Podcasts about shaked

Israeli settlement in the West Bank

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Best podcasts about shaked

Latest podcast episodes about shaked

The Great Trials Podcast
Sagi Shaked | Tyler v. Gibbs & Register, Inc. | $12.24 Million

The Great Trials Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2025 51:05


In this episode of the Great Trials Podcast, hosts Steve Lowry and Yvonne Godfrey are joined by renowned Miami lawyer Sagi Shaked. They delve into a significant wrongful death case Shaked successfully tried in 2017, resulting in a $12,240,000 verdict. Remember to rate and review GTP on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or your favorite platform. --- Case Details: "After a 4-day trial, we obtained a $12,240,000.00 verdict on behalf of a family that lost their mother as a result of a tragic head-on automobile collision. The trial team consisted of Sagi Shaked, Joel Roth, Manny Lorenzana and Iury Carvalho. Unfortunately, Roitiki Tyler only got to see her star athlete son play one college game. Tyler was accompanied by her 11-year-old, who flew from Florida to Iowa to watch Devontre Tyler play middle linebacker in a Saturday game in November 2014. The following night, Tyler was driving home when a Ford F-150 truck hit them head-on at 65 mph. The mother of two died. Her young son survived his mother without physical injuries, but whose subsequent emotional traumatization led a jury to award them with $12.24 million." (Source) (More Coverage on Case Details) --- Guest Bio: Sagi Shaked As an experienced Miami personal injury lawyer, Sagi Shaked actively litigates cases involving catastrophic injuries and wrongful death on behalf of victims and their families. These cases include car accidents, product liability, medical negligence and malpractice, nursing home abuse and neglect, trucking accidents, industrial manufacturers, insurance disputes, premises liability, drowning accidents, airline accidents, burn-related accidents, and others. Sagi Shaked has been practicing law since 2000 and went on to found the successful Shaked Law Personal Injury Lawyers in 2007, where he became one of the Top 100 Trial Lawyers in the United States as named by the American Trial Lawyers Association. This highly coveted honor was bestowed upon Mr. Shaked for his exemplary legal expertise, compassion for his clients, and consistently recovering multi-millions of dollars in damages for those he represents.  Read Full Bio --- LINKS FROM THE EPISODE: Shaked Law Firm on Facebook Sagi Shaked on LinkedIn Shaked Law Firm on Instagram Shaked Law Firm on YOUTUBE --- Check out previous episodes and meet the GTP Team: Great Trials Podcast --- Show Sponsors: Legal Technology Services  Harris Lowry Manton LLP - hlmlawfirm.com Production Team: Dee Daniels Media Podcast Production

The Attorney Post - If you don't know your rights, you don't have any!
Fighting for Justice: Inside Personal Injury Law and Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI) with Sagi Shaked

The Attorney Post - If you don't know your rights, you don't have any!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 94:12


https://shakedlaw.com/ (786) 458-8660 In an episode of The Attorney Post, Sagi Shaked, founder of Shaked Law, shared his insights on personal injury law, his commitment to mentoring young attorneys, and his experience handling high-stakes cases. With over 25 years in the field, Shaked has secured multi-million-dollar settlements for accident victims, particularly in trucking litigation, brain injury cases, and wrongful death claims. A Passion for Advocacy and Justice Shaked's law firm specializes in catastrophic injury cases, including trucking and motorcycle accidents. Recognized as one of the top 100 trial lawyers in the nation, he has successfully fought for clients against powerful insurance companies. His influence extends beyond his firm—he is a past president of the Southern Trial Lawyers Association and a board-certified trial advocate. Educating the Next Generation of Attorneys Shaked believes in the power of mentorship and regularly teaches trial advocacy nationwide. His focus on brain injury and wrongful death cases ensures that attorneys are well-equipped to represent victims in complex litigation. By sharing his knowledge, he helps shape the future of personal injury law. Handling Brain Injury Cases and Emotional Challenges Brain injury litigation is a growing focus in personal injury law. Shaked explained how insurance companies often dispute the severity of these injuries, making strong medical evidence essential. His expertise has made him a go-to attorney for these cases, with many referrals coming from other law firms. He also highlighted the emotional toll of handling wrongful death claims. He shared a case where a mother lost her life in an accident, leaving two children behind. The defense offered $4 million, but Shaked's team fought for a fair settlement, ultimately securing over $10 million. COVID-19's Impact on Legal Practices The pandemic changed how legal professionals operate. Shaked noted that before COVID-19, all depositions were in-person, but virtual platforms like Zoom have become essential. While convenient, he expressed concerns about the effectiveness of remote trials, particularly in jury selection and case presentation. Winning High-Stakes Cases Shaked has successfully litigated cases resulting in nine-figure settlements. He stressed the importance of understanding jury biases, highlighting that defense experts are often hired to downplay injuries. His ability to counter these tactics has helped his clients receive the compensation they deserve. Sagi Shaked's discussion on The Attorney Post showcased his dedication to justice, education, and high-stakes litigation. His leadership in personal injury law continues to make a lasting impact, ensuring that accident victims receive the fair representation they deserve. Sponsors: RankWith.NewsThe Attorney PostNational ERCAndropology

Culture en direct
Ido Shaked : "On se protège et on protège le public, c'est un endroit de bienveillance"

Culture en direct

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2025 11:19


durée : 00:11:19 - L'Avant-scène - par : Aurélie Charon - Le metteur en scène israélien Ido Shaked et son ami Hannan Ishay, lui aussi metteur en scène, imaginent la pièce "Mode d'emploi pour metteur en scène israélien en Europe". - réalisation : Alexandre Fougeron - invités : Ido Shaked Metteur en scène israëlien

Tous en scène
Ido Shaked : "On se protège et on protège le public, c'est un endroit de bienveillance"

Tous en scène

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2025 11:19


durée : 00:11:19 - L'Avant-scène - par : Aurélie Charon - Le metteur en scène israélien Ido Shaked et son ami Hannan Ishay, lui aussi metteur en scène, imaginent la pièce "Mode d'emploi pour metteur en scène israélien en Europe". - réalisation : Alexandre Fougeron - invités : Ido Shaked Metteur en scène israëlien

