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21 नवंबर 2025 की दोपहर दुबई के मकतूम एयरपोर्ट से कुछ ख़बरें-विज़ुअल्स आए जिन्होंने भारतीयों का ध्यान ख़ींचा. ख़बर थी दुबई के एयरशो के दौरान हुए एक भारतीय फाइटर प्लेन तेजस के क्रैश होने की. तुरंत उभरी चिंता, दुख में तब बदली जब ये मालूम हुआ कि पायलट विंग कमांडर नमांश स्याल ने इस क्रैश में अपनी जान भी गंवाई. लेकिन बात सिर्फ़ दुख की नहीं थी, चिंता के विषय और भी हैं. क्योंकि न सिर्फ़ तेजस Indian Air Force का Indispensable हिस्सा है, बल्कि हम इस प्लेन को Export करने की दिशा में भी तेज़ी से काम कर रहे थे. तो Padhaku Nitin World Affairs के इस एपिसोड में हमने बात शुरू की इसी Crash से. समझा कि आखिर भारत दुबई के इस एयरशो में करने क्या गया था? समझा कि तेजस क्रैश की जांच किस तरह से आगे बढ़ रही है? कौन जांच करेगा? कैसे करेगा? और ये भी कि आखिर कोई प्लेन क्रैश क्यों होता है? और ये भी कि भारतीय जेट के क्रैश होने पर पाकिस्तान में मीम्स क्यों बन रहे हैं? हमारे मेहमान हैं सीनियर डिफेंस जर्नलिस्ट संदीप उन्नीथन. इन्हें आप जानते ही हैं. एपिसोड पूरा सुनिएगा. प्रड्यूसर: मानव देव रावतसाउंड मिक्स: रोहन भारती
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On November 21, an Indian Air Force Tejas fighter jet performing aerial manoeuvres at the Dubai Airshow crashed, killing its pilot, Wing Commander Namansh Syal. This is the second crash involving the indigenous aircraft in its 24-year history but the first to result in a fatality. The previous Tejas crash took place in Jaisalmer in March 2024 when the pilots ejected safely. With the IAF ordering a court of inquiry, this bonus segment of In Our Defence sees host Dev Goswami and national security expert Sandeep Unnithan break down what the accident reveals about India's indigenous defence production and the future of the Tejas programme. Tune in! Produced by Taniya Dutta Sound mixed by Suraj Singh
Inside the day's Moneycontrol Editor's Picks: A new trust-based regulatory architecture in the works, rupee undervaluation makes exports competitive,network interference sparks blame game between Airtel and Tejas networks and more news. Also, Infosys's chief marketing officer Sumit Virmani shares his thoughts on why India's education system needs an overhaul and experts explain the new labour code changes and what they mean for employers. Tune in!
A direct, no-nonsense look at this week's biggest aviation stories, backed by real-world fighter pilot experience — unscripted and unedited and 69% true!Go here to support the channel. https://www.themoverandgonkyshow.comFor sponsorships and business inquiries: themoverandgonkyshow@gmail.comMost Mondays at 8PM ET, Mover (F-16, F/A-18, T-38, 737, 787, helicopter pilot, author, cop, and wanna be race car driver) and Gonky (F/A-18, T-38, A320, dirt bike racer, author, and awesome dad) discuss everything from aviation to racing to life and anything in between. #MoverAndGonky #FighterPilot #AviationPodcast #MilitaryAviation #PilotTalk #JetPilots #AviationNews #AviationCommunity #CrashAnalysis #CombatAviation #AviationHumor #PilotLife #AviationDiscussion #LiveShow #VeteranPilotsMore About Mover:Mover's YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@CWLemoineLooking for a good book? https://www.cwlemoine.comMore About Gonky:Gonky's YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@therealgonkyKids Coloring and Activity Books! https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B0CDS4C68YWOMBAT's Books and More! https://www.trmatson.com/*The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement.Views presented are our own or our guests and do not represent the views of DoD or its Components.*
#nationalinterest The unfortunate Tejas crash and the pilot's death at the Dubai Air Show are a shattering moment. The Indian Air Force (IAF) is too strong, proud and professional to let this weigh it down. For India's policymakers, however, this is a useful juncture to reflect on whether they've been, and are being entirely fair to the IAF, given what it needs. Or in the demands they place on the IAF, the compromises and “adjustments” they seek. It is also important, however, that we take a deep breath and remind ourselves that pilots are particularly tough people. Among the toughest of them will be found in the IAF because globally they are some of those few who remain perpetually in operational mode — Watch this week's #NationalInterest with ThePrint's Editor-in-Chief Shekhar Gupta. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- To read this week's National Interest: https://theprint.in/national-interest/a-tribute-to-tejas-indias-delay-culture-is-the-real-enemy-in-the-skies/2789632/
A heartbreaking tragedy has brought the country together. Tejas, India's light combat aircraft fighter jet and heart of its self-reliance in the skies, crashed at the Dubai Air show Friday. The pilot, Wing Commander Namansh Syal, couldn't eject, and lost his life. He is survived by his wife, also an air force officer, and a 6-year-old daughter. Tejas has an excellent safety record, with only one crash last March in Jaisalmer due to engine failure. At that time, the pilot ejected safely. But this year's tragedy is heart-wrenching at so many levels—a national loss, a reputational loss and an irrecoverable loss of a qualified, experienced and skilled fighter pilot. For this episode of 'Worldview with Swasti', former fighter pilot Group Captain Ajay Ahlawat and I will break down many more layers of this unfortunate incident, its technical issues, the reputational damage to the Indian Air Force at a time when India's squadron strength is lowest, and its geopolitical impact amid a worsening security situation. Not to forget that while India lost an excellent fighter at Dubai, the Pakistan-China co-developed JF 17 got fresh orders at the same venue. How to analyse it best, keeping disinformation at bay and yet adding more constructive measures for strengthening India's politico-military culture.
• டெல்டா, தென் மாவட்டங்களில் இரண்டு நாள்களுக்கு கனமழை!• டெல்டாவில் இணைந்த கடலூர் மாவட்ட கிராமங்கள்!• தகுந்த அறிக்கையை அனுப்பாத திமுக அரசு! - இபிஎஸ்• மெட்ரோ திட்டம் பிரதமருக்கு கடிதம் எழுதிய முதல்வர்!* சென்னையில் மீண்டும் டபுள் டக்கர் பஸ்?• கிருஷ்ணகிரி: 52 பணியிடங்களுக்காக கூடிய ஆயிரக்கணக்கான இளைஞர்கள்!• இஸ்லாமியக் கைதிகளை முன்கூட்டியே விடுதலை செய்க! - முதல்வருக்கு ஜவாஹிருல்லா கோரிக்கை• அமைச்சர் ஐ.பெரியசாமி மகள் வீட்டில் ஜி.எஸ்.டி நூண்ணறிவு பிரிவினர் ரெய்டு?• விஜய் மக்கள் சந்திப்பு நிகழ்ச்சி... நாளை முதல் தொடக்கம்?• விஜய்க்கு நெருக்கடி தர வேண்டாம்!• நேற்று முளைத்த காளன்... விஜயைச் சொல்லவில்லை! - பிரேமலதா• ஆட்சியில் பங்கு தரும் கட்சியுடன் கூட்டணி! - கிருஷ்ணசாமி அதிரடி• காங்கிரஸ் - திமுக கூட்டணிப் பேச்சுவார்த்தைக்கு குழு அமைத்த டெல்லி!• பஞ்சாக்கப்படி எதிர்க்கட்சிதான் ஆட்சிக்கு வரும்! - நயினார் நாகேந்திரன்• சீமானின் கடலம்மா மாநாடு!• உள்துறை அமைச்சகத்தை நிதிஷிடமிருந்து பறித்த பா.ஜ.க!• டி.கே சிவக்குமாருக்கு முதலமைச்சர் பதவி?• தென்னாப்பிரிக்காவில் பிரதமர் மோடி!• அமெரிக்க டாலருக்கு நிகரான இந்திய ரூபாயின் மதிப்பு வரலாறு காணாத வகையில் சரிவு!• மம்தானி பகுத்தறிவுள்ள மனிதர்! - ட்ரம்ப் புகழாரம்• தேஜஸ் விமான விபத்து... உயர்மட்ட விசாரணைக்கு உத்தரவு!
