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The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast is a reader-supported publication (and my full-time job). To receive new posts and to support independent ski journalism, please consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.WhoJoe Hession, CEO of Snow Partners, which owns Mountain Creek, Big Snow American Dream, SnowCloud, and Terrain Based LearningRecorded onMay 2, 2025About Snow PartnersSnow Partners owns and operates Mountain Creek, New Jersey and Big Snow American Dream, the nation's only indoor ski center. The company also developed SnowCloud resort management software and has rolled out its Terrain Based Learning system at more than 80 ski areas worldwide. They do some other things that I don't really understand (there's a reason that I write about skiing and not particle physics), that you can read about on their website.About Mountain CreekLocated in: Vernon Township, New JerseyClosest neighboring public ski areas: Mount Peter (:24); Big Snow American Dream (:50); Campgaw (:51) Pass affiliations: Snow Triple Play, up to two anytime daysBase elevation: 440 feetSummit elevation: 1,480 feetVertical drop: 1,040 feetSkiable Acres: 167Average annual snowfall: 65 inchesTrail count: 46Lift count: 9 (1 Cabriolet, 2 high-speed quads, 2 fixed-grip quads, 1 triple, 1 double, 2 carpets – view Lift Blog's inventory of Mountain Creek's lift fleet)About Big Snow American DreamLocated in: East Rutherford, New JerseyClosest neighboring public ski areas: Campgaw (:35); Mountain Creek (:50); Mount Peter (:50)Pass affiliations: Snow Triple Play, up to two anytime daysVertical drop: 160 feet Skiable Acres: 4Trail count: 4 (2 green, 1 blue, 1 black)Lift count: 4 (1 quad, 1 poma, 2 carpets - view Lift Blog's of inventory of Big Snow American Dream's lift fleet)Why I interviewed himI read this earlier today:The internet is full of smart people writing beautiful prose about how bad everything is, how it all sucks, how it's embarrassing to like anything, how anything that appears good is, in fact, secretly bad. I find this confusing and tragic, like watching Olympic high-jumpers catapult themselves into a pit of tarantulas.That blurb was one of 28 “slightly rude notes on writing” offered in Adam Mastroianni's Experimental History newsletter. And I thought, “Man this dude must follow #SkiTwitter.” Or Instabook. Of Flexpost. Or whatever. Because online ski content, both short- and long-form, is, while occasionally joyous and evocative, disproportionately geared toward the skiing-is-fucked-and-this-is-why worldview. The passes suck. The traffic sucks. The skiers suck. The prices suck. The parking sucks. The Duopoly sucks. Everyone's a Jerry, chewing up my pow line with their GoPro selfie sticks hoisted high and their Ikon Passes dangling from their zippers. Skiing is corporate and soulless and tourist obsessed and doomed anyway because of climate change. Don't tell me you're having a good time doing this very fun thing. People like you are the reason skiing's soul now shops at Wal-Mart. Go back to Texas and drink a big jug of oil, you Jerry!It's all so… f*****g dumb. U.S. skiing just wrapped its second-best season of attendance. The big passes, while imperfect, are mostly a force for good, supercharging on-hill infrastructure investment, spreading skiers across geographies, stabilizing a once-storm-dependent industry, and lowering the per-day price of skiing for the most avid among us to 1940s levels. Snowmaking has proven an effective bulwark against shifting weather patterns. Lift-served skiing is not a dying pastime, financially or spiritually or ecologically. Yes, modern skiing has problems: expensive food (pack a lunch); mountain-town housing shortages (stop NIMBY-ing everything); traffic (yay car culture); peak-day crowds (don't go then); exploding insurance, labor, utilities, and infrastructure costs (I have no answers). But in most respects, this is a healthy, thriving, constantly evolving industry, and a more competitive one than the Duopoly Bros would admit.Snow Partners proves this. Because what the hell is Snow Partners? It's some company sewn together by a dude who used to park cars at Mountain Creek. Ten years ago this wasn't a thing, and now it's this wacky little conglomerate that owns a bespoke resort tech platform and North America's only snowdome and the impossible, ridiculous Mountain Creek. And they're going to build a bunch more snowdomes that stamp new skiers out by the millions and maybe – I don't know but maybe – become the most important company in the history of lift-served skiing in the process.Could such an outfit possibly have materialized were the industry so corrupted as the Brobot Pundit Bros declare it? Vail is big. Alterra is big. But the two companies combined control just 53 of America's 501 active ski areas. Big ski areas, yes. Big shadows. But neither created: Indy Pass, Power Pass, Woodward Parks, Terrain Based Learning, Mountain Collective, RFID, free skiing for kids, California Mountain Resort Company, or $99 season passes. Neither saved Holiday Mountain or Hatley Pointe or Norway Mountain or Timberline West Virigina from the scrapheap, or transformed a failing Black Mountain into a co-op. Neither has proven they can successfully run a ski area in Indiana (sorry Vail #SickBurn #SellPaoliPeaks #Please).Skiing, at this moment, is a glorious mix of ideas and energy. I realize it makes me uncool to think so, but I signed off on those aspirations the moment I drove the minivan off the Chrysler lot (topped it off with a roofbox, too, Pimp). Anyhow, the entire point of this newsletter is to track down the people propelling change in a sport that most likely predates the written word and ask them why they're doing these novel things to make an already cool and awesome thing even more cool and awesome. And no one, right now, is doing more cool and awesome things in skiing than Snow Partners.**That's not exactly true. Mountain Capital Partners, Alterra, Ikon Pass, Deer Valley, Entabeni Systems, Jon Schaefer, the Perfect Clan, Boyne Resorts, Big Sky, Mt. Bohemia, Powdr, Vail Resorts, Midwest Family Ski Resorts, and a whole bunch more entities/individuals/coalitions are also contributing massively to skiing's rapid-fire rewiring in the maw of the robot takeover digital industrial revolution. But, hey, when you're in the midst of transforming an entire snow-based industry from a headquarters in freaking New Jersey, you get a hyperbolic bump in the file card description.What we talked aboutThe Snow Triple Play; potential partners; “there's this massive piece of the market that's like ‘I don't even understand what you're talking about'” with big day ticket prices and low-priced season passes; why Mountain Creek sells its Triple Play all season long and why the Snow Triple Play won't work that way (at least at first); M.A.X. Pass and why Mountain Creek declined to join successor passes; an argument for Vail, Alterra and other large ski companies to participate on the Snow Triple Play; comparing skiing to hotels, airlines, and Disney World; “the next five years are going to be the most interesting and disruptive time in the ski industry because of technology”; “we don't compete with anybody”; Liftopia's potential, errors, failure, and legacy; skiing on Groupon; considering Breckenridge as an independent ski area; what a “premium” ski area on the Snow Triple Play would be; why megapasses are “selling people a product that will never be used the way it's sold to them”; why people in NYC feel like going to Mountain Creek, an hour over the George Washington Bridge, is “going to Alaska”; why Snow Triple Play will “never” add a fourth day; sticker shock for Big Snow newbs who emerge from the Dome wanting more; SnowCloud and the tech and the guest journey from parking lot to lifts; why Mountain Creek stopped mailing season passes; Bluetooth Low Energy “is certainly the future of passes”; “100 percent we're getting more Big Snows” – but let's justify the $175 million investment first; Big Snow has a “terrible” design; “I don't see why every city shouldn't have a Big Snow” and which markets Snow Partners is talking to; why Mountain Creek didn't get the mega-lift Hession teased on this pod three years ago and when we could see one; “I really believe that the Vernon base of Mountain Creek needs an updated chair”; the impact of automated snowmaking at Mountain Creek; and a huge residential project incoming at Mountain Creek.What I got wrong* I said that Hession wasn't involved in Mountain Creek in the M.A.X. Pass era, but he was an Intrawest employee at the time, and was Mountain Creek's GM until 2012.