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British Formula One racing driver

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Greyhound Nation
Charlie Blanning and Sir Mark Prescott: Coursing Characters We Have Loved or Not Loved

Greyhound Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2024 75:19


Episode 47: Recorded December 22, 2024 "With the loss of any sport or pastime, it's the people you miss in the end…" Sir Mark Prescott on the people he met over four decades of coursing Show Notes Every sport has its share of characters — the people that influenced and shaped the sport, for better or worse. Babe Ruth. Lester Piggot. Hank Aaron. Sterling Moss. Michael Jordan. Caitlin Clark. Eric Liddell. David Beckham. Mike Krzyzewski. Bobby Knight. Billie Jean King. Depending on your perspective, these names can elicit a variety of emotions and memories of your favorite sport. The world of Greyhound coursing has its own cavalcade of characters who left their own mark or legacy on the sport. Historical figures like Colonel North and Edward Dent influenced the glory days of the sport. Lord Sefton, while influential, left artifacts and records of the Waterloo Cup to be burned and abandoned after his passing. Then there are the memorable judges, owners and trainers that left their mark on the sport of coursing. Jack Chadwick judged meetings from atop a horse with a permanently outstretched leg. Owner Lilah Shennen delivered both criticism and support of the sport and its organizers over the years. Harry Skinner made contributions to the sport in the design of the fields and courses to be run. In this episode, host John Parker sits down with his own favorite coursing characters — Charlie Blanning and Sir Mark Prescott — to talk about the larger community of coursing's beloved and not so beloved. Their discussion covers the gamut of historical figures to coursing's contemporaries right up until the last Waterloo Cup. Links The Greyhound and the Hare (Facebook) Heath House Stables (Website) Dedication This episode is dedicated to Michael's Greyhound, Raleigh (fka Mr. Bates), 3/2/2016 - 12/13/2024. Raleigh was one of ten puppies in the Dublin and Kell's Casino litter from 2016. This was a hobby bred litter courtesy of John Parker. If you'd like to learn more about Greyhound hobby breeding, listen to our fifth episode -- the Hobby Breeder Roundtable.

The Daily Quiz Show
Sports and Leisure | Which of these is a soccer team based in Portland? (+ 7 more...)

The Daily Quiz Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2024 8:05


The Daily Quiz - Sports and Leisure Today's Questions: Question 1: Which of these is a soccer team based in Portland? Question 2: What term is used to describe the cards in a deck that have either a Jack, Queen, or King on the card? Question 3: Which of these is a baseball team based in Toronto? Question 4: In 1958 a plane carrying Manchester United home from a match in Belgrade crash during take-off at which city's Airport? Question 5: With which sport is Sterling Moss associated? Question 6: Which of these is a soccer team based in Atlanta? Question 7: Which of these is a hockey team based in Seattle? Question 8: Alan Shearer was the first player to score 200 Premiership goals. Who was the second? This podcast is produced by Klassic Studios Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Market Call Show
The Fear and Greed Index-Discussion with Jason Meshnick | Ep90

