ColoradoLeeds
ColoradoLeeds
  • 612
  • 532 277
Certificate in ESG Strategy - Instructor introduction - Jennifer Forman
Certificate in ESG Strategy - Instructor introduction - Jennifer Forman
Переглядів: 51

Відео

Stories of Impact From Leeds Students
Переглядів 100Місяць тому
For the 2023-24 academic year, the Leeds School of Business awarded a record amount in scholarships, supporting over 1,100 students. $6,008,015 2023-2024 Academic Year Total Scholarships Awarded This achievement would not have been possible without our community of donors. We invite you to watch this video to hear from a few of these scholars. Each narrative illustrates the profound influence y...
Leeds Executive MBA International Residencies
Переглядів 58Місяць тому
There is perhaps nothing more distinctive than the week-long residencies of the Executive MBA program. Offered once in the Fall semester and twice in the Spring semester, each residency transports you to a place where it all comes to life-connections with your cohort, case studies and concepts, and candid conversations with faculty. Most residencies take place on either the beautiful campus of ...
Leeds 2024 Graduation Celebration
Переглядів 93Місяць тому
Congratulations to the Leeds Class of 2024! Revisit some of the highlights of this year's ceremonies and celebrations.
Leeds' Alix Barasch Wins the 2024 Erin Anderson Award
Переглядів 2084 місяці тому
Alix Barasch and her colleagues reflect on her research, mentorship and winning the American Marketing Association's 2024 Erin Anderson Award for an Emerging Female Marketing Scholar and Mentor.
Leeds 2023 Holiday Video
Переглядів 3336 місяців тому
Leeds students, faculty and staff share their holiday traditions, reflect on 2023 and tell us what they're looking forward to in the New Year. Tell us about your holiday traditions in the comments!
An Introduction to ESG by Tonie Hansen
Переглядів 1157 місяців тому
An Introduction to ESG by Tonie Hansen
Kristin Gutierrez (MBA'23)
Переглядів 1958 місяців тому
Kristin Gutierrez shares her experience earning a master's in Leeds Evening MBA program. Learn more at www.colorado.edu/business/mba/evening-mba-program
Holly Henderson (MBA’23)
Переглядів 61811 місяців тому
Recent full-time MBA graduate Holly Henderson discusses her experience in the program. Learn more about the program at www.colorado.edu/business/mba/full-time-mba-program.
Online Learning at Leeds
Переглядів 12111 місяців тому
At Leeds, learning online doesn’t mean learning alone. Hybrid students engage with and get support from nationally renowned faculty, experienced program staff and fellow classmates every step of the way. And, to ensure maximum flexibility and convenience for busy graduate students, asynchronous course lectures, assignments, interactive group work, and discussions are easily accessible and well ...
Leeds Business Insights S3E10: Sales Is Really About Building Relationships featuring Brian Higgins
Переглядів 4711 місяців тому
Brian Higgins, a Teaching Assistant Professional at Leeds Business and sales and business development executive, joins us to discuss applicable lessons from sales that can be useful for any professional. Brian joins host Amanda Kramer to talk about misperceptions many have about working in sales, the art of a good conversation, surprising skills taught in sales courses at Leeds, and the unique ...
Inaugural Greeting from Dean Vijay Khatri | Rustandy Endowed Dean
Переглядів 52511 місяців тому
Inaugural Greeting from Dean Vijay Khatri | Rustandy Endowed Dean
Leeds Business Insights S3E9: You Don’t Get Lucky If You Don’t Work Hard feat. Brock Weatherup
Переглядів 5611 місяців тому
Brock Weatherup is a Leeds alumnus and consumer growth board executive, three-time exit startup CEO/founder, multi-billion dollar C-suite leader, and an active early stage investor. He was a dedicated startup guy, who went from churning out successful businesses in the pet food & wellness industry, to receiving a diagnosis that changed the entire course of his life. In this episode, he sits dow...
Leeds Business Insights S3E8: Crafting Immersive, Enjoyable Experiences featuring Alix Barasch
Переглядів 60Рік тому
So much of our free time is consumed with posting on social media, sharing our day to day lives and crafting a personal narrative or brand online. But how is the effecting our day to day lives, and is it effecting our possibility to truly live in and experience the moments were in? Today we are discussing the intersection between technology and consumer experiences with Alixandra Barasch, an as...
Leeds Business Insights S3E7: The Gender Gap in Predicting Entrepreneur Success with Ethan Poskanzer
Переглядів 42Рік тому
In this episode, we are discussing innovation and inclusivity in entrepreneurship with Ethan Poskanzer. Ethan is an Assistant Professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship in the Leeds School of Business, and studies how organizations can select and connect people to develop innovative ideas and how the opportunity to innovate can be democratized and made more inclusive. Host Amanda Kramer sits do...
Leeds Business Insights S3E6: Define and Hone Your Expertise with Case Swenson
Переглядів 20Рік тому
Leeds Business Insights S3E6: Define and Hone Your Expertise with Case Swenson
Leeds Business Insights S3E5: Get To Know Your Stakeholders & Be Transparent with Gloria Urrea
Переглядів 20Рік тому
Leeds Business Insights S3E5: Get To Know Your Stakeholders & Be Transparent with Gloria Urrea
Career Catalyst: Nic Breen
Переглядів 29Рік тому
Career Catalyst: Nic Breen
Career Catalyst: Hailey Dearman
Переглядів 25Рік тому
Career Catalyst: Hailey Dearman
Career Catalyst: Garrett Obermeyer
Переглядів 75Рік тому
Career Catalyst: Garrett Obermeyer
Career Catalyst: Emily Abed
Переглядів 24Рік тому
Career Catalyst: Emily Abed
Career Catalyst: Danielle Miller
Переглядів 69Рік тому
Career Catalyst: Danielle Miller
Career Catalyst: Capri Van Gilder
Переглядів 62Рік тому
Career Catalyst: Capri Van Gilder
Career Catalyst: Khushali Dave
Переглядів 35Рік тому
Career Catalyst: Khushali Dave
Silicon Valley Bank Demise: Causes and the Path Forward
Переглядів 70Рік тому
Silicon Valley Bank Demise: Causes and the Path Forward
Creating a Rock Star LinkedIn Profile April 2023
Переглядів 141Рік тому
Creating a Rock Star LinkedIn Profile April 2023
Leeds Business Insights S3E4: Economic Updates & Forecast with Rich Wobbekind and Brian Lewandowski
Переглядів 26Рік тому
Leeds Business Insights S3E4: Economic Updates & Forecast with Rich Wobbekind and Brian Lewandowski
Leeds Business Insights S3E3: The Science of Happiness featuring Ashish Kothari
Переглядів 46Рік тому
Leeds Business Insights S3E3: The Science of Happiness featuring Ashish Kothari
Leeds Business Insights S3E2: Bank Failure Fallout featuring Shaun Davies
Переглядів 28Рік тому
Leeds Business Insights S3E2: Bank Failure Fallout featuring Shaun Davies
CESR: Debating Divestment
Переглядів 118Рік тому
CESR: Debating Divestment

