Ivanka Trump
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
No, I actually, I love it. I love it. You have like a little, I love this guy.
And this, I mean, I feel like you've really thought about all of these.
And this, I mean, I feel like you've really thought about all of these.
And this, I mean, I feel like you've really thought about all of these.
To make you smile.
To make you smile.
To make you smile.
How do you do that successfully as you bring your projects to life?
How do you do that successfully as you bring your projects to life?
How do you do that successfully as you bring your projects to life?
And dogs, though, will have that every time. You could walk into the other room to get a glass of milk and you come back and your dog sees you like it's the first time. So I love replicating that in robots. They actually say children, like one of the reasons why Peekaboo is so successful is that they actually don't remember not having seen you a few seconds prior. Yeah.
And dogs, though, will have that every time. You could walk into the other room to get a glass of milk and you come back and your dog sees you like it's the first time. So I love replicating that in robots. They actually say children, like one of the reasons why Peekaboo is so successful is that they actually don't remember not having seen you a few seconds prior. Yeah.
And dogs, though, will have that every time. You could walk into the other room to get a glass of milk and you come back and your dog sees you like it's the first time. So I love replicating that in robots. They actually say children, like one of the reasons why Peekaboo is so successful is that they actually don't remember not having seen you a few seconds prior. Yeah.
There's a term for it, but I remember when my kids were younger, you leave the room and you walk back in 30 seconds later and they experience the same joy as if you had been, you know, gone for four hours. And we grow out of that. We become very used to one another.
There's a term for it, but I remember when my kids were younger, you leave the room and you walk back in 30 seconds later and they experience the same joy as if you had been, you know, gone for four hours. And we grow out of that. We become very used to one another.
There's a term for it, but I remember when my kids were younger, you leave the room and you walk back in 30 seconds later and they experience the same joy as if you had been, you know, gone for four hours. And we grow out of that. We become very used to one another.
I think every day. I think I wake up in the morning and I wanna be better. I wanna be a better mom. I wanna be a better wife. I wanna be more creative. I wanna be physically stronger. And so that very much lives within me all the time. I think I also grew up in the context of being the child of two extraordinarily successful parents. And that could have been debilitating for me.
I think every day. I think I wake up in the morning and I wanna be better. I wanna be a better mom. I wanna be a better wife. I wanna be more creative. I wanna be physically stronger. And so that very much lives within me all the time. I think I also grew up in the context of being the child of two extraordinarily successful parents. And that could have been debilitating for me.
I think every day. I think I wake up in the morning and I wanna be better. I wanna be a better mom. I wanna be a better wife. I wanna be more creative. I wanna be physically stronger. And so that very much lives within me all the time. I think I also grew up in the context of being the child of two extraordinarily successful parents. And that could have been debilitating for me.
And I saw that in a lot of my friends who grew up in circumstances similar to that. They were afraid to try for fear of not measuring up. And I think somehow early on, I learned to kind of harness the fear of not being good enough, not being competent enough. And I harnessed it to make me better and to push me outside of my comfort zone. So I think that's always lived with me.