The Market Call Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2024 86:34


  In this episode of the Market Call show, I sit down with Jason Meshnick, a market maker turned fintech pioneer whose intriguing career journey has taken him from the bustling trading floors of the early 2000s to the cutting edge of AI in finance. Jason recounts his winding path from a philosophy major in small-town Poughkeepsie, New York, to becoming a Wall Street trader and, later, a leader in tech for trading. We explore his transition to automated trading as floors shifted online trader jobs contracted and his move into roles in finance education and media. Jason offers a captivating look into the evolution of markets and trading strategies, from the dynamics of floor versus electronic exchanges to analyzing sentiment shifts through media platforms and tools like CNN's iconic Fear and Greed Index, which he helped develop. Across various sectors of finance, Jason's experiences highlight the human element alongside technical progress.   SHOW HIGHLIGHTS Jason Meshnick talks about his transition from being a market maker on Wall Street to becoming a fintech expert. We discuss the changes in trading desks from the early 2000s to the present, emphasizing the shift towards automation and a reduced number of traders. Jason describes his unconventional career path, moving from a philosophy major to a Wall Street trader, and his eventual move into fintech. Jason shares insights into the development of CNN's Fear and Greed Index, including the collaborative efforts and practical constraints faced during its creation. We explore the shift from floor trading to electronic markets and how enduring principles of market trading continue to influence career paths in finance. Jason recounts his personal and professional journey, including his move to Boulder, Colorado, and his involvement with the CFA Society. We dive into the intricacies of building decision trees for financial data analysis, comparing their transparency and reliability to large language models. Jason reflects on his editorial role at TheStreet.com and the importance of market sentiment analysis in shaping financial media platforms. We discuss the role of experience and a deep understanding of market nuances in successful investment strategies. Jason explains the seven indicators used in CNN's Fear and Greed Index and how this tool helps both sophisticated and retail investors make informed decisions.   PLUS: Whenever you're ready... here are three ways I can help you prepare for retirement:  1.  Listen to the Market Call Show Podcast or Watch on Youtube One of my favorite things to do is to talk with smart people about investing, financial planning, and how to live a full life.  I share this on my podcast the Market Call Show.  To watch on Youtube  – Click here   2.  Read the Financial Freedom Blueprint:  7 Steps to Accelerate Your Path to Prosperity If you're ready to accelerate your path to prosperity, the Financial Freedom Blueprint lays out a proven system for planning and investing to secure your financial independence. You can get a personalized signed hardcover copy – Click here 3.  Work with me one-on-one If you would like to talk with me about planning and investing for your future. – Click here TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors)   Louis: Jason Meshnick how are you? Jason: I'm doing great, Lewis. It's so great to see you. Louis: I know I'm so glad to finally have you on the podcast. You know, just knowing you for so many years and you know, knowing that you have so much knowledge out there with regard to investing and just your overall creativity, I had to have you on and I'm so glad that you came on. Jason: Well, and one thing as you know from from our relationship, I've always gotten so much out of talking to you and I always learn something just through our conversations, and I feel like by the time this podcast is over, I will have five new ideas to to go after and try to figure out what to do, how to make them all reality oh god, I hope so, I hope so. Louis: it's all about the ideas you know exactly. It was funny. I asked you to send me a send me your bio and I've known you for a long time and we met years and years ago at a CFA meeting I think we were both on a board for the CFA Colorado or Denver chapter and and since then we've worked together in many capacities. But I didn't know a lot of things about you that I should have known just reading your bio. I knew that you spent 20 years in the fintech world and I didn't know that you were also working on some AI investment analysis, which I'd like to learn more about, and that you really have a lot of passion for educating. And I guess your coworkers asked you to write a newsletter. I had no idea about that and you know now what is this about. Vampires are rich. Why are vampires so rich? Jason: That was one of my favorite things that I wrote. Yeah, if you want to cover that now, we can, or we can talk later. Louis: I think we'll circle back to that, but I was a little what's that about. But yeah, and now you're doing some teaching at CU Boulder, teaching finance. We've done a little bit of lecturing together at the university level DU and things like that and I've always enjoyed watching you teach because you seem to captivate the kids. Well, they're not kids, they're young adults with your style. So I'd like to learn a little bit more about what you're doing there. And you are a Wall Street trader and market maker and there's a lot of things that you know about microstructure and investor psychology that I want to kind of touch on too. So, but the big thing is understanding that you were involved with the CNN, that popular feed and fear and greed index back in 2012, I guess that was put together. So I don't know. Maybe what we could do is talk a little bit about your background. I mean, I kind of covered it a little bit, but just maybe you can tell me a little bit about you know, share with the audience, your you know how you got in this business and kind of what's been your progression in this business. Jason: Yeah, so my guess is that everybody says this, but I came to it from a slightly different path, not that not that, you know, I didn't get out of college and immediately go to Wall Street, that's. That's a pretty normal path, right? But I was a philosophy major and I'm far from a philosopher. But I think what I took away from my undergrad as a philosophy major was just sort of a way of thinking, right, as opposed to being sort of a business person thinking only about money, it's more about thinking about other kinds of things and things that drive people and being able to draw from communication and trying to understand what people think and how they think and why they think, and I think it was one of the things that really fascinated me. Also, being a child of the 80s, you know Wall Street was so important. There's so many movies about it, right from from the Wall Street movie to I don't know. It seemed like every other movie that came out was about how to make millions of dollars on Wall Street, and so, of course, I wanted to be part of that. Having grown up in sort of a backwater, poughkeepsie, new York, I always wanted to go live in the big city, yeah, so that was sort of my start, was coming at it from kind of a weird direction and I ended up immediately going to work for well, a firm that no longer exists for a couple of reasons, but it was the trading arm of a New York specialist firm. So the specialists were downstairs on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange and my boss was one of their customers and he just worked upstairs in their clearing division and he was trading his own money. He had been a floor broker for 20 years, owned two seats, sold his seats, did pretty well on them, and then decided that he was just going to live the rest of his life as a trader. He brought his son in and then eventually I was working as a runner so you know fourteen thousand dollars a year and just wanted exposure, just wanted to be part of the action. Right, I love the action. I was so excited about just being there, the history I love the history of things. Um, I probably should have been a history major and so, just being in that environment, I ended up getting picked up because I was. I was pretty cheap, right, so they didn't have to pay me much and I ended up working and really falling in love with being a trader and learning about how the market worked and how floor brokers could help make these trades. We had a network of 20 floor brokers across the New York Stock Exchange and what was then called the Amex, and some of the regional exchanges too, so that we could trade and we'd strategize every morning and then make our buy and sell decisions and then, throughout the day, update them as needed. I'd like to say that we were the high frequency traders of the time, even though our frequency wasn't that fast, but we were sitting on both sides of the bid and the offer. Louis: Boy. Jason: times have changed, huh offer Boy times have changed huh yeah, I mean that's yeah, I like to say. When I, when I started in the business, there were people there who'd been on the floor in 1929. And so much of the floor of the New York Stock Exchange looked the same as it did in 19,. You know, if you, if you were to go, take Jesse Livermore and drop him, you know from 1929 and just drop him on the floor in 1992 when I started, he'd have been like I don't know what these TV things are that are all around. He wouldn't have even had that word, but otherwise he'd have been able to run into a crowd and know exactly what to do. And by the time I left in 2002, well, there wasn't even a crowd, right? I mean, everything was different about the floor of the exchange. I was a market maker on a fully electronic stock exchange, so the principles were all the same, but everything else had changed. It was so different. Louis: Oh, that's a big part of what I wanted to talk to you about that the principles are all the same. So, because I was just listening back to some of our, or looking back at some of our conversations just to prepare for this, and we've had a lot of conversations in the past where you were really outlining like I want to capture what I saw, those principles that I saw on the floor, and I want to capture them today and that's kind of driven a lot of things that you've done. So maybe maybe you can tell me like just a handful of what those principles are that you've noticed are like still the same now that probably will never change. Jason: Well, so I'll caveat this by saying I've been out of the markets for a number of years, right, so I left, I left trading in 2002. And then I was still, you know, still kind of a pretty active trader, investor for the next 10 years or so. But then life gets in the way and I'm just very busy, and so I've sort of shifted my focus in a number of ways and I'm honestly really interested in analysis now and thinking about market sentiment and what investors are doing and how investors think about the market. And I now, when I trade, it's opportunistically right, I'm not in there every day, I'm not trying to make eighths or even pennies. Louis: I guess we should probably. Oh, I'm sorry to interrupt you there. Jason: Go ahead. Louis: I was just gonna say I guess we should probably back up a little bit and talk a little bit about, like more about your career progression, because you moved into from trading into fintech and, and from fintech now to working at the streetcom for and as an editor, so, and which to me makes a hundred percent sense. Um, just from what I know from your talent, your talent stack, so maybe you can kind of finish that progression a little bit. So, to where you are now, yeah, sorry, yeah, totally. Jason: So my progression is really. I mean, there's there's a couple things that run through the entire thing and I think a big part of it is analysis and being excited about, about thinking about the markets right, about being being in some ways just part of the culture of it right. So that's been the big thing that's run through my entire career. But in 2002, my wife and I we weren't married at the time we were thinking about you know where will we end up, and we decided that we either end up in New Jersey or we could move somewhere that we wanted to live. So we did a search all around the country and decided we just sort of threw a dart at the at the wall and said Colorado seems pretty nice. So we ended up here in Colorado and it's been the best move. Louis: Man, that was a lucky dart throw. If you ask me, it's a lucky dart throw, I think. Jason: I think it was guided by my wife's hand. She may have said I'll take that dart and I'm going to place it right here just at the foot of the Rocky Mountains. So she'd been out here and visited and said Boulder is going to be the place where Jason will be happy and we'll make this happen. And so we moved out here without jobs. I quit my job as a market maker in June of 2002. And the market was changing so much at that time it was definitely becoming harder to make money, and so I was ready for a change. I was ready to do something different. You know, when I left, there were 10 traders on my desk and probably another 30, 20, 30 on our over-the-counter desk. And when I went back, seven or eight years later and I'll get to this, but when, when I was working in FinTech and I went back, visited my old trading desk, there were three people and a really large computer and, rather than taking directional bets on the market, they were doing arbitrage. And they were. They were, they were working the order flow and they were figuring out, based on the order flow, how long or short they were going to be. You know, sort of using quantitative methods to understand. If they felt the market was going up and they were going to end up being more short and more short, they would have to think about the Delta to the market and try to get long ahead of those people so they could be selling to them. So it became in some ways probably a much more intellectually engaging thing than just sitting saying, oh someone just sold me 1,000 shares, I have to get out of it now. You were thinking ahead of the market. In many ways it was really cool. I probably would have liked it a lot, but it just became a really different animal. It was much more arbitrage as opposed to directional trading, which is really what I knew. So we moved to Colorado without jobs and in doing that that's when I met you, lewis is. I was pretty engaged with the CFA Society despite not having a CFA I'll throw that out there. I'd also just finished my MBA at NYU. That counts. So, I think they let me in, but that was about it, and they let me even onto the board. Louis: Yeah, yeah, you're a very likable guy, so it was a pretty easy decision. They're like he doesn't have a CFA, but he's a pretty cool guy. We'll let him in anyway. Jason: I think he also said this is a guy that we can make do all the all the programming. We can make him call all the all the people that we don't want to call and try to organize meetings. And they thought I was an event planner, which it turns out I'm not. I'm just not a good event planner. My wife can tell you that Actually, lois, you did kind of the same. We were organizing all the CMT meetings. Louis: Oh yeah. Jason: Like, yeah, yeah, yeah, let's, let's go call some people, um, yeah, but so so it took a while and I ended up finding this job here in boulder, uh, for a company called wall street on demand and for those who are not familiar with wall street on demand, it has a new name um, it became market, uh, no, became wall street on. It was wall street on demand. Then it became market on demand once I, once market bought us and then eventually it became market on demand once market bought us, and then eventually it became market digital, when they decided that it was really time to think more broadly than just web and think broadly across all digital formats video, et cetera, and advertising. And I stayed there for 19 years. Where, louis, you touched on the AI side of what I did and so this is one of my big jokes is that I like to say that I was the world's most widely read analyst, if not the best, and the reason why I say that is because over the 19 years that I was at that company, I built something like I don't know 200 different. I call them only because of today's terminology and the way that people talk about markets now, about technology now. I call these AI related, and they really are simple. They're very much rules-based AI, so sort of traditional AI, not these large language models that we have now that are in some ways more sophisticated but really not as good. So what I was building were these big decision trees, and these decision trees were things where you would, using your financial knowledge, you would say, okay, I'm looking at some financial data around a company. What do we need to know? Well, let's start with the valuation. Is the stock what's the PE ratio? Is it a high PE ratio or a low PE ratio? How do you define a high PE ratio? Is a high PE compared to its average for the last five years, or is it the highest in its industry? Right, you can look at things cross-sectionally or historically, right, but both ways time-based or versus peers, and so we would do things like that and we would chop up the market and try to understand. You know which stocks were good or bad, but it wasn't necessarily for an investment perspective, right? This was because what we were doing was for the Schwab's and TD Ameritrade's and all those companies. We were building the news and research portions of their website, and so I and my team were providing that research, and so a lot of the texts that you would see on that site was completely dynamically generated. So, very simple, rules-based AI. And I say it's better than large language models for AI, because large language models you never really know what you're going to get. It's a bit of a black box, right. So what we could do is I would create text that was locked down. I knew exactly what it was going to say. I didn't know what the data was that was going into it, right, I didn't know if Apple had a high PE ratio or a low PE ratio, but I had rules around defining what was high and low. And so when I would go to the compliance departments at Schwab or TD Ameritrade or Fidelity, et cetera we worked with all the US brokers, many of the Canadian brokers, australia, others I would go to the compliance departments and they would say, well, how do I know that you're not going to say something silly or that's incorrect? And I said, well, I'm going to give you the entire decision tree and you're going to be able to look at the decision tree and understand what it says. So the only way that my model can be wrong is if I have a bug and there are bugs all over the internet, so I'm as fallible as anybody else, but we're going to do our best not to have those. And then, secondly, if the data is wrong and if the data is wrong, well it's wrong all over the website too, and we're going to fix that. But generally, 99.9% of the time, for 99.9% of the stocks, what we say is going to be accurate. It's going to be correct, it is going to be as unbiased as possible, because I'm not trying to tell you, as a value investor or growth investor or whatever, what you should do. I'm just trying to describe the various aspects of the stock. I wasn't there to give you a buy, sell hold recommendation. I was purely there to help you, as a self-directed investor, understand more about the stock, about the company. You know you brought up something that's really interesting about that. Louis: I mean, I have to. You know you're talking about large language models and it's a little bit of a black box. We don't really quite know, and you're dealing with these big decision trees, or you were at that time and it was traceable, like you could trace the logic which made me think, okay, we have data and the data can be right or wrong, and then you have the logic, and the logic can be right or wrong. And I think that's one of the things that I always have a little. I'm having a little bit of an issue with with some of the AI is the logic element of it, because you like how much of it is curve, fitting what is real behind it, so we could use it. I had a tech executive tell me one time that the big thing with AI is it can help us with speed and it can help us with accuracy if we use it correctly. But it's not necessarily like you still need human thought. You still need that ultimate human element to it. That's my personal opinion on that. But the fact that you were using decision trees early on, you know that and just to get information, that way you were speeding the process for the investor, basically. Jason: Right. Louis: Like they would spend a lot of time looking for all those things. But you systematically sped it up, which is a a big thing for and we and we all have that now that's and it's, there's just like different flavors of it, um, so, uh, it's, it's that whole. It's a whole. Nother topic we can get into a little bit later. But I, I, uh, I remember you talking about that when you were doing working on those projects, um, wondering where it would go next. Um, you know, as far as that goes, but getting back to your, getting back to your, your story, let's get back to your story. Yeah, sorry, keep getting off track. Yeah, that's okay, yeah. Jason: So while I was at that job I did, I did a number of things. I mean it was really, it was really an exciting job in so many ways. But the two big things that I did were really this