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @JohnDoe-tt6en
    @JohnDoe-tt6en 11 днів тому

    UA-cam wouldn't let me post this in reply to @mysticvortex13 I agree with you about tickling although it can be funny alongside just the physiological reaction that might come regardless (if a parent pretends to be a monster and tickles their child for example, after it's over the child might still be smiling because they found it amusing). I didn't really understand your second paragraph. Humor isn't always genuine meaning people can mock others as a calculated attempt to shame/humiliate or humble them and not because they genuinely find something about them or their situation to be amusing. I think your interpretation of what is racist and how emotionally invested you are in anti-racism also plays a role. I'm really interested in this point of view (benign violation theory) and it seems to capture some of my ideas about humor and personality differences (ie. that people are more likely to find callous humour funny because they are low on compassion, at least for the victims in the scenarios they find funny, and it's not because they just have a stronger sense of humor than people who are bothered by that same humor, it's directly because they're not as emotionally invested in the victim's well-being so priming people to be more compassionate would make them less likely to be amused by people's misfortune. It's not just about being amused by misfortune either but simply mocking people - the natural reaction to being mocked is humiliation (the social currency or praise that comes with being the kind of person who can laugh at him or herself comes precisely because people assume it implies that you are not easily humiliated, whether that's because you are just thick-skinned or because you don't have a high opinion of yourself/don't need others to have a high opinion of you. I used to think the superiority theory of humor was underrated but people can pride themselves on being superior to hypothetical or possible others in various ways without being amused by the difference between them and there are situations where it is scenarios and not people that are objects of amusement. It seems to me that there is something 'off' about what we find funny, something is ridiculous; it's absurd, so it's a 'violation' but it's ok because it doesn't matter which is why mocking someone can be effective shaming, there's something 'off' about them but it's ok, we can take pleasure in it because it (they, really) doesn't (don't) really matter. I think this covers why amusement is the only positive emotion we can expect people to not want to be an object of (you might not want to be sexualized by someone you're repulsed by and you might not care if they have affection for you if you don't feel the same way but those things aren't 'intrinsically humiliating' in the same way), it's not so much that it requires looking at them as though they are of real negative value, as subjectively unflattering as being 'ridiculous' can be, but that they don't matter, that's why they need not be taken seriously. I didn't really understand a lot of your post but I think we can laugh at certain stereotypes because we don't personally find them very threatening- either because the stereotype itself is not that subjectively harsh or because it's obvious that the person telling the joke doesn't really think that; they make it out that you would have to be a fool to really think that. Again, I don't really understand your criticism even though I don't want to go through it all - as I interpret the argument in the video, something is funny because it's not a pure or real violation but in theory it _shouldn't_ be benign either, and what people are/should be threatened by aren't necessarily one and the same. -I hope youtube allows this. They deleted my last post and it was completely uncontroversial, as far as I can tell. --- Absolutely nothing controversial. They are just being dunderheads as usual.

