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A highlight from How Bitcoin Fights Tyranny with Erik Cason

What Bitcoin Did

21:01 min | Last month

A highlight from How Bitcoin Fights Tyranny with Erik Cason

"If I'm not wrong about Bitcoin, then I believe that this is the most radical apparatus that has ever put its hands in humanity, and that is the only thing that can save us from the potential annihilation of total war that we are eking towards closer and closer every day. Hello there. How are you all doing? Hope you're doing well. A few things to update you on. Firstly, travels over the next month. We'll be heading out to Fort Worth, I think it's next week, two weeks, I can't remember, for the North American Blockchain Summit before we head out to Ghana to attend the Africa Bitcoin Conference in December and to make another film. It's going to be very busy. We've also announced our conference in Bedford in April next year. Please do go and check that out, cheatco .co .uk. Anyway, welcome to the What Bitcoin Did podcast, which is brought to you by the legends at RS Energy, the largest NASDAQ listed Bitcoin miner using 100 % renewable energy. I'm your host, Peter McCormack, and today we have Eric Cason making his debut on What Bitcoin Did. Now, Eric has been around in Bitcoin for a long time and recently dropped his book, Crypto Sovereignty, in which he expands upon a lot of his writings over the last few years. Now, I absolutely love this show, but not as much as our boy Danny. We've made a few more philosophical shows over the past couple of years, and they are among some of my favorites. I love getting into the wild stuff, especially with someone like Eric. Now, he claims he isn't a philosopher, but have a listen. I think you'll disagree. And all I know is Danny absolutely loved this. It was his favorite show, I think, this year. So I hope you enjoy this one. If you've got any questions about this or anything else, please do get in touch. It's hello at whatpikwondid .com. Danny is like all week, he's like, all right, I cannot wait for the Eric Cason to come on. It's going to be completely fucking nuts, but you're going to love him. That's a pretty good - That pretty much sums it up. Yeah, it's a pretty good synopsis of who I am. Well, look, welcome. Good to finally have you on the show. It's been a long time coming. Do you know what's funny in the last one? So we do notes for the shows, and sometimes I don't even refer to them, but sometimes I do. But I'd opened Eric's notes, and I was looking. So I had Mark Masson, and I was like, so you just dropped a book? I was like, has he just dropped a book? Did you have - No, I did switch it around, but I did have the wrong notes. Anyway, Eric, how are you? I'm good. Strung out from the concert, but you know, or from the conference. Well, in the conference, I went to a concert last night too. Who'd you go and see? Tinlicker. They're part of the Anjunadeep label. They're like a big, they're pretty big in the UK, actually. What kind of music is it? Deep House. Yeah, that's not my thing. Yeah. Yeah, I listen to Slayer and Megadeth and shit like that. Congratulations on the book. I haven't read it. Thank you. It's been a long time coming. I've read some of it, but. Danny usually gets them read in time, but yeah, congratulations. Tell me about the book first, and then we'll get going. Well, the book, it didn't start as a book. It just started as a series of essays that I was just kind of writing, exploring philosophical and sociological content of Bitcoin. And sort of as I got deeper and deeper, I was like, whoa, there's like all these threads sort of connecting. So the book I can really say is more of like a constellation of a greater incomplete work that I'm sort of working on now, that's trying to essentially do an entire philosophical approach towards, I guess what we call it, called like the sociology of cryptography or something like that. We did consider doing mushrooms for this episode. Well, I mean, it would be really nice, but then I got to get on my flight kind of all weird and stuff. I'm just not sure how that would go with TSA. I've had some close calls like that before. I don't really do mushrooms as well, so I'd be completely lost. I don't do acid on planes anymore. Oh, anymore. Yeah, there was an incident once. So I decided I was like, it's time to throttle back on that. Really great way to pass eight hours on a plane. Yeah, please tell me. There's not much to tell you. Cause everybody's always like, you're going to take it, you're just going to flip out on the plane, right? No, like you sit down and you're like, I'm going 600 miles through the air, 330 ,000 feet in the air. Like this is amazing. And if the plane just burst into flames, I'm going to meet God now. It doesn't matter, I can't do anything. So I'm just going to look outside and see all of the amazing mountains and the clouds and how incredible and extraordinary it all is. Did you see that guy get dragged off a plane recently? It was going to Ibiza and had to do an emergency landing, I think in Marseille and they dragged him off the plane cause he was off his nut. No, I didn't see that. Absolutely off his nut. Probably like a weekly occurrence from there. Yeah, I was thinking, what are you doing, doing drugs on a plane? Yeah, yeah. So, you know, I decided that I was getting it a little too close. So we're not doing that anymore just for me and everyone else's safety. Just the gin and tonic will do. Exactly. So what's your philosophy background? I don't have one. You don't have it, even better, okay. But you are a philosopher. No, no, I'm not a philosopher at all. I eschew when anyone tries to call me a philosopher. Maybe I could pass for a thinker. I always say I'm a strategist at best, so. How do you get class as a philosopher? Isn't that a choice? A class? Well, no, essentially like this was all compelled by, when I got into Bitcoin, I had this moment that I was like, how is it possible that this piece of technology can keep its oath to itself in a way that like no man, no institution, no government, no organization seems to be capable of? And it was like a splinter in my mind. And I was like, all right, really smart people have thought about this before me. So like, let's do some Googling about the oath and the philosophy. And I came across this philosopher, Giorgio Ambogon, and I got a book of his called The Sacrament of Oath, The Archaeology of Language. And it's really, really good. It's like the fourth book in like a nine book series called Homo Secur. And now I've read the whole series. And essentially in it, like he's doing a whole archeology of like, what is the oath? How did it function? How did it come about? And he kind of like goes all the way back to pre -Roman times. And he was like, the oath really is like this object of language that fuses magic, religion, and words into a singular that actually has nothing to do with the content that's spoken, but it has to do with the actualization of what's been promised. And so this then marries up with an individual called Homo Secur, who's like the forsaken man throughout human history, who all legal systems have always given themselves a right and a decree to destroy these people, but it's not murder. And most interestingly is that these people can't be used in sacrifices ritualized either, because it's about putting them outside the purview and the protection of the gods. So like they can't have anything to do with religion. And what's pretty interesting is that like, essentially there have been these like non peoples throughout human history that could always be destroyed by the state because of the way that like they're the other bad people. And they pose a threat to the entire system. So like they must be destroyed. And so following the lineage of that person, I kind of like connected that up to modernity and seeing how like now we live in a constant state of emergency where like any of us can be labeled as a terrorist or any enemy combatant. And not only like, do we just not, not only are we in prison, but like access to the law itself is fundamentally impossible. Like we can't even get habeas corpus. So yeah, it's been a pretty interesting journey. And then there's like 10 other philosophers that like on the concourse of it, he like mentioned that and I have to like go on the journey to read them. And I'm also dealing with like a lot of, like a lot of these thinkers you can't approach in academia because they're like solely with backgrounds either in like communism or like radical fascism or other things. So like the moment that you start reading them, people are like, you got to get out of academia. Like you're not welcome here. Why? Specifically so like Heidegger for example, Heidegger is really solely because not only did he belong to the Nazi party, but it seems like a lot of his philosophy actually deals with trying to like actualize a political party that explicitly can identify friend and enemy classes for like the evolution of that political ideal. And so in my opinion, dealing with Heidegger and understanding him very intently so that you can make a criticism of him is essential. Like if you actually want to make your way through the course of phenomenological philosophy and like actually like make your way past Heidegger. you So are saying there's like a whole class of philosophers or philosophy that is essentially kind of censored? Absolutely. One of the guys that, a more contemporary fellow, his name is Michael Norman. He was from the University of Toronto, but brilliant, brilliant scholar. He was studying Heidegger like pretty intensely and he essentially got canceled from the University of Toronto and was intimidated and sort of forced out. It is Canada, it's not surprising. We're ragging on Canada a lot recently. Have you registered yourself yet? We don't have to yet. Okay. Yeah, because we don't make $10 million in revenue, but if there's a bull market, yeah, no, it's the platforms and if you make more than $10 million. I don't know if that's podcast in Canada or anyone. What do you mean as in based in Canada? Like, do you have to be based in Canada or if we want to disseminate our content in Canada? Don't know, probably based in Canada, I would guess. I would have thought the latter actually, because otherwise how can we control you? Well, we don't make $10 million yet, so. Yeah, we're close. After this pod though. Nine and a half million. Okay, so what, the background is they're seen as dangerous words? Yeah, I mean like another floss for I deal a lot with is Karl Schmidt. And so like Schmidt was like a, he was a member of the Nazi party and specifically what I think is the most damning of Schmidt is he actually wrote the legal defense for Hitler during the night of the long knives that essentially justified why that state of emergency was used and that really sort of solidified from a legal perspective that like Hitler's decree was the law itself. And interestingly enough, like Schmidt was actually arrested and in prison for like three years to go and trial at Nuremberg, but they just eventually felt like he didn't have enough evidence. And the biggest irony is that Schmidt actually wrote in, I think it was in 1931 on the concept of the political. And this specifically was talking about like the crisis that the Weimar Republic was facing and that essentially if Chancellor von Hindenburg didn't use the clause of article 38 in the constitution to declare a state of emergency and banned both the Nazis and the communists, that the Weimar Republic would be in crisis. So ironically enough, this didn't see its way into the hands of the chancellor. And