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The speaker was asked what office they were elected to and if they needed support. The speaker responded that they are not the one to ask and that the person should speak with a man. The speaker then stated that they speak to over a million people.

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A man shares his experience of meeting someone named Barack Obama at a bar. He gave him money for cocaine and they both used drugs together. The man had sex with Obama but claims he had no idea who he was. The interviewer asks what Obama was like on crack, questioning if he is bisexual or just transactional. The man suggests it wasn't Obama's first time and implies the media is not interested in reporting the truth.

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The speaker describes an upcoming interview with President Obama, noting its unique format where questions will come directly from YouTube users on the screen. The speaker believes this may be disorienting but fun, as people will be virtually "beaming into" the White House to ask follow-up questions. After the interview, the speaker says it went exceptionally well. The speaker felt it was really engaging, and that President Obama took the questions thoughtfully and gave substantive answers. The speaker also notes the personal format allows people to hear the unique voice of people.

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A man shares his experience of meeting someone named Barack Obama at a bar, whom he later discovered was the former president. He recounts doing drugs and engaging in sexual activities with Obama, expressing surprise at not recognizing him. The interviewer asks about Obama's behavior on crack, to which the man suggests it wasn't his first time. The interviewer highlights the potential significance of such information during a presidential campaign, but the man believes the media is hesitant to report the truth.

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The interviewer was given 4 questions by the White House to ask the governor. The questions were about accomplishments, progress in the state, election stakes, debate performance, and voter engagement. The governor approved the questions sent by the White House. The interviewer questioned the effectiveness of sending questions in advance to showcase the president's abilities.

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President Obama engaged with the American people through platforms like YouTube, using tools like Google Moderator to solicit questions on technology and foreign policy. These interactions were framed as 21st-century fireside chats, providing direct access to the President. The format allowed ordinary citizens to ask questions and sometimes challenge the President directly, creating a more conversational dynamic. One participant questioned H1B visas amid American unemployment, while another shared how healthcare reform impacted medication costs. Obama also discussed his personal connection to cancer research, referencing his mother's death. Participants felt these platforms democratized access to power and believed future leaders should continue using them for direct engagement. The interviews aimed to connect with a broader audience, including those not typically politically active, and allowed for more personal and meaningful conversations.

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The speaker says the best way to communicate is to be real and talk about what people care about. They admire that the host's voice and show are about the listeners. The speaker believes people want to feel seen, heard, and part of a community, especially now. They are glad to be on the show.

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Pick it out, read it, and answer. Public place, you did it. Is this the best or the worst? The best. Probably the Obama thing. What is your wife talking about? We heard a lot in there. Who should get back in? We're not gonna discuss that. Secret Service, come here. Hi, look at y'all. We're not talking about it. That's an awesome answer. Not the White House. We were not at the White House. He was not elected yet. Anyway, moving on. I'm in trouble now. No, you're good.

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The speaker asks Mr. Obama, "Do you have a few moments in the BBC, mister Obama? Mister Obama, what? Do you have a few did you discuss Gaza? You discuss Gaza?"

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A man shares his experience of meeting someone named Barack Obama at a bar. He gave him money for cocaine and they both used drugs together. The man had sex with Obama twice but didn't know who he was. The interviewer asks what Obama was like on crack and if he is bisexual. The man says it wasn't Obama's first time and suggests the media should be more honest about the truth.