you know, running the natural language generation product right. This thing we called it smart text, um, and so that's that ai thing. But then the other thing that I was so excited about was doing education right and and our. So this started back in 2006 or 7, um, I started doing brown bag lunches where I would just put together a presentation and teach our developers and designers and engineers all about everything they needed to know about investing, not so they could go out and make a million dollars, but rather so that when they were building the tools that we were all using, they understood their subject matter right, that they could be engaged with the topic and identify with the end user and really understand why a PE ratio mattered or why a chart mattered. Simple thing, like in design, you'll notice that there's a lot of white space on many pages and they talk about that as being good design. It's actually a really bad design for investors and the reason is well, depending on the type of investors, but for slightly more active investors, engaged investors, what they want is information dense things, and so I would help steer our design team to create things that were a little bit more information dense, an example being a chart, a price chart. You don't want to have to scroll up and down too much to be able to read your price chart on your Schwab account. You want to be able to type in NVIDIA and load up a couple of indicators that you want to see. Put your MACD on and then MACD is a lower indicator, maybe an RSI, maybe whatever Put those things on there and be able to, in one view, understand the trend, momentum, volume and volatility from that stock right. That was another thing that we did when we rebuilt Schwab's charts. I'm kind of proud to say that Yahoo actually stole this, but we broke the indicators out. Previous big charts started this. They said indicators are either separated out as upper indicators or lower indicators, and that doesn't tell you anything, and I'll credit John Bollinger. I learned all this from him is really you know, people should understand what goes into the indicators. They should understand as much of the calculation as possible, right, what the inputs are and what it's giving, what information it's giving you, right, and then separate those out into different sort of you know I'm using the term factors very loosely but into the different factors of technical analysis. So, is it trend, is it momentum-based, is it volume, volatility you can come up with others as well but, right, where does it fit? And if you're looking, if you put a bunch of indicators on a chart and it turns out that they're all trend indicators, well, you really have one indicator and so you're not getting a full picture. So go put some momentum indicators on there to understand the speed and whether the trend is about to be exhausted or not. So it's things like that that I really wanted to help both the end user of our products as well as the the, the person who was building the products, understand so. So I ended up writing for about three or four years. So we started that in 2007, but it was. They asked me to put it on hold after a while cause it was taking away from a lot of my work. And then, in 2018, our CEO came to me and she said you know, you used to do this, these brown bag lunches. I would really like it if you would just write. Just write a newsletter for the whole company. The question of the week, so Fridays. I'd ask the question, and it might be how many? How many stocks are there in the S&P 500? And I haven't looked at the number recently, but I think the number is still 501, right, it might even be higher, but there's only 500 companies in the S&P 500. And so that's the distinction. There's 500 companies, but some companies have multiple classes of stock that may be in the S&P. It might be 505 now I can't remember. I have not looked in a long time, but that was effectively the answer, and so it became just a really fun thing to write the answer, and so it became just a really fun thing to write. Yeah, so teaching people about vampires right, became a way of telling them. Why are vampires so rich? It's simple They've been investing for hundreds of years and so they've had time to let their money compound. Assuming that Vlad the Impaler, the first vampire, he was a prince. Let's just put a number on that $10,000 in today's money. What does $10,000 grow to over 500 years? It grows to trillions of dollars. And then, if you spend 1% of that every year, how much money are vampires spending? Today, vampires are spending billions of dollars. Vampires are probably supporting our economy. Louis: They've got to be the richest people in the world. It's like puts vampires, yeah yeah, it puts elon musk to shame, I mean really so maybe elon's a vampire yeah, you never know, maybe a little similar, I don't know. That's that's wild. Well, um, so you have this creative side to you. That's that's driven that. And then how did you get um, like, was it just a natural progression for you to do what you're doing now? Jason: or maybe you should tell us a little bit about what you're doing now yeah, so so let's get to what I'm doing now, because that's important and I know that, um, they'll be watching this and they'll they'll kill me if I don't talk about what I'm doing now, because they also really like it. Um, I'm having a lot of fun. So, you know, you go through ups and downs in your career and I definitely there were times when I absolutely loved trading and absolutely hated, and that might be the same day. I might love and hate trading. Louis: In. Jason: FinTech it was. I might love a year and hate the next year and, you know, love the next year for that. It was project to project and here you know right now what we're doing. So I work for I'm currently the managing editor of the street pro and so so you are probably familiar with the street. Jim Cramer founded it back in I don't know 1997 or 1998. It was really the first, the first and best of its type where you could come and get financial news and information. And then, not long after they started the street, they brought, they created something called real money where they brought in people like Helene Meisler and and Doug Cass and they would create something that was more of a subscription product but more of a newsletter, newsletter product where Helene would write top stocks is what it became and Helene would write her brand of you know market sentiment analysis and it was really great. And Jim Cramer left about two years ago and I've never met Cramer. I've heard him speak before but I don't know Cramer, don't know a lot about him. But I'll say this is a business that was 25 years old or is 25 years old now, and it's going through a lot of change. So we're trying to figure out what will it look like in the future. And one of the big things I love this I quote it all the time but Barry Ritholtz was one of our. I believe he was a street contributor at one point. Barry Ritholtz has gone on to become a Bloomberg contributor and have his own money management firm, but earlier in his career, I'd say, he made his name at the street, as did a lot of people, and so he calls the street the Motown of Finance and he says that the Jim Cramer was sort of this I think the name is Barry Gordy character who you know sort of larger than life in many ways, and he brought people in, brought people in and he made them stars right, and so we did the same thing, or he did that at the street, and so we're in the process now of trying to do that again. We have great contributors. They're all wonderful and they provide really great perspectives on the market, and sometimes they disagree and sometimes they agree. I asked a few of them to write about GameStop recently and it was really great to see the kinds of things that I got. But we want to get back and we want to make these people, we want to make our contributors, who are such great analysts, stars again, right. So we're trying to change a lot of things that we do in the business. In the past it was really Jim Cramer. The last five years, I'd say, jim Cramer became our number one star. I want Helene and Doug and Sarge and Rev Shark and I could go through the whole list Chris Versace I want them all to be stars too, and they want to be stars and they are because they're so good. So we're working at how we can do that, how we can elevate the content, not just to make the contributor stars, but really to showcase how good they are as we go and help more investors to be self-directed investors, be more successful in their trading and investing. And I say we have two different types of products, really Our value add. If you are a trader, a self-directed trader, you might spend your time on Doug Cass's community, right? So Doug has his daily diary. Doug's a hedge fund manager. He's out there from three o'clock in the morning. He's sending us stuff. It's crazy. The editors have to be there editing and putting it up from. They start at 5.30. So the editors are in there at 5.30 in the morning putting Doug's ideas up all the way through the end of the trading day, and then in the lower half of that page is a community where we have many, many people from the community, some of which I won't say any of their names, but some of which are fairly big names in finance and investing. We know who they are. On the site they really the community ends up feeding on itself and providing great ideas just among each other. There's one guy who talks a lot about cryptocurrencies. We don't have a lot of cryptocurrency content on the site. We're working, we're going to be adding some, but this one person alone actually provides some of the best crypto content I've ever written, and he's paying us right now, at least for now us right now, at least for now. And so the other products that we have. We have where you can get trading ideas or investing ideas. We have some people who are a little bit more technical focused, some who are more fundamental focused. We have one person who does really well providing dividend ideas. Another person is really great at more fundamental, value-based ideas, but then we have a whole portfolio. You can come to us and we have Chris Versace runs our pro portfolio, where we help investors understand not only how to put together a portfolio and they can just copy this entire portfolio but, the thing I love about it most, every week Chris writes a weekly update talking about what he sees in the market, what's coming up, economic things that are happening. But then he goes through all 30 holdings. He tells you the investment thesis you know I'm big on the investment thesis, lewis right, you should have a thesis, you should know why you're investing something and you should update it frequently. Right, chris updates the investment thesis every week. And then he tells you what his target price is and his panic point, his stop right, where he's going to realize that his thesis is incorrect and he's going to re-evaluate, probably sell the position. And then he just goes through and gives you sort of a weekly update and says, yeah, here's what happened in NVIDIA. Jensen Wan was out doing whatever he did. He spoke to these people. So that's what we're doing and the product is great and we're, you know, really excited. Now we have a lot of energy around what we're doing and how we're, how we're rebuilding, um, building I keep saying rebuilding like really we're taking what we had, which was a solid product, and we're just building off of it. We have, uh, later this month this will be the first time I've kind of mentioned this Um month this will be the first time I've kind of mentioned this Our marketing team doesn't even know but later this month we're doing a roundup, or we're actually calling it the quarterly call. So this will be the end of every quarter. Now we're going to have four of our contributors come on and really just talk about what they see in the market and have kind of a little panel discussion, and so that'll be really exciting, but it's things like that that we want to do. Louis: Yeah, it's good to hear the actual real time discussion, you know, because you get more color about it. But I love what you said about the Motown or the. Who is it? Who said a Barry Ritholtz? Jason: Barry Ritholtz. Louis: Yeah, I said that. I mean I thought I had so many like visions in my head because, you know, I'm a musician too and I I'm thinking about motown. I fell in love with motown as a young kid. My parents listened to it and the first thing that I thought about was that these, a lot of these people that were, uh, involved in motown, they were, they were completely isolated from the music industry. So so you know, you can find a lot of talent outside of, people that are like right in the mainstream of the music and of the Wall Street, kind of normative Wall Street. I mean you have to do something different really to be unique like that. And sometimes I think groupthink hurts Wall Street. In fact, I was just telling my wife this morning. I got out of the shower and I said you know what, in a way, wall Street is kind of like not even a thing anymore. Like you know, it's like I don't even think of Wall Street anymore as Wall Street. I mean last time I was there it didn't even seem like Wall Street to me. I mean it's still, it's still a thing mentally, but it's not. It's like I really think it's time for Motown. Jason: I think you guys are right in the thick of what we should be doing, because there's so many great thinkers that I run into who are not anywhere near the center of Wall Street, quote, unquote. So that's, yeah, one of the things I really want to steal comes from Chicago. So Morningstar in their quant reports. So if you have a Schwab account or any of these, they pretty much all have Morningstar's reports. These aren't the quant reports, I'm sorry, it's actually the ones that are handwritten by analysts, but on page I don't know two or three they have a module that says bulls say and bears say and they go through the bullish case of a stock and the bearish case of a stock, and that's something that I want to institute everywhere. Everybody should be with everything right. You talk politics, you should have a. You know what are the positives, what are the negatives. Whoever your candidate is doesn't matter. They have positive, they have negatives, that's right. You know your friends have positive, negatives. Like everything has a positive and a negative, and you have to look at both sides of the story, especially they say you shouldn't marry your investments Right. Know what the downsides are, Know what the risks are with everything you do. Louis: Wow, there's a lot there we could go into. Jason: I know yeah, as far as the no, no, not politics. Believe me, I mean we're staying away from politics. Louis: Yeah, we're staying away from that. You know, it's more like the I keep thinking of the narrative versus the numbers debate. I always say that I'm more interested in the numbers than the narrative. Like I start with the numbers and then go for the narrative and I think the older I get and the more I've seen, the more I realize that it's not the narrative necessarily, it's just understanding as much as you possibly can about what is true. It's hard to do and so much of investing is qualitative. You know, I mean you know my background. I do a lot of quant factor stuff and all that and that's really helpful in kind of keeping you honest. But at the end of the day, when I look at the stocks that have done really, really well for me, or macro trades like futures type oriented trades, it's been because I had some piece of knowledge and understanding about something that I just knew with a high conviction that was true and I stayed with it and it made a lot of money. So that is really hard. I don't think the quant sometimes leads you there, but it may not necessarily. It's not usually the end, like the end all be all, and a lot of times if you look at the best quantitative stuff it tends to turn over a ton. Right, it's like like momentum. Well, you know, you could say like, okay, I'm going to run momentum screens on stocks and the best parameter set is going to be me like turning over quite a bit. But then after tax and reality in the real world, you're really not making that as much as you would think, whereas you might find something that's gaining momentum that no one's talking about, like I bought not to talk about. I shouldn't talk about specific names right now, but there's a particular stock that I bought where I understood what was happening. It did come up in a momentum screen. It was a very small company at the time and then it just went ballistic. That now did I know it was going to ballistic? No, not to that degree. You know, I didn't think it was going to go up. You know 500% in, you know three months. But it's one of those things where you, if you know something, there's so much more to the narrative, so you go into the Motown aspect of things. There's value in that. We, we numbers are becoming a commodity, almost right. Everybody can get all these numbers and we can, we can move things around. Anybody can go on chat, gpt and, you know, pull, you know I get certain things. So I, you know, I don't know I'm becoming more of a qualitative guy the older I get. Is that that's weird? Jason: I have a theory on that. Let me know what you think. But I think that you are able to become a qualitative guy now because you have been a quantitative guy for so long and so because everything that you do there's, you know, there's a famous saying, it comes from consulting. I think you can't manage what you can't measure, and so everything that you've done as a quantitative person has been to measure, even when you run that quant screen and you get a list of stocks and you know that this list of stocks is going to turn over at the same time. You probably know well, this is going to turn over. But let's pick on NVIDIA. Nvidia is on the list right now and, because of these other things that I know through my experience, nvidia may come off in two weeks, but it's probably going to come back on in a month. I should just hold it Right, yeah, and so I think that you've spent so much time in the markets and it comes down to the word is experience. Right and that's why you hire a financial advisor. Or you hire, or you take a subscription to the Street Pro, or you want to get the experience of other people, especially as you're learning. Louis: Yeah, yeah. Jason: So now you can be. I was just going to say one thing. One thing is you can be sort of a core satellite where you can take your core investing, and maybe you want to be self-directed and buy a portfolio of ETFs, or you want to give that money to your financial advisor, give it to you, lewis, and then, with sort of the satellite funds, play money or whatever. You use your own experience Maybe it's in your own industry or whatever it is. You're trying to add that extra bit of alpha right and have fun maybe, but but keep yourself intellectually engaged. You have, you know, sort of the core of your portfolio over here and then kind of the rest of it where you can do things with as well. Louis: Yeah, I totally, I totally agree with that. So you know, this is just kind of getting me into this the fear and greed concept. You know you got involved with the fear and greed. I'm not, I'd like to hear the story about how you got involved in and what you, what you did in that. But when I think about the fear and greed index, I always think about that fish that's in the bowl and doesn't realize that he's in water and but you know, but if he steps outside and looks at he's like wow, I'm in water, right. That's kind of what sentiment is to me. It's like we're part of the sentiment, like we are, we're the observer. It's like the Heisenberg principle, like what we look at, we change, right, and that's sentiment, and fear and greed is kind of like a great overall, you know, easy to understand way of looking at that. But I guess I want to let's start off with your story, like how did you get into the fear and? Jason: greed project and what, what. What was your progression through that? So yeah, I mean, after coming from Wall Street, I'll tell a really quick story because I think this it's in it's in the article that I wrote too. But this story is a story from business school and I can't remember if the numbers are correct, but they're approximately correct and the timing is approximately correct. I was in business school, part-time, at night. I was working as a market maker during the day and then at night I was at NYU taking a class and this class was a valuation class and they asked us we had to come up with, we had to do a discounted cashflow analysis of a stock, and each group got to select whatever stock they wanted and I proposed to my group let's pick JDS Uniphase, because it was one of. It was the NVIDIA of its day. Oh yeah, hopefully NVIDIA will have a better future than JDSU did. But my group was all they said absolutely, let's do that one. And the stock was trading at I don't remember exactly, but probably about $165. Okay, and so we sit down and we do our analysis and we're doing discounted cashflow analysis and one of the big inputs to DCF is understanding the growth metrics right and forecasting growth. And forecasting growth means looking back historically, figuring out how fast the company has been growing and just saying you know, is it going to speed up or is it going to slow down? Eventually they all slow down. It will slow down, but you have to figure out how long that's going to take. So we did