AJC Passport
Held Hostage in Gaza: A Mother's Fight for Freedom and Justice

AJC Passport

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 36:38


“He told me: ‘We are the same. We are the same.' Meaning, me and the terrorists who penetrated the kibbutz are the same. They received the mission to murder and to burn, and I received the mission to hold you as bargaining chips for the release of the Palestinian prisoners. And this was a very cruel sentence, because while we were in captivity . . . they could do anything to us.” Former Israeli hostage Shoshan Haran, abducted during the Hamas terror attack on October 7, 2023, shares her harrowing story of survival and resilience. Shoshan was abducted from her home in Kibbutz Be'eri alongside her family, including her son-in-law Tal Shoham, her daughter, and her young grandchildren. While she and the other women and children were released after 50 days in November 2023, Tal remained in Gaza for 505 days and was released in February 2025. Now, as she welcomes Tal home, Shoshan opens up about the unbearable anguish of captivity, the emotional toll of waiting, and the devastating losses her family has endured. She sheds light on the humanity that persisted even in the darkest moments and issues a powerful call for continued global action to free the 59 hostages who are still being held. Resources: Listen – AJC Podcasts: The Forgotten Exodus: with Hen Mazzig, Einat Admony, and more. People of the Pod:  U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff on Gaza Reconstruction, Israeli Security, and the Future of Middle East Diplomacy Why Germany's Antisemitic Far-Right Party is Thriving Instead of Disappearing Follow People of the Pod on your favorite podcast app, and learn more at AJC.org/PeopleofthePod You can reach us at: peopleofthepod@ajc.org If you've appreciated this episode, please be sure to tell your friends, and rate and review us on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. __ Transcript of Conversation with Shoshan Haran: Manya Brachear Pashman:   After 505 days as a hostage in Gaza, Tal Shoham returned to Israel to his wife and two young children and to an extended family whose lives have been on hold since the Hamas terror attacks on October 7, 2023. Tal had been taken hostage from his home in Kibbutz Be'eri with his wife, his children, his wife's aunt, his 12-year-old niece, and his mother in law, Shoshan Haran. Shoshan returned home with the other women and children on November 26, 2023. She is with us now to talk about welcoming Tal home, the tremendous loss she and her family have suffered, and the endless fight to get the rest of the hostages home.  Shoshan, welcome to People of the Pod.  Shoshan Haran:   Thank you. Nice being here.  Manya Brachear Pashman:   Well, I'm glad that you are here to at least partially celebrate the return of your loved ones. It has been more than 500 days since that awful day in October. Can you take our listeners back a few days before the 7th, to October 4th: what were you doing that day? Shoshan Haran:   On October 4, we had a very big event of Women Making Peace in the Dead Sea, together with a sister movement, Women of the Sun. It's a Palestinian movement. Both women-led movements working for peace on both sides. And I went there with my sister Lilach and with the founder of this movement, Vivian Silver, who was my neighbor in Kibbutz Be'eri. And it was such an optimistic event, and heartwarming, we were there with thousands of women, some men also, and we were talking about the power of women to bring peace and how we should stop the bloodshed and how we should find a new way to live together in peace. That was on October 4.  Two days later, on October 6, we are getting ready for Simchat Torah, to celebrate with our family. We had the sukkah already since a week ago, and we invited my daughter, Adi, and her husband Tal and the little kids, Naveh, who was then eight years old, and Yahel (Yula), three years old, to join us for Simchat Torah. So we were cooking, getting ready for the holidays. It was a shabbat dinner, so cooking. And then we got a call from Avshal, Avshalom, he's my husband, his nickname is Avshal, and we got a call from his sister, Sharon, that wanted to join us for that evening with her daughter, Noam who was then 12 years old. And we celebrated together in the sukkah, having fun. The kids were playing all over. And then we went to sleep. We had kind of a loft above our house for hosting our guests, and that's where Tal and Adi and the kids stayed overnight. Sharon and her daughter stayed with us on the ground level, and we went to sleep. And then at 6:29am, we heard the red . . . color red is the code for attack. And we thought it is, I shouldn't say it, but the usual missile attack on us. So we went to the safe room. And then after a few minutes, we went out. My husband went up to the second floor to get Adi, Tal, and the kids down to be with us, and I started making hot chocolate for the grandkids. And then we got the warning on our–we have a community WhatsApp for alarms. And they told us that they suspect that some terrorists penetrated the kibbutz, and then we should go into the safe room. And a few minutes later, they confirmed that a terrorist attack was launched on the kibbutz. Manya Brachear Pashman:   Who was in that safe room with you? Shoshan Haran:   We were in the safe room, seven people. Tal, Adi, my daughter, the kids–my [2] grandkids, Sharon and Noam. Avshal stayed outside with a knife ready to protect his family, and also looking through the windows to understand what was going on. And then we started hearing shooting and grenades, and they got closer and closer to us. My cell phone was the only one that had reception inside the safe room. And after one hour and a half of terror, Tal texted my husband to join us in the safe room, because he understood that a knife is not gonna protect us, so there was no way. And so Avshal joined us, and Tal and him–we had a very large dinner table when we have guests, and the extensions were in the safe room, so very heavy pieces of wood. And they used it to protect the handle of the safe room door because there was no lock, but they were just pushing it against the safe room door. I heard them breaking into my neighbor's home. I heard a lot of glass and a lot of shooting and grenades. I didn't know what was happening there. And then they left.  And then they penetrated our house. They just broke into it. It's easy. It was full of windows that you could easily break into. And they started shouting at us: open the door, open the door. We did not. And then they had steel penetrating bullets that went through the safe room's iron door. And I even saw one bullet passing very close to my head. The movement of the bullet was a little bit slowed, so I could see it. And my husband shouted at me, just lie down, you know, because my head was a little bit upwards, looking at the cell phone and trying to call for help.  They couldn't break in the safe room door, and then they left, and we thought that maybe we were saved. But then after a few minutes, they brought a bulldozer, and they just cracked the safe room window. And the safe room window is composed of two steel parts that should be connected. But with the bulldozer, they were able to dismantle the window and create a crack.  And then we had a few seconds to decide to surrender or not. And then my husband and Tal decided to surrender. We were under the bed, so we didn't see much, but they understood that the crack will allow the terrorists to throw grenades into the room. So they decided to surrender.  And then the terrorist opened the window so we stopped resisting. They opened the window, and then my husband and Tal went out first, and that was the last glance that I had of my husband. And it took us a while, because we were under the bed, and we were three women and three little kids. So we went out of the room. They grabbed us through the window. And when my daughter was out, she saw her kids. They took her kids separately. And she just shouted at them, mother, kid, mother, kids. And she, she just kidnapped. She grabbed them from the terrorist. She's a real hero, my daughter.  And then they pushed us with a gun pointed at us. And when we were out of the safe room, which I saw already, six or seven members of the kibbutz were already murdered and were lying near our home, and they were pushing us towards the fence around the kibbutz, which they already destroyed.  And one of them that looks really lunatic, he handcuffed me with my hands behind my back, and they just pushed us into the car that they brought from Gaza and drove towards the Gaza Strip. We didn't see any IDF soldiers. The border was completely abolished. There was no border. We didn't see any Air Force. We saw nothing. It was just driving through the open fields into the Gaza Strip.  We were sitting in the back seat of the car. I had Naveh, my grandson, on my lap. Adi was holding Yula, and Sharon was holding her daughter, Noam. And the two terrorists were sitting in front. And when we crossed the border into Gaza–the theoretical border, there was nothing there–one of the terrorists told us, welcome to Gaza. And I said, thank you. And then we just entered into Gaza.  Manya Brachear Pashman:   You said that was your last glance of Avshal when he climbed out the window. Shoshan Haran:   So we were in captivity for 50 days, and during these horrible days, I was almost sure that both Tal and Avshal were hostages in Gaza, because they were kidnapped a few minutes before us, and I understood that the goal of the terrorists was to have hostages. And so I was very confident, I should say, that both of them are hostages in Gaza. And I knew, I knew by intuition, that Israel will demand to release women and children first. I just knew it.  And I told Adi and Sharon all the time. I said, we need to survive. Every day that we survive will get us closer to our release, because I knew that the terrorists see us as bargain chips to get their prisoners released. So I said our mission is just to survive. I need to keep my family. I need to survive.  And I thought that Tal and Avshal are also hostages, and I learned about the fact that they murdered my husband on October 7, only after I was released and I met my daughter and my son, and they had to tell me the horrible truth that he was murdered, but not only him. My sister was murdered, my little sister, my younger sister. Her husband, his caregiver.  102 people from my kibbutz, from the little community that we know, every one were murdered on October 7. Manya Brachear Pashman:   This was your sister, Lilach, who had been at the event on October 4 with you. Yes?  Shoshan Haran:   Yes, yes. Manya Brachear Pashman:   I am so sorry. May all of those memories be a blessing, every one of them in the kibbutz.  Did you stay with your daughter and grandchildren in Gaza the entire time? Or were you separated?  Shoshan Haran:   No, we were together, luckily. We were handed over by the kidnappers to what I used to term as guards in Gaza. And I use the term guards because we wanted the children to live in the belief that these people are guarding us, so we didn't call them terrorists, not even between ourselves. We call them guards.  We were moved from one house to another. So we were not in the tunnels. We were in top Hamas leaders' houses. What they did in all of these houses, they created a separate room for us, where we did not see the family of the Hamas leader, but we heard the voices. We heard the voices of the commander. We heard the voices of his wife and the children. So it was like a provisoric arrangement. And the guards were always in between us and the family. I mean, we didn't see the family, but we heard them. And the guards were the ones who brought us food and they were kind of in between.  We had an event in the second house that we stayed. We had an event of knock on the roof. Knock on the roof is a term that the IDF is using when the Air Force is aiming to hit a specific house without harming the people who live inside the house.  One time it was supposed to be two blocks away from us, so the terrorists, they know exactly the address, and they told us to get away, just to stay away from the window. So if the window is, if the glass is breaking, we will not be wounded. The second time, it was very close to where we stayed, maybe even the place we stayed, specifically so they evacuated us and the family of the Hamas terrorist who was holding us. We were evacuated to the street, and then we were taken to another house. And eventually we were taken to a fourth house, where we stayed 43 days. And in that house, the Hamas person who joined us knew English. So I started to talk. Before that the guards or the captors, didn't speak any English. They knew some very basic words, like bomb, far, go, come. You know, simple words. But in the fourth house that we stayed 43 days, the Hamas terrorist knew quite good English.  Manya Brachear Pashman: Did you seize on that and try to have conversations with your captors? We had lots of conversations and talks. I'm a very passionate reader, so I read a lot of books, including Holocaust survivors' books. I used a lot of the wisdom on how to survive when I was in Gaza. So the first thing I knew: that I should not show any weakness. I looked in their eyes, I talked straight forward, I didn't show any panic or hysterical or crying or stuff like that.  The other thing is, I knew I had to keep hope and be determined that we will be released. So that was very important, and that gave us strength. And also I counted the days. I knew the day of the week. And I knew the date. And to eat when you can. To sleep when you can. So to be very determined and very focused on the present. You don't have the capacity to think about the past or the future, you just focus on survival every second, every minute, every hour, how to protect your family and how to create some kind of a relationship with your captors. So they will get to know us, and this will give some some layer of protection. Manya Brachear Pashman:   Did you feel like you successfully fostered a relationship?   Shoshan Haran:   Yeah, it's a very tricky situation. So on one hand, I used to thank–his mother was cooking, was providing the food. We never saw her, but we heard her voice. We heard the babies on the other side of the apartment, but there was no eye contact. But when I knew that she was the one who is preparing food for us and for the captors and for her family. So every time that this guy, her son, brought us the food, I said, I want you to thank your mother. And I mentioned a few times that I appreciate the fact that they are guarding us and they are providing us the food, although it was very minimal, but still. And after a few days, we started to talk about life. I know about their salaries. I know their problems. I know how they get married or why they're not married yet.  I know about their mission. Their mission is very clear. They want to destroy Israel. It's a jihadistic mission. It's very clear. They talk about it very openly. And actually, they tried to convince us to leave Israel. He was saying, why don't you go back to Europe or go to Florida. I don't know for some reason, Florida is like, simple for them, for the Jewish community in the US. And he said, next time we're going to come harder on Israel, and I'm not sure that you'll have such a nice team to take care of you, so I advise you go, leave Israel.  And at a certain point he said, he asked me, if you go back to Israel, will you go back to the kibbutz? So said to him, I don't want to hear the word if. When we go back to Israel. And regarding the kibbutz, I said, it's a very good question, but I never gave him an answer. I knew what he wanted to hear. They were in a state of mind that, on one hand, you do create human interactions. And they played with the children. The children were so sweet, and they started to play. His family had the same age kids at the other side of the house, so there were human interactions, but it was very clear that their mission is to keep us as bargaining chips. And at one point after I felt more, I don't know, relaxed with the interaction with him, because all my talks were with this specific guy, because he was the only one who talked English. I said, you know, I am very, I don't know which expression I said, but I'm very angry about the people I saw who penetrated the kibbutz and murdered my my friends. And I saw the house of my sister was on fire. It was already bombed. You know, with, I don't know what, with whatever. Actually, I gave her and her husband like, 1% chances to be alive. What I saw in the house was, it would require a miracle for them to survive. So I told him that I'm angry at the people who penetrated the kibbutz and did these horrible things, but I do thank him and the guards and his family, to protect us and to feed us. Manya Brachear Pashman: Did you get any glimmer of remorse or compassion or empathy from them at that point? Shoshan Haran: He told me: We are the same. We are the same, meaning me and the terrorists who penetrated the kibbutz are the same. They received the mission to murder and to burn, and I received the mission to hold you as bargaining chips for the release of the Palestinian prisoners. And this was a very cruel sentence, because while we were in captivity, we were fully dependent on every expression of their faces, they could do anything to us.  So my mind couldn't handle this sentence, and I kind of buried it, I just put it aside. I didn't want to think about it, because it was so cruel. But I was sure that if anybody tried to rescue us, they will murder us. I was sure, I was not confused in that sense. I knew that they use us as assets. They see us as assets. And if they will feel that somebody is trying to rescue us by force, then they will kill us. And going to the situation now, you know that Tal, my son in law, Tal Shoham, was released two weeks ago. And actually it's the first time I started to breathe after a year and some months of fighting for his life, and, you know, taking care of helping my daughter and the grandkids and everybody, but we need To remember there are 59 more hostages in Gaza. And when we must keep on the fight. We must not give up. Manya Brachear Pashman:   A religion reporting colleague of mine, Dave Schechter in Atlanta, is a cousin of yours. When Tal was released, he wrote about how the extended family all around the world fought for and celebrated his release. Were you able to feel that love or sense that family energy? Shoshan Haran:   When I was a hostage in Gaza, I knew that my family and friends in Israel will not stay quiet, just because I know them. But as I said before, most of the time you don't think of anything else besides what's going on in your cell. Actually, I I looked at our situation as if we are astronauts in a hostile world, but unfortunately with terrorists pointing guns at our heads inside the satellite.  So when I was in Gaza, I thought about the fact that my family and friends will not stay quiet and will fight, but only on the way to Gaza. Once I was there, the focus is survival, focus. You just don't have any capacity to think of the past or the future or on anything that is beyond here and now. After I returned, first of all, Yuval, my son, told me that he organized a march from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem with 50,000 people when we were in captivity. And Shaked, my daughter, she was then nine months pregnant, and she flew to the US with AJC, by the way. Without insurance. She was nine months pregnant, no insurance company would cover her flight, but she still went, and she was all over. And when they told me, I suddenly felt the connection.  And of course, I mean, I got, while I was there, I got millions of emails and, well, WhatsApp I didn't have, because my phone was stolen, but emails from all over the world, including from Africa, the places that my my NGO is working with smaller farmers, Fair Planet, we call it. Now I think it's a bit naive name, but still.  Manya Brachear Pashman: And really the Jewish people as a collective have come together at this moment in history. Were you able to feel that sense of community in your circumstance? Or if not, can you feel it now that Tal is home and you can, as you just said, breathe? Shoshan Haran:   10 days after I was released on 26 of November, 50 days after we were taken, I came to the US and AJC people helped us get meetings with congressmen and Senate members. They took us all over. I was just in the meetings. But, you know, in the corridors of the Senate, at the corridors of the Congress and in and out with meetings. And I really, really, really appreciate not only this help, but this was my personal feeling. I mean, we just landed. I was still half in Gaza and half in my freedom. And here I am in the US, talking to decision makers and influencers, and this was done with the help of you guys, so I think it's a nice opportunity to thank you. Thank you for all the help that you are doing since then. I know it started very early on.  Actually, my daughter, my younger daughter, Shaked, came to the US to meet you guys and to meet Congressmen a few days after I was kidnapped. So, when I was in Gaza, actually.  So I think, the way I see it, I always knew the importance of the Jewish people all over the world, and of course, the importance of Israel being an independent Jewish democratic country, the importance of Israel to the Jews in the world, and the importance of the Jews in the world for Israel. I knew it, but the strength of these connections was much more evident after this horrific October 7 attack. So I felt that the Jewish world is is not only with us, but on a very practical level with us, and using all the network and all the professionals in Washington, in New York, I was invited to synagogues a few times, to big synagogues in Manhattan, what I felt is that a lot of Jewish people abroad that were not so much active in their connection to Israel understood the importance of Israel to them. And the urgency to work together on this crisis. And I think this will not go away. That's my feeling.  But now we need to focus on the 59 hostages. I know the feeling I had until two weeks ago. I couldn't breathe. I couldn't smile. I mean, it's your you look at the news and you get heart attacks every single news piece, and you just cannot breathe, and the families of these 59 hostages are still in this situation, we are not allowed to forget and let go. Manya Brachear Pashman:   Thank you for expressing your gratitude. And I must echo that gratitude to you for sharing that story and reliving all of that trauma. I'm sorry that you had to remember some of those horrible moments, though I do think that they are illuminating for those who just simply can't grasp what your family went through.  You did not see Tal again until he returned to Israel. Is that correct?  Shoshan Haran:   Yes. Well, about my husband, I heard only when I returned. But there were evidence from October 7 that Tal was taken alive. People saw him in Gaza. So we knew that he was taken. We were just hoping and praying that none of the horrible things that could happen while you are in captivity will not happen to him. He had a horrible time, but it was released, and my daughter, Adi, his wife, told me it's either zero or one. Either you get your husband, your loved ones back alive, and you can rebuild your future and unite your family, or it's a zero.  And for the 59 hostages who are still in Gaza, we need to do anything that we can keep keep the pressure, keep the energy, keep the fight. If you care about the civilian Palestinians in Gaza, like I do–that all my life, I was working for peace–the only thing you need to focus on is releasing the hostages. Because the hostages, the fact that the Hamas terrorists are still keeping them there, is a devastating fact for the Palestinians, because the Hamas, they don't care about their own people.  Manya Brachear Pashman:   Is it too soon to ask, once all the hostages return and they will, what comes next? Is there a movement already afoot to make sure Israel and others never forget what happened on October 7? Or is it too soon to ask that question?  Shoshan Haran:   I think once all the hostages are back, there will be as we will need, and also the Jewish people in the world will need to cheshbon nefesh (accounting of the soul). I don't know how to say it in English. To rethink and reconsider our views and our actions looking forward. I think we cannot be naive anymore and say to ourselves, you know that just saying that they want to kill us all, but they don't really mean it, and they will not be, they will not dare to do it and so and so forth. I think now we need to look at the facts as they are and recalculate our stance, our thoughts.  I think, first of all, we need to follow the money. Because one thing I can tell you, without funding, Hamas would never get to this stage, and neither Iran or the Houthis or Hezbollah, there are forces in the world who are supporting financially, the organizations or the countries who declare that they want to destroy and abolish Israel. We need to follow the money. We need to be smart. That's one. The other, and that's a big question. I'm just putting it on the table, but it's a big question how to do it, but this, we must do it. And the other thing is, the key for mutual existence is education. And what I learned recently, for example, is that the Palestinian Authority, or the people in Gaza, they do not teach about the Holocaust. They do not know about the Holocaust. The people that my captors, they were 24, 25, and 31 and then the commander was 40. Looking at the dates of the decision not to teach about the Holocaust, I'm sure they had no understanding why we are here. They think that we just came here like a colonialist or, you know, and then, if they will give us enough trouble, we will go away.  But we're not going to go away. We are staying, and until they change their mission to destroy us. We need to be stronger and smarter than them. Manya Brachear Pashman:   Shoshan, thank you so much for being with us, for sharing your story, and for giving us hope, sharing your hope, and then giving us hope that the hostages are all coming home, and that there is a future for Israel. Shoshan Haran:   There is a future for Israel. This, I'm sure, yes, but we need the Jewish people with us, and we need to work together. Manya Brachear Pashman:   Thank you so much. Shoshan Haran:   Thank you. Thank you. And regards to my friends at AJC. Manya Brachear Pashman:   If you missed last week's episode, be sure to tune in for my conversation with two scientists at MIT who have created a foundation to ensure Israeli scholars and their American colleagues can collaborate freely, and foster research and innovation that benefits all of humanity.