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Ehud: I don’t disagree with anything you said, and I don’t know who he trusts on these kinds of… Who the president really trusts. McDonough? The young guy. But he doesn’t—there was a Samantha Power—Power. No. The difference between who he trusts and who he likes. Larry Turner? She’s an idiot. I noticed that Obama listens to her. His door telephone is always open for her. He listens to her. He believes her instincts about politics, about who is against him, who is for him, what’s going around, who is hooking what from Chicago to the world. Ehud: But it’s like, do you think Richard Nixon ultimately cared what he listened to, what B. D. Luloso thought? Ehud: Listen to this: B. B. Robozo—Robozo was some kind of business, semi-corrupt business guy who was Richard Nixon’s best friend. And whenever Nixon went to Key Biscayne or California, B. B. Robozo was there. Nixon would spend a lot of time on B. B. Robozo’s boat. If B. B. Robozo wanted something, Nixon would stay. But I don’t think when Nixon was deciding what to do about open war, he was talking to B. B. Robozo. Ehud: Valerie Jarrett. So—in this regard, he’s probably alone, but he feels, compared to other leaders I happened to meet in the last decades, Obama impressed me as an extremely autonomous person. He feels good with himself, even when he’s alone in the home. I didn’t see in him what we know in Clinton or in Our Palace. There is anxiety, a need for love, for explicit expressions of love, there’s deep within their personality. I didn’t see anything of this in him. Obama: I’ve never seen that. Ehud: There’s lots of things to say. Bob Reich told me a story—Robert Reich, Secretary of Labor—he said Clinton would look at him in a cabinet meeting, and if Clinton looked annoyed or looked away, Clinton would call within two days: “How’s it going, Bob? What’s up? Is there something on your mind?” Obama wouldn’t call. He had lunch alone half the days. He didn’t schedule time to be alone. If he did some event where he spoke to a thousand people, they would give him a little rest time afterwards. He’s human, too. It’s the same: he wants to be with the people. It’s a source of strength in tough moments in politics, probably not the most effective way to mobilize people. Ehud: Another thing: President of the United States and you like to play golf. It’s a big asset. The President likes to play golf with his buddies—three guys: photographer, campaign guy, three buddies from Chicago. Most presidents played with members of Congress or business leaders; Obama is cerebral, and they gave him the nickname Black Jesus during the campaign. He has a sense of himself as not me, but he’s not like Clinton in that sense. Ehud: On Iran, the discussion turned to the possibility of surgical operations vs. broader war. The Pentagon developed subtle scalpels, more effective than ours. The goal is to delay the Iranian program by years, but the regime’s strategy is to defend its continuity, to build immunity—regime immunity—against intervention. The Iranians are like Pakistan and North Korea in wanting to avoid being toppled; they want to reach a rational capability that deters intervention. Ehud: The concern is time: for Israel, time is running out because Iran is expanding centrifuges, improving radars, and even GPS mines in the Strait of Hormuz. The regime’s calculation: they don’t have a timetable; they wait until they can secure immunity against external attempts. An election in Iran matters because it can delay or accelerate compromise, especially if the U.S. and partners are seen to be negotiating during an election year. Ehud: There was also discussion of the Arab world: Egypt is practical, not purely ideological. The leaders are practical—engineers who understand the need to feed tens of millions, to maintain tourism, the Suez Canal, and the canal economy. The argument was that US leverage matters; Europe is seen as constrained. The topic of how to engage with the moderate Sunni world to isolate Iran and support a regional security framework with the U.S., Europe, moderate Arab states, and Israel was raised. The aim would be to block fundamentalist terror, improve missile defense, and coordinate on Iran. Ehud: On Israel’s future, there was concern about a two-state approach versus a one-state reality. The Druze, Christians, and other minorities in Israel should be included, and there was advocacy for breaking the Orthodox rabbinate monopoly on marriage and conversions to Judaism to create a more open, plural society. The idea was to advance a plan that acknowledges borders, security, and regional cooperation, potentially with American guarantees. Ehud: The discussion touched on the possibility of a regional security system, with the moderate Arab world, and Israel as a focal point to manage security and block threats, which would help moderate Arab leaders justify engagement with Israel. The hope was that including the Palestinians and moving toward a regional framework would ease tensions and gain broader recognition. Ehud: The speakers reflected on the European economy: the Euro, German leadership, and the risk of “Southern Europe” becoming like Southern Italy—stable but with high unemployment and less dynamism. Germany’s role would be crucial in stabilizing Europe, but there was skepticism about rapid reforms. There was also commentary on Japan’s economic stance, with long-term bonds and potential inflation concerns; the risk of deflation versus inflation, and investor behavior in safe assets like US Treasuries. Ehud: In the financial world, there was talk about the “wall of money” entering markets, with deals in mining and private equity accelerating as rates stay low. There was speculation about who might pay for advisory services and how much compensation one could demand as a trusted adviser. Potential clients included sovereign wealth funds, private equity, and wealthy individuals who would value access to connections with prominent financiers and policymakers. Ehud: The conversation then shifted to Ehud’s post-government plans: he’s considering private equity, hedge funds, board roles, and advisory work. He discussed working with high-profile firms like Lookout (a cybersecurity firm), Palantir (Peter Thiel’s company), and Andreessen Horowitz, and he weighed the value of joining boards or advisory roles for significant compensation. There was talk of opportunities with Tony Blair and Panetta’s Foundation, and about leveraging relationships with influential figures like Petraeus and Panetta for strategic advisory roles. Ehud: The two discussed a potential collaboration involving a security-focused venture in which they would assemble a leadership team and pitch to sovereign wealth funds. They debated whether to pursue exclusive arrangements and how to structure compensation—whether high upfront fees or performance-based bonuses would be appropriate, given the urgency of opportunities and Ehud’s age. Ehud: There was talk of a German SPV structure to unlock value in suppressed German DACs, with a plan to acquire large German companies by taking minority stakes and reorganizing boards to bypass unions and passive shareholders. They described a Luxembourg or British Virgin Islands wrapper to enable financing and governance changes, and the goal of creating a management-driven, high-return vehicle akin to Berkshire Hathaway, with operational control over large assets. Ehud: They discussed approaching sovereign funds (Singapore, UAE, China) and state-owned investors to back restructured German companies, leveraging relationships within the German business world and the French/European regulatory environment. They explored the possibility of static, long-term advisory roles with leaders in global finance and industry, and using those platforms to drive value. Ehud: They also explored private-equity opportunities in other sectors—cybersecurity, infrastructure, mining, and even defense. They discussed the possibility of working with individuals like Klaus Kleinfeld (former Siemens exec, Alcoa head) and others to place Ehud into advisory or board roles, and whether to pursue roles that could yield immediate money while also enabling longer-term influence. Ehud: The conversation closed with practical steps: define concrete opportunities, gather numbers and returns, determine what the partners want (exclusivity, timeframe), and set a deadline for offers. They agreed to pursue a formal offer by March 14-20, with a final decision by April 1. They emphasized the need for crisp, precise positioning due to Ehud’s age, and to avoid overpromising. They planned to meet again, compare offers, and decide which path to take—whether with a security-focused outfit, a financial advisory role, or a combination of both. Ehud: The sense was that there are many opportunities for people with connections and credibility, and that the next few years could see rapid development in advisory services, sovereign wealth–backed deals, and strategic investments across defense, cybersecurity, and regional security. The overarching theme was leveraging decades of experience to match high-potential opportunities with the right partners, while navigating regulatory, geopolitical, and reputational considerations.