CutTheClutter: Tejas fighter crash: Possible cause, what it means for Indian Air Force, & risks of air show flying
India's labour codes come into force, Indusind Bank prepares for major fundraise, Rupee faces rough time, Meesho targets post money valuation of Rs 52,500 crore, an unsettling surge in digital crime & Tejas crashes in Dubai Air Show. Tune in for the details on today's edition of Moneycontrol Editor's Picks.
Inside today's Moneycontrol Editor's Picks: International Holding Co.'s $1-billion acquisition of Sammaan Capital hits uncertainty, Hindustan Aeronautics fast-tracks Tejas Mk1A fighter deliveries, Xiaomi grapples with frozen funds and declining market share, new age tech firms mark strong presence on stock market. Also find 15th Finance Commission chairman NK Singh's interview on what Bihar's newly elected government should prioritise and Pratim Ranjan Bose's take on Bangladesh politics.
With Nvidia becoming the first US$5tn company, Australia quashing AI copyright exemptions and Hollywood still reeling from Tilly Norwood, we hear from Protege's Dave Davis [04:21], Luma AI's Verena Puhm [15:04] and Gennie's Tejas Shah and Chelsea Durgin [30:30] about the latest developments in this fast-moving space, from swirling legal battles to the realities of industry uptake.
¡Vótame en los Premios iVoox 2025! La de Texas es la historia de una frontera. Desde el primer avistamiento de sus costas en 1519 por parte de Alfonso Álvarez de Pineda, que había recibido el encargo de reconocer y cartografiar la costa del golfo de México, hasta su consolidación como potencia económica en el siglo XXI, Tejas es un microcosmos de la historia de América. Los primeros europeos en llegar a Texas fueron los españoles. En 1528 Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca naufragó cerca de la actual Galveston y recorrió el interior de lo que hoy es el estado de Tejas. Describió en su “Relación” la geografía y la cultura de los indígenas, lo que alimentó mitos como el de las Siete Ciudades de Cíbola que empujaron a otros conquistadores como Francisco Vázquez de Coronado o Hernando de Soto a emprender expediciones que exploraron el territorio. Pero el clima hostil, la ausencia de oro y la belicosidad de los indígenas desviaron la atención española hacia el sur, lo que dejó a Texas en esta primera fase en un relativo abandono. En el siglo XVII, los franceses intentaron colonizar la región. Establecieron un fuerte, el de San Luis, en la costa del golfo de México en 1684. Pero no consiguieron mantenerse. Los españoles, alarmados por la presencia francesa, se plantearon entonces colonizar la provincia mediante mediante misiones y presidios. Con ambos querían, por un lado, cristianizar a los indígenas y, por otro, asegurar su presencia para que, en el caso de que otra potencia europea apareciese por allí, fuese fácil repeler la incursión. Fueron estos colonos llegados desde Nueva España los que introdujeron la ganadería que terminaría convirtiéndose en uno de los símbolos de Texas con sus conocidas vacas Longhorn y los vaqueros que las conducían para asegurarse los mejores pastos. De aquellas misiones nacieron las primeras ciudades texanas. La más antigua es la de San Antonio, fundada en torno a una misión. Pero Texas, que así es como empezó a denominarse formalmente, era inmensa. Los españoles sólo ocuparon algunos valles, para lo demás prefirieron llegar a acuerdos con los indígenas locales como los apaches o los comanches. Tras su independencia en 1821 México heredó Texas y los pocos habitantes que se habían establecido allí. Para asegurar su control, el Gobierno mexicano fomentó la colonización tanto de mexicanos como de estadounidenses. Eso atrajo a empresarios como Stephen Austin, que se estableció con un grupo de 300 familias a orillas del río Colorado. Tras él vinieron muchos más. La llegada de colonos estadounidenses, muchos de ellos con esclavos, creo grandes tensiones ya que México había prohibido la esclavitud. Además, los colonos querían autonomía y eran muchos. El Gobierno mexicano terminó prohibiendo la inmigración desde Estados Unidos y eso hizo estallar la revolución texana de 1835, que culminó con la independencia de Tejas tras la victoria en la batalla de San Jacinto. Pero la nueva república era muy frágil y estaba asediada por conflictos con México y con los indígenas. Pervivió hasta 1845, momento en el que fue anexionada a EEUU. Esto provocó la guerra entre México y Estados Unidos que terminó muy mal para los primeros. El Tratado de Guadalupe-Hidalgo fijó la frontera en el río Grande y permitió la consolidación de Texas como estado. Durante la Guerra Civil los Texanos se unieron a la Confederación y tras la derrota se convirtió en un estado ganadero en el que comenzaba el salvaje oeste. Pero eso no duraría mucho. En 1901 se descubrió petróleo en la costa del golfo, lo que terminó transformando a Texas en una potencia económica ya que el petróleo animó el desarrollo y la creación de todo tipo de industrias. Las ciudades crecieron y atrajeron a millones de inmigrantes, entre ellos muchos hispanos que hoy representan el 40% de la población. En nuestro tiempo Texas es un estado grande y rico, su PIB es mayor que el de Canadá y su población no deja de aumentar. Texas es una metáfora de América. Una tierra extensa y llena de oportunidades con una historia breve, pero muy agitada. En El ContraSello: 0:00 Introducción 4:28 Texas: historia de una frontera 40:03 Premios iVoox 1:24:27 Alfonso X el Sabio 1:30:07 Cuando empezó la edad media en España Bibliografía: - “Historia de las misiones de Texas” de Byron Browne - https://amzn.to/476KdID - “La revolución de Texas” de Gustavo Vázquez-Lozano - https://amzn.to/4o7bP6s - “España, la primera bandera de Texas” de Juan Hernández Hortigüela - https://amzn.to/4hq64hr - “La revolución de Texas” de Kelly Rodgers - https://amzn.to/47kf2Iz · Canal de Telegram: https://t.me/lacontracronica · “Contra el pesimismo”… https://amzn.to/4m1RX2R · “Hispanos. Breve historia de los pueblos de habla hispana”… https://amzn.to/428js1G · “La ContraHistoria del comunismo”… https://amzn.to/39QP2KE · “La ContraHistoria de España. Auge, caída y vuelta a empezar de un país en 28 episodios”… https://amzn.to/3kXcZ6i · “Contra la Revolución Francesa”… https://amzn.to/4aF0LpZ · “Lutero, Calvino y Trento, la Reforma que no fue”… https://amzn.to/3shKOlK Apoya La Contra en: · Patreon... https://www.patreon.com/diazvillanueva · iVoox... https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-contracronica_sq_f1267769_1.html · Paypal... https://www.paypal.me/diazvillanueva Sígueme en: · Web... https://diazvillanueva.com · Twitter... https://twitter.com/diazvillanueva · Facebook... https://www.facebook.com/fernandodiazvillanueva1/ · Instagram... https://www.instagram.com/diazvillanueva · Linkedin… https://www.linkedin.com/in/fernando-d%C3%ADaz-villanueva-7303865/ · Flickr... https://www.flickr.com/photos/147276463@N05/?/ · Pinterest... https://www.pinterest.com/fernandodiazvillanueva Encuentra mis libros en: · Amazon... https://www.amazon.es/Fernando-Diaz-Villanueva/e/B00J2ASBXM #FernandoDiazVillanueva #texas #mexico Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Recomendados de la semana en iVoox.com Semana del 5 al 11 de julio del 2021
La de Texas es la historia de una frontera. Desde el primer avistamiento de sus costas en 1519 por parte de Alfonso Álvarez de Pineda, que había recibido el encargo de reconocer y cartografiar la costa del golfo de México, hasta su consolidación como potencia económica en el siglo XXI, Tejas es un microcosmos de la historia de América. Los primeros europeos en llegar a Texas fueron los españoles. En 1528 Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca naufragó cerca de la actual Galveston y recorrió el interior de lo que hoy es el estado de Tejas. Describió en su “Relación” la geografía y la cultura de los indígenas, lo que alimentó mitos como el de las Siete Ciudades de Cíbola que empujaron a otros conquistadores como Francisco Vázquez de Coronado o Hernando de Soto a emprender expediciones que exploraron el territorio. Pero el clima hostil, la ausencia de oro y la belicosidad de los indígenas desviaron la atención española hacia el sur, lo que dejó a Texas en esta primera fase en un relativo abandono. En el siglo XVII, los franceses intentaron colonizar la región. Establecieron un fuerte, el de San Luis, en la costa del golfo de México en 1684. Pero no consiguieron mantenerse. Los españoles, alarmados por la presencia francesa, se plantearon entonces colonizar la provincia mediante mediante misiones y presidios. Con ambos querían, por un lado, cristianizar a los indígenas y, por otro, asegurar su presencia para que, en el caso de que otra potencia europea apareciese por allí, fuese fácil