  • @jimparsons6803
    @jimparsons6803 Місяць тому

    Wrote a couple of programs using BASIC-256, why not, using the information given in this interesting clip and after looking the Paradox on Wikipedia. Seemed to be pretty straight forward. The limitations within the Paradox's definition are pretty stringent, so you have to be careful with the programming. As for how to apply the theory or the programs to a real to life situation, still working on that part. When I took math, I was interested in topology, and there y' go.

  • @cathrynocken488
    @cathrynocken488 6 місяців тому

    Grateful for Leeds helping to pave the way with opportunities and challenges for our Daughter Jackie O!!!

  • @SilasDickie
    @SilasDickie 6 місяців тому

    I’m grateful for my professors and classmates at Leeds who have challenged me to reach new heights as a finance professional that I couldn’t have imagined would be possible. I’m living a dream that exceeds the dreams I had in the beginning of my academic career. Thank you Leeds! Sko Buffs! 🎉

  • @user-uv4yb8hz1j
    @user-uv4yb8hz1j 6 місяців тому

    I really enjoyed hearing the different holiday traditions that people from Leeds Shares. I am looking forward to seeing my daughter, that I have not seen in almost 4 months, and celebrating Christmas with her and our family.

  • @stephendavis9739
    @stephendavis9739 10 місяців тому

    This video is truly painful to watch, barely understood what ole magic hands had to say because he spoke so quietly.

  • @user-op3nw2qj6r
    @user-op3nw2qj6r Рік тому

    hi

  • @futerko108
    @futerko108 2 роки тому

    Pretty much the opposite of Freud's theory that jokes are the royal road to the unconscious as they allow us to say taboo things "humorously" - a variation of the motto that there's ne'er a truer word spoken in jest.

  • @ericgrimes341
    @ericgrimes341 2 роки тому

    I work at a non profit with my finance major. One of my good friends works at coinbase. He’s a millionaire. Finance doesn’t = banking. Don’t pigeonhole yourself into banking. What a miserable industry. Go work for a smaller company while your still in school. If you are a good, smart employee. They’ll hire you full time when you finish school 99% of the time.

  • @mte4506
    @mte4506 2 роки тому

    Recharacterizations are no longer allowed This video needs to be removed to avoid confusion of investors who think that their conversion can be reversed.

  • @TNexpert
    @TNexpert 2 роки тому

    I'm surprised they don't mention any ingredients to keep it from forming ice crystals

  • @teacherteacher5586
    @teacherteacher5586 3 роки тому

    Well spoken!

  • @sovetski8893
    @sovetski8893 3 роки тому

    When a co worker pisses me off I pick the hardest frozen strawberry I can find or In my case limes 😂😂😁😁

  • @sophiabangtson1324
    @sophiabangtson1324 3 роки тому

    huh

  • @Waterfound
    @Waterfound 4 роки тому

    Wow

  • @cjline8270
    @cjline8270 4 роки тому

    Very educative video.. I have learned a lot

  •  4 роки тому

    You all seem Intelligent Enough, to MAKE YOUR OWN DECISIONS, Ladies

  • @DidYouKnowThatChannel
    @DidYouKnowThatChannel 4 роки тому

    The Video could use white balancing across both cameras, Sound leveling to avoid the volume differences and noise canceling for that buzzing sounds.