the analysis and we figured out it would slow down, I don't know, over 10 years or something. Something pretty reasonable, probably pretty generous as well, and we came up with a value Again. Remember the stock's trading at $165. We came up with a value of $2.25. And we looked at it and we said can't be, can't be. We learned in our last class the market's efficient, this is all wrong. I don't know. We did something wrong and so we went back and we now this time we went crazy. We're like this stock's going to speed up its growth. It's going to, instead of growing at 50% per year like it has been, it's going to grow at 100% forever. And we came up with a value of $225, right, and so the stock gets added to the S&P or maybe it was when they confirmed that it would be and the stock jumps to $225. It jumps to $235, I think was the high I sell my stock at like $225. Louis: And so we were right, that was a good trade. Jason: Good trade. And then we go and we present our research to our professor. And this is where it's really funny. The professor, who was so outrageously smart, could do any math problem in his head. But he's looking at us, he's laughing at us. He's like really, you think this thing is worth $2.20? We're like, yeah, here's the research, here's what we did. And he's just laughing at us. And then he says how could this company possibly be worth more than Apple? And Apple at the time was trading at $19, which, split adjusted, is probably something like negative 10 cents. And he said Apple has $16 in cash on its books and, whatever he's like, Apple is definitely worth more than JDS, Unipay. And, of course, this guy's probably retired on a private island somewhere. But what I took away from this whole story oh, and the other thing is we were right on both sides. We were right with $225 call because the stock traded to $235. And within two years the stock was trading at something like $2. So we were right on both ends. And so what I took from that was I'm not a great analyst and I'm not a great forecaster. I'm especially not a good forecaster. Okay, but what I can do is I can look at data and I can back into things and I can understand well, if I look at, if I calculate, if I back into, how do I get to $165 or $200 for JDS Uniphase? I look and I say, well, the market has really high expectations of this company and those expectations are nothing but sentiment. Nobody knows. Louis: I think that's all you need, though, jason, I actually don't think you need to be a great forecast Like that's really all you need. So, cause, if you know those extremes, you avoid mistakes, because the more I do this, the more I realize that's what it's about. You know, if you're going to put X number of units, and risk units if you will, in your portfolio, if you don't make a lot of mistakes and you compound reasonably, you're going to do great. It's just like reading. You know Warren Buffett always talks about read chapter eight and chapter 20 of the intelligent investor, which everyone should do, by the way. In fact, I'm set I send that book to clients and just say read this. You know that's what all it is about. I mean, that's basically what it's about what you just talked about right there. You don't really need to be a great forecaster. You just need to avoid a lot of mistakes and have a reasonable amount of diversification, not too much. And yeah, I mean you hear about people that have made like great calls consistently, and then the more you learn about them, the more you realize that there was something else part of the story. You know what I'm saying. There was another part of the story that you didn't really hear about, and a lot of it boils down to not avoiding mistakes, having discipline, risk management, things like that, but anyway, I got you off your topic. Jason: It's all risk. Yeah no, yeah, no, no, yeah, and it's. It's important to cut me off too, because I can. I can talk about certain things for too long, but I'll just. I'll just cut right to your question, which was fear and greed, yeah, yeah. And so how did I get to that? Literally, I, from that point in about 2000,. You know, I got much more interested in technical analysis and and, and I started thinking I'm not so much like a stock picker and I'm not so much into, you know, the MACD and the RSI. I'm much more quantitative. That's my interest in technicals. Technicals really helped me become more quantitative and more interested in looking at the big picture, understanding how to measure the big picture, and so I started looking at indicators and things that people like Ned Davis was doing. Right, I, I a big fan of Ned Davis, ned Davis's work. There's some other providers that were like that, sentiment traders Another one. I like all those, I like what they do and I started trying to replicate. You know, you don't know what their secret sauce is, although actually Ned Davis has a really good book. I'm looking at my bookshelf somewhere out there when Ned Davis's book is being right or making money. But then his chief strategist wrote another book where they actually go in and they tell you how to build a, build their, one of their sentiment indicators that has nine components to it. I was messing around with that, trying to figure out, trying to understand these indicators and understand the signals that they gave. And I hadn't around. That same time, cnn was one of our clients at what was then Wall Street On Demand and our CEO was out talking to them and he was talking to Lex Harris, who was their editor in chief, and Lex said you know, I don't know what this is, but I want to build something called the Fear and Greed Index. Can you help me? And Jim, our CEO, came back and he came to my team and he said so CNN has this kind of crazy idea. They want to build something called the Fear and Greed Index. What do you think has this kind of crazy idea? They want to build something called the fear and greed index? What do you think? And everyone on the team pushed away from the table. They're like what a bad idea. And I was left sitting there going they thought it was a bad idea. Yeah, they just you know they didn't get it. It wasn't what they do. I thought you were going to say mic drop. Louis: I literally thought you were going to say mic drop. Everybody said that's a great idea, let's jump on it. That surprises me. They looked at it. Jason: Yeah, they were like well, and they didn't know how to do it right. It wasn't what they were interested in. The team all had very different kinds of backgrounds, and I was the only one that had that more market-related background. The others were really more analysts Smart guys, great guys, but much more like. They could probably pick a stock better than I can, but they cannot tell you if we're in a bull market or a bear market. So I'm sitting there saying this is the greatest opportunity ever. And so they got me on the phone with CNN, with Lex, a day or two later, and we just started putting together ideas and Lex basically said look, I don't know what this thing is. You kind of know what I want to do. I just want something that really represents that quote that Warren Buffett says, which is you should be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful. So what, what is that? What does that look like? And so I just went and built it. Luckily, they gave me Jim. Our CEO's son was also a statistics major at Yale, and so for his summer internship that year, he sat with me and we went through and took all the indicators that I had put together and we did a principal component analysis, which is really important because you want to make sure, just like we said earlier, when you're looking at a stock chart, you want to make sure that your indicators aren't all trend indicators or all momentum indicators. The same thing, we want to make sure that each of the indicators, within fear and greed, didn't step on one another right, that they weren't saying the same thing, or really just that they worked well together, that they were each complementary, right? There were a couple indicators that I wanted to include that just didn't make it for budget reasons. Cnn is a media company. Media companies don't have huge budgets these days, so I couldn't do things like market valuation, s&p 500 valuation, or we wanted to use the, because by this point, market had bought us, and so I wanted to use the credit default swap index and I could only get end of day CVS data, not intraday, and so it just didn't fit with what we were doing. Um, so there were, there were some indicators that we left out that really would have been perfect and, um, you know, later on I got I got to use for other purposes, but not for the fear and greed index. But I got to use for other purposes, but not for the fear and greed index. But yeah, right now you know the fear and greed index, the seven indicators that are there, we selected one that is purely just the S&P 500, right, normalized. So we understand if it's sort of fear, you know, fearful or greedy. But then we have two that are breadth indicators. So how broad is the advance or decline? And is that moving in concert with the market or against the market? Then we have two that are options related the put-call ratio and the VIX. And then we have two that are bond market related One that compares the spread and yields between low-quality junk bonds and high-quality investment-grade bonds, as that spread is tightening. You see that investors are, you know they're more, they're seeking out risk because they think that they can get better returns. And then the last one is where we compare the returns on stocks to the return on bonds over a 20-day rolling period, total return as well. So for all these underlying indicators we're using ETFs. So this is actually something that can be replicated by anybody, but there are a lot of mechanics and calculations that go into it on the back end which make it. You know, if you are going to calculate it yourself, you got to be pretty sophisticated and be and have a pretty decent data feed. Yeah. Louis: Well, I love that. You know that was put in a scale that made sense and a categorization that made sense. It almost kind of makes sense the way that you did. It is like extreme fear, fear, neutral greed, extreme greed. These are things that we can understand and this is, I think, one of your biggest talents, actually. I think one of your biggest talents actually. You know, like you had said, we were looking for, we did principal component analysis, but we were looking for things that worked well together and complementary. As a quant geek, I would have just said non-correlated, you know or not. I would have used like big, long names of there's some statistical names that are you know to describe, that are like really long and stupid, sounding like to make no sense. I love the fact that you like that, you, you that's the. That is a great skill and I think to be able to take something that is complicated and make it accessible was one of the biggest, I guess, wins from this and it also helps people understand themselves, in my opinion, like if somebody goes and they look at this and they say, okay, right now I'm looking at the website. It says I'm on cnncom markets, fear and greed. It says it's got a number 48 and it says we're neutral but kind of tilting towards fear. So tell me a little bit about, like, how you would interpret this. I'm an investor right now. Let's say I have a reasonably good sized portfolio. I want to grow my wealth, but I also want to manage my risk. How would I? What would I use this for? How would I think about this? For like, really, like practically, how would I use this? Jason: Okay. So what does neutral mean? And neutral is really that center zone of I don't know what it is right. So the first thing I'll ask you to do and I know users or people who are watching or listening can't see this, but in the upper right corner you can see where it says overview and timeline. So the first thing I want you to do is click on timeline, okay, and what you'll see is a chart of the fear and greed index for the last two years. And especially when we are in this neutral area and we don't really know what the overarching sentiment is, it's important to look back over historically, just like we said with the PE ratio. Right, you can look back and compare to peers, or you can say how is it versus history, and so what we see is this 48 is an increase over where it has been. But, more importantly, we're sort of in this weird consolidation period. Fear and greed is just kind of ticking up and down, up and down. It's not really doing much of anything. So, however, we have dropped from a level of greed right Back before April and I'm going to pat myself on the back. I don't write much about fear and greed. I'm going to start, but I don't write much about fear and greed on our site. I did post in one of our little communities. I said, look, hey, just so you guys know. You don't really know me, but I built the Fear and Greed Index and here's what I've been watching Fear and Greed. It has just broken down. I think the market's going to break down with it, and you know my timing was amazing and the next day the market broke down. So, yeah, good for me, blind squirrel. But so what I like to do is I like to look and see and look for patterns and try to understand what is it doing and how does it compare to the market. So a few things, all right. What really matters is fear tends to be good. What happens when the indicator goes into fear or extreme fear? What we see is that standard deviation of returns. So the volatility of the market increases, and I think we're talking about forward volatility too, not like a month out, but days out if you want to measure it each day and sort of see what's happening. Volatility is just high when we are in extreme fear and fear because investors are nervous. What happens when investors are nervous? Good time to buy, right. The other thing is greed happens a lot. Okay, and greed is not necessarily a bad thing. Extreme greed is oftentimes a good thing. Okay, extreme greed tends to have. There's two times that extreme greed happens and one time is a great time and the other time is a high risk time. Okay, the great time is when we have been at extreme fear. The market has fallen maybe the market fell by 10% or something and we're starting to see a rebound and what you'll see oftentimes is the components of the fear and greed index spike and everything spikes, everything jumps up and we get to extreme greed because we've gone from a low level and all of a sudden, investors are committing new capital to the money. Investors are getting excited and we see extreme greed. Extreme greed is almost always good, except when, if we were in some kind of an uptrend okay, we've been, we're in an established uptrend, something good happens, the market kind of spikes. We don't. It's rare that we really see extreme greed during an uptrend, but let's say it happens. Well, that tends to be a period where probably just don't want to commit new capital right now. I probably want to take a breather, wait, because risk is higher. You know it's extreme fear to extreme greed, but really it's low risk to high risk. Louis: But sometimes, as you know, sometimes that greed can be really good too. The other thing yeah, go ahead, sorry, no, no, I was just going to say that reminds me of like the traditional technical interpretation of momentum is after you've had a bear market, you always get to an overbought situation. That doesn't mean the trend's over, it just means the trend's beginning, and it's almost the same concept. It seems like to me to some degree like you're looking for the extremes, but sometimes you have to interpret it the opposite way after a certain condition, after a bear market or after you've had really a lot of fear, and then it pops back up to greed, well, that doesn't mean the trend's over, that means we're just starting to go up again. Exactly yeah, and you have a continuation of the trend. Jason: Right, yeah, yeah, completely. And so with anything, with any indicator, you have to look at it in context right. Everything from an economic indicator, cpi, et cetera. Everything has to be looked at within context. And with that, I think you have to look at the context within the fear and greed index, and that's why there are the seven components, and I actually feel that the seven components are more valuable than that headline number, than the speed dial, right. So we start with and CNN came up with these names and I love it that they did that, because they are so much better at explaining things than I am and they really they said well, you know, here's who our user base is. We want this to be something that is a sophisticated trader can use it. And, as you know, as we heard Katie Stockton tell us several years ago, lots of hedge funds use the fear and greed index, right, they use it as one of their marks to understand what investors are doing. But they want it to be understandable by retail investors, by my dad hundred versus 125 day moving average just to see how far like what is the momentum right. Use that word, it's completely accurate. What is the momentum Is it? Is it so high that it's potentially exhaustive right now? It's so high that it's potentially exhaustive right when we and we normalize it both over the last six months. But then we also go back and we normalize it again over two years to say is that six month number that higher, low that we have? How does that compare where we've really been over a longer period of time? And then we look at, as I mentioned, two measures of stock price strength and stock price breadth. So market breadth we're looking at both 52 week highs and lows on the New York Stock Exchange and then the McClellan Volume Summation Index. So really is money flowing into stocks going up or money flowing into stocks going down? Louis: And what we see is both of those numbers are sitting at extreme fear. Because, those are great indicators. They're such great indicators. Yeah, I mean, I remember back in the day doing a ton of backtesting and those were some of the most robust indicators, all three of them, especially on the new highs it's actually new lows is actually more valuable, in my opinion, based on the research years ago, than the new highs, but just because it showed that extreme capitulation. But those are great and they are complimentary. One is like the number of stocks hitting highs or lows, and then the other one is more. The McClellan summation is also very valuable and it can be manipulated in so many different ways. So and I love that you have three dimensions to that and while you were telling me about this, what struck me is I always try to put things in perspective for the individual investor and for the. You know how they can think about these things and make it useful for them. And I think one of the things that could be useful with this, or is useful for this, is understanding how you're feeling. Like you know, if you've just gone through a period of angst with your portfolio and then you notice that this thing is at fear, right, well, everybody's being fearful and like it's like what are you going to do in your portfolio during that period, right? Well, everybody's being fearful and like it's like what. What are you going to do in your portfolio during that period of time? Jason: Exactly. Louis: You know what how? are just you know how you're feeling, like if you can step away like that fish in the fishbowl with in the water, you know and say, yeah, I'm in the water and you know, and, and this is what's happening, and what am I going to do? And stay level headed. I always talk about like staying level headed is the most important thing as an investor. It's like if I'm overly optimistic, I need to bring myself down and if I'm overly pessimistic, I need to bring myself up. Tom Basso mentioned that to me years ago, who was one of the market wizards. Jason: Right. Louis: Talking about doing that, and I've really that's been probably one of the market wizards, right, talking about doing that, and I've really that's been probably one of the most helpful things for me personally and for advising clients as well and managing money. Just it's. It's it sounds so simple. It's like oh yeah, I know that, but yeah, but do you do it? Jason: Exactly, and that's where it's important to have something that's quantitative and unbiased, right, and I'll tell you a story about that that confirms what you just said. But when we first, a few years after we launched Fear and Greed, I was talking with a financial advisor and he said, oh, I use this thing all the time with my clients and I love it. He said how do you use it? And he said, well, I introduced them all to it. And then, when they call me, when the market is down, wanting to sell their positions, wanting to reduce risk the market's already fallen by 10% or 20% and now they want to reduce risk he says, ok, hang on a sec, go to CNN Markets, fear and Greed. What do you see? And they say extreme fear. And he says, ok, what does that mean? And the client always says, okay, what does that mean? And and the client always says, oh, yeah, everybody's afraid right now. Yes, and what does that mean? That means I shouldn't panic. And hey, let me write you a check because this is a good time to invest. Louis: There you go. So one thing I noticed that's not on here is valuation, which is so hard to time valuation. So this is, you know, valuation. So if you put this in context with valuation, then I think you have a powerhouse, really, because absolutely yeah. Yeah, because then you have that long-term