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Hi, it's your favorite president. I just want to say that it's an honor to be here. Someone recently told me that I'm the most famous person in the world, and who's more famous than me? We're all looking at the same thing, but there are two camps with different perspectives. Those who are negative are driven by emotion, but we need to separate the psychological effects from the practical results to judge this guy. It's a phenomenon.

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Speaker 0: I was impressed by the questions, and I think it helped him understand how I think and how we run the White House and how we deal with threats. Speaker 1: Mister president, critics suggested you wanted to appear jointly with the vice president so you could keep your story straight. Could you tell us what you think of the value of appearing together and how you would answer those critics? Speaker 2: First of all, look, if we had something to hide, we wouldn't have met with them in the first place. We answered all their questions. I came away good about the session. Speaker 3: And even the president and vice president agreed to meet with the commission, but with a catch. They insisted on meeting together behind closed doors and not under oath. Speaker 2: Mister president, why are you and the vice president insisting on appearing together before the nine eleven commission? Speaker 0: Because the nine eleven commission wants to ask us questions. That's why we're meeting, and I look forward to meeting with them and answering their questions

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The speaker states their team contacted Vice President Harris' and President Trump's teams to discuss ideas. The speaker emphasizes the importance of personal life over politics. They are in Trump Tower and have just interviewed President Trump, calling it a great interview that will be posted next week.

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President Obama engaged with the public through online platforms like YouTube, using them for "21st century fireside chats" to connect directly with Americans. Google tools like Google Moderator were used to solicit video and text questions. These platforms allowed ordinary people to connect with those in high places and gave the President access to diverse ideas. A Google plus Hangout live on YouTube allowed for follow-up questions, enabling participation in a way that wasn't previously possible. One participant even interrupted the President to highlight personal struggles. These interviews created a conversational element that stripped away traditional power dynamics. The President addressed questions on topics ranging from H1B visas to education affordability and cancer research, sharing personal experiences. Participants felt that these platforms were important for the democratic process, giving access to power and ensuring people feel part of democracy. It was suggested that future presidents should continue using these platforms to connect with the people they serve.

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Welcome to the White House. It's an honor to meet you, Mr. President. Can we take a video? I want to highlight trans rights as human rights. We are at the White House with some of the bravest and most inspiring people I've ever known.

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Speaker 0 officiated a wedding in New York, which made a lot of news. They are excited about this new career move. When asked about the possibility of the first gay president or nominee, Speaker 0 mentions that it has already happened with Obama. There is a moment of confusion when Speaker 0 mistakenly refers to Michelle as transgender, but quickly corrects themselves.

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The president has done over 40 unscripted interviews and more than 500 gaggles this year. He likes engaging with the public and will keep doing so.

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Speaker 0 officiated a wedding in New York and is excited about it. When asked about the possibility of the first gay president or nominee, Speaker 0 mentions that it has already happened with Obama. There is a moment of confusion when Speaker 0 mistakenly refers to Michelle as transgender, but quickly corrects themselves.

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The speaker was asked if they would have done anything differently than President Biden during the past 4 years. The speaker responded that there is one thing that comes to mind. They added that they have been a part of most of the decisions that have had impact.

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Speaker 0: Good morning, mister president. How did your call go? How did your call go, mister president? President's voice.