* I hedged on whether Boyne's Explorer multi-day pass started at two or three days. Skiers can purchase the pass in three- to six-day increments.Why now was a good time for this interviewOkay, so I'll admit that when Snow Partners summarized the Snow Triple Play for me, I wasn't like “Holy crap, three days (total) at up to three different ski areas on a single ski pass? Do you think they have room for another head on Mount Rushmore?” This multi-day pass is a straightforward product that builds off a smart idea (the Mountain Creek Triple Play), that has been a smash hit at the Jersey Snow Jungle since at least 2008. But Snow Triple Play doesn't rank alongside Epic, Ikon, Indy, or Mountain Collective as a seasonlong basher. This is another frequency product in a market already flush with them.So why did I dedicate an entire podcast and two articles (so far) to dissecting this product, which Hession makes pretty clear has no ambitions to grow into some Indy/Ikon/Epic competitor? Because it is the first product to tie Big Snow to the wider ski world. And Big Snow only works if it is step one and there is an obvious step two. Right now, that step two is hard, even in a region ripe with ski areas. The logistics are confounding, the one-off cost hard to justify. Lift tickets, gear rentals, getting your ass to the bump and back, food, maybe a lesson. The Snow Triple Play doesn't solve all of these problems, but it does narrow an impossible choice down to a manageable one by presenting skiers with a go-here-next menu. If Snow Partners can build a compelling (or at least logical) Northeast network and then scale it across the country as the company opens more Big Snows in more cities, then this simple pass could evolve into an effective toolkit for building new skiers.OK, so why not just join Indy or Mountain Collective, or forge some sort of newb-to-novice agreement with Epic or Ikon? That would give Snow Partners the stepladder, without the administrative hassle of owning a ski pass. But that brings us to another roadblock in Ski Revolution 2025: no one wants to share partners. So Hession is trying to flip the narrative. Rather than locking Big Snow into one confederacy or the other, he wants the warring armies to lash their fleets along Snow Partners Pier. Big Snow is just the bullet factory, or the gas station, or the cornfield – the thing that all the armies need but can't supply themselves. You want new skiers? We got ‘em. They're ready. They just need a map to your doorstep. And we're happy to draw you one.Podcast NotesOn the Snow Triple PlayThe basics: three total days, max of two used at any one partner ski area, no blackouts at Big Snow or Mountain Creek, possible blackouts at partner resorts, which are TBD.The pass, which won't be on sale until Labor Day, is fully summarized here:And I speculate on potential partners here:On the M.A.X. PassFor its short, barely noted existence, the M.A.X. Pass was kind of an amazing hack, granting skiers five days each at an impressive blend of regional and destination ski areas:Much of this roster migrated over to Ikon, but in taking their pass' name too literally, the Alterra folks left off some really compelling regional ski areas that could have established a hub-and-spoke network out of the gate. Lutsen and Granite Peak owner Charles Skinner told me on the podcast a few years back that Ikon never offered his ski areas membership (they joined Indy in 2020), cutting out two of the Midwest's best mountains. The omissions of Mountain Creek, Wachusett, and the New York trio of Belleayre, Whiteface, and Gore ceded huge swaths of the dense and monied Northeast to competitors who saw value in smaller, high-end operations that are day-trip magnets for city folks who also want that week at Deer Valley (no other pass signed any of these mountains, but Vail and Indy both assembled better networks of day-drivers and destinations).On my 2022 interview with HessionOn LiftopiaLiftopia's website is still live, but I'm not sure how many ski areas participate in this Expedia-for-lift-tickets. Six years ago, I thought Liftopia was the next bargain evolution of lift-served skiing. I even hosted founder Evan Reece on one of my first 10 podcasts. The whole thing fell apart when Covid hit. An overview here:On various other day-pass productsI covered this in my initial article, but here's how the Snow Triple Play stacks up against other three-day multi-resort products:On Mountain Creek not mailing passesI don't know anything about tech, but I know, from a skier's point of view, when something works well and when it doesn't. Snow Cloud's tech is incredible in at least one customer-facing respect: when you show up at a ski area, a rep standing in a conspicuous place is waiting with an iPhone, with which they scan a QR code on your phone, and presto-magico: they hand you your ski pass. No lines or waiting. One sentimental casualty of this on-site efficiency was the mailed ski pass, an autumn token of coming winter to be plucked gingerly from the mailbox. And this is fine and makes sense, in the same way that tearing down chairlifts constructed of brontosaurus bones and mastodon hides makes sense, but I must admit that I miss these annual mailings in the same way that I miss paper event tickets and ski magazines. My favorite ski mailing ever, in fact, was not Ikon's glossy fold-out complete with a 1,000-piece 3D jigsaw puzzle of the Wild Blue Gondola and name-a-snowflake-after-your-dog kit, but this simple pamphlet dropped into the envelope with my 2018-19 Mountain Creek season pass:Just f*****g beautiful, Man. That hung on my office wall for years. On the CabrioletThis is just such a wackadoodle ski lift:Onetime Mountain Creek owner Intrawest built similar lifts at Winter Park and Tremblant, but as transit lifts from the parking lot. This one at Mountain Creek is the only one that I'm aware of that's used as an open-air gondola. Get full access to The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast at www.stormskiing.com/subscribe
Lambert Drainville revient sur une soirée électorale électrisante, où il discute des rebondissements inattendus et des résultats surprenants pour les libéraux et conservateurs. Il partage son analyse sur l’échec du NPD et le défi du gouvernement minoritaire, tout en explorant la dynamique des partis et la réalité québécoise. Sophie Grégoire, quant à elle, parle de son expérience de déconnexion après une soirée plus calme que les élections. Elle évoque son cours de yoga à Tremblant et l’importance de prendre soin de soi pour réduire l’anxiété. En prime, un enfant abîme une œuvre de 50 millions d'euros !Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee pour notre politique de vie privée
A ses débuts, on le surnommait le petit. Tremblant tellement comme une feuille pour sa première apparition télé que le standard a été pris d'assaut par les téléspectateurs inquiets. En plateau les vieux briscards de la télé, Léon Zitrone et Roger Couderc ne rataient jamais une occasion de charrier leur tout jeune confrère. 60 ans plus tard, on l'appelle le boss. "Avec le temps", c'est le titre de son dernier ouvrage, Michel Drucker a construit une carrière unique dans le PAF. Il est ce soir notre invitéTous les soirs, du lundi au vendredi à 20h sur France 5, Anne-Elisabeth Lemoine et toute son équipe accueillent les personnalités et artistes qui font l'actualité.
Découvrez le parcours de Jérémy Savoie, ayant tout récemment amassé 32 000$ pour la fondation Enfant Soleil en complétant le trajet Montréal-Québec à la course pour un total de 318 km en 56 heures. Seulement 2 ans plus tôt, Jérémy a décidé d'entrer dans le monde de la course en faisant au moins une sortie à tous les jours pour se remettre en forme après avoir écouté un podcast avec le fameux David Goggins. Depuis, l'athlète de 21 ans a remporté deux Backyard Ultra, couru 165km au 24h Tremblant, fait 100km en raquettes à la course Cryo sur le Lac St-Jean dans des conditions exécrables, et bien plus!MONDEDELACOURSE pour des rabais au Demi-Marathon Mont-Tremblant et GaspesiaPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/lemondedelacourseEntraînements avec Catherine Gagné: https://bit.ly/3cKBgrGSuggestions d'invités: https://forms.gle/eM2MRhdQnsUEwENAA
Guy Thibaudeau, former ski reporter with CJAD 800 and now president of the Laurentian Ski Museum. He spoke to Andrew Carter about the current state of ski hills in Quebec.
Josiane part à la recherche de son beau Dereck au Nebraska ! Benoît est tout en bienveillance après son week-end 24h à Tremblant où il a aidé à amassé 7 millions de dollars ! Marie-Ève se transforme en historienne des chansons de Noël ! Bonne écoute !
Entente Churchill Falls: la ministre Fréchette est fière du premier ministre | 24H Tremblant : une famille d’une résilience sans nom illustre l’importance de cet événement | Une chirurgienne empêchée d’allonger des membres | Luc Langevin, de retour sur scène ! Dans cet épisode intégral du 13 décembre, en entrevue : Héloïse Archambault, journaliste au Journal de Montréal. Sandra Bélanger, maman de Lovania ET Lovania, enfant parrainé du 24h Tremblant. Christine Fréchette, ministre de l’Économie, de l’Innovation et de l’Énergie. Luc Langevin, illusionniste. Une production QUB Décembre 2024 Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
C’est aujourd’hui que débute le 24H Tremblant! On parle à des ambassadeurs de cet événement, qui bénéficie directement des fonds amassés lors de cet événement. On rencontre aujourd’hui Lovania, 7 ans, qui est en rémission d'un lymphome lymphoblastique à cellule T et sa maman! Entrevue avec Sandra Bélanger, maman de Lovania ET Lovania, enfant parrainé du 24h Tremblant. Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
Le directeur général des Remparts de Québec, Simon Gagné, était de passage aux Amateurs de Sports vendredi. Le succès de son équipe, la transition d’entraîneur vers la direction, de même que les défis d’une reconstruction dans la LHJMQ sont à l’honneur! L’ancien des Flyers et des Kings aborde aussi l’avantage numérique des Canadiens de Montréal cette année. Selon lui, Martin St-Louis aura un énorme défi, puisque ce dernier aura aussi à gérer le jeu à 5 contre 5. Selon Gagné, l’entraîneur du tricolore aura probablement un peu plus de cheveux gris à la fin de la saison. Est-ce que cela pourrait être trop? Pourrait-il avoir besoin d'aide? L'analyste Dany Dubé ne le pense pas. «Martin, s'il décide de prendre ça, c'est parce qu'il a une vision très claire de ce qu'il veut. Et la vision s'appelle Lane Hutson. Martin regarde et il dit: "Lui, c'est la pièce qui manquait.''» Les Canadiens de Montréal ont tenu leur dernier entraînement lors de leur retraite à Tremblant, vendredi, à la veille de leur dernier match préparatoire, samedi, à Ottawa, contre les Sénateurs. Écoutez Martin McGuire résumer la journée de l'équipe et rapporter les propos de l'entraîneur Martin St-Louis, qui ne veut pas voir de foire d'empoigne comme ce fut le cas lors du plus récent match contre les Sénateurs. L’entraîneur du CH estime d'ailleurs que les Canadiens et les Sénateurs en sont maintenant rendus au stade des grandes rivalités.Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee pour notre politique de vie privée
On jase des Canadiens avec Bruno Gervais et Stéphane Waite.