so when he was ousted and Hitler came to power, it turned out Hitler was actually kind of a fan of Schmidt's work and Hitler read it and he was like, ah, that's like clause 38 thing. Like this is what we use to destroy the Weimar Republic. Okay, so what do we lose by limiting the kind of scope of books that are studied? I mean, everything, like that's sort of the contextual space that we can have to actually criticize these works. So like look like Mein Kampf should be read not because it's brilliant, but because it's absolutely stupid. Okay. Like it's just an idiotic framework. And like, as soon as you read it, you go, oh, like this Nazism thing is actually like really stupid. Like there's not really much substance to it. I mean, even in the Nuremberg trials, when they asked Schmidt about Hitler, he like sighed and was dismissive. He was like, I can't even discuss his ideology because I find it so superfluous. Well, what is the TLDR? Cause I haven't read Mein Kampf. I doubt, have you read it? I know. I doubt I will. The TLDR is essentially that like Aryan individuals have a superior place in the world because they lead German culture and German culture has helped develop the West on a whole. And that that needs to be defended against all the individuals who aren't part of German culture that are invading Germany. And we need to get lunch in Rome in order to expand German culture and people. And that we always need to be aggressive and warring against the other people that are trying to come into us. And so like, we need to expand the Aryan people as much as possible, make as many of them and destroy anybody that tries to threaten that. So it was elitism. Elitism fused with a general nationalism that then wants to try to create a hierarchical order of people. Right, okay. And so how have you picked the rabbit hole for you to go to that eventually gets you to crypto sovereignty? It's pretty interesting. Well, so like after the Occupy Wall Street movement, like I was exposed to all of those things and it was very clear to me that money was substantially broken. And it was also very clear to me that we couldn't use the political system to make that operable. So for me, I just fell into a crushing depression where I was like, there's no conceivable way to solve any of this problem. Like, how do you neutralize this money problem that's so endemic? So like in my crushing depression, I was just like, well, like maybe, maybe that's it. Maybe I just need to like end it. There's like no good. We can never make anything happen. So I had like, somebody had essentially like whispered to me at Occupy about Bitcoin and how this was like the answer. What year was Occupy? Was that 2011? 2011. Okay. Yeah, so this was like early 2012 that like all this stuff was percolating. And so I like looked up some stuff about Bitcoin and I was like, oh, like this was really interesting and kind of let it percolate a little. And then I came across an article about people that were essentially like doing money laundering in between China and Singapore, like using Bitcoin. And I had wrote my senior thesis at university on the East Asian financial crisis and capital controls. So I was like really intrigued. I was like, capital controls are really powerful. And if you can get around the Chinese communist government capital controls, like pretty that's essential. So like now the Bitcoin thing had really sparked up for me and I was getting into it, reading a lot more about it. But there was all of these like lingering questions about like, how is this even working? Like I get it technologically, but like why, why can't I make a money when like no government can adequately make a money? Like, and then I did the research on the cypherpunk stuff and I was like, oh, okay, this is making sense. And then from Occupy, I'd really gone from being like a far left socialist or communist to like a full on anarchist. And that's really kind of the change that I went under Occupy. And so for me, anarchism was like a sufficient inoculation to be able to like explore both radical communist and radical fascist theory and be able to kind of pick and choose what works for me, what doesn't work for me. And I think that that piece of being like inoculated vis -a -vis anarchism, because to me it was like, I admit that the state is an apparatus of violence and we can't use it at all. And like both fascism and communism see those as key components, but like what else can we maybe learn from these theories? Like, is there anything of value here? And in my opinion, there's a lot of valuable stuff. It's just understanding where all of the pitfalls are and then how it essentially becomes a violent apparatus of destruction vis -a -vis statism and the authority that it tries to decree to people. Okay, so that shift from radical socialism to anarchism, was that like a, was that an actual shift or was that an evolution of your ideas, your worldview, where you actually realize what it is you, the issues you have in the world or complications the you see or the problems you see with the state, actually you thought socialism was a solution, but it really is anarchism, potentially. Yes, and like the actual like point of change was when I was in Philadelphia, like the Occupy National Gathering, and we had assembled at the Peaceful Assembly monument that's on the National Monument Mall, and the police told us to like get lost. And we're like, no, you don't understand. This is like the freedom to assemble memorial. They're like, we're telling you. And I was like, but you don't, then they got the tranche on that and started beating the shit out of me, right? Right on top of the memorial too. And I remember like, as he's like hitting me, like I have this thought, I was like, oh, like the state is not my friend. Like these people aren't gonna help us ever. And that was kind of like my big radical shift in understanding that like the state wasn't actually this thing that was gonna help us out. So what brought you to radical socialism then? What is it about you? So I grew up in the Western United States in California. So I grew up in woo woo, liberal California with everything feels really good. And like one of the really important things about socialism I wanna honor is like, it feels really good. Like this was like a really great idea that we want everybody to understand and get on board with. We should like share stuff that's like important. And there's like a common in community. I think the problem is that all of those feel good feelings, those are ots as opposed to like what is. And like what is is as good as we have those feelings, like there are very real limits to what we can provide. Like as much as we do centrally plan something and saying, we're gonna provide this for everybody, there is actual corruptions and limits to it. So I think for me, that experience of getting beaten was understanding that as much as this shouldn't be happening, it is. And why is it happening? And why do things like this happen? And for me, it was realizing that like, oh, this like apparatus of violence where people decide that like, hey, if you don't do the thing I tell you, I'm gonna hurt you, which seems like a really basic thing. But I really realized like kind of starkly, I was like, oh, like, this is the thing that like runs the entire world is like this entire module of punishment and discipline and trying to create an orderly world, which it does really, really well, but there's all these tertiary issues that come out from it that aren't really well connected to it. Such as? Well, such as if we want to look at the largest polluters in the world, like it's the US military. And so like, there's this endemic problem of that. Violence is a very real and endemic problem, but violence on a state -based level is a whole nother game. And that's one that we all comply to and act like it's a totally normalized thing that if somebody just doesn't comply, that using violence to get their compliance is good. Well, it's slightly different where we're from because we don't have guns. So they might hit you with a truncheon, but it's very rare that a police officer shoots someone. It's a big deal when that happens. Yeah, it's a huge deal. It usually leads to some form of protest. We had riots in South London a few years back on the basis of it, there's a massive investigation. There's actually a situation at the moment recently where a marksman shot somebody and killed them. And he's now being tried for murder. And a number of the, cause we don't have many cops with guns, we have some, we have like armed response or at the airports, a number of come in and handed in their guns because they don't want to run the risk of having to use their gun in the line of work and risk being tried for murder. Well, are you held accountable, just like a normal citizen who chose to shoot somebody? It depends on the situation, but every shooting will have an investigation. But this one, I don't know the details of it, but I just know he's now going to be tried for murder. And that's particularly rare. I couldn't even tell you the last time that's happened. I would say most of the time they're not treated the same way. Okay. Cause like here in the United States, like police officers get certain immunities for when they use their gun, particularly if like they say like, I felt like my life was in danger. And I think like there's only been like 21 officers like convicted throughout the history of the United States, like being put on trial for murder, like using their gun, like while in action. And so like, that's like a massive imbalance. And so to me, again, like the problem, the state is essentially saying, hey, there are people out there that can use their firearms. They're going to get special protection under the law. And they're also going to have a very cozy relationship with the prosecutors when they do come to do that. And to me, like this is a pretty gross abortion of justice. And it also communicates very clearly to police officers like, hey, if you shoot somebody in the line of duty, probably aren't going to be held responsible. So it's the monopoly and violence that, I listened to a podcast, I can't remember who it was. It might've been Sam Harris, I know he won't be popular. And I'm sure he was arguing that the monopoly of violence was the best thing we gave the government because it leads to net less violence. That's, I'm just telling you, that's what I read. But when I heard that, and I thought in terms of the United States, I thought actually that might be less true. I think it's potentially more true in the UK. It's interesting that there's that dynamic that sort of exudes itself. Because we don't have guns. Yeah, and I think that that's a pretty interesting example because yeah, the monopoly on violence, we could say in theory is working out pretty well there. And when we look at the United States, we'd say, ah, not having a monopoly on violence here doesn't seem to be working out so well. But I'm purely guessing. I could be entirely wrong. But one of the main problems is that like, all right, that works for a specific limited duration, but now we end up getting ourselves into Germany in 1930. We disarm the whole population. Like, hey, this is really great. There aren't any more firearm deaths. Now we have a population that we don't really like, that we start bullying a whole bunch. Turns out we really don't like them and we want to steal all their stuff. Turns out we actually hate them entirely and we don't even want them to be German citizens and we want to extinguish them. And so now we're talking about the wholesale murder of 2 million people.