repeler la incursión. Fueron estos colonos llegados desde Nueva España los que introdujeron la ganadería que terminaría convirtiéndose en uno de los símbolos de Texas con sus conocidas vacas Longhorn y los vaqueros que las conducían para asegurarse los mejores pastos. De aquellas misiones nacieron las primeras ciudades texanas. La más antigua es la de San Antonio, fundada en torno a una misión. Pero Texas, que así es como empezó a denominarse formalmente, era inmensa. Los españoles sólo ocuparon algunos valles, para lo demás prefirieron llegar a acuerdos con los indígenas locales como los apaches o los comanches. Tras su independencia en 1821 México heredó Texas y los pocos habitantes que se habían establecido allí. Para asegurar su control, el Gobierno mexicano fomentó la colonización tanto de mexicanos como de estadounidenses. Eso atrajo a empresarios como Stephen Austin, que se estableció con un grupo de 300 familias a orillas del río Colorado. Tras él vinieron muchos más. La llegada de colonos estadounidenses, muchos de ellos con esclavos, creo grandes tensiones ya que México había prohibido la esclavitud. Además, los colonos querían autonomía y eran muchos. El Gobierno mexicano terminó prohibiendo la inmigración desde Estados Unidos y eso hizo estallar la revolución texana de 1835, que culminó con la independencia de Tejas tras la victoria en la batalla de San Jacinto. Pero la nueva república era muy frágil y estaba asediada por conflictos con México y con los indígenas. Pervivió hasta 1845, momento en el que fue anexionada a EEUU. Esto provocó la guerra entre México y Estados Unidos que terminó muy mal para los primeros. El Tratado de Guadalupe-Hidalgo fijó la frontera en el río Grande y permitió la consolidación de Texas como estado. Durante la Guerra Civil los Texanos se unieron a la Confederación y tras la derrota se convirtió en un estado ganadero en el que comenzaba el salvaje oeste. Pero eso no duraría mucho. En 1901 se descubrió petróleo en la costa del golfo, lo que terminó transformando a Texas en una potencia económica ya que el petróleo animó el desarrollo y la creación de todo tipo de industrias. Las ciudades crecieron y atrajeron a millones de inmigrantes, entre ellos muchos hispanos que hoy representan el 40% de la población. En nuestro tiempo Texas es un estado grande y rico, su PIB es mayor que el de Canadá y su población no deja de aumentar. Texas es una metáfora de América. Una tierra extensa y llena de oportunidades con una historia breve, pero muy agitada. En El ContraSello: 0:00 Introducción 4:28 Texas: historia de una frontera 40:03 Premios iVoox 1:24:27 Alfonso X el Sabio 1:30:07 Cuando empezó la edad media en España Bibliografía: - “Historia de las misiones de Texas” de Byron Browne - https://amzn.to/476KdID - “La revolución de Texas” de Gustavo Vázquez-Lozano - https://amzn.to/4o7bP6s - “España, la primera bandera de Texas” de Juan Hernández Hortigüela - https://amzn.to/4hq64hr - “La revolución de Texas” de Kelly Rodgers - https://amzn.to/47kf2Iz · Canal de Telegram: https://t.me/lacontracronica · “Contra el pesimismo”… https://amzn.to/4m1RX2R · “Hispanos. Breve historia de los pueblos de habla hispana”… https://amzn.to/428js1G · “La ContraHistoria del comunismo”… https://amzn.to/39QP2KE · “La ContraHistoria de España. Auge, caída y vuelta a empezar de un país en 28 episodios”… https://amzn.to/3kXcZ6i · “Contra la Revolución Francesa”… https://amzn.to/4aF0LpZ · “Lutero, Calvino y Trento, la Reforma que no fue”… https://amzn.to/3shKOlK Apoya La Contra en: · Patreon... https://www.patreon.com/diazvillanueva · iVoox... https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-contracronica_sq_f1267769_1.html · Paypal... https://www.paypal.me/diazvillanueva Sígueme en: · Web... https://diazvillanueva.com · Twitter... https://twitter.com/diazvillanueva · Facebook... https://www.facebook.com/fernandodiazvillanueva1/ · Instagram... https://www.instagram.com/diazvillanueva · Linkedin… https://www.linkedin.com/in/fernando-d%C3%ADaz-villanueva-7303865/ · Flickr... https://www.flickr.com/photos/147276463@N05/?/ · Pinterest... https://www.pinterest.com/fernandodiazvillanueva Encuentra mis libros en: · Amazon... https://www.amazon.es/Fernando-Diaz-Villanueva/e/B00J2ASBXM #FernandoDiazVillanueva #texas #mexico
4th S-400 Regiment Delivered | Tejas, Su-57 Messages to US | Rubio, Trump Play Good Cop, Bad Cop
Desde la Amazonia peruana hasta el corazón de Asia viajamos en este programa que nos lleva por Argentina (con conexión polaca), Tejas, Brasil, Pakistán, Afganistán... ¡e incluso Saturno! Homenajeamos a grandes maestros que nos han dejado recientemente, como Hermeto Pascoal, Raúl Barboza, Flaco Jiménez y Jamshied Sharifi, y recordamos también a las víctimas del terremoto de Afganistán y las inundaciones en Sindh y el Punyab pakistaní. From the Peruvian Amazon to the heart of Asia, we travel in this program that takes us through Argentina (with a Polish connection), Texas, Brazil, Pakistan, Afghanistan... and even Saturn! We pay tribute to great maestros who have recently left us, such as Hermeto Pascoal, Raúl Barboza, Flaco Jiménez and Jamshied Sharifi, and we also remember the victims of the Afghanistan earthquake and the floods in Sindh and Pakistani Punjab. - Ranil y Su Conjunto Tropical - Vuelo a Saturno - Sonido amazónico - Los Zheros - La rosa - Psychedelic cumbia party - Bandonegro - Cuyo - Tanuevo - Dino Saluzzi - Buenos Aires 1950 - El viejo caminante - Raúl Barboza - La pulseada - King of chamamé - Flaco Jiménez - Grítenme, piedras del campo - Lo mejor de Flaco Jiménez - Hermeto Pascoal & Grupo - Viagem - Só não toca quem não quer - Antonio Adolfo - Oba (O bafo da onça) - Carnaval: The songs were so beautiful - Alla Bachayo Khoso - Shah Latif ke kafi - Pakistan / Sindh: Sindh soul session [V.A.] - Qais Essar & Sonny Singh - Lal meri pat - Sangat - Jamshied Sharifi - Tariqat - A prayer for the soul of Layla 📸 Hermeto Pascoal (Paulo Rapoport)
Apologies for the audio quality; I'm working on fixing it. Thanks for your patience.Today, we explore the 3rd chakra, Manipura, meaning “city of jewels.” Located at the solar plexus, it governs self-definition, confidence, and personal power. Associated with fire, it fuels digestion, metabolism, and transformation—Agni. The bija mantra is RAM, its colour is yellow, and its sense organ is sight, representing vision and illumination (Tejas).Fire in yoga, or Tapas, creates positive change through disciplined action and intention. Imbalances manifest as rajasic dominance (control, aggression) or tamasic weakness (low self-esteem). A balanced state, or sattva, fosters vitality, confidence, and wise action.Manipura's ten-petal lotus represents overcoming negative tendencies like fear, shame, and ignorance, replacing them with strength, compassion, and clarity. Its symbol, a downward triangle, signifies transformation. The ram embodies courage and determination.Let's connect with our power and purpose. Enjoy the practice.To read more and to practice with Zephyr Wildman, click here. To support Zephyr Yoga Podcast, donate here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this week's episode of The Whiskey Trip, Big Chief heads back to Houston to sit down with Master Distiller Julian Giraldo and Brand Manager Mike Cosby of Giant Texas Distillers. Julian isn't just any guest—he was the very first to appear on the show—so it was only fitting to bring him back to share another round of stories and pours. We start with Giant Texas' standard 90-proof expression, then move into the University of Houston Cougars commemorative bottling with notes of kettle corn, toasted sugar, and just the right amount of spice. From there, the lineup takes off: • A five-year-old honey infused bourbon at 105.7 proof, crafted through a unique process of resting honey in a wet bourbon barrel for six months before finishing the whiskey for another eight. • A maple infused rye whiskey at 118 proof, aged in an empty maple rye whiskey barrel from Seldom Seen Farm, marrying decadent maple character with rye spice. • And finally, a Texas brandy made from Orange Muscat and Trebbiano grapes from the Panhandle, aged seven years in a toasted barrel and bottled at 117.3 proof—a perfect palate cleanser with notes of toasted marshmallow and bright citrus. Along the way, Julian and Mike share stories of traveling together, building a community of whiskey lovers, and carrying forward the true meaning of Tejas—“friendship.” Julian also offers a sneak peek at a future American Single Malt, showcasing the distillery's range and diversity. This episode is a perfect mix of tradition, innovation, and Texas pride—just like Giant Texas itself. So pour yourself a glass, settle in, and come along for the ride on this stop of The Whiskey Trip.