Bienvenue à la Maison de Soma, bienvenue chez Edith et Didier!Ça fait longtemps qu'on était dûs pour enregistrer des podcasts en dehors de Montréal.Alors il y a quelques jours, on a décidé de partir dans Les Laurentides. On a demandé autour de nous des recommandations de restos inspirants et de gens de l'industrie qui avaient des choses à dire.On a reçu beaucoup de recommandations. Mais de loin, la premier endroit qu'on nous a dit de visiter, c'est un restaurant perdu dans les champs, qui fait pousser ses 100% des légumes utilisés, où le temps est un ingrédient à part entière et où luxe n'a pas la même définition qu'en villeAlors évidemment qu'on y est allé, à la Maison de Soma. Et aujourd'hui ce sont Edith et Didier qui sont Dans le JusHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Send us a textIm Urlaub ist für uns das Hauptziel meistens die bekannten Sehenswürdigkeiten aus der Nähe zu erleben, die ikonischen Gerichte zu verzehren, den einen oder anderen Kaffee zu Genießen, naja Ich gebs zu, viele Kaffees zu genießen, und hier und da sich mit Absicht verlaufen um neue Ecken und Plätze kennenzulernen und zu erleben. Hat man in Montreal die Hauptpunkte abgeschlossen und sich in der Altstadt satt gesehen, dann geht es in dieser Folge ab vom bekannten Pfad, und stattdessen mal in Gegenden und Nischen die in der Regel nicht so besucht sind und dadurch dem Besucher Möglichkeiten zum abspannen, ausruhen, und erholen bietet, abseits der ausgetretenen Pfaden. Wo gibts das? Hat man da auch Spaß? Gibts genug zu sehen und erleben?Bei diesen Fragen will Ich mit der heutigen Folge helfen und ein paar Orte und Restaurants vorschlagen die wir über die Jahre hinweg entdeckt haben und die uns sehr ans Herz gewachsen sind. Ich bin der Bastian und Ich lebe seit 1999 in Kanada. Wilkommen beim ‚Ab nach Kanada‘ podcast wo Ich Dir gern Kanada als Reiseziel schmackhaft machen und die Reiseplanung ein bischen erleichtern will. In der heutigen Folge geht es um diese Themen: ▪ Sainte Anne de Bellevue im Detail erleben ▪ Mt. Tremblant und Saint Sauveur ▪ Bromont und die Eastern Townships ▪ Cabane à sucre & érablières ▪ Long Sault & Ingleside Vogelschutzgebiet ▪ Ile Perrot Ressourcen und Links: ▪ Ahornzucker Höfe ▪ Wein route ▪ Autotouren zu Herrenhäusern ▪ Long Sault Inseln ▪ Morgan ArboretumSupport the showVielen Dank fürs zuhören! Wenn diese Folge oder die links oben hilfreich waren würde Ich mich sehr über eine Empfehlung meines Podcasts an Freunde, Verwandte, oder andere Reiseinteressierte Menschen in deinem Leben freuen. Für neue Folgen notizen, Bilder und Links folge diesem Podcast auf Facebook oder Instagram @abnachkanada_derpodcastBis zum nächsten mal!
We are thrilled to share our fantastic 29029 Everesting experience with you. In this conversation we dive into: What our three days were like at Mt. Tremblant. Our personal goals going into the event. The role a positive community plays in our lives. The power of setting your mind to something and acheiving it. What grit and resilience look like. Other takeaways from our experience and also what we learned from the amazing speakers. Helpful links and resources: 29029 Everesting E172 with CEO Marc Hodulich E177 with Emilee Wise and Chris Hauth FB: https://www.facebook.com/29029Everesting/ IG: https://www.instagram.com/29029everesting/ --------------------------------------------------------- Thanks to our amazing Sponsor, Vivarays Are you looking for a way to improve your sleep and boost your energy during the day? Meet Vivarays' Circadian Light Harmonizing Glasses! Unlike regular blue light blockers, these glasses are engineered with a deep understanding of light and its impact on your body. Designed by leading sleep experts, Vivarays helps keep your circadian rhythm in sync with nature, improving your hormonal balance, sleep quality, energy levels and productivity. Head over to https://vivarays.com/livingwell to check out their amazing glasses and use promo code ARTOFLIVINGWELL during checkout to save 10%. --------------------------------------------------------- Vitality Reboot Fall Detox 2024 - Sept.22-28th Revitalize Your Life in Just 7 Days! This program is designed to leave you feeling refreshed, energized, and ready to embrace the fall season ahead! Join our fabulous community! Register here! --------------------------------------------------------- Need more protein in your day? Check out these amazing, high quality products from Kion, especially their essential amino acids, which we both use daily. Use code 'ARTOFLIVING' for a discount off your purchase. ----------------------------------------------------------- Ask us a question/make a recommentation We'd love to hear from you! Click here to share your feedback and suggestions. ----------------------------------------------------------- Sign-up for your 15 minute Health Transformation Audit - Click here. ----------------------------------------------------------- Let us help you get to the root cause of your unwanted symptoms. Schedule a 15 minute consultation to discuss at-home functional medicine lab testing here. ----------------------------------------------------------- How can you support our podcast? Apple users, please subscribe and review our show on Apple Podcasts,we make sure to read them all. Android users, please be sure to subscribe to our show on Google Podcasts so that you don't miss any of the action. Tell a friend about The Art of Living Well Podcast® and our community programs. Share your favorite episode on social media and don't forget to tag us @theartofliving_well. Subscribe to our Youtube channel Shop our Favorite Products: https://www.theartoflivingwell.us/products Connect with us on social media: IG: @theartofliving_well FB: theartoflivingwell Get on our list so you don't miss out on announcements, programs and events. You can download our guests' favorite reads here. Learn more about your hosts: Marnie Dachis Marmet Stephanie May Potter
Cette semaine sur le podcast, je reçois une autre nutritionniste du sport dans le cadre des épisodes « Raconte-moi ton anecdote de nutrition ». Natasha a participé au demi Ironman de Tremblant en juin dernier. Cette année, il y a eu une grande particularité à l'évènement cette année : il annonçait 70 mm de pluie en quelques heures... Les athlètes ont eu un droit à tout qu'un cocktail météo ! Natasha a tout de même pris le départ, malgré les conditions et le fait que c'était son premier demi Ironman. Elle vient sur le podcast nous raconté son expérience et nous expliquer l'impact que la météo a pu avoir sur sa stratégie de nutrition. Vous pouvez suivre Natasha via : Instagram Pour t'inscrire à ma formation gratuite Comment planifier la nutrition pour ta prochaine course en sentier, clique ici : JE M'INSCRIS ! N'hésite pas à partager l'épisode sur les réseaux sociaux. Un énorme merci et bonne écoute !
Rencontrez ma Chacha dans ce septième épisode!!! @chaloux.lauzon vient nous jaser de la culture des runclubs à Montréal, de ses expériences au Ironman 70.3 de Tremblant, le tout en se remémorant quelques parcelles de nos passés de p'tites filles de Québec et Sherbrooke. Juste une petite jasette entre copines.Bonne écoute les chums!!! (Comme elle dirait)
With Jackson Laundry currently standing in 2nd place in the IRONMAN Pro series and planning to take on IRONMAN Lake Placid against some serious contenders, we had a lot to unpack. Additionally, Tamara Jewett is BACK smashing the course at IRONMAN 70.3 Mt. Tremblant, running her way into 2nd place after battling with Ellie Salthouse in the final Kilometers. Garrick is taking on IRONMAN Vitoria-Gasteiz while Nicholas Chase is going for Challenge ROTH, one of the biggest races in the sport. We are in full-on season peaking with most of us taking a break after our July races. If you want to go above and beyond consider supporting us over on Patreon by clicking here! Follow us on Instagram at @realtrisquad for updates on new episodes. Individual Instagram handles: Garrick Loewen - @loeweng Nicholas Chase - @race_chase Jackson Laundry - @jacksonlaundrytri
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Cette semaine sur le podcast je te donne mes meilleurs trucs nutritionnels pour te préparer pour le demi Ironman de Tremblant ! On va parler de : Déjeuner et stratégies nutritionnelles pré-départ L'optimisation des transitions au niveau nutrition L'importance de considérer l'équipement dans la stratégie Produits disponibles sur le parcours Gel Maurten 100 et 100 CAF Barre Maurten Solid 160 Gatorade Endurance Particularité du parcours à Tremblant : les côtes ! Pour l'épisode sur : Le pouvoir de la nutrition en triathlon Pour t'inscrire à ma formation gratuite 4 étapes pour t'aider à réussir tes objectifs de course en sentier, clique ici : JE M'INSCRIS ! N'hésite pas à partager l'épisode sur les réseaux sociaux. Un énorme merci et bonne écoute !
Brett Barakett is the Founder and Chief Investment Officer of Tremblant Capital, a 23-year-old long-short equity and long-only firm focused on deep fundamental stock research with a senior team that has been together for at least sixteen years. Brett has invested through rising and falling tides in the industry, ups and downs in fund flows, and alongside friends and peers who have since retired. Yet he keeps skating to where the puck is going. Our conversation covers Brett's path to launching Tremblant, including lessons from hockey, operational experience, and the early days in a terrible market for the strategy. We discuss the long-short and long-only models, primary research, portfolio construction, sell decisions, risk management, compensation structure, and Tremblant's launch of TOGA, one of the first active ETFs run by a longstanding hedge fund manager. Learn More Follow Ted on Twitter at @tseides or LinkedIn Subscribe to the mailing list Access Transcript with Premium Membership
This SATURDAY we're BACK with an all new episode! We do a serious catch up with you guys and chat about Ro's Costa Rica trip, crazy coincidences, Tash's Tremblant crisis, health benefits of gossiping, Teletubbies, reaching 1.8 million views, & so much more! xoxo Tash & Ro #itsaturdaypod No Days Wasted - Use code “itsaturdaypod” to receive 15% off! (https://nodayswasted.ca/) Listen & subscribe: https://linktr.ee/itsaturdaypod Instagram & Tiktok: @itsaturdaypod Disclaimer: Opinions expressed here are solely our own and do not express the views or opinions of our employers.