Gareth Jones On Speed
Gareth Jones On Speed #481 for 04 January 2024

Gareth Jones On Speed

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2024 35:35


#481 Ferrari The Movie. Gareth and Zog review the epic Michael Mann feature film about Enzo Ferrari. We have high expectations for this release, does it meet them?

Flynn In The Mix
Techno Mixtape - 002 - Steven Flynn

Flynn In The Mix

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2023 174:01


Techno Mix Series All About The Acid 1 UNKNOWN 2 Dave The Drummer & Marcello Perri Hydraulix 33 A 3 Ap Old Skool Edge 4 Dynamo City One Night In Hackney (Chris Liberator & Sterling Moss remix) 5 UNKNOWN 6 Tiddles & The Geezer North London Skank (Aaron Liberator & The Geezer Buster Selector A mix) 7 UNKNOWN 8 Dynamo City & Steve Mills One Bassline 9 Dj Itchy, Guy Mcaffer RAW 43 B 10 UNKNOWN 11 Berio 303, The Geezer Acid Keul 12 UNKNOWN 13 Chris Liberator, Darc Marc, Ganez The Terrible Happy Birthday LSD 14 Cogs Beans & The Machines Yes! London 15 UNKNOWN 16 D.A.V.E. The Drummer Hydraulix 09 B (original mix) 17 D.A.V.E. The Drummer & Pattrix Hydraulix 25 B (original mix) 18 UNKNOWN 19 Chris Liberator, Sterling Moss I'm Bored (Love Acid) 20 UNKNOWN 21 Chris Liberator & Sterling Moss Croydon Girl (with Rackitt) 22 UNKNOWN 23 Chris Liberator, Sterling Moss Massive Line 24 UNKNOWN You can follow me on www.beatport.com/artist/steven-flynn/1020220 open.spotify.com/artist/4DO4MAQlx…XET-K8ftCXC-0LYg

DJ Kena This Is Serious
Episode 155: DJ Kena - This Is Serious Episode 155

DJ Kena This Is Serious

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2023 121:07


Hold on to your hats, this episode of DJ Kena's 'This Is Serious' is a full throttle banger. This one-hour non-stop DJ mix is packed full of high energy techno expertly crafted together into a seamless mix. Thanks for your continued support, for sharing, liking, and subscribing.1)      Harvey McKay - Caffeine (Original Mix)     2)      Ackermann  - Oooh I Love It (Harvey McKay Remix)  3)      Uncertain - Conga (Gene Richards Jr Jackin' Tool)  4)      Bart Skils -Roll the Dice (Original Mix)  5)      BLK_BETTY - 2 Get Real (Joey Beltram Remix)   6)      Christian Smith - Lust (Original Mix)   7)      D-Unity - Just Listen (Original Mix)   8)      Filterheadz - Oblivion (Original Mix)   9)      Gary Beck - Aye Bass (Original Mix)    10)  Harvey McKay - Bubble (Original Mix)   11)  Wehbba - The Next Step (Original Mix)   12)  Kena - Xestensial Crisis (Harvard Beach Remix)   13)  William Arist - B-One (Gary Beck Remix)   14)  Ryan McKay - Strange Groove (Original Mix)   15)  Domshe - Hell Beat (Filterheadz Remix)   16)  Tommier Joyson - Clap Your Hands (Original Mix)   17)  INSOLATE - Lust (Ben Sims Hardgroove Remix v1)   18)  Eric Sneo - Metasm (Remastered)    19)  Dino Maggiorana - Pink Noise (Original Mix)   20)  Balrog - Talk That Shit (Original Mix)   21)  Sterling Moss, D.A.V.E. The Drummer - Red Light Fever (D.A.V.E. The Drummer Remix)   22)  Mario Ochoa - Clarity (Original Mix)   23)  Chicago Loop - Jupiter's Revenge (D.A.V.E. The Drummer Remix)   24)  Marck D - Clubing (Original Mix)   25)  Harvey McKay - Confusion (Original Mix)   26)  Filterheadz - Avalanche (Original Mix)   27)  D-Unity - Holding On (Original Mix)   28)  Altinbas, Cirkle - Divergence (Original Mix)  

dj tool kena ackermann sterling moss dice original mix bart skils roll
The Gary Klutt Podcast
The Oldest NASCAR Team Owner - Jim Bray

The Gary Klutt Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 91:30


Jim Bray is the oldest Nascar team owner. He has raced in the Daytona 500 multiple times. He raced in the first race at Mosport with Sterling Moss. Jim is a wealth of Nascar history that he witnessed first hand in the 1950s and 60s, he's got great stories with many legends of the stock car world. He still flys his plane, runs his trailer business and is at the race track most weekends with his Nascar Pinty's Series team. This is The Gary Klutt Podcast! Gary Klutt interviews race car drivers, pro athletes, entrepreneurs, business owners, politicians, and contemporary thinkers. Discussing the nature of reality, what it means to be a human and the felt presence of our experience. Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmpAjVuVuqgA9pbgePK7ceg Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://tinyurl.com/applegkp Listen on Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/spotifygkp

Re|flections
Mirrors Vol. 69 | Fauna

Re|flections

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 61:22


Turning up the tempo this week, we welcome Fauna to the roster, giving us a true hard-techno mix full of heavy grooving and hypnotic selections, enjoy! -- Follow @fauna999 @perfectdark909 instagram.com/fauna.999 instagram.com/perfectdark909 -- "Fauna is a high energy DJ based in Northern California. Biologist by day, Techno Selector by night, Fauna harnesses the energies of her surroundings to infuse mixes with all the beauty and intensity of the natural world. She curates mixes that are dark and groovy with a speedy tempo encouraging people to dance and become one with their environment." -- Tracklist: 1. Perpetual Motion - Balagan 2. Hydraulix - D.A.V.E The Drummer, The Anxious 3. Groove Alert (Alarm Mix) - DJ Disrespect 4. Murk - Lacchesi, Mac Declos, ABSL 5. Try Stop Me - Marlon Hoffstadt 6. Coming Back 2 U - DJ HEARTSTRING 7. Prophetic Steps - Tesox 8. SIRENS (NTBR RAVE REMIX) - NTBR 9. 50 Dollars Amore - TAFKAMP 10. It Will Have Lost Control - Taube 11. Down Underground - Chris Liberator, Sterling Moss, DVS 12. Apt 1245 - Wallis 13. Kickoff Tune - Ducky, 2TD 14. Trave (Marie Vaunt Remix) - Jacidorex, Marie Vaunt  15. Like Tears In The Rain - Balrog 16. Abstract Dimensions - MORSURE 17. All The Lies You Said - 753