Are you building your customer data strategy around your goals, or are your goals constrained by your data platform? Agility in today's marketing technology landscape isn't just about speed—it's about flexibility. Brands need data architectures that adapt to their needs, not the other way around. And with the right approach, that agility can fuel personalization, better customer outcomes, and real business value. Today we're going to talk about composable customer data platforms and how AI is enhancing decision-making to increase customer lifetime value.To help me discuss this topic, I'd like to welcome Tejas Monahar, co-CEO and co-Founder of Hightouch. About Tejas Manohar Tejas Manohar is the cofounder/co-CEO of Hightouch. Prior to founding Hightouch, Tejas was an early engineer at Segment, the leading company in the Customer Data Platform (CDP) space that was acquired by Twilio for $3.2B. At Segment, Tejas realized that many of the challenges of building a best-in-class CDP would be better solved on top of the data warehouse and a modern data stack and hence, he founded Hightouch. When Tejas isn't thinking about data, he likes running and playing competitive table tennis. Tejas Manohar on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tejasmanohar/ Resources Hightouch: https://www.hightouch.com https://www.hightouch.com The Agile Brand podcast is brought to you by TEKsystems. Learn more here: https://www.teksystems.com/versionnextnow Catch the future of e-commerce at eTail Boston, August 11-14, 2025. Register now: https://bit.ly/etailboston and use code PARTNER20 for 20% off for retailers and brandsDon't Miss MAICON 2025, October 14-16 in Cleveland - the event bringing together the brights minds and leading voices in AI. Use Code AGILE150 for $150 off registration. Go here to register: https://bit.ly/agile150" Connect with Greg on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gregkihlstromDon't miss a thing: get the latest episodes, sign up for our newsletter and more: https://www.theagilebrand.showCheck out The Agile Brand Guide website with articles, insights, and Martechipedia, the wiki for marketing technology: https://www.agilebrandguide.com The Agile Brand is produced by Missing Link—a Latina-owned strategy-driven, creatively fueled production co-op. From ideation to creation, they craft human connections through intelligent, engaging and informative content. https://www.missinglink.company
Daddy and Hammer de Tejas are back together again. College football is 9 days away so Hammer returns from his Libertarian training camp to talk Texas ball - and to talk his true expertise: Epstein theories. We also talk DC Liberation Day, Diego Pavia's greatness on the SEC Netflix show, the scandal rocking the Shea in Irving CFB 26 Dynasty league - and the college football land/hell-scape. Get it in yall. Listen to the Shea in Irving Show on the iHeartRadio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Have you been feeling tired no matter how much you sleep? Pushing through your workouts, responsibilities, and routines but still feeling like you're running on fumes? You might be moving beyond your capacity and your body is trying to tell you. Let's explore the signs you're doing too much, what this means through the lens of Ayurveda and Yoga (hello Tejas), and what to shift instead so you can move from push into presence. Where to connect with Andrea Website: https://andreaclaassen.com/ Instagram: https://instagram.com/seasonalandrea Perimenopause Support Quiz: https://quiz.tryinteract.com/#/681d3069f79fde0015c88d8c Wise Woman Reset: https://andreaclaassen.com/wisewomanreset 3 Day Mini Cool-Down Challenge- https://andreaclaassen.com/3-day-mini-cooldown-challenge Andrea Claassen Bio Andrea Claassen is an Ayurvedic Wellness Counselor, RYT 500 hour yoga teacher, and personal trainer who has been in the wellness space since 2007. She specializes in cyclical living. Her mission is to help women learn how to slow down, tune in and connect to their inner wisdom. The three pillars she focuses on are movement, mindfulness & mother nature through an Ayurvedic lens. You can hear more from Andrea on her Peaceful Power Podcast where she aims to deliver actionable takeaways for you to live a more holistic lifestyle. Connect with Andrea on her website at www.andreaclaassen.com
In this Nerditorium episode, Tejas, Jishnu, and Dinkar tackle Marvel’s new Fantastic Four — from its bold direction to its wobbly third act. They unpack character vibes, MCU comparisons, and the courage to get weird with superheroes. Then it’s over to James Gunn’s Superman for talk of Kryptonian heritage, quirky humor, and cape-wearing geopolitics. Big laughs, bigger opinions, and a nerdy peek at where superhero cinema flies next.
Angela answers a student question about keeping a simple rhythm amongst the busyness of summer. Learn more about: Building a simple grounding afternoon ritual to help anchor rhythm in the summer nights Simple suggestions for a weekly self-care evening The power of one small ritual to center yourself before going out or to events Recognizing the conflicting parts within The minimum effective dose for wellness and rhythm Resources: The Simple Ayurveda health certification program walks you step-by-step through a year-long process of integrating Ayurveda into every aspect of your life so that you are confident in your authentic abilities to share Ayurveda with your community- whether that's your family or clients. Apply here. It is a small group with personalized instruction and individual mentorship led directly by Angela. Next cohort starts September 2025. Befriend Yourself: A Self-Care Club based on the wisdom of Prana, Tejas and Ojas: Weekly Self-Care Pep Talks, Practices + Prompts to help you recognize the Divine within, held August 3rd-September 4th, 2025. Join the Simple Ayurveda newsletter Podcast episode mentioned: 247 | The Spine, Deep Yoga and True Release with Kaya Mindlin
El Camino Real de Los Tejas is a network of trails that connected Spanish missions, settlements, and military outposts from Mexico through Texas and into Louisiana. Now a national historic trail, this road played a crucial role in the Spanish colonization of the region in the late 1600s. It served as a vital route for communication, trade, and military movement. Over time, that trail facilitated cultural exchange and interaction between Spanish settlers, indigenous peoples, and later, Anglo-American pioneers. The 2500 mile route is marked by numerous historical sites, including mission ruins, forts, and early settlements. It provides a tangible link to the colonial past and the diverse communities that shaped Texas and the broader Southwest. The Traveler's Lynn Riddick takes a stroll along the trail with expert Steven Gonzales, who shares his knowledge about the significance of the trail and the American historical narrative.
Un informe publicado por la ONG relata prácticas en tres centros de detención de Florida que vulneran los derechos humanos y la legislación estadounidense en materia de migración. Hacinamiento, maltrato físico y psicológico, humillación e incluso muertes por falta de atención médica. La organización no gubernamental Human Rights Watch publicó el lunes 21 de julio un informe acerca de las violaciones de derechos humanos en tres centros de detención de migrantes en Estados Unidos, en el estado de Florida, entre los meses de enero y junio de 2025. Estos abusos, resultado de la actuación sistemática y deliberada de los guardias de seguridad y de los agentes de inmigración del gobierno estadounidense en estas cárceles, son "el resultado de un sistema de detención fundamentalmente deficiente", según el informe, elaborado a partir de entrevistas con reclusos del Centro de Procesamiento de Servicios de Krome (Krome), el Centro de Transición de Broward (BTC, por sus siglas en inglés) y el Centro Federal de Detención (FDC, por sus siglas en inglés) en Miami. "Algunas de estas personas estaban detenidas en los lugares donde hacen el procesamiento hasta 11 días, donde no había camas, el aire acondicionado estaba muy alto y tenían que dormir en el piso, sobre el cemento", señala Vicki Gaubeca, directora asociada de HRW para temas de migración. El texto recoge casos en los que se obligaba a los presos a comer en el suelo como si fuesen perros, y también de mujeres forzadas a usar el retrete a la vista de los hombres. Sin embargo, los abusos comienzan antes de llegar a las instalaciones, dentro de los autobuses en los que transportan a los detenidos. "Los trasladaban a todos encadenados, amarrados de pies, manos y cintura. También descubrimos que, en algunas ocasiones, los tuvieron detenidos en un autobús durante una noche entera, sin darles agua, ni comida ni la oportunidad de ir al baño. Es casi tortura", deplora Gaubeca. Saturación de cárceles En los tres centros de detención se supera la capacidad operativa. De acuerdo con el informe, en marzo, el número de detenidos en Krome era un 249% superior al nivel previo a la toma de posesión de Donald Trump, y en junio, los tres centros registraban una población un 111% más alta que antes de la investidura. Esto se debe principalmente a que el número de personas arrestadas por el Servicio de Control de Inmigración y Aduanas (ICE, por sus siglas en inglés) no ha hecho más que aumentar desde que Donald Trump llegó a la Casa Blanca. A finales de junio eran 56.000, un 40% más que hace un año. Es la cifra más alta en la historia de Estados Unidos. Sin embargo, 7 de cada 10 detenidos no tenía antecentes penales. Desde Human Rights Watch observan una vuelta de tuerca respecto de la primera administración Trump. "Lo que ahora estamos viendo es una intención por parte del presidente en cuanto al maltrato y la crueldad en contra de los inmigrantes. Lamentablemente, creo que vamos a observar un aumento en los abusos a los derechos humanos de los inmigrantes. De todos, no sólo de los detenidos, sino también de los que están en la comunidad". A nivel estatal, 45 de los 181 centros de detención autorizados superaban su capacidad, según datos del ICE. La superpoblación de las cárceles "va a servir de pretexto a Trump para construir nuevas instalaciones como la de Miami", advierte Gaubeca, refiriéndose a la reciente y polémica "Alligator Alcatraz", situada en el parque nacional de los Everglades, al sur de Florida, con capacidad para 5.000 personas. Human Rights Watch está investigando otros centros en los estados de Tejas, Arizona y California, donde ya se han detectando abusos similares.