Cette semaine je vous fait un petit recap des choses qu'on a discuté durant nos 3 jours à Tremblant avec la gang du Mastermind. Bonne écoute!
This SATURDAY we chat about the Super Bowl LVIII, why we're beefing WestJet, Tash's bachelorette location, robberies at the LCBO, the Stanley cup lead scandal, the rebrand of the century, the Redbull event at Tremblant, cronuts, notifs vs notis, the Night Mayor & more! xoxo Tash & Ro #itsaturdaypod VOTE FOR US! Faces Magazine Awards 2024 (scroll down until you see “Podcast”): https://facesmag.ca/awards/#/gallery?group=473037 No Days Wasted - Use code “itsaturdaypod” to receive 15% off! (https://nodayswasted.ca/) Listen & subscribe: https://linktr.ee/itsaturdaypod Instagram & Tiktok: @itsaturdaypod Disclaimer: Opinions expressed here are solely our own and do not express the views or opinions of our employers.
Benoit nous raconte ses 200 km de course Wendigo avec le barbu Buck Miller et quand il a apporté ses pneus dodus à une épreuve de crosscountry à Tremblant. Jonathan parle de la seule expérience de son père en fatbike. Les deux discutent d'habillement et de trucs de pilotage sur la neige. Envoyez-nous vos questions → @jonathanbroy et @espressosports.
BONJOUR from Mt. Temblant! There they Wendy and Shelley discuss the men briefly not running and give their analysis with athlete interviews for the exciting races in Quebec!
Dans son make it Big, Martin nous dit comment faire du cash, Question du jours : Raconte nous la fois ou tu n'as pas utilisé la bonne affaire . Le Coup de tête de Simon Delisle et une belle entrevue avec Liam Mallet pour le 24h Tremblant . Bonne écoute !
Le terme «génocide», utilisé cette semaine pour parler de l'offensive d'Israël, est un terme de plus en plus souvent galvaudé. La rencontre Rioux-Durocher avec Christian Rioux correspondant à Paris pour le quotidien Le Devoir.Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
Benoit Martel est un investisseur immobilier à succès ayant a à son actif de multiples Ironman, y compris le défi redoutable d'Ironman Lanzarote et l'épreuve exigeante de l'Ironman du Mont Tremblant. De plus, il a repoussé ses limites en participant à des ultramarathons et en réussissant plusieurs marathons, satisfaisant aux normes strictes du marathon de Boston. Au cours de cette discussion, Gabriel explore le parcours de Benoît en tant qu'investisseur immobilier et athlète, tout en mettant en lumière les causes caritatives qui lui tiennent profondément à cœur. ** Vous pouvez supportez Benoît, Gabriel et leur équipe dans leurs objectifs de courir 1000 km en 24h, dans le cadre du 24h Tremblant: https://www.24htremblant.com/fr/utilisateur/gabriel-minville https://www.24htremblant.com/fr/utilisateur/benoit-martel ______ Benoit Martel is a successful real estate investor with multiple Ironman races to his track record, including multiple Ironman races, including the formidable challenge of Ironman Lanzarote and the demanding Ironman Mont Tremblant. Furthermore, he has pushed his limits by participating in ultramarathons and completing several marathons, meeting the strict standards of the Boston Marathon. In this discussion, Gabriel delves into Benoît's journey as a real estate investor and athlete, all while shedding light on the charitable causes that deeply resonate with him. **You can support Benoît, Gabriel, and their team in their goal to run 1000 km in 24 hours as part of the 24h Tremblant event: https://www.24htremblant.com/en/user/gabriel-minville https://www.24htremblant.com/en/user/benoit-martel
Jay est humoriste, animateur, ami et nouvellement athlète d'endurance. Il nous raconte son parcours vers le Ironman de Tremblant et on revient sur notre participation au BU80. "Upikapodcast" pour 10% sur votre première commande au https://upika.ca/Pour suivre Jay:https://www.jaydutemple.com/https://www.instagram.com/jaydutemple/Pour nous suivre:https://www.instagram.com/upikasports/https://www.instagram.com/upikapodcast/
Beaucoup de choses à se mettre sous la dent avant le long week-end de l’Action de grâce avec le nouvel épisode de Sortie de zone. L’animateur Jérémie Rainville et Antoine Roussel, du 98.5 Sports, ainsi qu’Alexandre Pratt et Simon-Olivier Lorange, de La Presse, se demandent notamment qui sera le gardien partant des Canadiens de Montréal pour le match d’ouverture, si les trios ont besoin d’avoir une identité et où sera Logan Mailloux dans quelques mois. Le sommaire: Bloc 1 0:00 - Le Canadien à Tremblant : l’intensité au rendez-vous. 7:30 - Cole Caufield, malgré ses 62,8 millions $, respecte les partisans. 9:20 – L’identité des trios… Doit-on vraiment avoir une étiquette? Bloc 2 18:58 - Dernier match préparatoire, samedi, face aux Sénateurs d’Ottawa. Qu’est-ce que l’entraîneur Martin St-Louis veut voir? 26:26 – Relativement à l’identité de son gardien de but au match d’ouverture, Martin St-Louis a dit: «Je ne sais pas.» Vous, savez-vous? 31:45 - Complétez la phrase: Un petit 2$ que Logan Mailloux sera…? Bloc 3 39:30 - Le plafond salarial passera de 83.5 à 87.7 millions $ la saison prochaine. 45:30 - Expansion: Atlanta, Salt Lake, Québec?Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee/fr/ pour notre politique de vie privée
À On Jase, Martin Lemay, Yanick Lévesque, François Gagnon et Gilbert Delorme discutent de l'actualité des Canadiens.
L’une des questions qui n’est pas résolue à ce stade du camp préparatoire des Canadiens est de savoir si la formation montréalaise va amorcer la saison avec deux ou trois gardiens. C’est l’un des sujets de discussion de Sortie de zone avec l’animateur Jérémie Rainville et Stéphane Waite du 98.5 sports, ainsi qu'Alexandre Pratt et Simon-Olivier Lorange de La Presse. Le sommaire Bloc 1 1:20 - Retour sur la victoire des Canadiens face aux Maple Leafs. De 1-3 à 4-3: est-ce un simple match préparatoire où était-ce plus que ça? 6:25 - Jeff Gorton, dans La Presse de samedi: «Notre objectif est de jouer des matchs importants en mars». Réaliste ou lunettes roses? 12:00 - Est-ce possible d’imaginer un trio de gardiens à Montréal? Bloc 2 22:10 - Votre analyse de Juraj Slafkovsky, Logan Mailloux et Matthias Norlider? 40:40 - Avec un match préparatoire à faire, est-ce que ce club est prêt pour la saison? 44:45 - Le camp se poursuit en retraite fermée à Tremblant. Croyez-vous au «Team Bonding»? Bloc 3 52:05 - Trevor Zegras signe un contrat de 3 ans d'une moyenne de 5,75 millions $ à Anaheim. Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee/fr/ pour notre politique de vie privée
This podcast hit paid subscribers' inboxes on July 27. It dropped for free subscribers on July 30. To receive future pods as soon as they're live, and to support independent ski journalism, please consider an upgrade to a paid subscription. You can also subscribe for free below:WhoJared Smith, President and CEO of Alterra Mountain CompanyRecorded onJuly 26, 2023About Alterra Mountain CompanyAlterra is owned by a joint venture between KSL Capital and Henry Crown and Company. Alterra owns and operates the following properties:The company's Ikon Pass delivers access to these resorts for the 2023-24 ski season:Why I interviewed himIf I could unleash one artifact of 2023 skiing on the winters of my teens and twenties, it would be these passes. Ikon, Epic, Indy, Mountain Collective. It doesn't matter which. They're all amazing. Punchcards to white-capped horizons. The kind of guidebook I could have spun a winter around, sating those impulses for novelty, variety, constant motion.Not that I mind them now. For anyone, especially families, that lives near skiing and vacations to skiing, they basically saved the sport. Day trips to Windham, weekends at Stratton, a spring break run to the Wasatch: a tough itinerary – perhaps an impossible one – without that plastic ticket secured the previous March.But man I coulda used one of those little Ski Club cards when I was untethered and unmoored and wired at all times on Mountain Dew. And broke, too, by the way. Teenage Stu's ski circuits followed discount days more than snowstorms. Fifteen-dollar lift tickets after one on Sunday at Sugar Loaf? I'm there, rolling three-deep in a red Ford Probe, the driver's-side passenger seat dropped for the skis and poles and boots angled in through the hatchback.I would have preferred a membership. In my 1990s Indy Pass fantasies I roll the Michigan circuit early winter – Nub's and Caberfae and Crystal and Shanty Creek and Treetops. Then 94 to 80, popping into all the snowgun-screaming High Plains bumps along the route west. Chestnut and Sundown and Seven Oaks and Mt. Crescent and Terry Peak. Then the big mountains and the big snows. Red Lodge and Lost Trail and Brundage and Silver and 49 North and White Pass. Or I skip the Midwest and roll Ikon, spend a week circling California. Another in Utah. A third in Colorado on the way home.It's weird how much I think about this. Alternate versions of winters long melted away. I'm not one to dwell or regret. Or pine for the lost or never-was. But that's the power of the multi-mountain ski pass. I never re-imagine my past with an iPhone or the internet or even the modern skis that have amped up the average skier's ability level. But I constantly imagine how much more I could have skied, and how many more places I could have visited, and how much sooner I would have discovered the ski world outside of the destination circuit, had the Ikon and Epic passes arrived 15 to 20 years before they did.These passes are special, is my point here. As a catalyst to adventure and an enabler to the adventurous, they have no equal that I can think of in any other industry. It's as though I could buy some supper club pass and use it at every restaurant in town for an entire year without ever paying again. And among these remarkable products, the Ikon Pass is currently the best of them all. It's hard to dispute this. Look again at the roster above. What they've built in just six years is remarkable. And it keeps getting better.What we talked aboutThe sudden passing and legacy of Aspen managing partner Jim Crown; why Aspen is not part of Alterra; from entry-level salesman to CEO at Ticketmaster; the dramatic evolution of Ticketmaster and its adaptation to the digital age; skiing's digital transition; entering skiing at a high level as an outsider; “we don't make it easy at all for people to come enjoy our sport”; how to better meet consumers on their Pet Rectangles; balancing affordability with crowding and capacity; could lift ticket pricing be more like baseball or concerts?; finally some sensible thoughts on lowering lift ticket prices; $289 lift tickets; filling midweek ghost towns; “we're on the front end of our pricing and product-packaging journey as an industry”; why Alterra bought Snow Valley; rethinking the mountain's lift fleet; chairlift safety bars; Snow Valley expansion potential; housing and bed development at Snow Valley's base; considering a lift connection