HODINKEE Podcasts
Chopard And The Mille Miglia With Karl-Friedrich Scheufele And Jacky Ickx

HODINKEE Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2022 28:29


Chopard's Co-President Karl-Friedrich Scheufele and race car driver Jacky Ickx on more than 30 years of a legendary automotive event.--This episode of HODINKEE Radio was recorded in Italy shortly before the start of the 40th running of the Mille Miglia, a modern recreation of an incredible 1000-mile race from Brescia to Rome and back to Brescia. Said to be the most beautiful race in the world, it ran from 1927 to 1957 and was then restored in 1977 as a regularity rally that plays host exclusively to cars from the original period. As you can imagine, it's become a banner event in the vintage car scene and for this episode, I was joined by Karl-Freidrich Scheufele and Jacky Ickx to chat about the event, the cars, and how Chopard has played a long-standing role in supporting the race. Karl-Friedrich is Chopard's Co-President (along with being a vintage car collector) and Jacky Ickx is a famous race car driver who has won Le Mans six times, drove in Formula One for Ferrari in the early '70s, won at Dakar, etc. The pair are long-time friends, and they first ran the Mille Miglia in 1989. We chat about how they met, what Mille Miglia means to the vintage car scene, why Chopard has been sponsoring the event for more than 30 years, and how the race has changed as it's been passed to the next generation. 2:20 Mille Miglia 9:27 Sterling Moss 1955 Mille Miglia 18:10 Mille Miglia History 19:42 Cannes Film Festival 28:07 Chopard Mille Miglia 2022 Race Edition

MedellinStyle Podcast
Lourdes / MedellinStyle.com Podcast 095

MedellinStyle Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 59:54


English: Dj producer born in Bogotà (Colombia), founder of the label and event production company Studio 401, resident of the THC and Overground brands. His technique is based on sudden changes, cuts, long mixes and the creation of live effects. He has shared the stage throughout the Colombian territory with several of the most representative local artists and with several international artists such as Slugos, Chris Liberator, Sterling Moss, Mario Malke, Angy Kore, Cadans, AnD, Chlaer, Veronique, Mr Madness and Leon. Kb. He has participated in productions for the Depthnoise Records (Argentina), Atzend Records and Studio 401 labels, he belongs to the capital label Raw Quarter where he released his first EP Kaleidoscope. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Español: Dj productora nacida en Bogotà (Colombia), fundadora del sello y empresa productora de eventos Studio 401, residente de las marcas THC y Overground. Su técnica es basada en cambios bruscos, cortes, mezclas prolongadas y creación de efectos en vivo. Ha compartido escenario a lo largo del territorio Colombiano con varios de los artistas locales màs representativos y con varios artistas internacionales tales como Slugos, Chris Liberator, Sterling Moss, Mario Malke, Angy kore, Cadans, AnD, Chlaer, Veronique, Mr Madness y Leòn Kb. Ha participado en producciones para los sellos Depthnoise Records (Argentina), Atzend Records y Studio 401, es perteneciente al sello capitalino Raw Quarter donde lanzo su primer EP Kaleidoscope. LOURDES: https://www.facebook.com/camila.caicedo.35325/about https://www.instagram.com/lourdes_music/?hl=es-la MEDELLINSTYLE @medellinstyledj www.instagram.com/medellinstyle/?hl=es-la www.facebook.com/culturaelectronica Available on: sptfy.com/medellinstyle youtube.com/medellinstyle apple.co/2NirUXY soundcloud.com/medellinstyledj/sets/podcast www.mixcloud.com/MedellinStyle/ www.deezer.com/es/show/657932 tun.in/pjCgO medellinstyle.com/category/podcast

Znamy się z Techno Podcast
[Znamy się z Techno Podcast #30] Arthur Crag (A.C.)

Znamy się z Techno Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2022 58:40


Arthur Crag (A.C.) is a Cracow Dj from the STK 47 Collective. He started his musical activity in 2004 at the Roentgen Club. Currents represented by A.C. it is primarily heavy, massive kicks. The musical genres closest to him are: Acid, UK Techno, Hard Techno. His sets surprise with dynamics, consistency and purity of form. Apart from purely technical skills and a wide range of sounds, it is impossible to ignore the energy that he transmits in his sets. Improving musical skills is part of his everyday life .. Practice, practice, practice - as he emphasizes. So far he has played with DJs such as: Sterling Moss, Chris Liberator, Dave The Drummer, Pet Duo or Dominik Muller, but the full list is much longer. Devoted STK 47 support his collective… Silence makes a sound !

BizNews Radio
Turbo charging efforts to bring F1 racing back to SA in 2023 – Motorsport SA's Anton Roux

BizNews Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2022 17:34


The last time that South Africa hosted a Formula 1 championship at Kyalami was in 1993 before democracy dawned in the country. In the years up to then, it hosted legends like Damon Hill, Sterling Moss, James Hunt, Niki Lauda, and off course our own world champion, Jody Scheckter with the 9-hour races attracting top endurance riders and teams. In the last year; talks have been going on in the background to re-instate the South African Grand Prix. And now, Motorsport SA Chairman Anton Roux, a well-known board room veteran's appointment to the senate of the international body overseeing motorsport, the FIA or Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile has given new hope that a South African Grand Prix could be on the calendar by 2023. Roux spoke to BizNews about the drive to get Formula 1 back in South Africa, the Hamilton-Verstappen controversy, how a new generation of younger, female, and non-white participants and spectators are emerging and where spinning cars, which have become popular in townships, fit in. – Linda van Tilburg

Spirit Box Radio
SBR EAK: Dear Magpie '21 (Part 2)

Spirit Box Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2021 24:28


Tune in as Sam Enfield receives some letters following their birthday! This episode is part of the Dear Magpie writing event and features fanworks, and thus exists in the realms of dubious canon.Read a transcript here: https://hangingslothstudios.com/sbr-eak-dear-magpie-21-part-2/Content Warnings Mild existential horrorCreepy kidsDiscussions of death and dyingVery mild implied threat of ambiguous dangerGraphic description of injury to skin (brief, concerning thorns piercing skin)Graphic (but not gory) description of a dead person in a bizarre stateThe letter about the dairy-saavy ghost was by KC (she/her). Tulia's letter about a stolen heartbeat was by Clue (they/them). The letter from Esco at the Society of Unusual Phenomenon was by JF Standhope (they/them). The soft letter to Sam was by Sterling Moss (they/them). The letter from Foxworth Langdon is by Jess Beauchamp, a fabulous artist and friend of the show whose work you can find here: https://linktr.ee/kahahunaSUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://open.acast.com/public/patreon/fanSubscribe/3397288SUPPORT US ON KO-FI: https://ko-fi.com/hangingslothsSHOW TWITTER: @SpiritBoxRadioSLOTHS TWITTER: @HangingSlothsPINTEREST: https://www.pinterest.co.uk/hangingslothstudios/PODCHASER: https://www.podchaser.com/podcasts/spirit-box-radio-1592988CONTACT: https://hangingslothstudios.wordpress.com/contact/Support us on Ko-fi and on Patreon!Spirit Box Radio is a podcast distributed by Hanging Sloth Studios under a Creative Commons Attributions 4.0 International Share Alike license. The show was created by Pippin Eira Major. More info about the show and its cast can be found on the Hanging Sloth Studios website. Music by Maybe Wednesday. Get episodes one day early with Patreon! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

B.S.E - Because: Podcast
Because: 29 | B.S.E

B.S.E - Because: Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2021 60:03


Because: Episode 29 - Techno May's episode of Because: Techno is hard, fast, and filthy. Featuring tracks from BL.CK, Sterling Moss, and the legend that is D.A.V.E The Drummer. Wherever you are in the world stay safe and we'll be back on the dancefloors before you know it. Feel free to add any comments or reactions to the podcast on Twitter @BSEChris or on my Facebook wall http://www.facebook.com/bseDJ http://www.bsemusic.co.uk B.S.E - Because: Episode 29 - Techno 01 - Jam El Mar - Vicious (Original Mix) [Jam El Mar REC] 02 - Matthieu-F - Sleepwalker (Original Mix) [Planet Underground] 03 - Ramiro Suarez - Glare (Original Mix) [T4F Records] 04 - A Thousand Details - Cravaktov (Original Mix) [Animal Farm Records] 05 - Dominik Schwarz - Beware (Richard Cleber Remix) [Resiliant Records] 06 - Alavux - Entering The H (Forest People Replant) [Route One] 07 - ATMN - Moralvorstellung (Original Mix) [WLM Hard] 08 - El Brujo - Search And Destroy (Nizzy Remix) [trench] 09 - Emiliano Cassano - Humanoid (Hels.Yeah Remix) [Keep On Techno X] 10 - Wetworks - Trust Dynamixxx (Balrog Remix) [Player Records] 11 - BL.CK - Mechanic Madness (BSE Remix) [Keep On Techno Records] 12 - Sterling Moss - The Rebirth (Original Mix) [Dancefloor Impact Research] 13 - Ollie Linear Feat Frilla - It's Mad (Original Mix) [Filth Infatuated Digital] 14 - D.A.V.E. The Drummer - Dig Into The Brain (Original Mix) [Dancefloor Impact Research] This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration

ck syndicast sterling moss
B.S.E - Because: Podcast
B.S.E - Because: Episode 29 - Techno

B.S.E - Because: Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2021


  Because: Episode 29 - TechnoMay's episode of Because: Techno is hard, fast, and filthy. Featuring tracks from BL.CK, Sterling Moss, and the legend that is D.A.V.E The Drummer.Wherever you are in the world stay safe and we'll be back on the dancefloors before you know it.  StreamDownload Feel free to add any comments or reactions to the podcast on Twitter @BSEChris or on my Facebook wall http://www.facebook.com/bseDJhttp://www.bsemusic.co.ukB.S.E - Because: Episode 29 - Techno01 - Jam El Mar - Vicious (Original Mix) [Jam El Mar REC]02 - Matthieu-F - Sleepwalker (Original Mix) [Planet Underground]03 - Ramiro Suarez - Glare (Original Mix) [T4F Records]04 - A Thousand Details - Cravaktov (Original Mix) [Animal Farm Records]05 - Dominik Schwarz - Beware (Richard Cleber Remix) [Resiliant Records]06 - Alavux - Entering The H (Forest People Replant) [Route One]07 - ATMN - Moralvorstellung (Original Mix) [WLM Hard]08 - El Brujo - Search And Destroy (Nizzy Remix) [trench]09 - Emiliano Cassano - Humanoid (Hels.Yeah Remix) [Keep On Techno X]10 - Wetworks - Trust Dynamixxx (Balrog Remix) [Player Records]11 - BL.CK - Mechanic Madness (BSE Remix) [Keep On Techno Records]12 - Sterling Moss - The Rebirth (Original Mix) [Dancefloor Impact Research]13 - Ollie Linear Feat Frilla - It's Mad (Original Mix) [Filth Infatuated Digital]14 - D.A.V.E. The Drummer - Dig Into The Brain (Original Mix) [Dancefloor Impact Research]