Angela discusses a student question on making peace with body weight. Learn more about: Approaching this topic with curiosity and self-compassion How beauty standards evolve based on current trends An Ayurvedic understanding of body types and weight gain The German New Medicine conflicts associated with types of weight gain Clearing a backlog of stuck beliefs Building self-worth and confidence Have a question you'd like featured on the podcast? Email angela@simpleayurveda or send a DM on Instagram @angela.perger. Resources: The Simple Ayurveda health certification program walks you step-by-step through a year-long process of integrating Ayurveda into every aspect of your life so that you are confident in your authentic abilities to share Ayurveda with your community- whether that's your family or clients. Apply here. It is a small group with personalized instruction and individual mentorship led directly by Angela. Next cohort starts September 2025. Befriend Yourself: A Self-Care Club based on the wisdom of Prana, Tejas and Ojas: Weekly Self-Care Pep Talks, Practices + Prompts to help you recognize the Divine within, held August 3rd-September 4th, 2025. Join the Simple Ayurveda newsletter Book mentioned: Move Your DNA
Colette explores how summer, a season of heat, light, and intensity can support sadhana, your conscious spiritual practice. Sadhana refers to any intentional, disciplined effort we make to align with our higher Self, whether that's through meditation, mantra, prayer, mindful movement, self-inquiry, or acts of devotion. She explains how we can harness our inner fire (tapas) and creative light (tejas) to align more deeply with purpose. It's an opportunity to live in alignment with our unique path (dharma). Colette covers the following: Avoiding summer stress and burnout. Understanding tapas - the sacred inner fire. Summer as a season for sadhana. Tejas - the light of creative insight. Aligning with Soul purpose. * CELEBRATING 8 YEARS OF PODCASTING!!! To express my heartfelt appreciation for your support, I'm offering 10% off ALL of my Online Services until August 6th, 2025. Just use the code ELEMENTS8 at checkout. Choose from the following online services: Online Consultations Private Digestive Reset Cleanse - choose your own dates Educational Program - Daily Habits for Holistic Health Reset-Restore-Renew Program- a complete wellness journey combining all services Have questions before you book? Book a FREE 15 min online Services Enquiry Call * Join the Elements of Ayurveda Community! * Stay connected on the Elements Instagram and Facebook pages. * Enjoy discounts on your favourite Ayurvedic products: Banyan Botanicals - enter discount code EOA15 at checkout for 15% off your first purchase.** Divya's - enter discount code ELEMENTSOFAYURVEDA15 at checkout for 15% off your first purchase.** Kerala Ayurveda - enter discount code ELEMENTS15 to receive 15% off your first purchase.** LifeSpa - Save $10 on a $50 or more one-time purchase with the code elements10. **Shipping available within the U.S. only. * Thanks for listening!
Lead Head Brigade, get ready! Talking Lead hits the Leadquarters with a sharp focus on long-range shooting. Join experts Charlie Melton (ex-Navy SEAL, CharlieMikePrecision), Jim Gilliland (record-setting sniper, 1,367-yard shot), and Brad Stair (master gunsmith, Performance Guns) for insights on precision skills, top-tier gear, and stories like the 5,000-yard .408 Tejas shot. From techniques to myth-busting, we equip shooters, hunters, and competitors with pro tips for mastering distance. Visit Jim @long_gunner, Charlie @charliemelton13 and Brad @tejas_rifles on Instagram. Email questions to talkinglead@gmail.com. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, or RUMBLE (for video) for more! Stay focused and keep Leaducating The Unleaducated!
Just before last weekend's matchup between El Paso Locomotive and San Antonio FC, Dan sat down with the two founders of Copa Tejas, Steve Arters and Danielle Gawronski. They explain the competition, the important role it plays for Texas soccer clubs, and how they'd love to see it expand.
Tejas Thacker, a Melbourne IT professional, now has 5 property deals, and is manifesting his dream to become financially independent. I'm proud to say he's a client of the Property Investment Accelerator, and in this discussion we cover:
After Paul's first show back at TN Motorcycle Music Revival he came out to my neck of the woods to play an acoustic show at the Aztec Theatre and I met up with him and the rest of the Tejas Thunder Moto Club. Greg Giannukos, Andrew White, and Taylor Garrigan. After a long day in the saddle the fellas opened up about their first run in with Velardi, and Paul's recent battle with cancer. Due to some technical difficulties most of the conversation got scrapped so I met up with Paul before a recent show at the Kessler and talked about his career, his father and grandfather being his inspiration to ride, and how a Shovelhead helped solidify one of the his greatest albums, Room 41. Check out his tour schedule here and watch out for a Harley Davidson Limited Road Glide while out on the open road as he mows down the miles playing shows across the country. KickStart Danger Dan's Talk ShopMCshopTsLowbrow CustomsKnives Made By Nick Permalink
A version of this essay was published by Deccan Herald at https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/let-s-make-our-own-planes-3607351June 23rd was a very sad anniversary: it was exactly 40 years ago that Air India Kanishka, Flight AI 182 (Montreal-London-Delhi), a Boeing 747, was blown up in the sky off Ireland, killing all 329 on board. There has never been closure, because the Canadian government stonewalled the investigation into how alleged Khalistani terrorists on their soil perpetrated one of the worst airline disasters in history.The black box and cockpit voice recorder were recovered, and confirmed a loud explosion and sudden loss of communications and an explosive decompression, consistent with a bomb in baggage. Separately, two baggage handlers at Narita were killed when another bomb linked to the same terror group exploded on the ground on flight AI 301 on the Toronto-Tokyo-Bangkok-Delhi route.On June 12th, 2025, the as-yet unsolved crash-landing of AI 171 (Ahmedabad-London) killed all but one of 242 on board, and at least 35 people on the ground, as the Boeing 787 Dreamliner failed just after take-off. The black box has been recovered, and India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau was able to decode it. The detailed results will take another couple of weeks. Fortunately, the black box didn't have to be sent to the US because they would have an incentive to exonerate Boeing.Indeed there is already a media narrative of a) incompetence of the Indian pilots, b) poor maintenance by Air India. While there have been previous complaints about broken seats and entertainment systems, there was a clear objective to limit reputational damage to already beleaguered Boeing. Whistleblower reports have long suggested shoddy manufacturing practices especially on jets earmarked for delivery overseas.Boeing appears to be an engineering-driven company that was ruined as the focus shifted to bean-counting and finance, ever since they took over McDonnell Douglas in 1997, but paradoxically allowed the latter's cost-cutting managers to dominate. Instead of innovating, they now tend to recycle old designs. A 2022 Netflix documentary, “Downfall: The Case Against Boeing”, is scathing in its accusations.India is building the infrastructure for significant growth in air travel, to the extent that the hostile Financial Times mocked it with a story titled “Air India crash tests Narendra Modi's ambition to get his country flying”, blaming Air India and the airline regulator (but not Boeing). All this has implications for India, considering that Air India ordered 220 Boeing aircraft and another 350 from Airbus, while Indigo ordered 500 Airbus planes. That's many billions of dollars. The obvious question is: why isn't India making these commercial aircraft? Surely aerospace is a growth sector for India? Yes, there will be offset-based sub-assembly manufacturing, and maintenance operations, but why not India's own passenger aircraft?Brazil's Embraer, Russia's UAC and China's COMAC are eyeing the cosy Airbus-Boeing duopoly. Strategic autonomy suggests India should also strive for its own design.There are military reasons too. Warfare is changing, and drones and missiles are becoming more important, though fighter aircraft remain critical. India is developing the Tejas and the newly-approved AMCA, but there is the salutary tale of the indigenous HF-24 Marut, phased out because of underpowered engines, inadequate infrastructure, and poor coordination between HAL, the IAF, and the government; also no private sector involvement and the lure of imports.India has to build its own fighter jets, and especially jet engines like Kaveri: India is last in line for foreign engine-makers, and anyway, they keep the kill switches. India may be able to sell fighter jets to many countries, along with the battle-tested BrahMos, Lakshya and Akashteer, so spending on them is an investment with likely returns.There is still the siren-song of the US F-35, the Russian Su-57, and so on. There is, ironically, a British-owned F-35B sitting, forlorn, in the rain, on the tarmac at Trivandrum airport since June 15th. It has a) fuel issues, b) hydraulic problems with STOL, c) other problems. This $100+-million jet may end up having to be hauled back in a big transport plane, unable to take off on its own. Local trolls advertised it on OLX for a mere $4 million for scrap.British specialists were flown in, but couldn't fix it. They await Americans now. Obviously, even the closest allies do not get full technology transfer.Let us also remember that the first F-35 built under license by Mitsubishi in Japan ended up in the Pacific Ocean. The pilot, who died, was blamed for ‘spatial disorientation', not Lockheed Martin. The black box was damaged, so the story ends there.Suffice to say that in both civil and military aircraft it is time for India to get its act together.775 words, 29 June 2025The AI-generated podcast based on this essay is here. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rajeevsrinivasan.substack.com/subscribe
In today's newsletter, we break down the expected impact of RBI's higher-than-anticipated rate cut and also decode how the central bank might behave going forward. We have details on the procurement deal for Tejas Mk-1A jets and its uplifting effect on the Indian aerospace industry. Also, we take a hard look at the Bengaluru stampede and ask why the administration cannot be better prepared for crowds.