Sam Harris Peter Mccormack Michael Norman Hitler Eric Cason Giorgio Ambogon $10 Million 1931 Schmidt Ghana Eric 330 ,000 Feet Mark Masson UK The Sacrament Of Oath Marseille Eight Hours Karl Schmidt Three Years Bedford
A highlight from Larry Taunton

The Eric Metaxas Show

09:08 min | 3 months ago

A highlight from Larry Taunton

"Ladies and gentlemen, are you ready to listen to a man of grace, sophistication, integrity, and whimsy? Well, so are we, but until such a man shows up, please welcome Eric Metaxas. Welcome back, folks. This is Eric Metaxas, and welcome to the show. It's hour two. I continue talking to John Smirack, and after this segment, we'll bring on Larry Taunton to go over the news of the day and other things, but the news of the day being Tucker Carlson's mind -blowing interview with Larry Sinclair. Absolutely insane, insane that we're hearing about this for the first time 15 years after we should have heard about it. And the country's a different country because the media and the Republicans just squashed this information because they think you're too stupid to be able to process it on your own, so they have to censor it for you, scandalous. Okay, John, you were talking about something else. I was saying that Winston Churchill had a lot of flaws. He had been a warmonger in 1914. In 1923, he was hostile to the Germans, even though they were the Weimar Republic. He was an anti -German jingoist, but in 1940, he was the indispensable man, the only man who would stop the British from surrendering after France fell and cutting a disgraceful deal that let Hitler essentially run Europe. He was the indispensable man for all his flaws. And there were people in his party, the British Conservative Party, who wanted to push him aside and make a deal with the Nazis because it seemed like the prudent and sensible thing to do. That is exactly when you hear pious Christians condemning Donald Trump saying, well, he's got this terrible moral character. And he says, he puts out mean tweets. They wanna shove Winston Churchill aside and make a deal with the enemies of freedom and surrender to them because they find things unsavory about Donald Trump. And that's what's happening potentially in the Texas Senate right now with Ken Paxton, a heroic defender of religious freedom and the unborn and America's borders and election integrity. He's being savaged from the left by people who hate all those things and attacked from the squish center by the Bush family, which just resents him for beating one of their family members, George P. Bush, in an election. So you've got the most disgusting squish rhinos on the one hand and the far left cooperating the way they cooperated in the election of Obama. So that is my latest political article, but I've got a much more important piece I'd like to talk about. Sure. It has to do with our Lord and savior, Jesus Christ. Was Jesus a sinner? Do we get to say that Jesus was a sinner too? I can't wait to hear where you're going with this one, John Smirack, what do you got? This is a theme I've seen first in mainline Protestant preaching and then in some woke evangelicals. So now of course it eventually filters down to the Vatican. One of the closest advisors to Pope Francis is Father Antonio Spadaro. He runs the semi -official magazine at the Vatican, La Civilta Cattolica. So he is like Pope Francis' right -hand man. He gave a sermon just recently about Jesus' encounter with the Canaanite woman. And I think we all sort of remember that story, this Canaanite woman whose daughter is possessed by a demon starts basically pestering Jesus for a miraculous cure. And Jesus makes her jump through a bunch of hoops. He tells her, look, I've only come to preach to the lost children of Abraham. It is not fit to give to the dogs the bread that is meant for the children. And when we read this, I think we're all a little shocked by it at first. Jesus doesn't sound very nuts. And we're like, wow, what is this? What is this about? I think it is one of those hard sayings in the gospel that we have to think through that challenge us. Jesus was not acting like Oprah here. He was being kind of a hard guy, kind of a tough guy. He makes the woman, basically she gets to the point of saying, but even the dogs get the scraps that fall from the master's table. Then Jesus praises her for her persistence and for her faith, and he heals her daughter, just remotely, heals her daughter. A happy ending. Well, Father Antonio Spadaro, Pope Francis's right -hand man, gave a sermon recently where he says Jesus does not care. He calls Jesus angry and insensitive. He says that his hardness is unshakable. He said that Jesus replies in a mocking and disrespectful way towards that poor woman, because he's apparently blinded by nationalism and theological rigor. But - Hold on, hold on, hold on. You're telling me that one of the top priests at the Vatican genuinely publicly disapproved of the behavior of Jesus of Nazareth, our God. He said that Jesus is giving in to his own racism and nationalism, but by the end, the woman, through her persistence, heals Jesus. He says, quote, Jesus also appears healed and in the end shows himself free from the rigidity of the dominant theological, political and cultural elements of his time. So in other words, the woman heals Jesus instead of Jesus healing the woman's daughter. Jesus's racism is rebuked and repents Jesus for his sin of racism. This is what Pope Francis's right -hand man is saying, but don't take comfort in the fact that you're Protestant. This crap has been around. Protestants have been preaching this for years. You would see it if you go to Woke Preacher TV, you can see videos of Protestant ministers saying this five years ago. Well, first of all, the word Protestant is meaningless because the Protestant church has been in the tank, since Dietrich Bonhoeffer was at union in 1930. I mean, we've had liberal, progressive Protestantism for about a hundred years, so - These are self -described evangelicals. Right, that's the difference. Some of these folks would be described as evangelicals, but they are woke and they're doing the same thing you're describing. But somebody that close to the pope to be saying this, unless you're exaggerating - No, I'm not exaggerating. I was quoting directly from the translation. So let me unpack what's going on here, okay? This is an attempt to put ourselves above Jesus to where we can judge Jesus Christ, because we're so enlightened and we're so intelligent and we have made so much progress. This is the ultimate rebellion, the ultimate new gospel of the Antichrist. And this is what is being preached in our churches where we can judge even the behavior of Jesus Christ. John, it's the clearest mercy I've ever heard. I mean, for somebody to be criticizing Jesus as having sinned even slightly, that goes against every doctrine of the church from the beginning. I can't imagine that this could be - That is what the Vatican is now preaching. So really what happened in this story is this woman is a Canaanite. She's a member of a fertility cult that used to sacrifice infants. So she basically is in a religion that worships demons. She comes to Jesus. The daughter she raised in the demon -worshipping religion is, big surprise, possessed by a demon. She asks Jesus for a miracle, a miracle, a suspension of the laws of nature. God is not some water tap. We turn it on and off. Oh, I need a miracle. Okay, thank you. She's asking for a miracle from a God whom she has rejected her whole life. He makes her jump through a few hoops to show her sincerity and then gives her a miracle. And yet these progressive Christians are so proud that they want to condemn Jesus so that they can feel superior to Jesus. That is the essence of liberal Christianity, where you are the ultimate authority and the secular culture around you are the ultimate authority. George Soros, Microsoft, Facebook, Harvard, Google, they are the authority. They judge even Christ. We have less than a minute left. It's just hard for me to believe that things are that bad, but it seems like they are that bad. I don't know how your average faithful Catholic could make sense of this. This is very, very disturbing. Well, we've had terrible popes before and we've had heretical popes before. We now have one who's probably the worst, most heretical in the history of the church.

Barack Obama Hitler Eric Metaxas John Smirack Ken Paxton 1930 Bush Dietrich Bonhoeffer 1914 Antonio Spadaro Donald Trump John 1923 Larry Taunton 1940 Facebook Winston Churchill Harvard Google Jesus
A highlight from #433  Carl Osburn  People of Divine Naples  The BEST Barbeque Master in SWFL that been rubbing the meats over 20 years with secret spices, love and gentle hands. His KNOW HOW brought lot of people together around his Table with slab of ribs. THANK YOU CARL

Divine Naples Podcast

06:15 min | 3 months ago

A highlight from #433 Carl Osburn People of Divine Naples The BEST Barbeque Master in SWFL that been rubbing the meats over 20 years with secret spices, love and gentle hands. His KNOW HOW brought lot of people together around his Table with slab of ribs. THANK YOU CARL

"Welcome to another podcast episode named People of Divine Naples, today you will hear an interview that was done on the very beginning of our Divine Naples podcast, this was the second interview I have ever done in the United States on 14th of January 2018, this interview was never published but for many reasons today I have to bring it to your ears, you will hear voice from my dear friend for 22 years, my neighbor for 18 years, the businessman that you should have known and the person that will be missed by many, if you are one of them you will always find his voice here speaking, enjoy the show. Hello all divine people, welcome to episode 433 named People of Divine Naples, I have the great pleasure to welcome person that decided to dedicate his 22 years of passion for people, he enjoyed to make them happy through taste buds and good vibration, he started experimenting in Naples 2001 with Chicky Hut where he blended in community immediately, after that he opened best rated and most successful barbeque restaurant in South West Florida, Black Eyed Pick and he built from scratch Franklin Social, here is one and only Carl Osborn. Hey Rich, how are you today? I am doing great, good to have you, you are comfortable? Yeah, oh good. Yeah, and our bar is serving good? Yeah, beer is good, check that out. We like to have interviews relaxed so we are prepared with whatever you wish as drinks, so if anybody want to come over and do the interview, so make sure we get the right information. So you are sitting here in a very humble studio, I hope you are feeling comfortable and good, whether it is cold outside, it is good, probably a good time to maybe do barbeque, a lot of people maybe do barbeque because it is Sunday today and you have been doing this for 15 years, isn't it enough of barbeque right now, you still going to continue? Yeah, we are just getting on a good roll right now, we are actually at the restaurant, we are in year 10 right now, but I had 5 years prior doing outside stuff. The question was, you know, if you still like it. I still like it, I love barbeque. That is good, let's just tell everybody what is the name of your restaurant, where you are located, so we can start with that and let's just roll. We are at the Black Eyed Pig Barbeque, it is 5307 Shirley Street in Naples, just off Pine Ridge Road between Airport or Naples Boulevard and Goodlett Road. It is hard to find, so you guys have to get on that road and it is a very short distance from Pine Ridge and you will see from a long way the pig eye, the design on the building. So it is barbeque with a big pig face. Yeah, it is a very inviting pig face. I wanted a big pig to put on top, but they won't let me do that. Oh really? Yeah. But you can smell it from a long distance. Yes. All right, you end up in Naples when? When did you come here? 2001, came down from the Orlando area. Oh really? So you lived in Orlando before? I did, I came to Orlando in 1986 with the Olive Garden. Oh really? So I didn't even know that. I know you for a long time, I didn't know you were in the Olive Garden. I was with the Ruby Tuesday prior for four years and came with the Olive Garden in 1986 to Orlando when they had four restaurants I think. So there is a long way, you are the expert in restaurants, you picked up a lot of practice there. Yeah, I've had a lot of practice closing restaurants and opening restaurants and lots of employees. So you know how to do it? Yes, absolutely. And you know there is a reason for probably keep it on the size you have it because it's very limited on seating, it's very limited with employees, so you can focus on the quality and there is probably, the end is, you've been voted, as many people say, the best barbecue in Naples, so what is the special on that? Well, we decided in the beginning, the building was a breakfast lunch restaurant when we bought it and I've never been open for dinner, so we started opening lunch and dinner and we got rid of everything that we don't do, we got rid of salads, so we're basically just barbecue. If you smoke it, we got, so we just sell what we do. We don't try to be everything to everybody, we do barbecue, that's it. That is very simple? Yes. And you do the hot sauces? Everything is yours? Homemade sauce. Recipes? Everything. Really? I just have to tell everybody who is listening right now, we don't talk ordinary barbecue one like you can buy in the Costco and you roll it out at your parking lot, load it in your SUV, this is serious business. Your barbecue is probably 10 times maybe more bigger, now you bought another little barbecue I would say, right? Specialty built for you, for your business? Yeah, we've got a competition smoker now that we're going to start with this spring, but we use it on a lot of caterings. But going back to the recipes, I've got a great friend of mine who I met here in my first business venture here in town, which is a little bar, he's from Oklahoma and his family has been in business since 1930 in the barbecue business. So a lot of my recipes came from him, so they're well tested, they've been there 85, the one on 88 years now. So, would you say this is like Saturn taste or what is this exactly? Well, Oklahoma, it's a dry rub, everything's dry rub and hickory smoke. Never baked, never boiled, it's just smoked. How many hours do you have to smoke like ribs? Ribs are around three and a half to four hours depending on the size. We do baby backs and St. Louis as well. St. Louis are the ones that came out of Oklahoma, we kind of threw the baby backs in for the East Coast kind of people. And what's the best seller? They sell about equal, we sell a couple of hundred racks of each a week, we have 35 seats, so we stay pretty busy. I think you did really well when bikers start showing up because they love the type of food and I think there's always a lot of bikes on your parking spaces. There's a lot of bikes, there's a lot of guys, golf outings, we always get the guys, we're a big guy hanging out for lunch and then they all bring their wives at dinner. Okay good, so you do what, I mean you do pick, you do chicken, you do sausages, just tell us a little bit. So everybody who's listening, their mouth is already watering right now. We do pulled pork is our specialty, we call ourselves home to pulled pork.