between Bear Mountain and Snow Summit; whether Alterra could purchase more city-adjacent ski areas; why Alterra bought Schweitzer; expansion potential; how Ikon Pass access may evolve at Schweitzer; the Ikon approach to adding new partners; whether the Ikon Base Pass' value is eroding over time as high-profile partners exit that tier; comparing Epic and Ikon prices; and Alterra's Impact Report. Why I thought that now was a good time for this interviewSmith pinned his CEO nametag onto his shirt almost exactly one year ago, on Aug. 1, 2022. He's had a busy year. The Ikon Pass has added five new partners (Alyeska, Sun Peaks, Grandvalira, Panorama, and Lotte Arai). Alterra purchased its first two ski areas since Sugarbush in 2019, scooping up Snow Valley, California in January and Schweitzer – the largest ski area in Idaho – last month. And the company acquired gear-rental outfit Ski Butlers and released its first Impact Report. A setback, too: while Ikon has still never lost a partner, Taos jumped off the Ikon Base Pass for next ski season, making it the seventh resort (along with Sun Valley, Snowbasin, Alta, Deer Valley, Aspen, and Jackson Hole) to exit that product.Meanwhile, check out the growing price differential between the Ikon and Epic passes over the past several seasons:After three years of relative parity, Ikon prices blew past Epic when Vail Resorts slashed prices in 2021. So this isn't news. But what's interesting is that Alterra has been able to hold that premium price. Vail lobbed its discount hand grenade three weeks after Alterra had locked in 2021-22 Ikon Pass prices. Rather than follow Vail into the basement, Alterra raised prices again in 2022. And again in 2023. Stunning as those early-bird differentials are, the gap is even more pronounced now: the current sticker price of a 2023-24 Ikon Pass is $1,259, a 36 percent premium over Epic's $929 pricetag. Ikon Base currently runs $929, which is 35 percent more than the $689 Epic Local Pass.So what? A Porsche costs more than a Ford. But when did the Ikon Pass become skiing's luxe label? For years, no one had an answer for Vail. Now it's hard to imagine how the Epic Pass will ever catch up to Ikon. Since 2020, Ikon has added Alyeska, Mt. Bachelor, Windham, Snow Valley, Schweitzer, Panorama, Sun Peaks, Chamonix, Dolomiti Superski, Kitzbühel, Lotte Arai, Sun Valley, and Snowbasin to its roster. Vail has added three ski areas in Pennsylvania and two (really one) in Switzerland, while losing Sun Valley and Snowbasin to Ikon. The Broomfield Bully, which spent the 2010s gobbling up everything from Whistler to Park City to half the Midwest and New England, suddenly looks inert beside its flashy young competitor.For now. Don't expect the dragon to sleep much longer. Vail – or, more accurately, the company's investors – will need to feast again soon (and I'll note that Vail has invested enormous sums into technology, infrastructure, and personnel upgrades over the past 16 months). Which is why Smith's job is so enormous. It won't be enough to simply keep Alterra and the Ikon Pass relevant. They must be transformative. Yes, that means things like terrain expansions and $50 million gondolas and new tickboxes on the Ikon Pass. But it also means the further melding of the physical and the digital, a new-skier experience that does not feel like Alaskan bootcamp, and more creativity in pricing than a $5 season pass purchased seven years in advance and a $4,500 day-of lift ticket.It's 2023. The Pet Rectangle has eaten the world. Any industry that hasn't gotten there already is going to die pretty soon. Skiing is sort of there and it's sort of not. Smith's job is to make sure Alterra makes it all the way in, and to bring us along for the run.Questions I wish I'd askedSo many. The most obvious being about the recent death of 50-year-old Sheldon Johnson, who fell out of a Tremblant gondola after it struck a drilling rig and split open. The photos are insane – it looks as though the car was sliced right in half. My minivan goes apeshit with sensors and auto-brakes if I'm about to back into a fence – why does a gondola, with all the technology we have, keep moving full speed into a gigantic piece of construction equipment?I also wanted to check in on Crystal's decision to jump off the Ikon Pass as its season pass, get an update on the new lifts going in at Alterra's resorts this summer, and ask when Deer Valley was going to get rid of that icky snowboard ban.Podcast NotesOn the sudden passing of Aspen managing partner Jim CrownPer the Aspen Times:Billionaire philanthropist Jim Crown was driving a single-seat, open-top Spec Racer with a 165-horsepower engine on June 25 in Woody Creek when it struck a tire barricade backed by a concrete wall that was surrounding a gravel trap.His son-in-law, Matthew McKinney, drove the Spec Racer a few hours before Crown drove it that day. McKinney remembered the car handled normally, although the brakes “were somewhat stiff, and the brake pedal had to be pressed somewhat firmly.”Aspen Motorsports Park staff told McKinney the brakes were new.These are some of the findings in the Pitkin County sheriff's report, released on Thursday, investigating Crown's death at the 50-acre park last month.A beloved Aspen and Chicago resident, he was not a racetrack rookie. The managing partner of Aspen Skiing Co. and adviser to former President Barack Obama, he enjoyed the Aspen tracks and once owned a Ferrari. He celebrated his June 25 birthday with family at the park.Around 2:20 p.m., deputies were alerted to a crash at the park's eighth corner wall. Dispatchers relayed that the 70-year-old driver was conscious, breathing but bleeding badly from head injuries. And his pulse was weak.McKinney and his wife told the officer in charge, Bruce Benjamin, that they never heard brakes screeching before the crash. (Benjamin noted skid marks near the crash). Crown's car hit the tire barricade “with such force, that it came off the ground a few feet.”Sheriff's deputies, Aspen Ambulance, and Aspen Fire Protection District first responders cared for Crown at the crash site. The report says they took turns giving him CPR chest compressions, but they were unable to save him. Crown was pronounced dead, with daughters Hayley and Victoria nearby.On why Aspen is not part of AlterraSmith and I discussed Aspen's decision to remain independent, rather than become part of Alterra, of which it is part owner. Former Aspen CEO Mike Kaplan told the full story on this podcast two years ago (49:28):On acquisitionsHere are my full write-ups on Alterra's purchase of Snow Valley and Schweitzer.On the evolution of the Ikon Base PassThere's little question that the Ikon Base Pass was underpriced when it hit the market at $599 in 2018. As the pass gained momentum, flooding some of the coalition's biggest names, resorts began excusing themselves from the cheapest version of Ikon. While the coalition has added more partners since inception than it has lost from the Base Pass, losing marquee names like Aspen, Jackson Hole, and Alta contributes to a sense that the pass' value is eroding over time, even as the price continues to climb (the Ikon Base Pass is currently on sale for $929). Here's a look at how Ikon Pass access has evolved since 2018:On Snow Valley's ghost lift fleetSnow Valley may be home to the most abandoned lifts of any operating ski area in the country. A Snow Valley representative confirmed for me earlier this year that lifts 2 and 8 have not run in at least five years, yet they remain on the trailmap today:Even more amazing, when I skied there in March, lifts 4 and 5 are still intact. Lift 5 hasn't been on the trailmap for 20 years!I also referenced a long-cancelled proposal to expand Snow Valley – here's where it sits on old trailmaps (looker's right):On Schweitzer's masterplanSmith alludes to Schweitzer's masterplan. Here's a look:And here, for reference, is the resort today (this map does not include the Creekside lift, which is replacing Musical Chairs this offseason):On Alterra's 2023 lift upgradesAlterra is at work on six new lifts this offseason:* The biggest of those projects is at Steamboat, where phase two of the Wild Blue Gondola will transport skiers from the base area directly to the top of Sunshine Peak. This 3.16-mile-long, 10-passenger gondola will be the longest in North America.* Even more exciting for skiers: the Mahogany Ridge high-speed quad will open an additional 650 acres of terrain looker's left of Pony Express, transforming Steamboat into the second-largest ski area in Colorado:* Mammoth will upgrade Canyon Express (Lift 16) from a high-speed quad to a high-speed six-pack:* Winter Park will upgrade Pioneer from a high-speed quad to a high-speed six-pack with a mid-station:* Solitude will upgrade Eagle Express from a high-speed quad to a high-speed six-pack:* Snowshoe will replace the Powder Monkey triple with a fixed-grip quad:On Smith leaving TicketmasterI referenced a Q&A that Smith did with Pollstar in 2020. You can read that here.On Alterra's Impact ReportSmith and I discuss Alterra's first Impact Report. You can read it here.More Alterra on The Storm Skiing PodcastFormer Alterra CEO Rusty Gregory appeared on the podcast three times, in 2020, 2021, and 2022. I've also hosted the leaders of several of Alterra's ski areas:* Palisades Tahoe President and COO Dee Byrne – May 4, 2023* Deer Valley President & COO Todd Bennett – April 20, 2023* Solitude President & COO Amber Broadaway – March 5, 2022* Steamboat President & COO Rob Perlman – Dec. 9, 2021* Crystal Mountain President & CEO Frank DeBerry – Oct. 22, 2021* Sugarbush President & GM John Hammond – Nov. 2, 2020* Sugarbush President & COO Win Smith – Jan. 30, 2020I've also hosted the leaders of many Ikon Pass partner mountains and related entities, including:* Valle Nevado GM Ricardo Margulis – July 19, 2023* Sun Peaks GM Darcy Alexander – June 13, 2023* SkiBig3 President Pete Woods – May 26, 2023* Snowbasin VP & GM Davy Ratchford – Feb. 1, 2023* Aspenware CEO Rob Clark (Alterra purchased Aspenware in 2022) – Dec. 29, 2023* Loon Mountain President & GM Brian Norton – Nov. 14, 2022* Boyne Resorts CEO Stephen Kircher – Nov. 21, 2022* Sun Valley VP & GM Pete Sonntag – Oct. 20, 2022* The Summit at Snoqualmie GM Guy Lawrence – April 20, 2022* Arapahoe Basin COO Alan Henceroth – April 14, 2022* Big Sky President & COO Taylor Middleton – April 6, 2022* The Highlands President & GM Mike Chumbler – Feb. 18, 2022* Jackson Hole President Mary Kate Buckley – Nov. 17, 2021* Boyne Mountain GM Ed Grice – Oct. 19, 2021* Mt. Buller GM Laurie Blampied – Oct. 12, 2021* Aspen Skiing Company CEO Mike Kaplan – Oct. 1, 2021* Taos CEO David Norden – Sept. 16, 2021* Sunday River GM Brian Heon – Feb. 10, 2021* Windham President Chip Seamans – Jan. 31, 2021* Sugarloaf GM Karl Strand – Part 1, Sept. 25, 2020* Sugarloaf GM Karl Strand – Part 2, Sept. 30, 2020* Boyne Resorts CEO Stephen Kircher – April 1, 2020* Sunday River President & GM Dana Bullen – Feb. 14, 2020* Loon Mountain President & GM Jay Scambio – Feb. 7, 2020 * Boyne Resorts CEO Stephen Kircher – Nov. 21, 2019* Killington & Pico President & GM Mike Solimano – Oct. 13, 2019You can view all archived and scheduled podcasts here.The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing year-round. Join us.The Storm publishes year-round, and guarantees 100 articles per year. This is article 63/100 in 2023, and number 449 since launching on Oct. 13, 2019. Want to send feedback? Reply to this email and I will answer (unless you sound insane, or, more likely, I just get busy). You can also email skiing@substack.com. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.stormskiing.com/subscribe