Indisputable with Dr. Rashad Richey
Boebert: Al Green Shaked His Pimp Cane at Trump

Indisputable with Dr. Rashad Richey

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2025 82:45


Lauren Boebert Makes Racist Remark Towards Al Green's Protest. Ohio officer seen on video body slamming a Black woman head first. ICE arrests Palestinian activist with green card at Columbia University and more.  Host: Dr. Rashad Richey (@IndisputableTYT) Guest host: Yasmin Aliya Khan (@YazzieK) *** SUBSCRIBE on YOUTUBE  ☞  https://www.youtube.com/IndisputableTYT FOLLOW US ON: FACEBOOK  ☞   https://www.facebook.com/IndisputableTYT TWITTER  ☞       https://www.twitter.com/IndisputableTYT INSTAGRAM ☞  https://www.instagram.com/IndisputableTYT Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Tâm Sự Kinh Doanh
Thuần Hóa Sự Nhàm Chán- Tri Kỷ Cảm Xúc #369

Tâm Sự Kinh Doanh

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2025 22:36


Xem phiên bản video: w5n.co/tkcx-videoTư liệu tham khảo:John Eastwood, Alexandra Frischen, Mark Fenske & Daniel Smilek (2012).The Unengaged Mind: Defining Boredom in Terms of Attention.Perspectives on Psychological ScienceMann, S. & Cadman, R. (2014).Does Being Bored Make Us More Creative?Creativity Research JournalWilson, T. D., Reinhard, D. A., Westgate, E. C., Gilbert, D. T., Ellerbeck, N., Hahn, C., & Shaked, A. (2014).Just Think: The Challenges of the Disengaged Mind.Science