B.S.E - Because: Podcast
Because: 22 | B.S.E

B.S.E - Because: Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2020 60:15


Because: Episode 22 - Techno This month I've gone back to my roots and I've gone hard and fast with a 140+ set featuring Grace Dahl, Billy Spike Iland, Fractal Disorder and D.A.V.E The Drummer. Enjoy Feel free to add any comments or reactions to the podcast on Twitter @BSEChris or on my Facebook wall http://www.facebook.com/bseDJ http://www.bsemusic.co.uk B.S.E - Because: Episode 22 - Techno 01 - Gary The Apprentice - Raspberry Ripple (Original Mix) [Filth Infatuated Digital] 02 - Ahl Iver - 7AM (Milo Spykers Remix) [Lenske] 03 - Matia - Valley Of Darkness (Original Mix) [Pure Dope Digital] 04 - Billy Spike Iland - Emergency 138 [ASTRX] 05 - James Black Presents - Screaming Into The Void (Rave Syndicate Remix) [Keep On Techno X] 06 - Afflicted - My Name Is Dark (Gallego Remix) [Trigonometryk] 07 - Chris Coles & Latex Zebra - De Nada (Original Mix) [Keep On Techno X] 08 - D.A.V.E. The Drummer - Himmel (Original Mix) [Hydraulix] 09 - Fractal Disorder - Encrypted code (Original Mix) [Trigonometryk] 10 - Grace Dahl - Bad Boy Down (Original Mix) [Khazad Records] 11 - Extracto - Ner Rage (Original Mix) [Oyhopper] 12 - ACIND.TOUCH - Acid Hell (Original Mix) [Technological Records] 13 - Chris Liberator, Sterling Moss, Rachel Rackitt - Croydon Girl (Original Mix) [Stay Up Forever] This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration

syndicast chris coles chris liberator sterling moss
B.S.E - Because: Podcast
B.S.E - Because: Episode 22 - Techno

B.S.E - Because: Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2020


Because: Episode 22 - TechnoThis month I've gone back to my roots and I've gone hard and fast with a 140+ set featuring Grace Dahl, Billy Spike Iland, Fractal Disorder and D.A.V.E The Drummer. EnjoyStreamDownload Feel free to add any comments or reactions to the podcast on Twitter @BSEChris or on my Facebook wall http://www.facebook.com/bseDJhttp://www.bsemusic.co.ukB.S.E - Because: Episode 22 - Techno01 - Gary The Apprentice - Raspberry Ripple (Original Mix) [Filth Infatuated Digital]02 - Ahl Iver - 7AM (Milo Spykers Remix) [Lenske]03 - Matia - Valley Of Darkness (Original Mix) [Pure Dope Digital]04 - Billy Spike Iland - Emergency 138 [ASTRX]05 - James Black Presents - Screaming Into The Void (Rave Syndicate Remix) [Keep On Techno X]06 - Afflicted - My Name Is Dark (Gallego Remix) [Trigonometryk]07 - Chris Coles & Latex Zebra - De Nada (Original Mix) [Keep On Techno X]08 - D.A.V.E. The Drummer - Himmel (Original Mix) [Hydraulix]09 - Fractal Disorder - Encrypted code (Original Mix) [Trigonometryk]10 - Grace Dahl - Bad Boy Down (Original Mix) [Khazad Records]11 - Extracto - Ner Rage (Original Mix) [Oyhopper]12 - ACIND.TOUCH - Acid Hell (Original Mix) [Technological Records]13 - Chris Liberator, Sterling Moss, Rachel Rackitt - Croydon Girl (Original Mix) [Stay Up Forever]

Overdrive: Cars, Transport and Culture
Overdrive: Stirling Moss RIP; Electrics Vehicles good for environment; Travelling through Canowindra

Overdrive: Cars, Transport and Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2020 28:00


Hello and welcome to Overdrive, a program about cars and culture 1. Sterling Moss Dies (1:21) 2. Honda Civic (2:17) 3. Flashing LEDs may cut ‘distracted walking’ risk a little bit (3:15) 4. LA eases parking rules 'to aid social distancing' (4:21) 5. University study debunks EV emissions ‘myth’ (5:12) 6. UK invests in ‘future transport zones’ (6:08) 7. With the passing of the great motor racing driver Sterling Moss we have an extended interview on his life and times, with John Crawford who was a personal friend. (7:11) 8. And Rob Fraser and I discuss traveling to the western NSW town of Canowindra (21:57) You can find more information at Driven Media or previous programs are available as podcasts on iTunes or Spotify. or our Facebook site OverdriveCity YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKyx5sv6cgF4URRmNq2JiXg/videos So, let’s start with the news Originally broadcast 18 April 2020

talkSPORT Daily
Tributes to Sir Sterling Moss and Peter Bonetti

talkSPORT Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2020 19:19


Tony Cascarino isn't happy that footballers are being financially victimised, close friend of Sir Stirling Moss, Maurice Hamilton pays tribute to the racing great, respects are also paid to Chelsea legend Peter Bonetti after his sad passing, Joe Calzaghe laughs off Carl Froch’s challenge to come out of retirement and face him, while former Ryder Cup captain Paul McGinley predicts a bleak year for golf fans, Frank Warren gives his opinion on the revitalisation of boxing going forward, Simon Jordan rants about the unique financial structure of football clubs and the Trans Europe Express investigates soundproofing while broadcasting from home! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Speed City Broadcast
Virtual Racing, RIP Sterling Moss, Motorsports helping pandemic

Speed City Broadcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2020 56:54


We talk virtual racing from F1 to Indycar to MotoGP, RIP Sterling Moss, and discuss how the motorsports community is helping during the pandemic.   The post Virtual Racing, RIP Sterling Moss, Motorsports helping pandemic appeared first on Speed City Broadcasting.

Timeless Radio Show
Timeless Radio Show 17 (March 2020) - Acid Special + Sterling Moss interview

Timeless Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 29, 2020 120:04


Its a big show this month, as we hand over the show to the mighty Roland TB-303! It's our acid special, with massive acid tunes all the way, covering all flavours of acid from jacking 80s beats through to banging acid trance, and everything in between. We've got tunes from Adonis, A Guy Called Gerald, Bam Bam, Kink, Choci and loads more. Plus we've got tune shouts from N-Joi and 808 State. And as if that wasn't enough, we're in conversation with legend of the London acid techno scene Sterling Moss. Oh, and you can win a copy of the excellent A Brief History of Acid House book by Suddi Raval. As always, you can get in touch with us with your shouts, tune ideas and suggestions of featured artists at info@tunnelclubmusic.com, or message us via Facebook https://www.facebook.com/tunnelclubmusic/ Graeme & Steve / Tunnel Club

DJ Pilot
SKR0358 I DJ Pilot

DJ Pilot

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2019


Tracklist: 01 Steve Shaden - Breathe 02 Roby M Rage - Going To Happen - Dreizehn Schallplatten 03 David Temessi - The Seventh feat. Mr. A (Original Mix) 04 DJ Pilot - Escape (Original Mix) - Gobsmacked 05 Axel Karakasis - Obtuse Elements 06 Neowelt - Der Mensch (Bruchrille Remix) - Schallinterferenz Records 07 2bee - Bad Trip in Subotica (Cristian Glitch Remix) 08 DJ Dextro - Paradoxo Molecular (Shadym Remix) - Dolma Records 09 Dunkel Dame - Ciclo (Pablo Caballero remix) - Pressology Publishing 10 Dandi & Ugo, Steve Soprani - Answer (Steve Shaden Rave Mix) 11 CENSURE - Format C 12 Alignment - Interference (Luca Agnelli Remix) - Etruria Beat 13 Regal & Alien Rain - Acid Affair (Part 1) - Involve Records 14 Hellboy - Bad Experience (Atze Ton Remix) - Apex Recordings 15 Davinson - Psycho (Original Mix) - Tronic 16 Avgusto - Well, Who Knows When - Struktur 17 Atze Ton - W13 18 Booty Slave - Asylum (Original Mix) 19 Progression (UK) - Holding a Wolf by the Ears - Eternal Damnation 20 Chris Liberator, Sterling Moss, Rachel Rackitt - Croydon Girl (Original Mix) - ACID CLASSIC Download/listen to the Podcast on Sundcloud: http://soundcloud.com/sound-kleckse-recordsSubscribe to the Podcast on itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/de/podcast/sound-kleckse-podcast/id568630787?l=enif you're interested in having Sound Kleckse Podcast on your radio station, please contact info@soundkleckse.com

Sound Kleckse by Jens Mueller

Tracklist: 01 Steve Shaden - Breathe 02 Roby M Rage - Going To Happen - Dreizehn Schallplatten 03 David Temessi - The Seventh feat. Mr. A (Original Mix) 04 DJ Pilot - Escape (Original Mix) - Gobsmacked 05 Axel Karakasis - Obtuse Elements 06 Neowelt - Der Mensch (Bruchrille Remix) - Schallinterferenz Records 07 2bee - Bad Trip in Subotica (Cristian Glitch Remix) 08 DJ Dextro - Paradoxo Molecular (Shadym Remix) - Dolma Records 09 Dunkel Dame - Ciclo (Pablo Caballero remix) - Pressology Publishing 10 Dandi & Ugo, Steve Soprani - Answer (Steve Shaden Rave Mix) 11 CENSURE - Format C 12 Alignment - Interference (Luca Agnelli Remix) - Etruria Beat 13 Regal & Alien Rain - Acid Affair (Part 1) - Involve Records 14 Hellboy - Bad Experience (Atze Ton Remix) - Apex Recordings 15 Davinson - Psycho (Original Mix) - Tronic 16 Avgusto - Well, Who Knows When - Struktur 17 Atze Ton - W13 18 Booty Slave - Asylum (Original Mix) 19 Progression (UK) - Holding a Wolf by the Ears - Eternal Damnation 20 Chris Liberator, Sterling Moss, Rachel Rackitt - Croydon Girl (Original Mix) - ACID CLASSIC Download/listen to the Podcast on Sundcloud: http://soundcloud.com/sound-kleckse-recordsSubscribe to the Podcast on itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/de/podcast/sound-kleckse-podcast/id568630787?l=enif you're interested in having Sound Kleckse Podcast on your radio station, please contact info@soundkleckse.com

DJ Pilot
SKR0358 I DJ Pilot

DJ Pilot

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2019


Tracklist: 01 Steve Shaden - Breathe 02 Roby M Rage - Going To Happen - Dreizehn Schallplatten 03 David Temessi - The Seventh feat. Mr. A (Original Mix) 04 DJ Pilot - Escape (Original Mix) - Gobsmacked 05 Axel Karakasis - Obtuse Elements 06 Neowelt - Der Mensch (Bruchrille Remix) - Schallinterferenz Records 07 2bee - Bad Trip in Subotica (Cristian Glitch Remix) 08 DJ Dextro - Paradoxo Molecular (Shadym Remix) - Dolma Records 09 Dunkel Dame - Ciclo (Pablo Caballero remix) - Pressology Publishing 10 Dandi & Ugo, Steve Soprani - Answer (Steve Shaden Rave Mix) 11 CENSURE - Format C 12 Alignment - Interference (Luca Agnelli Remix) - Etruria Beat 13 Regal & Alien Rain - Acid Affair (Part 1) - Involve Records 14 Hellboy - Bad Experience (Atze Ton Remix) - Apex Recordings 15 Davinson - Psycho (Original Mix) - Tronic 16 Avgusto - Well, Who Knows When - Struktur 17 Atze Ton - W13 18 Booty Slave - Asylum (Original Mix) 19 Progression (UK) - Holding a Wolf by the Ears - Eternal Damnation 20 Chris Liberator, Sterling Moss, Rachel Rackitt - Croydon Girl (Original Mix) - ACID CLASSIC Download/listen to the Podcast on Sundcloud: http://soundcloud.com/sound-kleckse-recordsSubscribe to the Podcast on itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/de/podcast/sound-kleckse-podcast/id568630787?l=enif you're interested in having Sound Kleckse Podcast on your radio station, please contact info@soundkleckse.com