Quelqu'un tente de stopper la propriétaire de Lamborghini de Mirabel. Derniers développements sur Tremblant. Chronique Crime et Société avec Félix Séguin, journaliste au Bureau d'enquête de Québecor.Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
Deux personnes ont été éjectées d'une télécabine au Mont-Tremblant dans les Laurentides. Plus d'un mois après le début des feux de forêts, François Legault visite l'Abitibi. L'actualité racontée autrement également sur: Noovo Info : https://www.noovo.ca/noovoinfo Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/noovo.info Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/noovo.info Twitter : https://twitter.com/NoovoInfo TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@noovo.info
La plus grosse histoire judiciaire et policière de l'été. L'histoire de la cabine à Tremblant. Frappé par la foudre sur son vélo électrique. Chronique Crime et Société avec Félix Séguin, journaliste au Bureau d'enquête de Québecor.Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
On discute de l'accident impliquant une télécabine à Tremblant avec le CNESST comme c'est arrivé dans un contexte de travail. Entrevue avec Cindy L'Heureux, communicatrice régionale pour la Commission des normes, de l'équité, de la santé et de la sécurité du travail (CNESST).Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
Au menu, ce mercredi : retour sur le troisième quart de finale entre Alexander Zverev et Tomas Martin Etcheverry : revoilà l'Allemand en demi-finale un an après sa grave blessure à la cheville. Une renaissance qui n'a pas laissé Arnaud insensible...DiP posera son œil sur la défaite de Stefanos Tsitsipas face à Carlos Alcaraz, un revers qui a marqué beaucoup de monde… Fallait-il s'attendre à cela?La stat de notre partenaire Jeu Set & Maths portera sur la superbe série d'Iga Swiatek qui ne laisse que des miettes à Roland-Garros.Enfin, nous terminerons par les affiches des demi-finales dames : Swiatek-Haddad Maia et Sabalenka-Muchova, avec cette question : va-t-on inéluctablement vers une finale entre la Polonaise Iga Swiatek et la Bélarusse Aryna Sabalenka ?Bienvenue dans DiP Impact où nos spécialistes d'Eurosport débriefent l'actu tennis tous les jours durant la quinzaine de Roland-Garros : avec ce dimanche notre consultant Arnaud Di Pasquale et le journaliste Christophe Gaudot aux côtés de Sébastien Petit.Bonne écoute !Emission présentée et réalisée par Sébastien Petit - Graphisme : Quentin GuichardVous pouvez réagir à cet épisode sur notre page Twitter.Retrouvez tous les podcasts d'Eurosport ici Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Le 24h Tremblant remet aujourd'hui le plus important montant amassé lors des 20 dernières années par l'événement et la Fondation : un chèque de 2 millions $ ! Entrevue avec Paul Doucet, acteur et porte-parole de la Fondation Charles-Bruneau.Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
La traversée (le podcast de l'eau libre sous toutes ses formes)
André Soulières organise depuis 2016 la traversée du Lac Tremblant au Québec qui devient, notamment le 15km, une épreuve de très haut niveau que les meilleurs nageurs de cette distance commencent à inscrire à leur calendrier dont Bertrand Venturi qui en est devenu l'ambassadeur. Il fut vice champion d'Europe du 25km en 2010 et aujourd'hui entraine le Neptune Olympique Frontignais et co-organisteur du très beau Thau Swim Trek dont on parlait déjà dans le podcast il y a peu. Se pourrait-il que les lacs canadiens deviennent le lieu de rencontre estival des meilleurs "marathoniens" de la natation avec pourquoi pas la mise en place d'un circuit qui remplacerait ce que la Fina ne souhaite plus promouvoir au plus haut niveau, à savoir toutes les distances au delà de 10km. Il nous raconte la genèse de ce projet et son expansion, son ouverture au grand public et les grands noms qui ont remporté cette épreuve et ont écrit son histoire qui fait de cette épreuve, avec la traversée internationale du Lac Saint Jean le week-end précédent deux étapes clés de la nage longue distance. Le Québec pourrait devenir la destination des amoureux de l'eau libre. https://www.traverseelactremblant.ca
Les meilleures astuces dans
Jeff Cauchon est un vétéran du trail running québécois. Ses jambes l'ont amené de l'UTMB au Transmartinique en passant par le 100 miles du QMT. Il nous parle de sa passion pour la nature, le outdoor et repousser ses limites. Utilisez le code "upikapod2023" Pour 10% de rabais sur votre première commande au https://upika.ca/ Pour suivre Jeff: https://www.instagram.com/teamcauchon/?hl=en Pour nous suivre: https://www.instagram.com/upikasports/?hl=en https://www.instagram.com/upikapodcast/?hl=enSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
To support independent ski journalism, please consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This podcast hit paid subscribers' inboxes on Dec. 24. It dropped for free subscribers on Dec. 27. To receive future pods as soon as they're live, please consider an upgrade to a paid subscription.WhoShaun Sutner, snowsports columnist for the Worcester Telegram & Gazette and Telegram.comRecorded onNovember 21, 2022About Shaun SutnerShaun is a skier, a writer, and a journalist based in Worcester, Massachusetts. For the past 18 years, he's been pumping out a snowsports column from Thanksgiving to April. For the past two years, he's joined me on The Storm Skiing Podcast to rap about it. You should follow Shaun on social media to stay locked into his work:Why I interviewed himI've often said that the best interviews are with people who don't have bosses. That's true. Mostly. But not exclusively. Because journalists are just as good. And that's because they possess many attributes crucial to holding an interesting conversation: on-the-ground experience, the ability to tell a story, and a commitment to truth. Really. That is the whole point of the job. Listen to the Storm Skiing Podcasts with Eric Wilbur, Jackson Hogen, or Jason Blevins. They are among the best of the 122 episodes I've published before today. It's a different gig from the running-a-mountain-and-making-you-want-to-ski-that-mountain post that 75 percent of my guests hold. And these writers deliver a different kind of conversation, and one that enriches The Storm immensely.I'd like to host more ski journalists, but there just aren't that many of them. It's a weird fact of America and skiing that there are far more ski areas than there are American ski journalists. The NSAA lists 473 active ski areas. NASJA (the North American Snowsports Journalists Association) counts far fewer active members. The NBA, by contrast, has 30 teams and perhaps thousands of reporters covering them around the world. There's a lot more happening in skiing than there are paid observers to keep track of it all, is my point here.But there are a few. And Sutner is one of the real pros – one who's been skiing New England for most of his life, and writing about it for decades. His column is enlightened and interesting, essential reading for the entire Northeast. We had a great conversation last year, and we agreed to make it an annual thing.What we talked aboutWell I still can't pronounce “Worcester,” but we didn't discuss it this time which thank God; opening day vibes at Mount Snow; comparing last year's days-skied goal to reality; that Uphill Bro life and chewing up all our pow Brah; surveying the different approaches to New England uphill access; cross-country skiing and the opportunity of the Indy Pass; skiing in NYC; the countless ski areas of Quebec; Tremblant, overrated?; Le Massif; pass quivers; the importance of racing and race leagues to recreational skiing; why the rise of freeskiing hasn't killed ski racing; Sutner's long-running snowsports column; the importance of relationships in journalism; the Wachusett MACHINE; Sutner defends the honor of Ski Ward, my least-favorite ski area; the legacy of Sutner's brother Adam, former executive at Vail, Jackson Hole, and Crystal, who passed away suddenly last year; reaction to PGRI purchasing Jay Peak; what's next for Burke?; the future of Gunstock; Mount Sunapee crowding; Crotched, Attitash, and Wildcat's 2021-22 struggles; what the Epic Day Pass says about Vail's understanding of New Hampshire; whether Vail's pay increases and lift ticket sales limits will be enough to fix the company's operational issues in New Hampshire; the impact of Kanc 8 on Loon and what that could mean for new lifts at Stowe and Mount Snow; New England's lift renaissance; eight-packs and redistributing skiers; let's play Fantasy Ski Resort owner with Sugarloaf; the investment binge at Loon; high-speed double chairs; will Magic ever get Black Quad live?; the rebuilding of Catamount; a New England lift wishlist; Berkshire East; fake vertical; Smuggs' lift fleet; the future of Big Squaw; The Balsams; Whaleback; Granite Gorge; and Tenney.Why I thought that now was a good time for this interviewWell the intent was to push this podcast out alongside the debut of Sutner's first column of the year, on Thanksgiving Day. I, uh, missed that target. But I'll fix that whole timing bit, and you can expect a Sutner appearance on The Storm Skiing Podcast every Thanksgiving week for as long as he's interested in doing it.What I got wrong* I noted in the podcast that it was a 15-minute drive from Mountain Creek to High Point Cross Country Ski Center in New Jersey – it's closer to half an hour.* Sutner and I referenced Seven Brothers at Loon as an unfinished lift. That was true when we recorded this podcast on Nov. 21, but the lift opened on Dec. 17.* Sutner referenced a New England lift project that he knew about but that was not public yet – it's public now, and you can read about it here.