Oklahoma 14Th Of January 2018 1986 15 Years Orlando Naples Boulevard Pine Ridge Road 10 Times 22 Years 18 Years Chicky Hut 5307 Shirley Street Second Interview 35 Seats Rich Goodlett Road St. Louis South West Florida 2001 Black Eyed Pick
A highlight from #433  Carl Osburn  People of Divine Naples  The BEST Barbeque Master in SWFL that been rubbing the meats over 20 years with secret spices, love and gentle hands. His KNOW HOW brought lot of people together around his Table with slab of ribs. THANK YOU CARL

Divine Naples Podcast

06:15 min | 3 months ago

A highlight from #433 Carl Osburn People of Divine Naples The BEST Barbeque Master in SWFL that been rubbing the meats over 20 years with secret spices, love and gentle hands. His KNOW HOW brought lot of people together around his Table with slab of ribs. THANK YOU CARL

"Welcome to another podcast episode named People of Divine Naples, today you will hear an interview that was done on the very beginning of our Divine Naples podcast, this was the second interview I have ever done in the United States on 14th of January 2018, this interview was never published but for many reasons today I have to bring it to your ears, you will hear voice from my dear friend for 22 years, my neighbor for 18 years, the businessman that you should have known and the person that will be missed by many, if you are one of them you will always find his voice here speaking, enjoy the show. Hello all divine people, welcome to episode 433 named People of Divine Naples, I have the great pleasure to welcome person that decided to dedicate his 22 years of passion for people, he enjoyed to make them happy through taste buds and good vibration, he started experimenting in Naples 2001 with Chicky Hut where he blended in community immediately, after that he opened best rated and most successful barbeque restaurant in South West Florida, Black Eyed Pick and he built from scratch Franklin Social, here is one and only Carl Osborn. Hey Rich, how are you today? I am doing great, good to have you, you are comfortable? Yeah, oh good. Yeah, and our bar is serving good? Yeah, beer is good, check that out. We like to have interviews relaxed so we are prepared with whatever you wish as drinks, so if anybody want to come over and do the interview, so make sure we get the right information. So you are sitting here in a very humble studio, I hope you are feeling comfortable and good, whether it is cold outside, it is good, probably a good time to maybe do barbeque, a lot of people maybe do barbeque because it is Sunday today and you have been doing this for 15 years, isn't it enough of barbeque right now, you still going to continue? Yeah, we are just getting on a good roll right now, we are actually at the restaurant, we are in year 10 right now, but I had 5 years prior doing outside stuff. The question was, you know, if you still like it. I still like it, I love barbeque. That is good, let's just tell everybody what is the name of your restaurant, where you are located, so we can start with that and let's just roll. We are at the Black Eyed Pig Barbeque, it is 5307 Shirley Street in Naples, just off Pine Ridge Road between Airport or Naples Boulevard and Goodlett Road. It is hard to find, so you guys have to get on that road and it is a very short distance from Pine Ridge and you will see from a long way the pig eye, the design on the building. So it is barbeque with a big pig face. Yeah, it is a very inviting pig face. I wanted a big pig to put on top, but they won't let me do that. Oh really? Yeah. But you can smell it from a long distance. Yes. All right, you end up in Naples when? When did you come here? 2001, came down from the Orlando area. Oh really? So you lived in Orlando before? I did, I came to Orlando in 1986 with the Olive Garden. Oh really? So I didn't even know that. I know you for a long time, I didn't know you were in the Olive Garden. I was with the Ruby Tuesday prior for four years and came with the Olive Garden in 1986 to Orlando when they had four restaurants I think. So there is a long way, you are the expert in restaurants, you picked up a lot of practice there. Yeah, I've had a lot of practice closing restaurants and opening restaurants and lots of employees. So you know how to do it? Yes, absolutely. And you know there is a reason for probably keep it on the size you have it because it's very limited on seating, it's very limited with employees, so you can focus on the quality and there is probably, the end is, you've been voted, as many people say, the best barbecue in Naples, so what is the special on that? Well, we decided in the beginning, the building was a breakfast lunch restaurant when we bought it and I've never been open for dinner, so we started opening lunch and dinner and we got rid of everything that we don't do, we got rid of salads, so we're basically just barbecue. If you smoke it, we got, so we just sell what we do. We don't try to be everything to everybody, we do barbecue, that's it. That is very simple? Yes. And you do the hot sauces? Everything is yours? Homemade sauce. Recipes? Everything. Really? I just have to tell everybody who is listening right now, we don't talk ordinary barbecue one like you can buy in the Costco and you roll it out at your parking lot, load it in your SUV, this is serious business. Your barbecue is probably 10 times maybe more bigger, now you bought another little barbecue I would say, right? Specialty built for you, for your business? Yeah, we've got a competition smoker now that we're going to start with this spring, but we use it on a lot of caterings. But going back to the recipes, I've got a great friend of mine who I met here in my first business venture here in town, which is a little bar, he's from Oklahoma and his family has been in business since 1930 in the barbecue business. So a lot of my recipes came from him, so they're well tested, they've been there 85, the one on 88 years now. So, would you say this is like Saturn taste or what is this exactly? Well, Oklahoma, it's a dry rub, everything's dry rub and hickory smoke. Never baked, never boiled, it's just smoked. How many hours do you have to smoke like ribs? Ribs are around three and a half to four hours depending on the size. We do baby backs and St. Louis as well. St. Louis are the ones that came out of Oklahoma, we kind of threw the baby backs in for the East Coast kind of people. And what's the best seller? They sell about equal, we sell a couple of hundred racks of each a week, we have 35 seats, so we stay pretty busy. I think you did really well when bikers start showing up because they love the type of food and I think there's always a lot of bikes on your parking spaces. There's a lot of bikes, there's a lot of guys, golf outings, we always get the guys, we're a big guy hanging out for lunch and then they all bring their wives at dinner. Okay good, so you do what, I mean you do pick, you do chicken, you do sausages, just tell us a little bit. So everybody who's listening, their mouth is already watering right now. We do pulled pork is our specialty, we call ourselves home to pulled pork.

Oklahoma 14Th Of January 2018 1986 15 Years Orlando Naples Boulevard Pine Ridge Road 10 Times 22 Years 18 Years Chicky Hut 5307 Shirley Street Second Interview 35 Seats Rich Goodlett Road St. Louis South West Florida 2001 Black Eyed Pick
"1930" Discussed on Encyclopedia Womannica

Encyclopedia Womannica

03:58 min | 7 months ago

"1930" Discussed on Encyclopedia Womannica

"About Leticia Parente. Leticia Parente was born in 1930 in Salvador, Brazil.

Judgment Day for the American Economy With Edward Dowd

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:37 min | 9 months ago

Judgment Day for the American Economy With Edward Dowd

"Now is Ed dowd author of cause unknown, an author and founder of finance technologies portfolio manager at BlackRock for ten years managing $14 billion equity growth fund. I do want to talk to you today about the vaccine issue. I think it's really interesting. But I want to start with Silicon Valley bank and the bank run that almost happened didn't happen signature bank at how should we think about this? What are the big lessons and what do you think is the most obvious truth in media is missing? This was going to happen regardless. At the end of November of last year, N two money supply did year over year negative growth. Okay, so the last time that happened was 1930 and so this is the 5th time since 1868, that's occurred. And the other four times it happened is associated with financial panics. About a month and a half ago, I put out a tweet talking about we were seeing a setup in the capital markets, different asset classes lining up to agar poor things for financial assets. And SVB just happens to be the headline. And we're going to see what I think is rolling thunder rolling financial crises throughout the next year or two. I think it's going to be a controlled implosion on the way down because the fed and the government are going to come in and do this whack a mole thing. And every time something weird, it's like we had, they're going to respond, the markets will think everything's okay. But I think this is the beginning of the end of the global financial system, as we know, and something new is coming in the next two to three years. I suspect

$14 Billion Ten Years Blackrock 1930 Next Year Today 5Th Time Cause Unknown About A Month And A Half Ago Four Times Ed Dowd 1868 SVB TWO End Of November Of Last Year Three Years Silicon Valley Two Money Next
"1930" Discussed on Key Battles of American History

Key Battles of American History

02:27 min | 9 months ago

"1930" Discussed on Key Battles of American History

"If you haven't already, I strongly encourage you to check out these great podcasts. If you would like to support this podcast and help it to grow, there are four things you can do. First, you can subscribe to the podcast and leave a review on the podcast player of your choice. This helps other people to find the podcasts. Ratings and reviews on Apple podcasts are especially helpful. Second, join our Facebook group, American history fanatics, where we discuss the episodes of this podcast, as well as other topics related to American history. Third, tell as many friends as you can about the

"1930" Discussed on Key Battles of American History

Key Battles of American History

03:48 min | 9 months ago

"1930" Discussed on Key Battles of American History

"Foch wanted was to break up Germany back to what it was in the 19th and the 18th century. Multiple small states. He wanted to break up even more than what Napoleon had tried to do, which was set up just a confederation that had no military power whatsoever. His idea was make there be no Germany, make their very end and Saxony and rebels were, and things like that again. And he felt like he could take care of pressure by splitting it up and having ball and beat a buffer state. The other thing that is interesting that we don't really talk about it much, but the big the big boogeyman of 1919 in 1918 and 19 8 and 19 is the Soviet Union. Yes. Is the Bolsheviks. And they were Russia was excluded from the Treaty of Versailles. They were not part of that because they had signed their own peace with Germany. They pulled out of the war. And the allies saw that as a trail and a lot of ways, but they also were terrified of revolution, socialist revolution, spreading. And the writings of Karl Marx and of many of the other revolutions in the socialist and communist revolutionists of the 19th century were about Germany. Germany was to be ground zero for the dictatorship of the proletariat that Marx wrote about in the communist manifesto and in desktop. It was not a state like Russia, Russia was an aberration in that it was not a modern modernized industrial state. It was

"1930" Discussed on Key Battles of American History

Key Battles of American History

04:01 min | 9 months ago

"1930" Discussed on Key Battles of American History

"When the government collapsed and lost its nerve, they truly lost its nerve and the people saw that as this massive material. And that was never addressed. And the allies never took any time to address that to the German people. It was a falsehood that was allowed to fester. And then it was made worse by the nightmarish inflation, and the reparations, the idea that all of our money that we're making is going to Germany. And what Germany must have written German reparations that France got was they went in and they took factories out of the Rhineland and they moved them to France. They took all the product of the entire goal lines and took them back to France. To rebuild their steel industry. All these things ever happened in Germany. Germany did not German the German oblique did not realize how close they were to collapse in terms of the

Majority of Retail Bitcoin Investors Likely Lost Money in Last 7 Years, Finds BIS Report

CryptoGlobe

00:36 sec | 10 months ago

Majority of Retail Bitcoin Investors Likely Lost Money in Last 7 Years, Finds BIS Report

"11 a.m. Sunday, February 26th, 2023. Majority of retail Bitcoin investors likely lost money in last 7 years finds BIS report the bank for international settlements BIS has published its bulletin number 69, titled crypto shocks, and retail losses, which investigates the behavior of crypto investors and whether the sector has impacted broader financial markets. BIS was established in 1930 and is based in Basel, Switzerland its aims are to serve central banks in their pursuit.