Outcomes Rocket
Predicting Brain Health: The Power Of Retinal Scans with Eliav Shaked, co-founder of RetiSpec

Outcomes Rocket

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2025 8:55


This podcast is brought to you by Outcomes Rocket, your exclusive healthcare marketing agency. Learn how to accelerate your growth by going to outcomesrocket.com Early detection of Alzheimer's disease is crucial, and accessible diagnostic tools like retinal imaging are becoming increasingly vital.  In this episode, Eliav Shaked, co-founder of RetiSpec, discusses their innovative approach to early and accurate Alzheimer's detection using retinal imaging and artificial intelligence. RetiSpec focuses on identifying the core pathology of Alzheimer's, specifically amyloid burden, through a simple eye examination that can be incorporated into annual checkups. The company is also working on other neurodegenerative diseases beyond Alzheimer's. Eliav emphasizes the significance of recent breakthroughs in Alzheimer's medication, highlighting the potential of disease-modifying drugs now available, along with the growing innovation and therapeutic development in the space. He also predicts that more drugs will be developed for earlier stages of the disease and that technology will revolutionize healthcare.  Tune in and learn how this innovative technology is paving the way for better Alzheimer's care! Resources:  Connect and follow Eliav Shaked on LinkedIn. Follow RetiSpec on LinkedIn and visit their website.  Fast Track Your Business Growth: Outcomes Rocket is a full-service marketing agency focused on helping healthcare organizations like yours maximize your impact and accelerate growth. Learn more at outcomesrocket.com

Clinical Research Coach
Live from SCOPE with Or Shaked, MD-MPH, Medical Director at Briya: The Power of Real World Data

Clinical Research Coach

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2025 20:33


In this episode ofThe Clinical Research Coach, recorded live at SCOPE, hostLeanne Woehlke sits down withOr Shaked, MD-MPH, Medical Research Lead at Briya, to explore the transformative role ofreal-world data (RWD) and real-world evidence (RWE) in clinical trials. They discuss how RWD is reshaping trial design, improving patient recruitment, and enhancing the overall efficiency of research. Or shares insights on the latest advancements, the challenges of integrating real-world evidence, and what the future holds for decentralized trials.This episode offers valuable perspectives on the evolving landscape of clinical trials. Tune in for an insightful conversation on how data-driven innovation is driving better outcomes in research and patient care!To connect with Or Shaked, MD-MPH:https://www.linkedin.com/in/orshakedd/To learn more about Briya:https://briya.com/

The Result
Episode #61: Sagi Shaked

The Result

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2025 21:56


Attorney Sagi Shaked joins the podcast to discuss a jury verdict involving a head-on collision in Florida.

Israel Story
Wartime Diaries: Shaked Kestleman

Israel Story

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2024 31:20


A citizen runs to stop a terrorist, and is tragically shot by friendly fire. How does this happen? And what does his family do next?The end song is Karma Police, performed by Shefita, originally by Radiohead. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Achtsam - Deutschlandfunk Nova
Stille und Lärm - Achtsam mit unseren Gedanken umgehen lernen

Achtsam - Deutschlandfunk Nova

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2024 37:03


Straßenlärm kann unerträglich sein. Aber auch die Geräuschkulisse, die in uns herrscht, kann auf unser Gemüt schlagen. Besonders exzessives Grübeln zum Beispiel kann uns auf Dauer schlimmstenfalls auch krank machen.**********Quellen aus der Folge:Wilson, T. D., Reinhard, D. A., Westgate, E. C., Gilbert, D. T., Ellerbeck, N., Hahn, C., Brown, C. L., & Shaked, A. (2014). Just think: The challenges of the disengaged mind. Science, 345(6192), 75–77.Kirste, I., Nicola, Z., Kronenberg, G., Walker, T. L., Liu, R. C., & Kempermann, G. (2015). Is silence golden? Effects of auditory stimuli and their absence on adult hippocampal neurogenesis. Brain Structure and Function, 220, 1221-1228.**********Mehr zum Thema bei Deutschlandfunk Nova:Achtsamkeit: Gewaltfreie Kommunikation - so funktioniert esÜberhöhte Erwartungen: Wie uns Perfektionismus davon abhalten kann, Dinge zu tunAlltag: Rituale für die Achtsamkeit**********Den Artikel zum Stück findet ihr hier.**********Ihr könnt uns auch auf diesen Kanälen folgen: TikTok auf&ab , TikTok wie_geht und Instagram .**********Ihr habt Anregungen, Ideen, Themenwünsche? Dann schreibt uns gern unter achtsam@deutschlandfunknova.de

Category Visionaries
Yarden Shaked, CEO, and Founder at Varos: $4M Raised to Revolutionize Competitive Analytics and Break Data Silos

Category Visionaries

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2024 14:37


Welcome to another episode of Category Visionaries — the show that explores GTM stories from tech's most innovative B2B founders. In today's episode, we're speaking with Yarden Shaked, CEO and Founder of Varos, a data analytics platform that has raised $4 Million in funding. Here are the most interesting points from our conversation: Identifying the Problem: Varos addresses the lack of comparative data analytics for e-commerce and SaaS companies by allowing them to benchmark key metrics like customer acquisition cost and retention rate against similar businesses. Give to Get Model: The platform's value proposition is built on a cooperative model where users must share their data to access aggregated and anonymized insights from others, creating a robust data ecosystem. YC Experience: Yarden highlights the intensity and value of Y Combinator, emphasizing the importance of staying lean, focusing on growth, and the crucial lessons learned from interacting with other talented founders. Category Creation: Varos is pioneering the competitive data analytics category, offering unique insights that traditional analytics tools lack, thereby requiring significant market education and evangelism. Navigating Challenges: Building a new category involves overcoming significant hurdles, including customer education and validating the hypothesis that businesses need and will benefit from comparative analytics. Future Vision: Yarden is motivated by the challenge of proving the Varos hypothesis, expanding the user base, and scaling the team to establish a new standard in data analytics. //   Sponsors: Front Lines — We help B2B tech companies launch, manage, and grow podcasts that drive demand, awareness, and thought leadership. www.FrontLines.io   The Global Talent Co. — We help tech startups find, vet, hire, pay, and retain amazing marketing talent that costs 50-70% less than the US & Europe. www.GlobalTalent.co

Category Visionaries
Yarden Shaked, CEO and Founder of Varos: $4 Million Raised to Revolutionize Data Analytics

Category Visionaries

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2024 14:37


Welcome to another episode of Category Visionaries — the show that explores GTM stories from tech's most innovative B2B founders. In today's episode, we're speaking with Yarden Shaked, CEO and Founder of Varos, a data analytics platform that has raised $4 Million in funding. Here are the most interesting points from our conversation: Identifying the Problem: Varos addresses the lack of comparative data analytics for e-commerce and SaaS companies by allowing them to benchmark key metrics like customer acquisition cost and retention rate against similar businesses. Give to Get Model: The platform's value proposition is built on a cooperative model where users must share their data to access aggregated and anonymized insights from others, creating a robust data ecosystem. YC Experience: Yarden highlights the intensity and value of Y Combinator, emphasizing the importance of staying lean, focusing on growth, and the crucial lessons learned from interacting with other talented founders. Category Creation: Varos is pioneering the competitive data analytics category, offering unique insights that traditional analytics tools lack, thereby requiring significant market education and evangelism. Navigating Challenges: Building a new category involves overcoming significant hurdles, including customer education and validating the hypothesis that businesses need and will benefit from comparative analytics. Future Vision: Yarden is motivated by the challenge of proving the Varos hypothesis, expanding the user base, and scaling the team to establish a new standard in data analytics. //   Sponsors: Front Lines — We help B2B tech companies launch, manage, and grow podcasts that drive demand, awareness, and thought leadership. www.FrontLines.io   The Global Talent Co. — We help tech startups find, vet, hire, pay, and retain amazing marketing talent that costs 50-70% less than the US & Europe. www.GlobalTalent.co

The CJN Daily
The 13-year old who hundreds walked to school in Toronto has no plans to change schools due to antisemitic bullying

The CJN Daily

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2024 21:44


Eitan Cohen, 13, is determined to head back to class after the Victoria Day long weekend—despite months of being bullied, taunted, threatened and assaulted by a few fellow students in his school in Toronto, in the wake of Oct. 7. It came to a head on May 17, when hundreds of neighbours and friends came to walk Eitan to Faywood Arts-Based Curriculum School. It was a show of solidarity for the boy and his family. His parents—two Israeli doctors who came to Canada for specialized training—say they initially tried to enrol their four children in private Jewish schools while they were in Canada, but eventually decided to send them to public school so the kids could to learn about Canadian diversity. But after Oct. 7, they say they have been complaining in vain to Toronto school officials—and also to Toronto police—about the atmosphere of Jew-hatred impacting both Eitan and his younger brother Hillel, who also attended the same school. Toronto's police confirm the hate crime unit is now actively investigating one incident from last week, alongside two other investigations that remain open. The Cohens are already making plans to return to Israel and Eitan could have switched to a Jewish religious school until the end of June. But he won't quit: if he leaves now, he says, it will mean open season for bullies to ramp up antisemitic attacks on other Jewish students who attend public schools in Toronto. On today's episode of The CJN Daily, Ellin Bessner sits down at the home of Eitan and his parents, Moshe Cohen and Adi Halberthal Cohen, to find out what safety plans are in place for this week—and why they went public with their struggles. What we talked about: Learn more about the Toronto Jewish community accompanying the Cohen family to school on Friday May 17, 2024, in The CJN. Read the Fredericton police news release about an arrest being made in the beating of an Israeli teenager on April 30. Read the back story on the Fredericton family's antisemitism problems at their daughter Shaked's school, in The CJN. Credits: The CJN Daily is written and hosted by Ellin Bessner (@ebessner on Twitter). Zachary Kauffman is the producer. Michael Fraiman is the executive producer. Our theme music is by Dov Beck-Levine. Our title sponsor is Metropia. We're a member of The CJN Podcast Network. To subscribe to this podcast, please watch this video. Donate to The CJN and receive a charitable tax receipt by clicking here. Hear why The CJN is important to me.