  • @Christopher.Gontar
    @Christopher.Gontar 5 років тому

    The theory isn't just claiming that some benign violations are humor, it's claiming that ALL benign violations are humor. This theory is obviously false. Say I'm having a mixed emotional reaction to x. I can feel good about something and at the same time equally bad. My mind may vacillate. There are countless examples of this scenario that aren't funny at all. It is so easy to come up with them. It is so scandalous and absurd that this idea was granted an avalanche of media attention that still hasn't abated. It was published by Simon and Schuster and the author was invited on Joe Rogan. This man should have been completely ignored.

    • @videocritic2087
      @videocritic2087 4 роки тому

      Yes, if you have a mixed emotion, then it was not benign violation, just a violation.

    • @RandomVex
      @RandomVex Рік тому

      "It is so easy to come up with them" and yet you didn't

    • @ChristopherGontar
      @ChristopherGontar Рік тому

      @@videocritic2087 A mixed emotion between good and bad is a benign violation.

    • @ChristopherGontar
      @ChristopherGontar Рік тому

      @@RandomVexBenign violation happens every time something is making you happy at the same time something else is making you sad. It happens even when you are sad about anything, and someone hugs you to make you feel better. That's a benign violation, but it's not humor.

    • @ChristopherGontar
      @ChristopherGontar Рік тому

      Furthermore, they can't beat that by replying that the emotions have to be directed at the same object or source. There's no way the theory can require that. It's the mixed emotion itself that the theory is based on. I've thought this through.

  • @baylenk
    @baylenk 5 років тому

    Updates regarding the elimination of recharacterization options should be attached to this and all other Roth conversion/recharacterization strategies.

  • @spa101010
    @spa101010 6 років тому

    Now can you convert $ from your traditional IRA to your Roth IRA every year?

  • @bigshae1able
    @bigshae1able 6 років тому

    Great video. Thank you. I wish I had the option to recharacterize in my 457 plan.

  • @MadisonWilder
    @MadisonWilder 6 років тому

    She's my orthodontist!! awesome!! I had these things on for 11 months... this month is going to be a year with braces

  • @Super_Syrian
    @Super_Syrian 7 років тому

    White Gus Fring

  • @jononwheelz
    @jononwheelz 7 років тому

    FIRST

  • @philcragmoore8334
    @philcragmoore8334 8 років тому

    Shame on this anti-police place. Boycott them!!

  • @williamcampbell4623
    @williamcampbell4623 8 років тому

    Too bad his business is anti-police and refuses to serve on-duty police officers. Boycott this chain now!!

  • @williamcampbell4623
    @williamcampbell4623 8 років тому

    Too bad his business is anti-police and refuses to serve on-duty police officers. Boycott this chain now!!

  • @WayofChampions
    @WayofChampions 8 років тому

    This guy is REAL, really!!! He is obviously genuine, authentic and able to connect. Success in all of life whether a CEO of a big corporation or the CEO of a small family...mom and dad... is 99% relationships and 1% Luck. Human stupidity and the Universe are the only things that are infinite. What is it about our leadership that doesn't get this. Executives talking about bottom line, coaches in sports talking about x's and o's. All those results items work out well when you develop trusting, respectful relationships with integrity. THIS IS TRUTH. Much love and chi, Jerry Lynch, Ph.D. author, coach, dad.

  • @enjoypolo
    @enjoypolo 8 років тому

    This is interesting. Feelings of warmth and cold can also be affected by lighting colors as well. It seems full-awareness of the situation we're in is key.

  • @talbrott
    @talbrott 8 років тому

    "My ex wife in the media claimed she had apparently been 'violated.' Knowing her it probably wouldn't have been a moving violation." Woody Allen.

    • @stademeister15
      @stademeister15 6 років тому

      For those of you who didn't get it, this is really subtle humor. Think long and hard about this one (non-subtle humor inserted (again) for encouragement)

    • @futerko108
      @futerko108 2 роки тому

      reminds me of the joke about a man who finds a dead woman washed up on a beach and goes to get help - when he returns he finds someone having sex with the woman's body - says to him, wtf are you doing? this woman is dead - guy replies, oh, I thought she was american!

    • @d2dar459
      @d2dar459 2 роки тому

      Lol

  • @alexanderbayer964
    @alexanderbayer964 8 років тому

    Goldman Sachs is not digging around for talent at University of Colorado! Haha, bold faced lie.