BIS Bitcoin Basel Switzerland
Matthew Dowd Compares Republicans to 1930 German Nazis

Mark Levin

01:33 min | 1 year ago

Matthew Dowd Compares Republicans to 1930 German Nazis

"A guy Matthew dowd He was a Republican operative Now I think he's either an independent or Democrat He's a very low IQ But he's on MSNBC often because he attacks Republicans And he's a vile very stupid man As are many of his Elk Nicole Wallace a couple of the others whose names escape me and that's a good thing But I want you to hear what he said About you It's really amazing to make cut three go I'll remind people too of a history lesson that they're in the 1930s Germany there was a candidate and then there was a party that said they were going to do something about inflation and they did do something about inflation inflation went away but so did the democracy in Germany in the 1930s up until 1945 I mean I think the problem is twofold To me it's really true That's enough really That's a turn off right there So you see ladies and gentlemen he wants to remind us He wants to remind us that if Republicans are speaking out against inflation or you are whether you're Republican or not It reminds him of the 1930s and the Third Reich and the rise of the Third Reich because you see the Nazis he says promised they were going to do something about inflation And they did And he destroyed democracy

Matthew Dowd Nicole Wallace Msnbc Germany
Joe Biden Clumsily Attempts to Execute the 'New World Order'

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:46 min | 1 year ago

Joe Biden Clumsily Attempts to Execute the 'New World Order'

"Is clumsily and imprecisely executing on the new world order. Now, when you say that phrase new world order, you're usually called the conspiracy theorist. People say, ah, there's no such thing as the new world order, what do you like? Some sort of rapper where you put it in the song about Illuminati or whatever. Well, the new world order is now a phrase that is being repeated by people who just recently had the world government summit. So you could always count on us on this program to keep eyes on this globalist program coming up in late May, by the way. I believe May 22, May 23, May 24, is Davos two. Is that the World Economic Forum is going to have its official meeting and boy, we're going to be monitoring that very closely on this program. And you know what's interesting is most of the corporate media ignores it. Why? Maybe because they want actually what they're doing, they just don't want to get there as quickly. Well, the world the government summit manages to use the phrase new world order and it's opening in under 30 seconds. Play cut three. And the title of this session. Are we ready for a new world order? Well, that didn't take long. Right into it. Now the question is, are we ready? Joe Biden was supposed to be the guy that was the bridge. The problem and everybody knows this, at least everybody with an Obama and around those circles is that it's hard to execute the new execute the new world order. If you're about to lose, the House representatives in the most historic fashion since 1930. If you're about to get blown out of the water in every state local level, it's going to set back the globalist new world order agenda rather significantly.

World Economic Forum Joe Biden Barack Obama House
"1930" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

77WABC Radio

02:21 min | 2 years ago

"1930" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

"Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, appointed by Republican nonetheless, a so called progressive He writes in the decision. Buck vs Bell. The principle that sustains compulsory vaccination is broad enough to cover cutting the fallopian tubes. Three generations of imbeciles are enough. And back opened the floodgates by 1930. A total of 24 states were involved in involuntary sterilization. This is why some people fear the power grid mark that would never happen again, Folks. It was in the 19 twenties and thirties. At the beginning of the Covid 19 pandemic estates. They should lockdown orders that close businesses and prohibit a large gathering Several judges justified. Those restrictions based on Jacobson vs Massachusetts Since it was the most recent decision explicitly addressing state powers during disease epidemic, even if it was 115 years old. But in a reversal, the U. S Supreme Court ruled in 2020 against broadly applying the logic of Jacobson to all covid 19 lockdown restrictions in Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn. Versus Andrew Coma, the court decided the state of New York violated the constitutional rights of citizens wanted to safely gathering churches and synagogues during the pandemic. The reasoning was the lockdown laws barred religious gatherings altogether while still allowing secular business to operate at limited capacity. Vaccines against Covid 19 became readily available across the U. S. Employers, including government agencies, hospitals and so forth started to mandate the shots and employees. That followed a joint statement from a major medical group encouraging the policy. Now this is where we are, You see, because One of the arguments that is assumed can be made. Will be that Joe Biden has the Southern border open illegal aliens coming into the country. Do not have to be tested do not have to be vaccinated, even people coming in from Afghanistan. Do not have to be vaccinated, so people are coming into the country potentially spreading. The virus. While Joe Biden Is putting the arm Private businesses and so forth, and the question is going to be if he actually has the statutory authority. He's using an OSHA regulation. He doesn't have a straight up statute. He's using an.

Andrew Coma Afghanistan Joe Biden 2020 1930 24 states U. S Supreme Court New York Oliver Wendell Holmes Buck Jacobson Bell 19 twenties Republican 115 years old Justice Three generations U. Roman Catholic Diocese of Broo One of
The First Appearance of the Comic Strip "Blondie"

This Day in History Class

01:53 min | 2 years ago

The First Appearance of the Comic Strip "Blondie"

"Day was monday. September eighth nineteen thirty. A new comic strip appeared in american newspapers introducing readers to blondie buca duke better known today as blondie bump stead or just plain. Blondie although personally. I would never give up a maiden name as good as boop boop bum. Stead is such a downgrade the strips creator m b. chick young had dreamed of being a cartoonist since childhood his nineteen nineteen high school yearbook contained. Some of his earliest drawings which were signed with his nickname chicken from which he would later derive his pen name. Before the blondie strip debuted in nineteen thirty young had tried to launch several female driven comics with little success. One reason for the failure of such titles as beautiful babb and dumb. Dora was young's penchant for portraying his female leads as insipid and flighty. He initially followed the same chauvinist pattern for blondie perpetuating the tire dumb blonde stereotype. In the early strips gradually young was able to rein. In this impulse and blonde. He began to appear just as smart as the string of boyfriends vying for her affections one. Such suitor was the playboy. Dag would bump stead. Despite the strips title. Many readers are probably more familiar with blonde. Dis future husband. Who's bumbling antics tend to provide much of the comics humor but in the early days dag would was a far cry from his current incarnation as a sandwich loving working man instead he was originally portrayed as the son of a wealthy railroad tycoon. The comic strip struggled initially but once young decided to have dag would and blondie fall in love. His readership began to climb.

Blondie Buca Chick Young Blondie Stead Dora DAG
"1930" Discussed on KIRO Radio 97.3 FM

KIRO Radio 97.3 FM

02:39 min | 2 years ago

"1930" Discussed on KIRO Radio 97.3 FM

"What will happen to them? The more you recognized and I know that's a long way off. Well, thank you. Okay, Here's nothing. Long way off, he said. No man left behind. Even the kids. You know, the young people tend to be the most fierce Democrats, but This for some reason it took off like wildfire on Saturday. College football stadiums all across the country. Out erupted in anti Joe Biden chance finding that happened to be at Virginia Tech. But we have audio from at least six stadiums. And I'm told there were at least 20 stadiums that is students across America. Heard what the students and started on the East Coast stadiums in the morning. And then as they all heard about these bleep Joe Biden chance that we're spreading across the country. It started happening in college stadiums. All across the country, so his approval has absolutely vanished. Now. He by the way, he said, I heard one sound bite. Where he was talking about the climate change and how the storm that's hit in New England. It was the worst since 1930. And that's proof that this is climate change. Really? Then what caused 1930. If what happened in September of 2021 is proof of climate change. Then what caused the even bigger storm in 1930? Maybe things are better now because the storm in 1930 was reportedly even worse. And as I said, Well, we still have hundreds of Americans and thousands. Maybe tens of thousands of Afghans who helped America trapped behind enemy lines. Joe Biden was sitting in back in his basement in Delaware all weekend. No, this is the time for him to be on the job, 100%. We have people still in Afghanistan. They won't let our planes leave. This is it's a travesty of the worst kind. You know he's prioritizing his vacation over the lives of American citizens. You know, he kept his promises to the Taliban, and he's breaking his promises to Americans to get them out, and God only knows what will happen if they can't get out..

New England Joe Biden Delaware Afghanistan September of 2021 America 100% Saturday Taliban thousands hundreds 1930 Democrats East Coast tens of thousands Virginia Tech least six stadiums one sound bite least 20 stadiums American
"1930" Discussed on KPCC

KPCC

01:51 min | 2 years ago

"1930" Discussed on KPCC

"For an elite modernist audience, closing a circle his valedictory piano fantasy. Completed in 1957 returns to the idiom of the piano variations he composed as a young wild man in 1930. This may be the most challenging music Copeland ever composed, and it challenged him to its 30 Minutes were composed over a period of six years. We've been listening to pianist Benjamin Pasternack perform Aaron Copland's piano fantasy music that can be viewed as a summation. A parting creative gesture. We asked Pasternak for his own view, the fantasy and the works, uh, surrounding it in that time of Copland's life show an absolute Return to, um Very formal, and, uh, unpopular style of music boost people today still enjoy and love Appalachian spring or at least the most of the passages in it, that they're used to hearing in the movie or on television in a commercial Worry, and there really is barely a bar in the piano fantasy, even though it's over half an hour long that wouldn't force most people to run away..

Benjamin Pasternack Copeland Aaron Copland 1930 Copland Pasternak 30 Minutes 1957 Appalachian today over half an hour six years period over
"1930" Discussed on KQED Radio

KQED Radio

02:50 min | 2 years ago

"1930" Discussed on KQED Radio

"Shot shot shot shot shot Now she will be given one of France's greatest honors. The remains will be moved to the Pantheon mausoleum in Paris, joining other French icons like Victor Hugo Marie Curie and Jean Jacques Rousseau. That's after nearly 40,000 people signed a petition calling for the honor. Panetta Jews. Rosette is author of the book Josephine Baker in art and life and joins us Now. Welcome, Veneta. Thank you, Carol. It's a remarkable story. Josephine Baker was born in ST Louis, and she moved France in the 19 twenties. When she was a young woman. What kept her in France. She stayed there to the end of her life. Yeah. What kept her in France is that France received her well and gave her a number of possibilities for performance. So she started in the music hall. She made four feature films. So to answer your question, really? Briefly. France gave her the opportunity as it did. For many African Americans between the 19 thirties all the way through, I would say even the 19 seventies, uh, gave these people an opportunity to make careers that were not possible in a segregated United States. What was she like as a performer. Just think Got her start in vaudeville theater. She even performed in black face a couple of times. But during her early use, and even in France, she started as a comedic. Dancer Cheap performed her famous a savage dance does so much, which later became the banana danced. It's a story of a young sort of a savage woman running around in the wild in the tropics dancing and who's chased by Colonial hunter. Do we know about Josephine Baker's own opinion of how she presented these kind of racial stereotypes and tropes very quickly, and Josephine was really rapid. On picking up these things. She began to learn about the implications of these stereotypes. 1930. She had a real handle on this. She saw these stereotypes as really a way of poking fun at the larger, dominant society. 1932. She issued a song called If I were White Long Show,.