The CJN Daily
An Israeli high schooler was beaten up in Fredericton. Her family believes it was a hate crime

The CJN Daily

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2024 20:43


On April 30, Shaked Tsurkan, a 14-year-old Israeli girl attending high school in New Brunswick, was followed and beaten up by an older student. It happened off school grounds during the lunch hour and other classmates gathered to watch—someone even filmed the whole thing on their phone, later posted to social media, where you can see Tsurkan getting jumped from behind, thrown to the ground and punched repeatedly. According to Shaked, her assailant is an older female Muslim student who also attends her school, Leo Hayes High School, in Fredericton. It appears the physical assault came after months of being targeted for being Israeli after she started Grade 9 in Sept. 2023, just weeks before the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attack. The altercation left Tsurkan with cuts, bruises and black eyes. While the school declined to share details about the incident to protect the privacy of its students, Tsurkan says her assailant was suspended from school for a week; she also says when she returned to school, she was advised to use the teachers' private washroom for her own safety, not to walk alone and to stay inside the building between classes. Tsurkan's parents are frustrated, because they feel local authorities are ignoring the antisemitic overtones to their daughter's beating. On today's episode of The CJN Daily, Shaked Tsurkan and her parents, Eli and Michal, share their side of the story, detailing how the war in the Middle East is playing out in their corner of Atlantic Canada. What we talked about: Learn more about the antisemitic vandalism that resulted in broken windows on the Fredericton synagogue early on Jan, 27, 2024, in The CJN. Read why Fredericton's Major Crimes Unit has been called in to investigate the case, in The CJN. Why Canadian Jewish students are feeling afraid in public school classrooms, after Oct. 7, in The CJN Credits: The CJN Daily is written and hosted by Ellin Bessner (@ebessner on Twitter). Zachary Kauffman is the producer. Michael Fraiman is the executive producer. Our theme music is by Dov Beck-Levine. Our title sponsor is Metropia. We're a member of The CJN Podcast Network. To subscribe to this podcast, please watch this video. Donate to The CJN and receive a charitable tax receipt by clicking here. Hear why The CJN is important to me.

The Tech Blog Writer Podcast
2882: From Chess Grandmaster to ML Innovator: Tal Shaked's Journey

The Tech Blog Writer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2024 29:26


Are machines really capable of thinking like humans, or are we merely programming them to mimic our own patterns? Today on Tech Talks Daily, we delve into this intriguing question with Tal Shaked, an American chess grandmaster and Chief Machine Learning Fellow at Moloco, a leading machine learning performance solutions innovator. In a world rapidly transforming through the application of machine learning and artificial intelligence, the distinction between additive and transformative technology becomes blurred. Tal offers a unique perspective on how ML is reshaping not just individual industries but the entire landscape of software engineering. Unlike previous advancements such as SQL and relational databases, ML's evolution seems to forge a new path, one that might redefine the essence of software itself. Throughout the episode, Tal discusses the underappreciated art of ML engineering—a discipline that extends beyond traditional software engineering to balance robust infrastructure with high-quality outputs. This intricate balance is crucial for building systems that not only perform well but are also trustworthy and free from biases. The conversation takes a deeper dive into why the tech community has focused intensely on AI, yet the broader concept of 'machine intelligence'—a perspective that acknowledges the fundamental differences between human and computer cognition—remains less discussed. Tal explores this oversight and its implications for future technologies. We also address the practical aspects of eliminating bias in machine learning models. Tal shares insights into how engineers can refine their approaches to data to ensure fairness and accuracy in AI systems, and the skills that are becoming essential as ML grows more prevalent across sectors. As we explore these complex themes, we invite you to reflect on the following: How can we ensure that the pursuit of machine intelligence does not lose sight of human values? Share your thoughts and join the conversation on how we can harmonize human creativity with machine efficiency.

The Midnight Project Techno Music
The Midnight Project invites Fabio Salvati

The Midnight Project Techno Music

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2024 61:46


Welcome to a special invite, Midnighters!This Saturday on The Midnight Project, we're treated to an exceptional session crafted by the ingenious Fabio Salvati, a name that resonates with innovation and depth in the techno world. As the night unfolds, let's immerse ourselves in an hour where each beat and every transition tells a story—a narrative spun from the threads of Fabio's musical loom.In the dim glow of our preferred listening havens, where the familiar hum of anticipation builds, picture Fabio in the studio, his hands orchestrating a symphony of synths and drum machines. With a master's touch, he blends sounds and emotions, crafting a tapestry that moves beyond mere rhythm into something almost tangible.This guest mix isn't just another sequence of tracks; it's a voyage Fabio invites us on, a preview of his creative evolution marked by an upcoming trio of releases on Redesign Records. Imagine the scenes each track paints: from the adrenaline-infused pulses of "Shaked", which could almost make you feel the ground quake beneath your feet, to the haunting echoes of "Valak", where each note adds a shade to its dark, compelling lore. Then, there's "Basiliscus," a track with rhythms that slither and slide, encapsulating the mythic and the modern in one fluid motion.As Midnighters, we're not just listeners; we're participants in a global club, each beat a heartbeat that connects us across the unseen digital dancefloors of the world. Fabio Salvati doesn't just play music for us; he invites us into his world, giving us front-row seats to the unfolding drama of his artistic expression. And tonight, with every track meticulously chosen and mixed, we get to share these moments of creation and revelation.Enjoy the journey and Midnighters, and remember—each mix is a doorway, and tonight, it opens into the extraordinary world of Fabio Salvati. Let's step through it together.Stay healthy,Sebastiaan Hooft

Tip the Scales
69. Sagi Shaked - How A Positive Mindset Impacts Success

Tip the Scales

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 27:10


“Life is beautiful. Why not smile?” On this week's episode Maria chats with personal injury lawyer Sagi Shaked. They discuss how to spot the signs of a TBI, why a positive mindset helped lead to his success, negative changes to tort reform in Florida, workplace fashion and the secret to bonding with his daughter. Highlights 01:45 Recognizing a TBI 03:49 Workplace fashion 17:14 The power of mindset Guest Sagi Shaked is the founder of Shaked Law Personal Injury Lawyers. Sagi Shaked actively litigates cases involving catastrophic injuries and wrongful death on behalf of victims and their families. He has been named one of the Top 100 Trial Lawyers in the United States by the American Trial Lawyers Association. You can get in touch with Sagi at https://shakedlaw.com Host Maria Monroy (@marialawrank on Instagram) is the Co-founder and President of LawRank, a leading SEO company for law firms since 2013. She has a knack for breaking down complex topics to make them more easily accessible and started Tip the Scales to share her knowledge with listeners like you. Podcast Mentions Book: Tiny Habits by BJ Fogg Book: Atomic Habits by James Clear Book: Mindset by Carol S. Dweck LawRank grows your law firm with SEO Our clients saw a 384% increase in first-time calls and a 603% growth in traffic in 12 months. Get your free competitor report at https://lawrank.com/report. Subscribe to us on your favorite podcast app Rate us 5 stars on iTunes and Spotify Watch us on YouTube Follow us on Instagram and TikTok

Tip the Scales
69. Sagi Shaked - How A Positive Mindset Impacts Success

Tip the Scales

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 27:10


“Life is beautiful. Why not smile?” On this week's episode Maria chats with personal injury lawyer Sagi Shaked. They discuss how to spot the signs of a TBI, why a positive mindset helped lead to his success, negative changes to tort reform in Florida, workplace fashion and the secret to bonding with his daughter. Highlights 01:45 Recognizing a TBI 03:49 Workplace fashion 17:14 The power of mindset Guest Sagi Shaked is the founder of Shaked Law Personal Injury Lawyers. Sagi Shaked actively litigates cases involving catastrophic injuries and wrongful death on behalf of victims and their families. He has been named one of the Top 100 Trial Lawyers in the United States by the American Trial Lawyers Association. You can get in touch with Sagi at https://shakedlaw.com Host Maria Monroy (@marialawrank on Instagram) is the Co-founder and President of LawRank, a leading SEO company for law firms since 2013. She has a knack for breaking down complex topics to make them more easily accessible and started Tip the Scales to share her knowledge with listeners like you. Podcast Mentions Book: Tiny Habits by BJ Fogg Book: Atomic Habits by James Clear Book: Mindset by Carol S. Dweck LawRank grows your law firm with SEO Our clients saw a 384% increase in first-time calls and a 603% growth in traffic in 12 months. Get your free competitor report at https://lawrank.com/report. Subscribe to us on your favorite podcast app Rate us 5 stars on iTunes and Spotify Watch us on YouTube Follow us on Instagram and TikTok

Daf Yomi for Women - Hadran
Bava Kamma 83 - January 24, 14 Shvat

Daf Yomi for Women - Hadran

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2024 45:13


Today's daf is sponsored by Betsy and Tevie Mehlman in honor of the birth of their grandson Lavi to Hillel and Shaked. "His name symbolizes strength. May he be a continuing source of pride and joy to his parents and his entire family." Today's daf is sponsored by Deborah Kotz for the refuah shleima of Yonatan Yitzchak Ben Ateret, an IDF soldier critically injured in his tank in Gaza on Friday. Today's daf is dedicated in memory of the twenty-one soldiers who were killed in Gaza on Monday. Our thoughts are with their families.  Is it really forbidden to teach Greek wisdom, doesn't it say in a braita that the Greek language is better than the Sorsi language!? To answer, they distinguish between Greek language and Greek wisdom. But even this is challenged by a braita that tells about Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel and his family who studied Greek wisdom. They were allowed because of political reasons – so they could interact with the Romans. It is allowed to raise a dog at home only if it is chained so as not to cause damage. The Mishna states that one cannot spread nets to catch pigeons unless it is a distance of thirty ris (8,000 cubits) from a settlement. The Gemara cites sources that seemingly contradict this source and then resolves the difficulties. One who damages another must pay five payments - damage, pain, doctor bills, the loss of employment, and humilation. How are these payments evaluated? Why do we think that the one who harms his friend pays damage, after all, it is written in the Torah an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, etc.! The Gemara brings different drashot to prove that even though it is written in the Torah an eye for an eye, the obligation is to pay money.