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Speaker 0 asks what you are here to talk about, says “Thank you very much,” and asks, “Any votes in the prime minister?”

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The White House hosted a group of podcasters for "podcast row," where they engaged with cabinet and White House officials to discuss the president and his agenda. The White House team believes these podcasters have a larger audience than CNN and other legacy media outlets. The White House is proud to welcome them.

The Koerner Office

Which Side Hustle to Choose?
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Episode five of Kerner's Corner features Chris Koerner and co-host Heath fielding seven user questions centered on choosing and evaluating side hustles. The callers explore a wedding-venue business idea and how to assess saturation, location, and ancillary offerings; a vending-location business bought via Acquire.com; an AI-based tool for law firms using training manuals; a portfolio of side hustles including a community, newsletter, and a full-time job; a paid ads agency seeking more dental clients; a discussion on Twitter Spaces for audience growth; and a VA agency concept with a debate on niches and revenue models. Chris recounts personal experience with wedding-venue research, including whether to buy existing properties versus building, and suggests practical steps like market saturation analysis, cross-market benchmarking, and mission alignment for community benefits alongside profitability. Throughout the episode, real-world examples from participants—ranging from real estate decisions to lead generation and content strategy—provide actionable frameworks and cautions about capital intensity, competition, and risk in new ventures. Chris interweaves live coaching with structured frameworks, urging callers to validate demand before big investments and to anchor ventures in revenue foundations first. A recurring theme is the tension between passion projects and economics: a wedding venue might serve the community but must be financially viable, ideally bought rather than built, with diversification through repurposing. The vending-location lead service is analyzed as a high-touch marketplace where the buy side—finding buyers for leads—poses greater difficulty than sourcing locations, suggesting referral partnerships and influencer networks to de-risk the model. Tim and Lauren contribute on AI and audience-building strategy, highlighting safe data usage, niche targeting, and the challenge of cross-platform audience transfer. Clifton and others discuss agency models, client acquisition, and the balance between scale and hands-on fulfillment, emphasizing niche selection and the value of measurable outcomes in sales roles. The episode closes with a sense of evolving formats, promising more pre-submitted questions to reduce dead air and increase curated content, while maintaining live interaction. The overarching takeaway is to prioritize market validation, capital efficiency, and clear value propositions before committing to complex ventures. Guests emphasize concrete steps: saturation research, comparable-market analysis, building in repurposable assets, and establishing credible, win-win partnerships. The discussion also underscores that topics around Spaces, content strategy, and AI tools are intertwined with business decisions, but success hinges on scalable revenue models, defensible niches, and practical execution plans rather than only ideas or aspirational goals.

The Diary of a CEO

Harvard’s Behaviour Expert: The Psychology Of Why People Don't Like You!
Guests: Alison Wood Brooks
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The episode delves into the science and practice of how we talk, listen, and connect with others, guided by Harvard behavioral scientist Alison Wood Brooks. The hosts draw out her two-decade study of conversational patterns, anxiety, and the craft of negotiation, translating dense research into practical steps listeners can apply in daily life. Brooks outlines how many of us mismanage conversations without realizing it, from preemptively labeling social anxiety as a threat to clinging to small talk at the expense of deeper connection. A central theme is reframing internal states to improve performance, such as treating social nerves as signals of opportunity and learning to prepare conversations in advance. She shares what she calls the teachable, measurable core of effective communication, including recognizing when conversations should stay intimate and one-on-one, and how to adapt methods for text and other digital forms without losing nuance. The discussion also unpacks how emotions shape behavior in high-stakes settings like negotiations, and how reframing anxiety as excitement can boost performance across performance tasks, public speaking, and collaboration. The guests explore concrete tools drawn from decades of lab work, including strategies to preserve trust, manage impressions, and avoid common mistakes that erode rapport. Brooks explains a framework for understanding conversational goals, namely balancing relational needs with information exchange, and the power of kindness, validation, and follow-up questions in building connection. The conversation turns practical when Brooks describes how to handle difficult conversations, how to apologize effectively, and how to structure conversations to keep them on a productive trajectory. Throughout, the emphasis remains on real-world application: how to ask better questions, how to listen with genuine curiosity, how to create micro-matters of warmth and engagement, and how to design conversations that move people toward greater collaboration and understanding, both in personal life and professional settings. The talk also touches on the impact of technology and AI on communication in everyday life, the balance between being authentic and adaptable in different social contexts, and the crucial role conversation plays in reducing loneliness and fostering meaningful relationships. The host and guest reflect on the importance of teaching these skills to younger generations and consider the future of work where human connection remains a uniquely valuable asset. Throughout, the episode stays anchored in science while translating it into actionable steps listeners can practice with friends, family, colleagues, and in public forums.
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