A version of this essay was published by the Deccan Herald at https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/op-sindoor-how-we-won-and-lost-3566189There are no clear wins in wars these days, especially when terrorizing populations, or nuclear blackmail, is the goal. Pakistan's war manual may well be The Quranic Concept of War (1979) by Brigadier S K Malik, with its pithy statement: “Terror struck into the hearts of the enemies is not only a means, it is the end itself… Terror is not a means of imposing a decision on the enemy; it is the decision we wish to impose on him.” Notably, this book has a forward from General Zia-ul-Haq, their then President.In War From the Ground Up (2012), Emile Simpson, a former British Army officer, argues that modern wars often lack binary outcomes due to their political and informational complexity. Thus you could both win and lose a war, and that's what Operation Sindoor's outcome is.On the plus side, India won a clear military victory. India leveraged its integrated air defense, long-range missiles, global positioning satellites and drone decoy technology to achieve aerial dominance. This enabled India to make pinpoint strikes, unchallenged, first on terrorist enclaves, and then on Pakistani military sites, including, it is said, nuclear storage silos.India surprised most observers, because it was not only through expensive imported fighter jets that it deprecated Pakistan's offensive capabilities, but also indigenous drones, loitering munitions and cruise missiles. India needs strategic autonomy, because foreign suppliers, and supply chains, are not dependable. They keep the kill switches, and can turn off the spigot.India may well have ushered in a step-change in modern warfare itself, an age where drones and missiles tilt the balance rather than fighter jets, although the latter continue to remain key. Maybe it is sufficient to have slightly less advanced jets like the Tejas and the upcoming AMCA rather than procuring top-end F-35s, Su-57s etc. But there is a caveat: fighter jet engines. India must get its Kaveri engine working, for self-reliance.India also established strategic red lines: terrorist attacks will henceforth invite disproportionate and military retaliation because there is a military-terrorist nexus, with Pakistani soldiers cosplaying as terrorists, exchanging uniforms for long shirts, loose pants and beards, as a way of sub-critical harassment with plausible deniability.Furthermore, Pakistan's nuclear threat has been defanged. India's ability to hit their nuclear command center and two of the entrances to their storage facility in the Kirana Hills, suggest that their nuclear assets, if any, are disabled. Besides, there are rumors that warheads are not in Pakistani hands, but American or Chinese. That stands to reason, because otherwise Pakistan would likely have proliferated them to Iran, Turkey and non-state actors such as Hamas.So what are the negatives? The biggest is that this skirmish has not put even a dent in Pakistan's use of terrorism as state policy. Indeed, the next encounter with terrorists has already taken place in Kishtwar on May 22nd, exactly one month after Pahalgam, with one Indian soldier killed. Terrorism and war with India continue to be the raison d'etre of the Pakistani state.India comprehensively lost the narrative war. Operation Sindoor is portrayed in the Western media on Pakistan's terms (including the usual bogey of ‘nuclear war'), and their claims of shooting down 5-6 Indian jets are accepted as the truth. Many Pakistanis are embedded in Western media outlets, and that is not accidental. As they say, you can wake up a sleeping person, but not someone who is pretending to be asleep.In that sense, the all-party delegation visiting various capitals is an exercise in futility, because the West is not interested in India becoming a peer-level competitor: the G2 with China is bad enough, who wants a G3 with India as well? Also, just as the EAM told Europe that their (Ukraine) problem is a European problem, the West sees India's problems as not theirs.Pakistan's ability to internationalize the issue is a failure for India's stance that Kashmir is a bilateral issue. Fortunately, nobody actually cares, including the UN or its Security Council.A major failure for India was that it could have, but did not, capture any territory, which would have been a devastating blow to Pakistan's amour propre, and would have made “Field Marshal” Munir a laughing stock. India errs on the side of caution, and a large-scale intrusion does have problems with hostile civilians and stretched supply lines.But surely the Haji Pir Pass could have been recaptured: it was needlessly given away in Tashkent in 1966. It is a major route of infiltration for terrorists, its commanding heights dominate Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, and it cuts the Uri-Poonch distance from 282km to 56km.Alas, a resounding military victory has been morphed into a stalemate.795 words, May 27, 2025AI-generated podcast from notebookLM.google.com: Now AI-generated podcast in Malayalam from the same: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rajeevsrinivasan.substack.com/subscribe
India's next-gen stealth fighter, the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA), just got a massive push from the government with Defence Minister Rajnath Singh clearing an execution model for the jet's design and development. On this episode of In Our Defence, veteran defence journalist Sandeep Unnithan breaks down what this means for the future of Indian airpower, how private players like Tata and L&T could shape the aircraft production ecosystem, and what role the state-owned Hindustan Aeronautics Limited is likely to play. Sandeep also decodes the different generations of fighter aircraft, detailing what makes a fifth-generation jet stand out from the current crop of Indian Air Force jets such as the Rafales, Tejas, Sukhois and Mirages, among others. The episode also features a discussion on India's attempts to develop its own fighter jet engine and how that quest -- unsuccessful so far -- becomes all the more important for the AMCA. Produced by Prateek Lidhoo Sound mix by Rohan Bharti
627. We interview Kelly Jackson, founder of the Cane River Film Festival. Natchitoches has a long and intimate history with American cinema. The Cane River film festival represents the latest chapter in that history. We are as diverse as the community that we represent. Our mission is to showcase, nurture, and support the emerging creative student and independent filmmakers stories about and or filmed in Louisiana. We want to share their films with an audience, seek opportunities for distribution and celebrate their achievement in telling their story that they want to tell. The Cane River film festival is not just a film festival — it's an experience. Now available: Liberty in Louisiana: A Comedy. The oldest play about Louisiana, author James Workman wrote it as a celebration of the Louisiana Purchase. Now it is back in print for the first time in 221 years. Order your copy today! This week in Louisiana history. May 24, 1963. Birthday of great Shreveport basket player Joe Dumars the Former NBA guard and 6-time All-Star who helped the Detroit Pistons win back-to-back NBA Championships in 1989 and 1990. This week in New Orleans history. On May 24, 2013, City Putt, a 36-hole mini golf complex with two courses opened in City Park. The Louisiana Course highlights cultural themes and cities from around the state. The New Orleans Course showcases streets and iconic themes from around the city, with signs detailing the city's historic sites at each hole. This week in Louisiana. El Camino Real de los Tejas National Historic Trail TX, LA Trail sites are located across 2,580 miles and 5 states (in the U.S.) and thousands of miles in Mexico. The trail runs from the city of Lafayette to the town of Natchitoches. The trail travels west from there into Texas. It splits into two trails while in the state of Louisiana, and joins again at the border with Texas. Website The Trail is administered by the NPS office located at: National Trails Office Regions 6, 7, & 8 El Camino Real de los Tejas National Historic Trail 1100 Old Santa Fe Trail Santa Fe, NM 87505 During the Spanish colonial period in North America, numerous “royal roads” — or caminos reales — tied far-flung regions of the empire to Mexico City. One particular collection of indigenous trails and trade routes became known as El Camino Real de los Tejas, the primary overland route for the Spanish colonization of what is today Texas and northwestern Louisiana. The trail's name is derived not only from its geographic extent but also from some of its original users. Spaniards referred to a prominent group of Caddo Indians as the Tejas, a word derived from the Caddo term for ‘friend' or ‘ally.' Thus, the Spanish province of Tejas, the Mexican state of Coahuila y Tejas, and the historic trail traversing them owe their name to the Caddo language. Postcards from Louisiana. Albany Navarre. Building Blocks for Financial Literacy (ages 6-18). Louisiana Book Festival. Listen on Apple Podcasts. Listen on audible. Listen on Spotify. Listen on TuneIn. Listen on iHeartRadio. The Louisiana Anthology Home Page. Like us on Facebook.