  • @CUBoulderStudyAbroad
    @CUBoulderStudyAbroad 9 років тому

    So proud to be involved in putting on this program! Way to #BeBoulder around the world, 2015 participants! We would love your photos, just add a #CUBoulderAbroad on social media and we'll definitely find them.

  • @chelseymichelle9115
    @chelseymichelle9115 9 років тому

    She's pretty, but to be honest she doesn't seems passionate at all to men. And it makes me wonder if she believes she made the right decision

  • @Mrsoctoberlady
    @Mrsoctoberlady 9 років тому

    She was my son's orthodontist here in Georgia. I miss her so much! she had a baby and she used to travel down here from South Carolina but has now just stayed over there. She was a great doctor and person we trully miss her!

    • @MadisonWilder
      @MadisonWilder 6 років тому

      She's my orthodontist she's awesome..

  • @bradbradley5421
    @bradbradley5421 9 років тому

    BRAAD IS A MARKETING GENIUS!!

  • @phoatohjoe8281
    @phoatohjoe8281 9 років тому

    Is this Tommy Bolins manager or something of that sort... It would be great to hear some Tommy Bolin stories

  • @reaganmcmorris4979
    @reaganmcmorris4979 10 років тому

    😢😥😢😥😢😢😥😢😥😢😢that's my grandpa I'm crying right now cuz he is dead😢😢😢😢

  • @mysticvortex13
    @mysticvortex13 10 років тому

    tickling is not funny, its just a natural muscular reaction, a nervous tic if you will. those who laugh at being tickled do so not out of humor. those who dont, simply dont possess the tic. also, there are many things considered to be a violation of personal value that really shouldnt be such. racist jokes for example, arent really racist, as they arent intended to demean or otherwise negatively impact the subjected person/race. even if they were, in which case they wouldnt be funny, they still wouldnt be a violation of said nature without either a: having the words of said comment be inherently threatening in nature, such as a death threat, or b: the subject of said comments allowing themself to become unreasonably hypersensitive to it. in other words, a comment about black people liking chicken isnt actually racist. a threat to lynch someone for being jewish, or making an implication that you will arrest someone for being mexican, or banning them from an area for being muslim, or docking them pay for being native american, are. and somewhere in the gray is the comment cliven bundy made, wondering whether or not black people would be better off as slaves than living in their current status.. racist if taken to imply they should again become slaves, not if taken simply to imply that their current state of living overall could be considered that miserable.. nonetheless, people are justified in finding it offensive reguardless due to its use of cookiecutter stereotyping the entire race and not just an appropriate demographic within it.. but i digress... there are just so many things wrong with this theory of funny..

    • @elisears1791
      @elisears1791 9 років тому

      Yes, but as he says, tickling is only likely to cause laughter in certain situations as it does with friends and family members. As far as racist jokes, I think that example supports the theory. The reason they're not an exclusive violation because they usually have elements that are benign. This also depends on the social context of the person who hears the joke. To some, the benign condition may not be satisfied and it may be purely offensive (a violation).

    • @stademeister15
      @stademeister15 6 років тому

      tickling is not "just a muscular reaction." It's a muscular reaction, but it's not that simple. There's more to it than that.

    • @Jay-kx5cb
      @Jay-kx5cb 4 роки тому

      The reason why racist jokes may be offensive is that it is often making fun of the sad and damaged state of black people, therefore many people that believe in equality for races or black people that are conscious of their reality find no humor in it. The benign of the violation is not seen while the actual violation is really seen. The reason why white people or people that may not be as racially aware find it funny is because they distance themselves from the people that are being made fun of or they don't know enough about black people and what we have gone through to take any offense to it. This is what I believe to be the reality