Daf Yomi for Women – דף יומי לנשים – English
Bava Kamma 83 - January 24, 14 Shvat

Daf Yomi for Women – דף יומי לנשים – English

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2024 45:13


Today's daf is sponsored by Betsy and Tevie Mehlman in honor of the birth of their grandson Lavi to Hillel and Shaked. "His name symbolizes strength. May he be a continuing source of pride and joy to his parents and his entire family." Today's daf is sponsored by Deborah Kotz for the refuah shleima of Yonatan Yitzchak Ben Ateret, an IDF soldier critically injured in his tank in Gaza on Friday. Today's daf is dedicated in memory of the twenty-one soldiers who were killed in Gaza on Monday. Our thoughts are with their families.  Is it really forbidden to teach Greek wisdom, doesn't it say in a braita that the Greek language is better than the Sorsi language!? To answer, they distinguish between Greek language and Greek wisdom. But even this is challenged by a braita that tells about Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel and his family who studied Greek wisdom. They were allowed because of political reasons – so they could interact with the Romans. It is allowed to raise a dog at home only if it is chained so as not to cause damage. The Mishna states that one cannot spread nets to catch pigeons unless it is a distance of thirty ris (8,000 cubits) from a settlement. The Gemara cites sources that seemingly contradict this source and then resolves the difficulties. One who damages another must pay five payments - damage, pain, doctor bills, the loss of employment, and humilation. How are these payments evaluated? Why do we think that the one who harms his friend pays damage, after all, it is written in the Torah an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, etc.! The Gemara brings different drashot to prove that even though it is written in the Torah an eye for an eye, the obligation is to pay money.

Oral Arguments for the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
Ontel Products Corporation v. Guy A. Shaked Investments Ltd.

Oral Arguments for the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2023 36:28


Ontel Products Corporation v. Guy A. Shaked Investments Ltd.

The Living Chassidus Podcast
Daily Shiur: Kuntres U'Maayan: Class 20

The Living Chassidus Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2023 18:40


Delving into Maamar 6 of Kuntres U'Maayan In honor of the safety, health, and security of Shaked bas Bella, Yosef Yitzchak ben Simcha, and all Jewish people around the world Donate to Living Chassidus: livingchassidus.org/donate

Culture en direct
Le Proche-Orient sur scène avec Yuval Rozman, Ido Shaked et Lauren Houda Hussein

Culture en direct

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2023 59:53


durée : 00:59:53 - Tous en scène - par : Aurélie Charon - Yuval Rozman met en scène "Ahouvi", qui veut dire "amour" en hébreu, l'amour et la séparation d'une Israélienne avec un Français. Ido Shaked, israélien, et Lauren Houda Hussein, franco-libanaise, terminent leur trilogie "Une histoire subjective du Proche-Orient, mais néanmoins valide… je pense." - invités : Yuval Rozman; Ido Shaked Metteur en scène israëlien; Lauren Houda Hussein Comédienne

Honestly with Bari Weiss
The Stories—and Stakes—of War in Israel

Honestly with Bari Weiss

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2023 76:08


If you've been following our coverage at The Free Press, you've noticed that we've been covering the war in Israel nonstop since it began. We've never produced this much content in this short of a time about a single subject. Some of you might be thinking, why?  On October 7, we saw the single biggest massacre of the Jewish people since the Holocaust. But unlike the Holocaust, in which Germans tried to hide their war crimes, here we have the terrorists streaming it in real time on every social media platform across the internet. When the reports, and the videos, started circulating, we thought: surely this amount of blood and horror will be enough to shake the world awake.  And yet it wasn't. Internationally, some of the most educated people—including students, professors, and administrators at the most elite universities in the world—have either equivocated or remained silent in the face of mass atrocities. Others, by the tens of thousands, have taken to the streets to rejoice in the terrorist attack, screaming “resistance is justified” and “glory to the martyrs.”  That is why this story matters. Because this is not just a war in a faraway land. It's a battle for civilization. As my friend Sam Harris recently said, “There are not many bright lines that divide good and evil in our world, but this is one of them.”  This war should matter to everyone—not just Jews—who care about the future of civilization. Because if there is one lesson from history, it's that what starts with the Jews never ends with the Jews. And societies in which the Jewish people are persecuted are societies in which no one is safe.  And that is why we will continue to report on this war with such urgency.  On today's episode, we feature some of that reporting. You'll hear just some of the stories of the more than three dozen Israelis we have spoken to. We talk to a woman, Shaked, who tells us that eleven of her family members—including her three- and eight-year-old niece and nephew—were taken hostage by Hamas. We talk to survivors of the Nova music festival, like Amit and Chen, who miraculously escaped—some by hiding in bushes for hours—as they watched their friends get killed, “like sheep to be slaughtered,” just next to them. We talk to a father whose son was kidnapped from the music festival, and to a mother whose daughter was killed there. We talk to a grandmother who hid in the safe room of her home for hours with her 10-day-old grandson as terrorists shot at the door.  These stories are difficult to hear. But we will keep reporting them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Kan English
News Flash August 15, 2023

Kan English

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2023 5:09


Yehiel Indore released to house arrest. Hamas  tries to fire rocket at Shaked settlement.2 gunmen killed in Jericho-area refugee camp. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Kan English
Uzi Dayan on West Bank rocket threat and IDF reservists' revolt

Kan English

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2023 11:15


Terrorist operatives from the Jenin area said that they fired at a rocket at the Shaked settlement  in northern Samaria. They posted a picture of a rocket in a launcher. The IDF found the launcher  and believe the rocket exploded at the site during the  launch. The rocket was of low quality with a small quantity of explosives. Gunmen from the Al-Ayyash battalion linked to Hamas claimed responsibility, in the 5th such incident in recent months.  Res Maj Gen Uzi Dayan was deputy IDF Chief of Staff and is currently Chair of Mivtahi-the Forum of National Commanders. KAN's Mark Weiss asked him how concerned he is about the West Bank rocket threat. (Photo:IDF)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

SHAKED
How Psychology Proves They're Gaslighting Us About UFOs

SHAKED

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2023 22:29


How Psychology Proves They're Gaslighting Us About UFOs - SHAKED Ep. 47Subscribe for more psychology, behavior, influence, criminology, and body language podcasts, see you at the top.Subscribers on podcast YouTube channel at the time of upload: 4,681SHAKED Clipshttps://youtube.com/@shakedclipsHost: Derek Van Schaikhttps://youtube.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://www.tiktok.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://instagram.com/derekvanschaikhttps://twitter.com/derekvanschaikhttps://facebook.com/derekvanschaikAll the equipment we use:https://derekvanschaik.com/equipmentFollow us and send your podcast ideas:https://tiktok.com/@shakedshowhttps://instagram.com/shakedshowhttps://twitter.com/shakedshowhttps://facebook.com/shakedshowListen everywhere you get your podcasts!https://shakedshow.com

KZradio הקצה
Shaked Mochiach's Favorite Music 9-8-23

KZradio הקצה

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 59:18


Stork'd
S5 EP18 - The "WTF Moment" with Alona Shaked - Pursuing International Fertility Treatments After Conquering Cancer

Stork'd

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2023 58:13


Join Julia and Alona Shaked as they delve into her remarkable story. She was a 28-year-old lawyer who embarked on a challenging journey of fighting breast cancer and also discovered the heartbreaking truth that cancer treatments can significantly impact fertility. Explore the highs and lows of Alona's international path to building a family as she pursues fertility treatment in both Israel and the US. . Witness how Alona has transformed the setbacks she experienced into a coaching business catering to professional women who have undergone profound life changes.   IN THIS EPISODE:   [02:25] Alona shares what her different roles are and how she discovered she had cancer [07:12] What did Alona do the night before she found she had cancer, and how she evaluates her life and makes priorities [18:38] Alona's Egg retrieval was subpar, and how others reacted to her cancer and desire to have a family [20:15] Alona received international fertility treatments while living Israel [27:53] Alona and her husband may not be on the same page [31:50] Who is to blame for infertility [40:04] Alona gives an example of a positive outlook on the journey of building a family, and she shares starting IUI and IVF, and the result [47:52] What kept Alona going on the journey and what is driving her today [52:22] Alona defines her definition of family and recommends tools she used during her path to pregnancy, and she discusses her coaching business   KEY TAKEAWAYS:   Having cancer can affect your fertility. Life's WTF moments are an opportunity to get clear on what you really want Family and friends are essential to help you get through a cancer diagnosis. There is a stigma that it is the mother's fault when a couple cannot get pregnant.   RESOURCE LINKS:   Stork'd - Facebook   Stork'd - Instagram   Stork'd - YouTube    Alona Shaked - Website   Alona Shaked - Instagram   Alona Shaked - Facebook   Alona Shaked - Linkedin   BIOGRAPHY: Alona Shaked   I am an executive and lifestyle coach who shows women how to turn significant life challenges into purposeful, fulfilling careers and lives. I started my career as a lawyer at a big firm. When I was 28 years old, I was suddenly diagnosed with breast cancer, completely changing my perspective on what I wanted out of life and how I wanted to spend my time. After beating breast cancer and traveling the world, I transitioned into nonprofit management. I founded my non-profit, Thrivacious, an international community dedicated to helping women touched by cancer thrive and fulfill their dreams. I am also an IVF mama, writer, & women's health activist. While taking a sabbatical from nonprofit management to undergo fertility treatments and build my family, I trained to become a coach. I've now helped dozens of clients across the globe thrive through life's challenges, find their purpose, and succeed and grow in their careers and personal lives. I received my B.A. in psychology from the University of Pennsylvania and my J.D. from UCLA School of Law. I live in Philadelphia with my husband Oren, Labradoodle Franklin and miracle baby Ella.