Jean Jacques Rousseau Josephine Baker ST Louis Josephine Carol United States If I were White Long Show Paris 1932 1930 Veneta 19 seventies Victor Hugo Marie Curie Pantheon mausoleum Rosette Dancer Cheap French 19 thirties 19 twenties France
"1930" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:58 min | 2 years ago

"1930" Discussed on WTOP

"We'll also have another chance for some thunderstorms. But we're up to 82 right now in Washington, Baltimore now at 86 degrees He's Fredericksburg at 84 Gaithersburg at 84 as well, Lauren, We're gonna need to find a pool today. Thank you very much. 10 52 to House lawmakers are asking the Postal Service to delay a male rate hike until next year. Congressman Gerry Connolly and Glen Grove Grothman are leading 19 lawmakers and pushing for that delay. USPS plan to raise rates on most of its mail products by nearly 7% in August, it would raise the price of a first class postage stamp. Have 58 cents. Lawmakers say raising rates during the economic recovery would hurt mailers and USPS long term financial health. That's federal news networks. Jury Heckman We'll travel was the name of the game this Fourth of July weekend, ESA says Nearly eight million people took to the skies between Friday and Sunday. Overall, the number of people who flew or yesterday rather Monday overall, the number of people who flew this weekend was down 20% from 2019. That's when slightly more Than 10. Million people traveled by air during the same period. This year's numbers, though, are up significantly compared to last year. Well, plans may be announced soon about reopening the border between the US and Canada. It's been closed to non essential travel during the pandemic restrictions barring all non essential trips, including tourism will remain in place until at least July. 21st Canada's Prime minister, Justin Trudeau, has been waiting to reach a threshold of 75% of Canadians who are fully vaccinated before he reopened. The border, he says plans should be announced in the next few weeks while he made some of the most beloved movies ever. Filmmaker Richard Donner has died at 91, Born in the Bronx in 1930. Richard Donner directed TV episodes of the Twilight Zone in the Fugitive Before directing the 1976 Horror Classic Medium in God's name. Are you Talking About Your Son, Mr Thorn by the son.

Richard Donner Gerry Connolly USPS 58 cents Lauren 1976 2019 19 lawmakers 1930 Glen Grove Grothman 20% 86 degrees Fredericksburg last year August Monday 75% ESA July next year
"1930" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:15 min | 2 years ago

"1930" Discussed on WTOP

"Taliban seizing more territory More than 1000. Afghan security forces are fleeing the country in response to the U. S troop pullout. CBS News National Security consultant Jeff McCausland says other countries have had to suspend their work in Afghanistan. Since the violence there has gotten worse. Several countries including Russia, Turkey and Iran, has suspended operations. At the consulate in the northern city of Mother Sharif as Afghan troops have surrendered several districts around this provincial capital. Meantime, the new Afghan commander of Bagram airfield, says the U. S left the base after nearly 20 years. By shutting off the electricity and slipping away in the night without even notifying the new commander. He says he discovered the Americans departure more than two after at two hours after they had left. Afghanistan's army showed off the sprawling airbase, providing a rare first glimpse of what had been the epicenter of America's war to unseat the Taliban and hunt down the Al Qaeda perpetrators of the 9 11 attacks. U S announced on Friday it had completely vacated its biggest airfield in the country. The federal agencies the departments of Homeland Security and Veterans Affairs, are launching a joint effort to find deported veterans more now from federal news networks. Nicola Briscoe, the two departments say they'll work together to identify deported veterans and give them the VOC benefits. They're entitled to. DHS sub components will review cases to make sure noncitizen veterans and their families can remain in or return to the United States. The two departments will also create a resource center for former service members and will eliminate barriers to naturalization for these veterans Nicola Gresko Federal news Network Marine Corps Base, Quantico is facing a fine of more than $140,000 for violating environmental regulations. Inside Nova reports, Virginia's Department of Environmental Quality discovered a number of violations, including medical swabs contaminated with a blood thinner that had been disposed of with general waste. Also in the bases, middle and high schools, inspectors found expired chemicals and products in several classrooms. No comment from Quantico officials Hollywood has lost one of its most beloved filmmakers director Richard Donner, has died at the age of 91. Born in the Bronx in 1930, Richard.

Richard Donner Jeff McCausland Nicola Gresko Nicola Briscoe Homeland Security 1930 Bronx Richard United States Friday Taliban U S Hollywood Al Qaeda Mother Sharif Afghanistan more than $140,000 Veterans Affairs Quantico More than 1000
"1930" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

03:44 min | 2 years ago

"1930" Discussed on WTOP

"Donner, has died. He was 91, born in the Bronx in 1930. Richard Donner directed TV episodes of the Twilight Zone in the Fugitive before directing the 1976 Horror Classic. The Omen. Look at me, Damien. It's all for you. He pioneered the superhero genre in 1978, Superman. I'm here to fight for Truth and justice and the American Way. Created a Children's classic 1985 The Goonies down here, It's our time. It's our time down here and delivered a buddy cop team for the ages in lethal weapon You ever met anybody? You didn't kill well, I haven't killed you yet. Remembering Richard Donner, Jason Grilli, WTF peonies. It is 8 51. It appears car thieves are working overtime in our area. Let's look at Fairfax County is a prime example. Since the beginning of June, 27 cases of stolen vehicles have been reported 15 of them in McLean. The target unlocked vehicles with keys left inside Garage door openers have also been used to enter homes. Suspects have been gotten away with personal items in other vehicles. Police believe the incidents are connected. And the suspects may be armed. They're reminding folks lock up your home. Keep your property well lit and car key should be out of sight. And if you see anything suspicious, contact police Most how w T O P News D C Fire department was really busy over the weekend. Responding to calls involving illegal fireworks, Dozens of outside fires were started from illegal fireworks. Three buildings caught fire and four cars, including two that went up in flames after being hit by illegal fireworks in southeast in all, D C. Fire, says four people also suffered minor injuries over the weekend. Kyle Cooper w T o P News Vito Maggiolo with D C Fire says the department is confiscated about £2500. Of illegal fireworks for the fourth year in a row threatening algae blooms are back in part of Virginia's Lake Anna. The state Health Department is put out another algae notice. After finding blooms along a branch of the lake that straddles Spotsylvania and Orange counties. Folks of the popular resort area are being told to avoid contact with any discolored water or scum that appear green or bluish green. That color's assign they're more likely to contain toxins, which can lead to skin rashes and stomach illness is good news for people who work from a NASA city public schools. It's a one time bonus for you. Inside Nova reports, the school board has unanimously approved a $1600 payment for all full timers. Part timers get $500, Prince William and Manassas Park City schools have done something similar. Some of the money behind the bonuses comes from the federal government's pandemic stimulus. Other money is coming from a part of savings that was Generated by keeping buildings closed and bust his garage during pandemic lockdowns a changing of a guard Tonight at Amazon billionaire founder Jeff Bezoza, has turned over the reins of his sprawling empire to Andy Jassy. Bezoza has done a lot with the company starting as an online bookstore. That was 20 years ago. Now it's a $1.75 trillion Internet behemoth soon to be the world's largest. Even though he won't be CEO anymore, Bezos will still have a lot to say from his role as executive chair in February, the company said he would Be doing this to spend more time with the space company, Blue Origin and the Washington Post. He's also interested in philanthropy. Stay with us here on W. T O P. Fireworks displays were back as restrictions were lifted this weekend. That's in money news. We made us a insurance for busy moms like Kate. She's a veteran made of flexibility to balance work. Home and her hobbies from starting the work day to finishing her latest do it yourself project. So when another car accidentally bumped into her while she was running an errand. Didn't let a little fender Bender put a dent in her schedule with just a few taps on our USA, A mobile app..

Richard Donner Jeff Bezoza Jason Grilli 1978 February Andy Jassy Kyle Cooper $1600 Blue Origin Bezoza 1930 $500 Vito Maggiolo 1976 D C Fire Fairfax County McLean Spotsylvania Virginia Bezos
"1930" Discussed on WCBM 680 AM

WCBM 680 AM

05:56 min | 2 years ago

"1930" Discussed on WCBM 680 AM

"Channel forecast Widespread shower stars possible throughout the day. Flash flood watch in effect from this afternoon through tomorrow evening high today 87 much cooler tomorrow with high Of only 80. So for the weekend things cool off a bit. It is 75 Edgewater 73 in Edgewood. 7 20 for a CNN rolled out, Dr Peter Hotez. Of Houston will tell you about him in just a second. I didn't want to share with you. Um Jen Psaki puppet, Uh, on the news of the release of the cause from prison yesterday. Here is what she says. President the illegitimate one. Joe Biden thinks of the overturning of his conviction. The president has long been an advocate for fighting against violence against women for ensuring that we are raising the voices and the stories of people who have been survivors of sexual assault. That's something he's done throughout his career and will continue to do Yeah, He is a been an advocate for violence against women. And he's shown that he's been such a supporter by pleasantly sniffing their hair fondling and groping some of these same women that anyone but not like, cause he's nothing like cause it wasn't drugging anybody. And taking advantage of me just did it publicly in front of the whole world to say wow. Right. So the latest is the Delta variant. Now, the of the left will not give up the lockdowns and the mask mandates because it's about power and politics. It's about control. It's not about The dangerousness of of the virus and the CNN rolling out Dr Peter Hotez of Houston, where they find these people what they do to scare a few people watching the fake news outlet into are getting the chai com virus vaccine. The delta variant is like nothing we've seen before. The B 117 bearing from the UK was more transmissible than the original lineage. By about 50% this one. The delta is 50% more than that. This is twice as infectious as anything we've seen before. So if you're not vaccinated or if you're only partially vaccinated. There's a high likelihood you will become infected with this delta variant over the next few weeks or over the summer. Now it's not too late. Now is the time to get vaccinated. And if you're a young adult or adolescent, don't listen to the anti vaccine nonsense that says If you go to the German eat a healthy diet, that's good enough. It's not. It's not the same as virus neutralizing antibodies from the vaccine. Well, if you have a good immune system going to the gym, working out, get a good night's rests eating well, taking vitamin D three. All that Does help. Don't worry. They dug this guy up from not one word from the alleged doctor on how potentially dangerous the vaccine is for adolescents that are suffering from mild card itis. That's the heart inflammation issue. That is hirings than expected a young men and and teen boys, But he's telling healthy young adults and teens were virtually zero chance of dying from the dealt of variant. Uh, that they could put themselves at risk for mile card itis rather than working out and eating. Right. This is these people will never let go of power. That's for sure. Let's go to the phones. Chosen the Catskills, Joe. Good morning. Good morning. Thanks for taking my call. My pleasure. Just want to make a quick point. The second head of the front third school Cultural Marxism was Horkheimer. They replaced Greenberg because he was spinning his wheels. He took over in 1930. He was the one who said that logic is no longer independent of the content to which it refers or the argument Now. That means that Basically abuse. If your argument supports the ideas of the left, it's logical. On the other hand of it supports the ideas of conservator capitalism. It's not logical. Therefore it's irrational. Therefore we are irrational. Therefore, we're crazy were suffering from psychological repression. And all should be rounded up reeducated, possibly given shock therapy or maybe even exterminated. This is their viewpoint. This is why they claim there is no objective reality. This is an extension of that argument, which is obviously fallacious, but it was the principal awesome. Here was four timer. Head of the Frankfurt school as of 1930, in his letters to Eric from and he worked with Theodor Adorno, Uh and all that, and Marcoussis swung in 1936 with the critical race theory. It's all tied together, and it's a mess. Yeah, you're right. Yeah, This is this is the advance of of Marxism, and this is how they do it. It's done incrementally, and it's been done over. You know, decades now. And it was one word that really, really gets under my skin is reimagining reimagining. Yeah, that's like to me. It's the same as reeducation. Uh, read it out, and I heard Bill Gates say Well, since the common course failed. We have to reimagine education. Well, hasn't he done enough, gentlemen? Thank you, Joe. Thank you for the call. Appreciate that, quickly Squeeze one more in Miller in Brown Bryans Road. Good morning, Miller. Yes. Has gone. Let's go. Fine. Thank you. Hey, you know, I've been watching television here lately, and I'm not one that sits here and watches news constantly, but The the Stuff that I've been seeing is all these people coming across the border. Looks like they're in their sixties and seventies, and there's nothing but Children with them. There's going to take care of these people that are coming here. That are not going to be able to work you are we are American taxpayers are they've already courts have already ruled will be eligible for Medicaid. And the the next step will be Medicare and social Security. That will be the next ruling from the court. So you can you can bet your last dollar that it's going to be you and I Miller taking care of these folks. Thanks for the call Appreciated. 7. 30 Stay tuned. Lieutenant West coming up dead. With.