The 10 Minute Personal Brand Kickstart (FREE): https://the505podcast.courses/personalbrandkickstartCollab with Artlist and get 2 extra months for free here:https://artlist.io/artlist-70446?artlist_aid=the505podcast_2970&utm_source=affiliate_p&utm_medium=the505podcast_2970&utm_campaign=the505podcast_2970What's up, Rock Nation! Today we're joined by Tejas - the filmmaker and creator behind one of the most thoughtful and vulnerable docuseries on YouTube. After spending 9 months crafting a series on attractiveness, Tejas pulled in over 1.7 million views and sparked thousands of deeply personal conversations in the comments. In this episode, we dive into how he built a YouTube channel rooted in depth, not just reach, and how he's redefining what it means to build an audience that actually cares. We get into his creative process, the emotional cost of getting vulnerable online, and why most creators are thinking way too small.Check out Tejas here:https://www.instagram.com/tejashullur/https://www.youtube.com/ @TejasHullur SUSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER: https://the505podcast.ac-page.com/rock-reportThe Creator Pricing Guide - The No BS Guide to Pricing Your Creative ServicesCoupon Code: ROCKNATION10 gets you $10 off at checkout for the bouldershttps://courses.the505podcast.com/pricing-guideJoin our Discord! https://discord.gg/xgEAzkqAvsMore Free Products:Our 5 Positioning Tips to Land Bigger Clients (FREE): https://the505podcast.courses/5positioningtips 6 Questions to ask on Every Sales Call (FREE): https://the505podcast.courses/6questionsfordiscoverycallCOP THE BFIGGY "ESSENTIALS" SFX PACK HERE: https://courses.thecreatorcoach.com/BFIGGYSFXPACKKG Presets Vol. 1https://www.kostasgarcia.com/store-1/p/kglightroompresetsKostas' Amazon Storefront:https://amzn.to/3GhId2515% OFF Prism Lens FX with code: KOSTAS15https://bit.ly/42sNdejChase's Totality LUT pack:https://www.chasealexanderfilm.com/color/totalitylutpackTimestamps: 0:00 – Trailer0:33 – Intro1:12 – Why Creators Are Pivoting to YouTube Series2:32 – The Spark Behind the Attractiveness Series5:07 – The Rule Tejas Uses to Validate Video Ideas6:18 – How He Structured the Four-Part Series7:26 – Comparing thumbnails8:39 – Building Stakes and B-Plots Into Episodes10:36 – Thumbnail and title strategy11:23 – Breaking down Tejas' attractiveness series12:49 - How to start a successful series15:20 – Artlist16:18 - What comes after title and thumbnail18:16 - How often will Tejas create a series on YouTube19:49 – The Anxiety of Inconsistent Uploads21:03 – Short Form Pays the Bills, Long Form Feeds the Soul23:03 - How Tejas has changed as a creator24:23 - Editing process24:47 – Prioritizing Depth Over Width in His Audience27:38 – Why Word Count in Comments Is His Favorite Metric28:52 – How to build depth with your audience32:47 - How to create authentically online36:38 - What Tejas has learned from his roommate Colt39:31 - Producer brain40:08 – Tejas' ideal monetization strategy48:20 – Dealing with burnout52:20 - The future of Tejas' channel57:25 - Short form vs long form audiences58:54 - How to make the leap from short form to long form1:02:51 - studying formats1:04:27 – How Tejas' creative process has changed1:05:54 - Tejas doesn't want to go viral1:10:05 – Tejas' mindset going into YouTube1:12:01 – Tejas' big theory 1:12:43 - What tejas learned from creating short form content1:13:48 - Keeping the viewers attention1:16:25 - The future of the creator economy1:26:04 - What feels off about the creator economy1:28:44 - What tejas is trying to work on in the next 6-12 months1:31:45 - Creator vs consumer relationship1:33:53 - Advice to 18 year old selfIf you liked this episode please send it to a friend and take a screenshot for your story! And as always, we'd love to hear from you guys on what you'd like to hear us talk about or potential guests we should have on. DM US ON IG: (Our DM's are always open!) Bfiggy: https://www.instagram.com/bfiggy/ Kostas: https://www.instagram.com/kostasg95/ Chase: https://www.instagram.com/chaseronii/ TikTok:Bfiggy: https://www.tiktok.com/bfiggy/ Kostas: https://www.tiktok.com/kostasgarcia/
In this episode of WORK, Erika talks about leadership, trust, and why the best teams don’t need babysitting. She unpacks what makes someone worth following, how Gen Alpha misunderstands the internet, and why being busy doesn’t mean being valuable. Plus: a conversation with Tejas Hullur on content, burnout, and storytelling—and a story from travel writer Anne Abel about changing your life at 72 and finally becoming the person you’ve always been.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of Teeth Matter, we're joined by Dr. Tejas Patel (@tejaspateldds)—a nationally recognized cosmetic dentist based in Austin, TX. With over 20 years of experience, Dr. Patel shares how he carved out his niche in cosmetic dentistry and transformed his traditional practice into a boutique, high-demand smile studio.You'll hear:How and why he pivoted fully into cosmetic dentistryThe bold decision to eliminate hygiene and insurance—and what that meant for his growthThe underestimated power of social media for attracting ideal patientsWhat not to do in cosmetic dentistry (mistakes most dentists don't realize they're making)The truth about prepless and no-prep veneersHow he stays motivated after two decades in practice—and how you can tooIf you're serious about building a brand, attracting high-value patients, and practicing on your own terms, this conversation is a blueprint worth hearing. DM us your thoughts—what's your niche and how are you leaning into it?
The name "Texas" comes from the Native American word "Tejas" or "Tay-shas".
The conversation delves into the shifting contours of global space governance, touching on the rise of dual-use technologies, the importance of transparency and norms in space activities, and the need for trusted partnerships. Samson outlines how India and the U.S. can work together to ensure space remains a stable and secure domain, citing examples from recent dialogues and space exercises. This episode underscores the importance of rules-based order in space and the benefits of integrating space cooperation into broader diplomatic frameworks of both countries, including under the Quad and the U.S.-India strategic tech and defence partnership.Episode ContributorsVictoria Samson is the Chief Director for Space Security and Stability at the Secure World Foundation, with over 25 years of experience in military space and security issues. She has served as a senior analyst at the Center for Defense Information and is a leading voice in advancing norms of responsible space behavior.Tejas Bharadwaj is a senior research analyst with the Technology and Society Program at Carnegie India. He focuses on space law and policies and also works on areas related to applications of artificial intelligence and autonomy in the military domain and U.S-India export controls. Tejas is also part of the group that works in convening Carnegie India's annual flagship event, the “Global Technology Summit” co-organized with the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India. Every two weeks, Interpreting India brings you diverse voices from India and around the world to explore the critical questions shaping the nation's future. We delve into how technology, the economy, and foreign policy intertwine to influence India's relationship with the global stage.As a Carnegie India production, hosted by Carnegie scholars, Interpreting India, a Carnegie India production, provides insightful perspectives and cutting-edge by tackling the defining questions that chart India's course through the next decade.Stay tuned for thought-provoking discussions, expert insights, and a deeper understanding of India's place in the world.Don't forget to subscribe, share, and leave a review to join the conversation and be part of Interpreting India's journey.