* Shaun referred to a “little-known” summit T-bar at Sugarloaf. It must be a really well-kept secret, because I can't find any reference to it, now or in the past.Why you should read Sutner's columnBecause what I wrote last year is still true:Because it's focused, intelligent, researched, fact-checked, spell-checked, and generally just the sort of professional-level writing that is increasingly subsumed by the LOLing babble of the emojisphere. That's fine – everyone is lost in the scroll. But as the pillars of ski journalism burn and topple around us, it's worth supporting whatever's left. Gannett, the parent company of the Worcester Telegram & Gazette, has imposed fairly stringent paywalls on his work. While I think these local papers are best served by offering a handful of free articles per month, the paper is worth supporting if it's your local – in the same way you might buy a local ski pass to complement your Epkon Pass. Good, consistent writing is not so easy to find. Sutner delivers. Support his craft.I wish there was one place where all of Sutner's columns were collected, but the reality of being part of a larger entity is that your work gets mashed together with everything else. Here are direct links to Sutner's columns so far this season:* Skiing Vail Remains a Treasured Rocky Mountain Experience* Plenty of Updates and Upgrades have Crotched Mountain Resort Thriving in New Hampshire* Key Improvements Signal Strong Seasons Ahead for Attitash, Wildcat Ski Areas* World Cup Ski Racing Continues to Thrive at KillingtonSutner's column tends to be less-newsy, more focused on the long-term than the what-just-happened? But, thanks to decades of experience and a deep well of sources, he can fire off a breaking news story in a hurry when he needs to. Earlier this month, for example, he turned around this dispatch about Wachusett's sudden cancellation of its volunteer Ski Patrol program – known locally as “Rangers” – in just a few hours:Wachusett Mountain Ski Area ended its volunteer Ranger program at the start of the ski and snowboard season last month in an unexpected move that could have safety consequences on the mountain's busy slopes, at least in the short term. The ski area apparently was forced into ending or suspending the program due to an investigation by the state attorney general's office into whether treating the Rangers as volunteers violates state labor laws. A spokeswoman for the AG's office declined to comment on whether the office is investigating Wachusett.The case could have national ramifications in the ski industry, where more than 600 ski areas across the country use volunteer ski patrollers under the umbrella of the nonprofit National Ski Patrol, as well as volunteers similar to Rangers. Read the full story here:Podcast Notes* Sutner and I discussed Wachusett quite a bit, and specifically my podcast interview with resort President Jeff Crowley from last year:* We also had a long discussion about Ski Ward, which stemmed from this write-up I published in February:Ski Ward, 25 miles southwest, makes Nashoba Valley look like Aspen. A single triple-chair rising 220 vertical feet. A T-bar beside that. Some beginner surface lifts lower down. Off the top three narrow trails that are steep for approximately six feet before leveling off for the run-out back to the base. It was no mystery why I was the only person over the age of 14 skiing that evening.Normally my posture at such community- and kid-oriented bumps is to trip all over myself to say every possible nice thing about its atmosphere and mission and miraculous existence in the maw of the EpKonasonics. But this place was awful. Like truly unpleasant. My first indication that I had entered a place of ingrained dysfunction was when I lifted the safety bar on the triple chair somewhere between the final tower and the exit ramp and the liftie came bursting out of his shack like he'd just caught me trying to steal his chickens. “The sign is there,” he screamed, pointing frantically at the “raise bar here” sign jutting up below the top station just shy of unload. At first I didn't realize he was talking to me and so I ignored him and this offended him to the point where he – and this actually happened – stopped the chairlift and told me to come back up the ramp so he could show me the sign. I declined the opportunity and skied off and away and for the rest of the evening I waited until I was exactly above his precious sign before raising the safety bar.All night, though, I saw this b******t. Large, aggressive, angry men screaming – screaming – at children for this or that safety-bar violation. The top liftie laid off me once he realized I was a grown man, but it was too late. Ski Ward has a profoundly broken customer-service culture, built on bullying little kids on the pretext of lift safety. Someone needs to fix this. Now.Look, I am not anti-lift bar. I put it down every time, unless I am out West and riding with some version of Studly Bro who is simply too f*****g cool for such nonsense. But that was literally my 403rd chairlift ride of the season and my 2,418th since I began tracking ski stats on my Slopes app in 2018. Never have I been lectured over the timing of my safety-bar raise. So I was surprised. But if Ski Ward really wants to run their chairlifts with the rulebook specificity of a Major League Baseball game, all they have to do is say, “Excuse me, Sir, can you please wait to get to the sign before raising your bar next time?” That would have worked just as well, and would have saved them this flame job. For a place that caters to children, they need to do much, much better.As I'm wont to do, I followed that write-up with casual Ward-bashing on Twitter. Sutner took exception to this, saying that I was oversimplifying it and working on too small a sample size. Which, fair enough. He further defends the ski area's honor in our pod, though frankly I remain salty about the place.* Sutner spoke at length about his brother Adam, a member of Crystal Mountain, Washington's executive team, who died suddenly in April. Shaun wrote his younger brother's obituary, which reads in part:Adam lived and worked overseas in the advertising and tech business in Amsterdam, Brussels, London, Paris, Tokyo and Melbourne. He also lived and worked in advertising and the ski industry in New York City, Chicago, Denver, Minneapolis, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and in Vail, Colo., Jackson Hole, Wyo., and Greenwater, Wash.He lived the life he wanted to live.He was widely known for working hard and being a leader in the ski industry profession he loved, often starting work before dawn.Adam loved French Martinis, fast cars and motorcycles, high-speed skiing, music, reading literature and non-fiction, wok cooking, James Bond and art heist caper movies and smoking his beloved cigarillos. He was an ardent fan of international soccer and rugby.He liked to pick up and drop off at the airport the steady stream of visitors who he accommodated, with utmost hospitality, at his various well-appointed homes. He collected watches, fine art and mid-century modern furniture and accessories.He was a witty storyteller, entertaining family and friends with tales of his lifelong travels and adventures. He had an acerbic sense of humor and keen intellect.Read the full obit here:The Storm publishes year-round, and guarantees 100 articles per year. This is article 136/100 in 2022, and number 382 since launching on Oct. 13, 2019. Want to send feedback? Reply to this email and I will answer (unless you sound insane or, more likely, I just get busy). You can also email skiing@substack.com. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.stormskiing.com/subscribe
We are just one day away from the Ottawa Senators first game of the 2022-2023 NHL regular season! Brandon Piller and Ross Levitan take a look at the practice lines, Josh Norris and Tim Stützle have swapped lines, Mark Kastelic seems to have secured the 4th line centre role and #22 is not in the top 6 of the D core. Then we have a special recurring guest, it's the voice of the Ottawa Senators, Dean Brown (@PxPOttawa)! We ask him about the Sens time in Mt. Tremblant, his impressions from the pre-season road trip and top storylines for the upcoming season! We wrap the show up with the announcement that Dillon Heatherington has been named the 5th captain of the Belleville Senators! SENSCENTRAL MERCH STORE IS HERE Follow the show on TWITTER, INSTAGRAM, and please subscribe on YOUTUBE! Support us by supporting our sponsors! Built Bar: Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. BetOnline: Today's Episode is brought to you by BetOnline. BetOnline has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts! SimpliSafe: With Fast Protect™️ Technology, exclusively from SimpliSafe, 24/7 monitoring agents capture evidence to accurately verify a threat for faster police response. There's No Safe Like SimpliSafe. Visit SimpliSafe.com/LockedOnNHL to learn more. Athletic Greens: To make it easy, Athletic Greens is going to give you a FREE 1 year supply of immune-supporting Vitamin D AND 5 FREE travel packs with your first purchase. All you have to do is visit athleticgreens.com/NHLNETWORK #OttawaSenators #Sens #NHLHockey Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We are just one day away from the Ottawa Senators first game of the 2022-2023 NHL regular season!Brandon Piller and Ross Levitan take a look at the practice lines, Josh Norris and Tim Stützle have swapped lines, Mark Kastelic seems to have secured the 4th line centre role and #22 is not in the top 6 of the D core. Then we have a special recurring guest, it's the voice of the Ottawa Senators, Dean Brown (@PxPOttawa)! We ask him about the Sens time in Mt. Tremblant, his impressions from the pre-season road trip and top storylines for the upcoming season! We wrap the show up with the announcement that Dillon Heatherington has been named the 5th captain of the Belleville Senators! SENSCENTRAL MERCH STORE IS HEREFollow the show on TWITTER, INSTAGRAM, and please subscribe on YOUTUBE!Support us by supporting our sponsors!Built Bar: Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnline: Today's Episode is brought to you by BetOnline. BetOnline has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts!SimpliSafe: With Fast Protect™️ Technology, exclusively from SimpliSafe, 24/7 monitoring agents capture evidence to accurately verify a threat for faster police response. There's No Safe Like SimpliSafe. Visit SimpliSafe.com/LockedOnNHL to learn more.Athletic Greens: To make it easy, Athletic Greens is going to give you a FREE 1 year supply of immune-supporting Vitamin D AND 5 FREE travel packs with your first purchase. All you have to do is visit athleticgreens.com/NHLNETWORK#OttawaSenators #Sens #NHLHockey Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We gathered experts at our 2022 Summer Ops Camp in Tremblant to discuss best practices for attracting customers to resort summer activities. From the best mix of attractions to the right narrative, this discussion is full of important nuggets of information that will help four season business thrive. This pod is supported by The Trekking Group. thetrekkinggroup.com Support SAM Magazine content with a subscription to SAM Magazine.