Theodor Adorno Joe Biden Eric Bill Gates 50% 1936 Horkheimer Jen Psaki 1930 Marcoussis tomorrow Houston CNN Peter Hotez Brown Bryans Road sixties Greenberg today UK seventies
Holocaust Survivor Who Testified Against Eichmann Dies at 91

Buck Sexton

00:50 sec | 2 years ago

Holocaust Survivor Who Testified Against Eichmann Dies at 91

"Holocaust survivor who testified at Nazi commander at off Eifman's trial has died. Joseph Solman claimant Holocaust survivor who testified against Adolf Eichmann at the Nazi commanders trial, died Tuesday. According to Israeli media. He was 91 Kleinman was one of fewer than 180,000 Holocaust survivors remaining in Israel. Born in Slovakia in January, 1930 Kleinman and his family were deported by Nazi Germany to the camp in Auschwitz Birkenau in 1944, his father, mother and sister. Were killed it outfits. After the war, Kleinman emigrated to Israel. Eichmann, one of the architects of the Holocaust, was captured by Israeli Mossad agents in Argentina. In 1960 put on trial in Jerusalem in 1961 Eichmann was found guilty of crimes against humanity, crimes against the Jewish people and war crimes and executed the following year.

Kleinman Eifman Joseph Solman Adolf Eichmann Auschwitz Birkenau Israel Eichmann Slovakia Germany Mossad Argentina Jerusalem
"1930" Discussed on 860AM The Answer

860AM The Answer

02:04 min | 2 years ago

"1930" Discussed on 860AM The Answer

"Joseph Solomon Kleinman Holocaust survivor who testified against Adolf Eichmann at the Nazi commanders trial died Tuesday. According to Israeli media. He was 91 Kleinman was one of fewer than 180,000 Holocaust survivors remaining in Israel. Born in Slovakia in January, 1930 Kleinman and his family were deported by Nazi Germany to the camp in Auschwitz Birkenau in 1944, his father, mother and sister were killed at Auschwitz. After the war, Kleinman emigrated to Israel. Eichmann, one of the arcades. Text of the Holocaust was captured by Israeli Mossad agents in Argentina. In 1960 put on trial in Jerusalem in 1961 Eichmann was found guilty of crimes against humanity, crimes against the Jewish people and war crimes and executed the following year. I might cross CEO news and analysis at town hall that calm. I'm Keith Peters in Washington. U. S. Companies that cheat their workers out of pay are unlikely to be fined or punished even after they're caught. An analysis of Labor Department data finds that in 19 2085 100 employers were cited for taking about $287 million from workers. Companies that hire child care workers gas station clerks restaurant servers is the security guards are among the business is most likely to get caught. The analysis finds, however, that the government rarely penalize is repeat offenders and often lets companies pay workers back less than they owe correspondent Jeremy House Hyundai's recalling over 390,000 vehicles in the U. S and Canada. Problems that can cause engine fires. One recall owners are being told the park outdoors until repairs are made. That recall covers more than 203,000. Santa Fe Sport SUVs from 2013 through 2015. More on these stories at town Hall calm. I'm Keith Peters in Washington J. Foreigner here, CEO of rocket mortgage and rocket companies. Last year we saw historically low mortgage interest rates. What you may not know is that interest rates are already starting to increase, and it's likely that trend is on Lee going to continue..

Adolf Eichmann Joseph Solomon Kleinman Argentina 2013 Slovakia Jerusalem 1961 1960 U. S 1944 January, 1930 Israel 2015 Washington Eichmann Keith Peters Tuesday Last year Auschwitz Auschwitz Birkenau
"1930" Discussed on WHAS 840 AM

WHAS 840 AM

03:36 min | 2 years ago

"1930" Discussed on WHAS 840 AM

"Day, too. I guess we call that it's Tuesday there every week. And the fun continues. Your post positions announced zero wins for post position number 17 going back to 1930. Just always find that fascinating that all these years There have been seven winners out of whole number two Frances, There've been eight winners out of hole number one. Post position one. But everything was going. Oh. Oh, we got number. Well, we're against the rail. Calvin Bo Rail That doesn't bother him. 10 letters out of number five. I like the number five. I just to I like that whole window 567 and eight Right? But we have had a winner out of number eight cents Mine that bird. Remember that one coming out of nowhere was like, Who is this guy? My bird in 2009. Whole number nine would seem to be another optimal spot. I mean, you're you're not close to the rail, and you're not all the way out there on the edge. The last time we had a winner. And number nine was Riva Ridge 1972. That's a standing is your great bar bets? You should collect this information I posted by the way on Facebook and Instagram. Cause I got it from Will Clark will is going to be our occasional reporter on the afternoon show over the next couple of days. You know, he gets wasted on the morning show down again. He slays standing there Will Sascha watch And he gets covered up another thing. So my golly will come to the show that matters on this station, The afternoon program. We're glad to have you Justify love that horse out of whole number seven. Ever been seven winners there. And that was just 2018. But I mean Riva Ridge, 1972 Boy. That's that whole number nine is kind of unlucky If it's gone that long. That's almost 50 years, right? Yeah. 49 years since that happened. Come all came out of whole number ten's the last most recent winner out of that chute post position. Winning colors goes all the way back to 1988 Canonero, the second out of post position 12 1971, and that is 50 years ago. That's crazy. We'll talk with Jodi damn thing about somebody's butt again. Post position number. 17 has zero wins zero And highly motivated has drawn that post position for the 147th Kentucky Derby, which is this Saturday. Of course, that's the name of that horse highly motivated and I'm thinking that number 17 it's 10 1. Sports Some money. Just put something down, because sooner or later you break that you just break this snap that streak you know, Sooner or later, the Chicago Cubs finally win. The world. Syriza's have in one sense, but they broke that streak that happens in sports. Post position 17. I'm gonna go with that one. Highly motivated without knowing anything else. And of course, I never know anything about horse racing. Anyway, I just follow the lead of Toni Devlin, who knows things. I do like hot Rod Charlie. As post position number nine. They're pretty excited about that. When they announced the post positions earlier today, people were pretty worked up about it. They're excited when they when their their names get called. And then they find out where they're gonna be lining up. It's like here we go. What school? Everybody's excited. They here. What's happening. Trainers get out, start talking about the positions of their horses and how things feel for that gives us confidence about how right Charlie is. In fact, he's already shipped out of California twice.

Will Clark Toni Devlin Chicago Cubs 2009 2018 Will Sascha Charlie California Tuesday 10 letters 1988 Rod Charlie Syriza 1930 eight winners Facebook Jodi zero second twice
"1930" Discussed on 550 KFYI

550 KFYI

02:33 min | 3 years ago

"1930" Discussed on 550 KFYI

"Week in 1930. Pluto's The Ninth Planet in Our solar system is discovered at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, by astronomer Clyde W. Tombaugh in August 2006. However, the International Astronomical Union announced the Buddha would no longer be considered a planet due to new rules that said planets must clear the neighborhood around its orbit. Well since Pluto's oblong orbit overlaps that of Neptune, it was disqualified. Sorry, Toto this'll weekend 1985 and a highly controversial vote. The Irish government defies the powerful Catholic church and approved the sale of contraceptives up until 1979 Irish law prohibited the importation and sale of contraceptives. This weekend. 2010 professional golfer Tiger Woods holds a televised news conference where he apologizes for his marital Infidelities and foolish behavior. It was a closed conference with no questions and was the first time he had spoken about the incident outside his home. Woods would play in the Masters less than two months later, finishing tied for fourth. What happened? Thanks for listening to this week in history on my heart radio. I heart radio goes one on one with Luke Bryan to touch on how There's no set formula for marriage, and he even gives us some tips. When we know we need a little bit of time together. We just try to go have some time together and And obviously having a crazy house full of kids and stuff like that. There's so many factors that are going on that can make me and Caroline get a little off touch, so we just try toe. We just try to take a step back and enjoy where we're at. And there we have it. You know what? There's no formula for marriage, You know, no matter whether you're you know, an insurance salesman or whether you're a country music singer, But the bottom line is is just stand on the same page with one another and speaking your mind and laying it all out there. Keep listening to I heart radio for more Luke Bryan and all your favorite artists. Conservative circus with James T. Harris. Tomorrow morning at 65 50 K f Y I on your smart speaker. Say Play 5 50 K F Y I Russell 105 50. Yeah, why? This is a uh, A behind the scenes. Pelosi won't brief Congress and this is starting to anger. A lot of house Republicans and a few of the Democrats. They you know, they never would They step towed to the Queen Bee..