Up Arrow Podcast
How To Accelerate Your Business Idea With Yarden Shaked

Up Arrow Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2023 51:54


Yarden Shaked is the Co-founder and CEO of Varos, a data-sharing platform helping companies compare KPIs with their competitors. Varos, a Y Combinator startup, provides performance marketing benchmarks to over 4,000 brands, agencies, and SaaS companies. Yarden is an active angel investor and was a Private Equity Investor at Apax. In this episode…  An entrepreneur's role is to create innovative ideas that mature into functioning businesses. However, not all ideas come to fruition. Turning your vision into a business model takes sheer determination, hard work, and resources to solidify your mission and goal. What resources can you leverage to transform your idea into a thriving entity and prepare for execution?  Sometimes entrepreneurs have difficulty navigating the process necessary to reach their end goals. Without proper guidance, they can feel discouraged and unmotivated. Yarden Shaked, an entrepreneur and founder, discovered accelerator programs are a strategic way to kickstart your business idea. Program mentors challenge you to focus on every facet of your business and alter it as needed. Obstacles are inevitable during the pre-launch phase, but accelerator programs can help you work through blindspots and launch quickly. On this episode of the Up Arrow Podcast, William Harris welcomes Yarden Shaked, Co-founder and CEO of Varos, to discuss how his experience with an accelerator program contributed to his business success. Yarden also shares the correlation between CPMs and CPAs on performance and how benchmarking services are progressing with AI integrations.

KZradio הקצה
Shaked Miller's Favorite Music 17-5-23

KZradio הקצה

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2023 60:08


SHAKED
Does this prove Letecia Stauch is faking her mental disorder?

SHAKED

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2023 15:47


Does this prove Letecia Stauch is faking her mental disorder?Subscribe for more psychology, behavior, influence, criminology, and body language podcasts, see you at the top.SHAKED Clipshttps://youtube.com/@shakedclipsHost: Derek Van Schaikhttps://youtube.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://www.tiktok.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://instagram.com/derekvanschaikhttps://twitter.com/derekvanschaikhttps://facebook.com/derekvanschaikAll the equipment we use:https://derekvanschaik.com/equipmentFollow us and send your podcast ideas:https://tiktok.com/@shakedshowhttps://instagram.com/shakedshowhttps://twitter.com/shakedshowhttps://facebook.com/shakedshowListen everywhere you get your podcasts!https://shakedshow.com

SHAKED
Why Gwyneth Paltrow's accuser's story doesn't make any sense

SHAKED

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2023 27:51


Why Gwyneth Paltrow's accuser's story doesn't make any sense  - SHAKED Ep. 45Subscribe for more psychology, behavior, influence, criminology, and body language podcasts, see you at the top.SHAKED Clipshttps://youtube.com/@shakedclipsHost: Derek Van Schaikhttps://youtube.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://www.tiktok.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://instagram.com/derekvanschaikhttps://twitter.com/derekvanschaikhttps://facebook.com/derekvanschaikAll the equipment we use:https://derekvanschaik.com/equipmentFollow us and send your podcast ideas:https://tiktok.com/@shakedshowhttps://instagram.com/shakedshowhttps://twitter.com/shakedshowhttps://facebook.com/shakedshowListen everywhere you get your podcasts!https://shakedshow.com

SHAKED
Breaking Down Bryan Kohberger and Alex Murdaugh's Suspicious Behavior

SHAKED

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2023 31:32


Breaking Down The Suspicious Behavior of Bryan Kohberger and Alex MurdaughSubscribe for more psychology, behavior, influence, criminology, and body language podcasts, see you at the top.SHAKED Clipshttps://youtube.com/@shakedclipsHost: Derek Van Schaikhttps://youtube.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://www.tiktok.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://instagram.com/derekvanschaikhttps://twitter.com/derekvanschaikhttps://facebook.com/derekvanschaikAll the equipment we use:https://derekvanschaik.com/equipmentFollow us and send your podcast ideas:https://tiktok.com/@shakedshowhttps://instagram.com/shakedshowhttps://twitter.com/shakedshowhttps://facebook.com/shakedshowListen everywhere you get your podcasts!https://shakedshow.com

SHAKED
Why Even Police Officers In The Idaho4 Case Should NOT Immediately Be Ruled Out

SHAKED

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2022 20:47


Why Even Police Officers In The Idaho4 Case Should NOT Immediately Be Ruled OutSubscribe for more psychology, behavior, influence, criminology, and body language podcasts, see you at the top.SHAKED Clipshttps://youtube.com/@shakedclipsHost: Derek Van Schaikhttps://youtube.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://www.tiktok.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://instagram.com/derekvanschaikhttps://twitter.com/derekvanschaikhttps://facebook.com/derekvanschaikAll the equipment we use:https://derekvanschaik.com/equipmentFollow us and send your podcast ideas:https://instagram.com/shakedshowhttps://twitter.com/shakedshowhttps://tiktok.com/@shakedshowhttps://facebook.com/shakedshowListen everywhere you get your podcasts!https://shakedshow.com

SHAKED
Why Moscow PD Is NOT Solving The Idaho 4 Murder Case

SHAKED

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2022 22:53


Why Moscow PD Is NOT Solving The Idaho 4 Murder CaseSubscribe for more psychology, behavior, influence, criminology, and body language podcasts, see you at the top.Subscribers on podcast YouTube channel at the time of upload: 4,477SHAKED Clipshttps://youtube.com/@shakedclipsHost: Derek Van Schaikhttps://youtube.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://www.tiktok.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://instagram.com/derekvanschaikhttps://twitter.com/derekvanschaikhttps://facebook.com/derekvanschaikAll the equipment we use:https://derekvanschaik.com/equipmentFollow us and send your podcast ideas:https://instagram.com/shakedshowhttps://twitter.com/shakedshowhttps://tiktok.com/@shakedshowhttps://facebook.com/shakedshowListen everywhere you get your podcasts!https://shakedshow.com

SHAKED
Why The Idaho Murderer Was Not Found Yet

SHAKED

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2022 28:26


Why The Idaho Murderer Was Not Found YetSubscribe for more psychology, behavior, influence, criminology, and body language podcasts, see you at the top.SHAKED Clipshttps://youtube.com/@shakedclipsHost: Derek Van Schaikhttps://youtube.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://www.tiktok.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://instagram.com/derekvanschaikhttps://twitter.com/derekvanschaikhttps://facebook.com/derekvanschaikAll the equipment we use:https://derekvanschaik.com/equipmentFollow us and send your podcast ideas:https://instagram.com/shakedshowhttps://twitter.com/shakedshowhttps://tiktok.com/@shakedshowhttps://facebook.com/shakedshowListen everywhere you get your podcasts!https://shakedshow.com

SHAKED
How Elon Musk Will Finally Save Social Media & The Truth Behind TikTok

SHAKED

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2022 18:31


How Elon Musk Will Finally Save Social Media & The Truth Behind TikTokSubscribe for more psychology, behavior, influence, criminology, and body language podcasts, see you at the top.SHAKED Clipshttps://youtube.com/@shakedclipsHost: Derek Van Schaikhttps://youtube.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://www.tiktok.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://instagram.com/derekvanschaikhttps://twitter.com/derekvanschaikhttps://facebook.com/derekvanschaikAll the equipment we use:https://derekvanschaik.com/equipmentFollow us and send your podcast ideas:https://instagram.com/shakedshowhttps://twitter.com/shakedshowhttps://tiktok.com/@shakedshowhttps://facebook.com/shakedshowListen everywhere you get your podcasts!https://shakedshow.com

SHAKED
How Münecat Lied About Me In Her Debunking "Body Language Experts" Video

SHAKED

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2022 19:48


Reacting to münecat's I Debunked Every "Body Language Expert" on YouTube Subscribe for more psychology, behavior, influence, criminology, and body language podcasts, see you at the top. Subscribers on podcast YouTube channel at the time of upload: 4,388 SHAKED Clipshttps://youtube.com/shakedclips Host: Derek Van Schaikhttps://youtube.com/derekvanschaikhttps://www.tiktok.com/@derekvanschaikhttps://instagram.com/derekvanschaikhttps://twitter.com/derekvanschaikhttps://facebook.com/derekvanschaik All the equipment we use:https://derekvanschaik.com/equipmentFollow us and send your podcast ideas:https://tiktok.com/@shakedshowhttps://instagram.com/shakedshowhttps://twitter.com/shakedshowhttps://facebook.com/shakedshow Listen everywhere you get your podcasts!https://shakedshow.com

Telecom Reseller
STIR/SHAKEN Shaked by too many gaps, CCA TransNexus Podcast

Telecom Reseller

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2022 11:45


“There's been a lot of progress, but there's a long, long way to go,” says Jim Dalton of TransNexus. Dalton says that currently the program resembles a bucket with a hole on the bottom. Reciting statistics that show that as few as 1 in 4 calls are covered under STIR/SHAKEN. TDM networks remain a special challenge. In this podcast, recorded at the Competitive Carrier Alliance conference, Dalton outlines that this is a special challenge to rural wireless carriers and their customers. “The technology is here today,” says Dalton, who adds that this can be achieved inside the market, with technology that is available, accessible, and affordable. We learn what public policy, private sector and technology implementation steps that must come next. “There's lots of options for service providers.” Visit www.transnexus.com

UNC Hoops Talk Podcast
UNC Basketball Predictions Podcast - Who Will Win the Title?