Jack lays out his thoughts on how he may defend his title at Ironman 70.3 Mont Tremblant against the top Canadian athletes in the sport! Check out the Real Triathlon Squad online store here for all the best products we use! If you want to go above and beyond consider supporting us over on Patreon by clicking here! Follow us on Instagram at @realtrisquad for updates on new episodes. Individual Instagram handles: Garrick Loewen - @loeweng Nicholas Chase - @race_chase Jackson Laundry - @jacksonlaundrytri
Le vélo professionnel est un monde assez fermé. Alors comment un Québecois de Tremblant se retrouve Mécanicien en chef sur la plus grosse équipe de vélo de montagne au monde? Dans l'épisode, Jérome nous partage son parcours, puis explique les qualités nécessaires pour grimper les échelons dans le monde du vélo. On parle aussi de son rôle chez Specialized pour comprendre qu'il ne fait pas que réparer des vélos...il participe à l'innovation des produits, il agit comme support moral pour les athlètes, et optimise l'équipement au maximum. Il nous parle aussi de leur utilisation de certaines technologies empruntés à la F1... Pour suivre Jerome: https://www.instagram.com/jer_alix/ (@jer_alix) Pour suivre Specialized Factory Racing: https://www.instagram.com/specialized_factoryracing/ (@specialized_factoryracing)
Un peu plus de 50% de la population québécoise vit en régions de Québec ou de Montréal.Au bas mot, cela nous laisse quand même 3,5 millions de québécois à découvrir et près de de 4 fois la France à parcourir. Une paille !Gatineau, St-Georges, Magog, Sherbrooke, Tremblant, Saguenay... les villes sont nombreuse t les villages encore plus.Mais ici comme ailleurs, la vie en province/campagne n'est pas la même qu'en métropole.Si elle vit aujourd'hui à cheval entre campagne et Montréal, Sara Schéhérazade Caron a aussi vécu quelques années à Trois-Rivières. Elle a beaucoup aimé et nous explique ici, en quoi cette vie dans le "Rest of Québec" peut être différente.Bonne écoute. Jean-MichelPS : J'ai aussi eu la chance d'interviewer Schéhérazade sur mon autre podcast "Kézako". Si le marketing, la com ou le média vous intéresse, c'est là que ça se passe : Kézako... le CDO----------- Crédits :. Musique générique : "Winter Ride" de Twin Musicom. Photo invité : Sara Schéhérazade Caron. Production : www.podcastisthenewradio.com ----------- N'oubliez pas de laisser une note (5 étoiles c'est le tarif syndical !) , de vous abonner et d'en parler autour de vous.Pour en savoir davantage, rendez-vous sur www.faistufrette.comRetrouvez l'émission sur les réseaux sociaux : Site internet : www.faistufrette.comTwitter : @FretteTu (https://twitter.com/FretteTu?s=20) Instagram : @fais-_tu_frette (https://www.instagram.com/fais_tu_frette/) Facebook : faistufrette (https://www.facebook.com/faistufrette) Pour me contacter : faistufrette@gmail.com Soutenez ce podcast http://supporter.acast.com/fais-tu-frette. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
The story of our first spring break as Queens students. Tune in for, the tribulations of travelling via rail, the appeals of hitchhiking, unexpected violence in Tremblant's village and two students attempts to maintain financial stability while continuing to feed themselves. Some silly skiing shenanigans: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yDErc8_9tA4
Episode Summary Welcome back to the second season of the Erica Diamond Podcast! This is probably one of my favorite interviews to date. Please listen to the entire episode if you can. Mitsou shares so much with us, in the most engaging and candid ways. Mitsou was catapulted to overnight success as a teenager, and then by 22, called herself a "has-been." She talks about the music industry, what overnight fame felt like... and then having to reinvent herself. Her struggles with an eating disorder, and aging as a media host. I have no doubt, you will fall in love with Mitsou. In This Episode Coming from a family of artists, Mitsou had her TV debut at 5. And at 17, she releases a song that catapults her to success. She tells us how that happened and what that felt like. I imagine a young girl rising to stardom quickly - if you don't have a good family, or a good support system to keep you grounded, I imagine things can take a bad turn. The high notes of Mitsou's career The lower points, and how Mitsou overcame them Mitsou introduced Oprah in Montreal, and talks about what that was like. We hear the word reinvention a lot - Madonna comes to mind. She has kept herself relevant and has defied the test of time in the music industry. How can we keep reinventing ourselves as we age? On Mitsou's eating disorder and show she keeps herself healthy Speaking of aging, Erica shares that she is finding it hard. Mitsou shares about the pressure women have to stay young, and if she thinks it's hard to embrace that with aging comes wisdom — and changes! Is she okay with it? Mitsou has been the spokeswoman for the Quebec Breast Cancer Foundation for the past 14 years. If she could have dinner with anyone, alive on deceased, who would it be? What music is Mitsou listening to these day? And more! About Mitsou Gelinas Founder of mitsoumagazine.com web magazine, Mitsou Gélinas began as a singer and became actress, magazine director and entrepreneur within Groupe Dazmo. She is now host of Le retour de Mitsou & Sébastien, the radio show on Rythme FM network, host of the television show Mitsou et Léa on Moi&cie and a spokeswoman for the Quebec Breast Cancer Foundation for the past 14 years. Links MitsouMagazine.com Learn More about Your Host Teaching Empowered Living, Erica Diamond is a leading Expert in Lifestyle, Wellness and Empowerment. A Certified Life Coach and Certified Yoga Instructor, Erica is the Founder and Editor-In-Chief of the Award-Winning Lifestyle Platform EricaDiamond.com® (previously WomenOnTheFence.com®), Lifestyle and Parenting Correspondent on Global TV, Award-Winning Entrepreneur, Keynote Speaker, Spokesperson, and Author of the women's entrepreneurial book, 99 Things Women Wish They Knew Before Starting Their Own Business. Erica founded the Global Get Off The Fence Movement inspiring people worldwide to get off the fence, get unstuck and thrive, and launched The Erica Diamond Podcast in summer 2019 to spotlight trailblazers and change makers around the world. Erica Diamond has been named to the coveted list of The Top 20 Women in Canada as well as FORBES Magazine's Top 100 Sites for Women and FORBES 25 Most Influential Women In Entrepreneurship on Twitter. Erica Diamond was the Spokesperson for National Entrepreneurship Day and is a Huffington Post contributor. To learn more about Erica Diamond, visit her at EricaDiamond.com! Don't forget to SIGN UP for Erica's newsletter and tips: https://wellness.ericadiamond.com/subscribe If you liked this, then listen to the podcast episode for even more. And don't forget to subscribe to the show! -- This episode was brought to you by Hotel Quintessence Hotel Quintessence, the only 5-star boutique hotel in Tremblant is your perfect getaway, for romance, leisure, business or family vacation all-year long. If you want to experience personalized service, fine dining and amazing spa treatments, this is your go-to destination. Hotel Quintessence, where the mountain meets the lake. For more information, visit HotelQuintessence.com.