    • @JohnDoe-tt6en
      @JohnDoe-tt6en 11 днів тому

      I agree with you about tickling although it can be funny alongside just the physiological reaction that might come regardless (if a parent pretends to be a monster and tickles their child for example, after it's over the child might still be smiling because they found it amusing). I didn't really understand your second paragraph. Humor isn't always genuine meaning people can mock others as a calculated attempt to shame/humiliate or humble them and not because they genuinely find something about them or their situation to be amusing. I think your interpretation of what is racist and how emotionally invested you are in anti-racism also plays a role. I'm really interested in this point of view (benign violation theory) and it seems to capture some of my ideas about humor and personality differences (ie. that people are more likely to find callous humour funny because they are low on compassion, at least for the victims in the scenarios they find funny, and it's not because they just have a stronger sense of humor than people who are bothered by that same humor, it's directly because they're not as emotionally invested in the victim's well-being so priming people to be more compassionate would make them less likely to be amused by people's misfortune. It's not just about being amused by misfortune either but simply mocking people - the natural reaction to being mocked is humiliation (the social currency or praise that comes with being the kind of person who can laugh at him or herself comes precisely because people assume it implies that you are not easily humiliated, whether that's because you are just thick-skinned or because you don't have a high opinion of yourself/don't need others to have a high opinion of you. I used to think the superiority theory of humor was underrated but people can pride themselves on being superior to hypothetical or possible others in various ways without being amused by the difference between them and there are situations where it is scenarios and not people that are objects of amusement. It seems to me that there is something 'off' about what we find funny, something is ridiculous; it's absurd, so it's a 'violation' but it's ok because it doesn't matter which is why mocking someone can be effective shaming, there's something 'off' about them but it's ok, we can take pleasure in it because it (they, really) doesn't (don't) really matter. I think this covers why amusement is the only positive emotion we can expect people to not want to be an object of (you might not want to be sexualized by someone you're repulsed by and you might not care if they have affection for you if you don't feel the same way but those things aren't 'intrinsically humiliating' in the same way), it's not so much that it requires looking at them as though they are of real negative value, as subjectively unflattering as being 'ridiculous' can be, but that they don't matter, that's why they need not be taken seriously. I didn't really understand a lot of your post but I think we can laugh at certain stereotypes because we don't personally find them very threatening- either because the stereotype itself is not that subjectively harsh or because it's obvious that the person telling the joke doesn't really think that; they make it out that you would have to be a fool to really think that. Again, I don't really understand your criticism even though I don't want to go through it all - as I interpret the argument in the video, something is funny because it's not a pure or real violation but in theory it _shouldn't_ be benign either, and what people are/should be threatened by aren't necessarily one and the same. -I hope youtube allows this. They deleted my last post and it was completely uncontroversial, as far as I can tell.

  • @mickd5930
    @mickd5930 10 років тому

    Dr LoPresti is the best instructor I ever have had. I come back and use what he has taught me still, and I haven't been in his class in almost 5 years.

  • @michaelahayward7805
    @michaelahayward7805 10 років тому

    these students are not listening. they're expecting the client to speak like a project management text book... and that's not gonna happen, and he isn't understanding them because they're too busy talking like a textbook

  • @andrewquinn7082
    @andrewquinn7082 10 років тому

    1:33 They shouldn't act like commercial entities ... promoting ... (ohmygod did i just say that that's actually hilarious) (oh jesus don't laugh at my own joke, keep it together peter)' (heh. "oh jesus." with a church joke (STOP))

  • @sayirasilverio793
    @sayirasilverio793 11 років тому

    I hope to be an orthodontist when I'm older. Wow, she's pretty! Hopefully someday I'll be as successful as her. :)

  • @maxmunro99
    @maxmunro99 11 років тому

    ummmmm

  • @hornilasebastian154
    @hornilasebastian154 11 років тому

    WORLD RECORD: BIGGEST WIND TURBINE Visit: ABOUTSOLARCELLS.COMXA.COM ZERO-NOISE from gears and generators since they're sealed underground. SAVES THE BIRDS AND BATS since the turbines are slow-moving. DOES NOT NEED TO OCCUPY A WIDER LANDSCAPE since the turbine can be very tall. MAY BE LOWER-COST since it can use parts of junked trucks and others. ELUDES HURRICANE FORCE since the blades automatically close. HELPS THE WIND ENERGY COMPANIES since it is FREE FOR ALL.

  • @Jaggemonkey
    @Jaggemonkey 11 років тому

    It's interesting and i think they're on to something. But I feel like I can already see some exceptions if I go purely off what I know from this video.

  • @gogogojack1
    @gogogojack1 11 років тому

    Was Lawrence (the researcher who was testing his own hypothesis related to priming effects of hot/cold beverages) primed by the hot/cold beverages as well??? Lawrence was holding the hot/cold drinks before handing them to participants! See the experiment --> search UA-cam "on priming hot cold experiment" Also, was it a good idea for Lawrence & his research colleague to be conducting the experiment? Experimenter bias? Self fulfilling prophecy? Redo experiment with double blind methodology?

  • @tericavanagh7731
    @tericavanagh7731 11 років тому

    Maybe you missed the part about $170 million dollars in annual sales.

  • @neilchair
    @neilchair 11 років тому

    Thanks for the tip, Ze Frank!