UNC Hoops Talk Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2022 19:12


'22-23 Predictions Mine- 28-4 regular season champs, ACC tourney champs, National Champs 37-4 overall Gil (@yogigil)- 27-5 reg season wins, portland tournament, reg season champs. National Champions Blake (@blakekcmo)- 28-4 ACC regular season champs, ACC tournament semi-finalist. National champion @HeelYes- Regular season 26-5, lose in the ACCT Championship game, win NCAAT Championship Dalton Owenby (@dalton_owenby)- 6 losses total………. 2023 ncaa champs Arina Cotuna (@arinacotuna)- Regular season… 26-5. ACCT champs and NCAA champs. Go heels! Chan (@chancollins40)- Hmmm ok I'm think 24-7 Steve Wolf Sr. (@stevewolf44)- 26-5. ACC League & Tourney Champs, Final4 NCAA Champs. Sarah (@unccat)- 25-6. ACCT and NCAA wins @Michael May (@mikemay23)- 24-7 regular season. Lose in finals of ACC tourney. National Champs. Margaret LaPlante (@maggs219)- I think we should win 27. Post season- Heels beat Dook in ACC tourney & Heels go to championship game and beat Baylor.  Go big or go home I guess William Clark (@williambclark3)- Carolina is going 27-4 during the regular season. I expect an ACC title (both regular and tournament) and Natty Champs!! Shaked (@letsgosportsguy)- Hi I will give you two prediction this time around worse case UNC win 22 games finish 3rd place in the ACC only make it to the Elite 8. The more likely thing that I believe will happen is for UNC to go 27-4 winning the ACC regular season title. Not making it to the ACC championship game since it's the UNC way

20 Minute Leaders
Ep922: Amit Shaked | CEO & Co-founder, Laminar

20 Minute Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2022 20:48


Amit is the CEO and co-founder of Laminar. Shaked served in Unit 8200 of the Israel Defense Forces, an Israeli Intelligence Corps unit focused on signal intelligence and code decryption, before co-founding Laminar. Shaked earned a master's degree in artificial intelligence and deep learning during his time in the military. After Unit 8200, Amit led deep learning, AI, and augmented reality teams for the unicorn Magic Leap. Amit holds a Master of Computer Science from Tel Aviv University.

Vision Magazine Podcasts
TNS 085: Who Are Ayelet Shaked's Potential Voters? (with Jeremy Sultan)

Vision Magazine Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2022 69:59


Can Ayelet Shaked convince voters to see past her involvement in the plutocratic Bennett-Lapid coalition? Jeremy Sultan - director of the Yamina Knesset faction & candidate on the Bayit Yehudi list for Knesset - joins Yehuda HaKohen to defend the outgoing coalition & discuss what sectors of Israeli society could potentially vote for Shaked in the upcoming elections. The two also discuss the potential motivations behind many of Binyamin Netanyahu's moves while serving as prime minister.

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing
The way the right's Krembo crumbles; a new ToI docuseries

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2022 17:05


Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Senior analyst Haviv Rettig Gur and special guests, filmmakers Natan Odenheimer and Eiv Kristal, join host Amanda Borschel-Dan on today's episode. With a multitude of politicians, from MKs Ayellet Shaked to Yoaz Hendel to Yisrael Beytenu head Avigdor Liberman anointing themselves as the embodiment of the right, Rettig Gur takes a stab at the burning question: Who actually represents the so-called "normal" right these days? The Times of Israel has just released the third installment of the Into The Land series with, “A Tale of Two Cities.” The 20-minute documentary is about Ramle and Lod, each mixed cities with about a fifth Arab Israeli residents. The film presents two very different models for Arab/Jewish coexistence in the aftermath of the riots of May 2021. We hear from filmmakers Natan Odenheimer and Eiv Kristal. And finally, the iconic Krembo dessert is set to get a price hike. Could this be the rallying cry for the next major cost of living protest? Discussed articles include: Shaked agrees to run as leader of Jewish Home, days after split with Zionist Spirit Zionist Spirit's Shaked and Hendel end their short-lived political partnership Under banner of ‘real secular right,' Yisrael Beytenu launches election slate Into the Land: A Tale of Two Cities Into the Land: Dead Sea Walking Into the Land: The Forgery Scandal Iconic Krembo among Unilever products set for price hike as consumer woes continue Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. Image: The production line of the 'Menbo,' the Feldman's Icecream factory's name for the sweet snack better known as 'Krembo' at the factory in Rehovot on October 27, 2015. (Hadas Parush/Flash90)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

20 Minute Leaders
Ep913: Ohad Shaked | Co-Founder & CEO, ThinkUp Founder, Thinkz

20 Minute Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2022 22:34


Ohad is an entrepreneur, currently running ThinkUp – a digital platform to support, enhance and accelerate other founders' journeys. Ohad Also founded Thinkz – a network for IoT devices. He ran his family office for the past 15 years, building on the success of his late father at 888.com.

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing
Will Zionist Spirit spark joy? Plus, Kharkiv: Near the front

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2022 18:46


Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Political correspondent Carrie Keller-Lynn and military correspondent Emanuel Fabian join host Anne Gordon on today's episode, with diplomatic correspondent Lazar Berman reporting in from Kharkiv, Ukraine. A new political party has emerged from the remnants of the old political parties, as the politicians jockey for strategic advantage in the November election. Keller-Lynn reports on "Zionist Spirit." Berman updates us about the Ukrainian town of Uman, site of an annual Orthodox Rosh Hashanah mass pilgrimage, and the refugees who have settled in, given the pilgrims' absence. But what will happen to them come September? He also describes the lay of the land in Kharkiv, Ukraine, 20 kilometers (nearly 12.5 miles) from the Russian front, and his own experience in a shelter, during several not-too-distant explosions. Fabian explains why the IDF was briefing foreign press on the locations of Hamas weapons stockpiles and the like, and why it will continue to do so. Discussed articles include: Beleaguered right-wing leaders Shaked and Hendel unite as Zionist Spirit party With pilgrims coming, Uman's ‘miracle' refugee shelters will be forced to clear out Uman's mayor to ToI: We don't have enough shelters, can't guarantee pilgrims' safety IDF exposes ‘Hamas sites' in Gaza civilian areas, in bid to explain future strikes Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. IMAGE: Times of Israel diplomatic correspondent Lazar Berman, on location in Kharkiv, Ukraine, in the wake of an attack by Russian artillery, on July 27, 2022. (Lazar Berman)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing
Election primaries primer; looming Palestinian evictions

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2022 18:40


Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Political correspondent Carrie Keller Lynn and Palestinian affairs correspondent Aaron Boxerman join host Amanda Borschel-Dan on today's episode. Newly minted Yamina party head Ayelet Shaked has called for a “broad national government” in her first real statement these elections. What does she mean by that? Next, we talk primaries and hear updates on most of Israel's major parties, including the Arab parties currently in the Knesset. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas head Ismael Haniyeh met for the first time since 2016. What was the impetus of their meet-up? A high court decision in May gave the IDF the green light to evict up to 2000 Palestinians in the south Hebron Hills. Boxerman lays out the background. Discussed articles include: Shaked calls for ‘broad national government' in 1st statement on elections Meretz leadership in play as Golan enters race against Horowitz As Likud primaries near, final date and procedures still in the air PA leader Abbas, Hamas's Haniyeh hold first face-to-face meeting in years in Algeria Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. Illustrative image: A polling station for people that is under quarantine because of the Covid-19 in Jerusalem, during the Knesset Elections, on March 23, 2021. (Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing
Rebels, kingmakers & unlikely reunions as coalition unravels

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2022 18:12


Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday. Hi everyone, welcome to the Daily Briefing. Today is Thursday June 23. I'm Amanda Political correspondent Carrie Keller-Lynn and Palestinian affairs correspondent Aaron Boxerman join host Amanda Borschel-Dan on today's episode. Keller-Lynn gives us a picture of the mood at the Knesset. Where do things stand now with the bills to dissolve the coalition? We talk about the sliding-doors possibility of former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu forming a coalition in the current Knesset without going to elections. Who's in and who's out? Boxerman speaks about how voter turnout among Arab Israelis is expected to be low and how this may affect future coalitions. Also, what do you know about a re-unified Joint List with Ra'am? We address the “trouble-making rebel” MKs. What are we hearing about their political futures? And finally, Borschel-Dan speaks about what is to date, one of the oldest known mosques in the world, which was excavated in the Negev Bedouin city of Rahat. Discussed articles include: Knesset passes initial vote to disperse, setting Israel on path to elections Yamina rebel seeks to slow Knesset's end, to allow more time to form alternate gov't In improbable gambit, Shaked willing to join Netanyahu-led gov't in current Knesset One of the oldest known mosques in the world uncovered in Negev Bedouin city Rahat Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. Illustrative image: Former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks with then Israeli minister of justice Ayelet Shaked (L) during a vote at the assembly hall of the Israeli parliament on December 21, 2016. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.