Sound Kleckse by Jens Mueller

Tracklist: 01 Steve Shaden - Breathe 02 Roby M Rage - Going To Happen - Dreizehn Schallplatten 03 David Temessi - The Seventh feat. Mr. A (Original Mix) 04 DJ Pilot - Escape (Original Mix) - Gobsmacked 05 Axel Karakasis - Obtuse Elements 06 Neowelt - Der Mensch (Bruchrille Remix) - Schallinterferenz Records 07 2bee - Bad Trip in Subotica (Cristian Glitch Remix) 08 DJ Dextro - Paradoxo Molecular (Shadym Remix) - Dolma Records 09 Dunkel Dame - Ciclo (Pablo Caballero remix) - Pressology Publishing 10 Dandi & Ugo, Steve Soprani - Answer (Steve Shaden Rave Mix) 11 CENSURE - Format C 12 Alignment - Interference (Luca Agnelli Remix) - Etruria Beat 13 Regal & Alien Rain - Acid Affair (Part 1) - Involve Records 14 Hellboy - Bad Experience (Atze Ton Remix) - Apex Recordings 15 Davinson - Psycho (Original Mix) - Tronic 16 Avgusto - Well, Who Knows When - Struktur 17 Atze Ton - W13 18 Booty Slave - Asylum (Original Mix) 19 Progression (UK) - Holding a Wolf by the Ears - Eternal Damnation 20 Chris Liberator, Sterling Moss, Rachel Rackitt - Croydon Girl (Original Mix) - ACID CLASSIC Download/listen to the Podcast on Sundcloud: http://soundcloud.com/sound-kleckse-recordsSubscribe to the Podcast on itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/de/podcast/sound-kleckse-podcast/id568630787?l=enif you're interested in having Sound Kleckse Podcast on your radio station, please contact info@soundkleckse.com

The CRASH BANG WALLOP Podcast
S4 Ep28: The Le Mans Motor Racing Disaster - 1955

The CRASH BANG WALLOP Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2019 57:13


It's 1955. It's Le Mans, France and a quarter of a million people have turned out to watch one of the most boring sporting events on the planet - The Le Mans 24 Hour.     In what rich, champagne-spraying playboys are already toasting as the 28th lap of the CB Wallop podcast, join Phil Jerrod and Phil Lucas as they discuss the Le Mans Motor Racing Disaster of 1955 - Dozens of very fast cars, thousands of very boring miles, and one tragic decision that led to the worst accident in motor racing history.   Is motor racing still boring though? ... yes... yes it is.   Trigger Warning: This one is all fun until about halfway through - then it's really nasty. It has lots and lots of decapitations in it. It's pretty horrid, but nothing too graphic (although Sterling Moss does get pissed on from a tree). It's mainly about Motor Racing though, which, as I'm sure you know, is terribly boring.  Music by Steve Adam Sound Clips: Le Mans Motor Racing Disaster (1955) | British Pathé https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMoh5hZAaZk British Pathé Subscribe to the British Pathé YT Channel: https://goo.gl/hV1nkf (Film ID: 531.05) British Pathé also represents the Reuters historical collection, which includes more than 136,000 items from the news agencies Gaumont Graphic (1910-1932), Empire News Bulletin (1926-1930), British Paramount (1931-1957), and Gaumont British (1934-1959), as well as Visnews content from 1957 to the end of 1984. All footage can be viewed on the British Pathé website. https://www.britishpathe.com/ On Board with Mike Hawthorne at Le Mans 1956 | D-type Jaguar https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpRFagIbcPE&t=71s Cherry pink and apple blossom white-Eddie Calvert https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-TcLdJlA0Nc Cherry Pink and Apple Blossom White Artist Eddie Calvert Album Cherry Pink Licensed to YouTube by WMG (on behalf of Cherished Records); LatinAutor - Warner Chappell, The Royalty Network (Publishing), UMPG Publishing, LatinAutor, Warner Chappell, SODRAC, UNIAO BRASILEIRA DE EDITORAS DE MUSICA - UBEM, PEDL, LatinAutor - UMPG, and 6 Music Rights Societies Sources:  https://www.lemans.org/en/24-hours-of-le-mans https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Mans https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/24_Hours_of_Le_Mans https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1955_Le_Mans_disaster https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Hawthorn https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Levegh https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMoh5hZAaZk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GpOTNcro2wU&t=927s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggA0XXgnAJI&t=177s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMoh5hZAaZk&t=12s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EFQ2CwA1NCM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggA0XXgnAJI&t=240s https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lance_Macklin https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1406160/Lance-Macklin.html https://yesterday.uktv.co.uk/deadliest-crash-disaster-at-le-mans/article/what-happened-le-mans-1955/ https://www.express.co.uk/expressyourself/175213/Reckless-British-playboy-behind-motor-racing-s-biggest-disaster

Gareth Jones On Speed
Gareth Jones On Speed #359 for 24 January 2019

Gareth Jones On Speed

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2019 54:21


#359 Crash! In the wake of Prince Philip’s crash we discuss the crashes we’ve experienced. Gareth talks to Slade drummer Don Powell about the cars he’s owned and the dramatic crash he survived. Sniff Petrol on crashing into royalty and The Grand Tour.

Draw The Line Radio Show
#012 Draw The Line Radio Show 28-08-2018 guest 2nd hr Jenny Wren, feat 1st hr Violent Blondes

Draw The Line Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2018 120:04


This is Draw The Line Radio Show presented by jacki-e with my guest in the second hour Jenny Wren who comes from London. Jenny Wren has a passion for radio and started on Premier FM, a popular pirate station in Essex, where for 2 years she was the only female DJ. Since the birth of the internet she has brought that show, Audio Evolution, to many internet stations such as Orbital Grooves, Boost FM, Techno.FM, Horizon FM and currently resides at FNOOB Techno Radio. Jenny's mixes and radio shows incorporate the raw underground sound of hypnotic 303 acid, pounding kicks and dark bass lines. Links:- https://www.mixcloud.com/jennywren9465/ https://www.facebook.com/DJjennywren/ In my mix in the first hour I'm featuring the EP 'Gaia's Liberation' by the Violent Blondes, to be released by Civil Disobedience Records on 15th Sept 2018. I also play tracks by Laurie Spiegel, Ursula 1000, Violent Blondes, Hydrangea, La Fleur, Blond:ish, NUSHA, Sophie Nixdorf, ONYVAA, Risa Taniguchi, Lisa Lashes, Fatima Hajji, Jamaica Suk and BEC It's time to say NO to gender imbalance in dance music. It's time to Draw The Line!!!! If you like the tracks I play, please support the artists by buying their music. Track list First hour mixed by jacki-e 1. Laurie Spiegel - Hall of Mirrors (original mix) MITRA Music https://mitramusicfornepal.bandcamp.com/album/mitra-music-for-nepal 2. Violent Blondes - One (original mix) Civil Disobedience Records promo to be released 15th Sept 2018. 3. Ursula 1000 - Paradiso (original mix) MITRA Music https://mitramusicfornepal.bandcamp.com/album/mitra-music-for-nepal 4. Violent Blondes - Telepathy (original mix) Civil Disobedience Records promo to be released 15th Sept 2018. 5. Dasha Rush - Spring Drops (original mix) Fullpanda. 6. Hydrangea - Lundur (original mix) Bandcamp release https://hydrangea.bandcamp.com/album/escape-from-reality 7. La Fleur - Outbreaker (original mix) Watergate Records. 8. Zhu x Tame Impala - My Life (Blond:ish remix) Mind of a Genius. 9. SIS - Minosh (Nusha remix) Suruba X. 10. Joe Fisher - Sooner or Later (Sophie Nixdorf remix) Kubic Records. 11. La Fleur - Devil Sigh (original mix) Watergate Records. 12. ONYVAA - Poem of the Atoms (original mix) Passeport Records. 13. Risa Taniguchi - Ambush (original mix) Clash Lion. 14. Lisa Lashes - Leader (original mix) Eclipse Recordings. 15. Violent Blondes - Yueueechiga (original mix) Civil Disobedience Records promo to be released 15th Sept 2018. 16. Fatima Hajji - Star (original mix) Silver M. 17. Jamaica Suk - Scape (original mix) SUB TL. 18. BEC - Sines and Breaks 03 (original mix) Voight. 19. Violent Blondes - Kontrau Fido (original mix) Civil Disobedience Records promo to be released 15th Sept 2018. Track list 2nd hr:- Jenny Wren - An Exclusive Guest Mix for Draw The Line Radio Show. 1. John Rowe & Mellingfunk - The Horro (original mix)r Valhalla Records 002. 2. Syndrome - Acid Heart (original mix) Interstate One 07. 3. Punky Junx - Life’s A Bitch (original mix) Corrosive Records 007. 4. Tassid & Eski - Pump It Up (original mix) Skuxx 001. 5. Sterling Moss & Mark E.G. - Techno Muthafuckers (original mix) Cluster 95. 6. Krismix & Koss - Infanterie (original mix) Planet Techno 013. 7. Cyber Steve - Break It On Down (original mix) Dissipated Records 001. 8. Tassid - The Real Action (original mix) Cluster 93. 9. Sterling Moss & Miro Hardparty - The World Is Under Attack (original mix) Hard Party Records 004. 10. Badboy Pete - Eek A Tek (Tassid Remix) Scratchmix Records 002. 11. Krismix & Koss - Maggots Party (original mix) Planet Techno 013. 12. Vlado - Still Do The Things (original mix) Dirty Sound Records 001. This show was first streamed on Radio Flintshire on 28th August 2018. Draw The Line Radio Show is A Darker Wave production.

Gareth Jones On Speed
Gareth Jones On Speed #237 for 30 November 2014

Gareth Jones On Speed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2014 32:19


#237 Lewis Hamilton 2014 F1 World Champion. Are we happy though? What next for the double champion. Who could beat him next year? The golden age of British motorsport. Sniff Petrol on Carlos Sainz Jnr and Jenson Button. Plus Gareth sings Lewis’s anthem.

ALEXANDER PROKHOROV
PROOF - SPECIAL MIX FOR MEKHANIZM @ DI.FM

ALEXANDER PROKHOROV

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2011 60:40


Этот микс записан специально для подкаста MEKHANIZM, выходящего на волнах интернет радио DI.FM. В микс вошли самые свежие Acid Techno релизы от таких музыкантов, как Chris Liberator, Dave The Drummer, Sterling Moss, AP и других.Приятного прослушивания! www.bionikamusic.com

proof special mix acid techno di fm dave the drummer chris liberator sterling moss