Join us on Momento today!Welcome back to The Verdependent podcast, where we depend on the Verde & Black for our everyday vibes. This week, Paul and Lobar...recap Austin's bounce back win against LA Galaxydiscuss Austin FC's penalty recordpreview Austin's Copa Tejas match @ Houston DynamoStoppage time rundown covering the Open Cup, NWSL, CCC, and more... Thank y'all for kickin' it with us this week. Keep the conversation going on socials by following @TheVerdependent.
Welcome back, today we dip into some topic that I think your gonna like. The Texas whiskey fest. Which I have been talking about for a while now. Respecting private property. And the flooding in Kentucky. Hope you enjoy.Texaswhiskeyfestival.comBadmotivatorbarrels.com/shop/?aff=3https://www.instagram.com/zsmithwhiskeyandmixology?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igsh=ZDNlZDc0MzIxNw==The Texas Whiskey Festival is an event for those new to whiskey, avid fans, and those who make it. It's an opportunity for whiskey enthusiasts to meet the distillers and master blenders that make Texas whiskeyamong the best of the best. With entertainment, cigar pairings, vendors, and a live concert to finish the night off, this event is sure to be an experience to remember. If you love tasting and talking about whiskey, you'd be crazy to miss our events.Tejas Collaboration SeriesTejas, the Spanish spelling of the ancient Caddo word for “friend” or “ally,” is a collaboration between the festival and Texas distillers to create unique offerings that showcase their methods and character. Each bottling will be a limited release available only through the respective distiller.Tejas CollaborationDaddy's Little princess barrel-aged cigarShe's Daddy's Little Princess—the sparkle in your eye, the queen of your world. This is the kind of cigar that matches her sparkle. Wrapped in Nicaraguan leaf, bound by Nicaraguan finesse, and filled with the finest Nicaraguan tobacco, it's a beauty that's aged in Yellow Rose Bourbon barrels.Read MoreTejas CollaborationRYE WHISKEY FINISHED IN NARANJA "ORANGE" WINE BARRELSA Tejas Collaboration with Ranger Creek Brewing and Distilling- RYE WHISKEY FINISHED IN NARANJA "ORANGE" WINE BARRELSRead MoreTejas CollaborationRye Whiskey Finished in Spanish Sweet Vermouth BarrelsRye whiskey finished in Spanish sweet vermouth barrels. Not a Manhattan in a bottle, but this Tejas collaboration with Giant Texas Distillery is delicious.Read MoreTejas CollaborationPeated Single Malt aged in Mezcal Barrels.This Tejas Collaboration with Andalusia Whiskey Co., where we did the unthinkable—or at least the somewhat questionable. We took their Irish Peated Single Malt and poured it straight into a used mezcal barrel.Read MoreTejas CollaborationCrazy Aunt Barrel Aged CigarThis cigar is for those who don't follow the rules. For those who go where the wind takes them. Wrapped in mystery and brimming with personality, it's bold, a bit wild—just like her. It's the cigar you'll smoke when you feel like doing something a little out of the ordinary.Read MoreTejas CollaborationDrunk Uncle Barrel Aged CigarA cigar that arrives with the bold confidence of a man who's never met a glass of whiskey he didn't like. Wrapped in a rich Maduro, this cigar is an indulgence in itself—a deep, earthy flavor with hints of the robust and the refined.Read MoreTejas CollaborationRye Finished in a rum barrelNow Available! Click to learn more!Our first collaboration with Shire Distilling using their unreleased rye whiskey and a used rum barrel. The rum was a funky funky (in a good way) Jamaican-style heavy dunder rum. The combination created an amazing whiskey.
In this episode of the Neuroveda podcast, Dr Gillian Ehrlich and Dr. Julianna Giles explore the immune system from both Ayurvedic and Western perspectives. They discuss the complexities of cancer, autoimmunity, and chronic infections, emphasizing the importance of understanding the underlying factors that contribute to these conditions. The conversation delves into the roles of psychoneuroimmunology, cellular biology, and the Ayurvedic concepts of Prana, Tejas, and Ojas in maintaining health and wellness. Practical approaches to healing and supporting the immune system are also highlighted, along with the significance of lifestyle choices and conscious awareness in promoting overall health.takeawaysThe immune system is complex and multifaceted.Cancer and autoimmunity are not singular diseases but a spectrum.Chronic infections can exacerbate immune dysfunction.Psychoneuroimmunology bridges the mind-body connection.Ayurvedic principles emphasize cellular health and balance.Disruptions in Prana, Tejas, and Ojas lead to disease.Holistic approaches are essential for healing.Breathwork and lifestyle choices significantly impact health.Ojas represents immunity and vitality in Ayurveda.Conscious awareness can lead to positive health changes.
Cowboys trading Dak? Group Chat Leaks between you and your degen friends/National Security officials? DOGE update, March Madness update, Emails - and finally our new segment - Conspiracy Theories with Hammer. Get it in yall.
First off - keno winnings. Second, Shea thinks a certain Democrat governor is gonna win in 2026. Then - Emails including Shea's historical dictator power rankings, free agent tampering in the NFL. Finally - some sports/polymarket bets - and some politics talk. NEXT WEEK - NEW SEGMENT: Conspiracy theories found on the X "For You" tab -presented by Hammer de Tejas. Get it in yall.
With deliveries of the Tejas Mk1A fighter jet delayed by nearly a year, big questions remains on what it will take to plug the Indian Air Force's fighter jet shortfall. What will it take for the Hindustan Aeronautics Limited to get the Tejas production line up and running at the speed that the Indian Air Force requires? Is the entry of the private sector to help boost the production of the indigenous fighter jet all but a given now? Also, is there serious thought being put to figuring a roadmap to ensure that the Air Force is never faced with such a capability and technology gap? Host Dev Goswami and defence expert Shiv Aroor discuss and analyse these questions as they bring the second season of In Our Defence to a close. The two talk about how the Tejas project is just right on the horizon but not quite there yet and how this is going to be the proverbial do-or-die moment of the Hindustan Aeronautics Limited. The two also look at some of the tough decisions that military planners in the government will be faced with as they attempt to figure out a roadmap for the Indian Air Force's future fighter jet inductions. Tune in as Dev and Shiv break down a topic that became the top focus over the courwse of In Our Defence's Season 2. Produced by Prateek Lidhoo Sound mix by Rohan Bharti
Mike and Moses jump into the Hot Tub to tell the Legend of Tejas. It starts with a Coffee business that spans generations, that decides to branch out to distilling. That then parlays into acquiring a beloved West Texas brand that was almost lost. Listen in as we tell the story of how Tejas beer has been resurrected right here in Houston, and end the session with us as we create our own beer cocktail that combines the 3 beverages that built the company behind the NEW Tejas Beer!
On this edition of the Cowboy Up podcast, we introduce TJ Jones, a real-life rodeo announcer with the Tejas rodeo near San Antonio, taxes. TJ's mom was showing horses while he was growing up and his father was on the Sul Ross State Rodeo in Alpine, Texas so his rodeo roots run deep. TJ NEVER starts a rodeo without speaking to our Creator who blessed us with the ability to do what we do. With Christ, all things are possible. According to TJ, whoever said a dog is a man's best friend, never owned a horse. Good ol Buster has really turned into a great announcer's horse and he's the best coworker he's ever had. He hopes the Lord blesses him with many more years getting to announce rodeos from the back of ol Buster. TJ says there's no better place to be on a Saturday night than a Tejas rodeo. Give TJ a healthy listen on the Cowboy Up podcast
Intro Vince – Welcome back to another episode of Let's Go Hunt! – Back from the República Popular de Tejas! We have: Dave Packard, dog therapeutic rehabilitator Sam Alexander, who likes the skin on Mike Gonçalves, who might be a host? And I'm Vince H, On Target: Hangin' with the chums Eventual Ad […] The post Let's Go Hunt 104 – Boot Lotion: República Popular de Tejas Goose Shoot appeared first on Firearms Radio Network.