Luke Bryan James T. Harris Clyde W. Tombaugh Tiger Woods Caroline August 2006 International Astronomical Uni Neptune Woods Tomorrow morning 1979 Pluto Pelosi Congress 2010 Democrats Masters 1930 Toto Buddha
"1930" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

77WABC Radio

01:45 min | 3 years ago

"1930" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

"I just for the record. I did not try to run over. Sit because I heard him talk on the morning show, did you? Yeah. Hey, Piscopo tried to kill me. I was trying to park my SUV. I didn't even know he was out there It was. There was snowing and they didn't plow the by the curb. So I backed up my SUV and onto the snow. It was like a range Rover commercial, you know, And it was. I don't have a range Rover. But I just backed up my SUV and it was all crooked. It said was in the vicinity. What do you do it? The crazy Italian from New Jersey is trying to kill me. Not true. Fake news I love you said not true. Yeah. Joe of the radio. We're gonna Haley Reinhart. Next. I am so excited. T do this. I find these little gems, you know, And there's a beautiful song called You brought a new kind of love. Written by Sammy Fain. Irving Car Kel, Alan Pierre Norman. It was done for a movie called The Big Pond in 1930. Would Maurice Shal value that Look, if you remember him, you are good. Member dying, Kevin Vault, Little girls, Marie Shover. You remember that? Yeah, it was so so. Mr. Sinatra, of course, recorded it, but it was on something called a V disc. This was 1945. They were special records made during World War two produced exclusively for American servicemen and women overseas. And the initial recording was conducted by actual stored. All Mr Startle was with Mr Sinatra to a lot of those early a radio days. So let me I gotta play two different versions of this and this is what I love about. Frank Sinatra is a lesson for us all how you start one way and then you could just expand and reinvent yourself. But first, let's go back to 1945. Mr Sinatra's radio days. You brought a new kind.

Sammy Fain Alan Pierre Norman Kevin Vault The Big Pond Frank Sinatra Marie Shover Maurice Shal New Jersey 1930 Irving Car Kel Piscopo Haley Reinhart 1945 World War two Rover Joe one way first love Little girls
"1930" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

KOA 850 AM

01:50 min | 3 years ago

"1930" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

"MacKillop court, He'll Byron three for the right side, Mr. Rebound away to quality and a disappointing outcome to wrap up the road trip in the Bay Area after impressive outstanding victory on Thursday night over Stanford, 69 51 the bus fall to the count Golden Bears 71 62. They'll drop the 16 and six canon five and packed hold conference play and what they picked up on Thursday. He just came back twice. Toughest sweep on the road. Mark, I don't care What you say how good your team is. It's just hard to do a lot of reasons why? Well, the Buffaloes are a lot of things. When you look at this one, they allowed Cal team to get to the foul line. 28 times in the ball game, they give up too many offensive rebounds. I'm not sure shot selection was great. Have a stretch in the second half. They couldn't get consistent stops, even though they weren't allowing field goals like we talked about with Cal only shooting 32% of second half they would found the guy. Let me go to the foul line. Hit a couple of foul shots You're missing or you're not getting found our field goals. But you're not gonna shot stand for the foul line and making up for your lack of offense right there. So, boy, a lot of unpacking this one disappointing 71 62, the Buffaloes, Paul and Carol tonight. Up next up Thursday. I would get a late one. There's the bus will be in Eugene. Oh, we're going to take out the docks who earlier today stuck one out and to celebrate Arizona at the nine o'clock, ma'am Time. Tip off. Scott Little hippie here on Thursday. 1930 with bus warm up. Freeze Anybody safe way The bus locker room show still to come. Buffaloes fall in Berkeley, 71 62. This is college basketball from their field. Ramsey College. My part time service in the Army National Guard makes it possible for me to be more for the.

Carol Paul Eugene 28 times Thursday. 1930 Berkeley Thursday night Thursday Bay Area Stanford 32% Mark 16 second half Army National Guard twice tonight six 71 Cal
The conservation success story of the iconic wild turkey

WBZ Morning News

01:17 min | 3 years ago

The conservation success story of the iconic wild turkey

"This Thanksgiving, the story of the Wild turkey. And provide us with some positive thoughts for the future. Unlike with the key pen, which, after declining numbers for years due to over hunting finally became extinct in 1932. The return of the wild turkey is a success story about what happens when people come together. The greater good of wildlife in our planet After being hunted on a pretty sustainable basis by Native Americans. After the arrival of Europeans, they were hunted heavily by hungry settlers by 1930 wild turkeys were in serious decline in the U. S and Canada and by 1940. They were almost gone from Canada and found on Lian pockets in the U. S. It took many efforts both and U. S and Canada to save the Wild turkey In the last 50 years, The populations have obviously rebounded even across the suburbs by working together It's amazing what can be accomplished for the greater good. Remember those wild turkeys that could have been lost to extinction? While some people are not always thankful to have them around in their yards these days each wild turkey can eat up to 200 picks today, along with a corn, fruit seeds and other things on the leaf litter. Maybe this Thanksgiving. We can be thankful for the beautiful birds.

U. S. Canada U.
Covid Infections in Animals Prompt Scientific Concern

BBC World Service

03:53 min | 3 years ago

Covid Infections in Animals Prompt Scientific Concern

"News that the Danish government is putting down millions of men because of concerns the animals could act as hosts for Corona virus and potentially spread new mutations back to humans. Well in Uganda. There's a similar concern for the famed chimpanzees of Kabbalah National Park Nelson become BA is a wildlife veterinarian with the Kabbalah a chimpanzee project and I spoke to him earlier straight from the forest in the National Park. There was a report before alone. 2017 National Park where there was a human being chimpanzees in that particular national park in court diva with investigations because confirmed that tickles human coronavirus. So what happened is that what we have in current over 19 is part of the two which happened like something backing 2030, but we suspect that they are because being able of human 29 they can concoct. This is a concern, isn't it? So this is a real threat. So what are you doing to safeguard them from a potential infection? Will you got like authority have been working together with the National task force on they have come up with quite a number of regulations as their way of getting The fact ofthe 19 in most of the excites that body National Park on green, Impenetrable forest for any individual is coming to such a talk with the camps where these Has gone away. 14 days are parenting before the 14 days, counting five, accounting for any video, where someone has to come and then undergo isolation on current in 45 days notice anything like cold or in stomach upsets, and there were problems. But for 14 days we are pulling up with the exhibition period of 1940 notes off the fullest and he's coming to the come on. If it's going to the forest has 14 the current include you on then you also have the temperature then which are sufficiently different side around the national park, where by old individuals who are Going into the forest to pick their temperature measures all in the morning before going into the forest. Part of that also involved the official part whereby we used bleach for gambled should not attend of growth. So the club is that when you could have come from the court is that you use outside It sounds as if you're being incredibly thorough here. What is the plan, though? Should the worst happen. Is there any way of treating them at this stage? Actually, I've been covered 19 been having ongoing monitoring on civilians Programs Walla well, Great mint on when the West comes to us when we see that this trip really invested to the community and everybody's Linda, isolated populations of chimpanzees. So we have that window. Well, we come into position and for 19 because they don't ongoing monitoring surveillance. We are collecting samples from sampling from these individuals. From a from a vehicle from off Buring, which is an ongoing investigation in Alabama. So any suspect 1930 to a group? Of course. You have to put our hands on ground could make sure that we do our best in comes off. Protecting the chimpanzees of Kabbalah National Park in Uganda. Here we just heard from Nelson Lukamba are 99.9% of us, which is why they especially need protecting from Corona virus. He's a vet working in the Tamale Chimpanzee project.

Kabbalah National Park Danish Government National Park Uganda Nelson Buring Linda Nelson Lukamba Alabama
Sean Connery dies, iconic “James Bond” actor passes away at 90

WTOP 24 Hour News

01:13 min | 3 years ago

Sean Connery dies, iconic “James Bond” actor passes away at 90

"As James Bond and in many other roles. He was one of the smoothest actors ever to grace the screen. Sean Connery died overnight in the Bahamas at the age of 90. Born in Scotland in 1930, Sean Connery defined cool for a generation as the suave spy James Bond and Dr No James. He returned his double 07 in from Russia. With love Goldfinger Thunder Ball, You only live twice. Diamonds are forever and never say Never again. Not only was he a box office smash, she was sought by master filmmakers in Alfred Hitchcock's Marnie John Huston's The Man Who would be King Sidney Lumet's murder on the Orient Express and Brian DePalma's The Untouchables, for which he won the Oscar. Get Capone. Here's how you get him. He pulls a knife. You pull a gun, He sends one of yours to hospital. You send one of his toe the mark. His list of beloved Flix is endless. Highlander Hunt for Red October. The rock and my favorite is Harrison Ford's father in Indiana Jones and the last crusade I came here to say, Oh, yeah, and who's gonna come to save you Junior? He received the Kennedy Center honor in 1999 and was knighted in 2000, Remembering Sean Connery, Jason Fraley, Deputy news. Coming up

James Bond Sean Connery Capone King Sidney Lumet Marnie John Huston Brian Depalma Harrison Ford Dr No James Alfred Hitchcock Bahamas Orient Express Kennedy Center Jason Fraley Indiana Scotland Russia Oscar Murder Jones
Classical agency Columbia Artists says it will shut down

The Sunday Show

00:24 sec | 3 years ago

Classical agency Columbia Artists says it will shut down

"Artists Management, One of the leading agencies representing classical music performers, says it is shutting down a statement emailed to agency artists since it's closing its doors as of tomorrow. Cos. Sites Sites difficulties difficulties dealing dealing with with the the pandemic pandemic in in the the statement. statement. The The agency agency was was founded founded in in 1930 1930 has has represented represented many many leading leading conductors, conductors, among among them them Leonard Leonard Bernstein and James Levine.

Leonard Leonard Bernstein James Levine
The great broadband divide: Living without high-speed internet access

CBS Weekend News Roundup

03:35 min | 3 years ago

The great broadband divide: Living without high-speed internet access

"Austin, Texas, So many kids weren't online last semester, but the school system had to print and male 40,000 homework packets a week. They resorted to fill in school buses with portable WiFi hot spots and parking them near apartment complexes where a lot of people have no broadband service. Now, you might say Austin shining star of high Tech American cities. According to geese own Austin illustrates the biggest broadband problem of all the vast majority of Americans who don't have broadband Internet access is because they can't afford it because the price is too high. And sure enough, the U. S. Has the third most expensive broadband Internet in the developed world. Mostly because there's not much competition. It's just a money problem and not a problem of putting wires in the ground. We should be complaining about both the lack of actual network infrastructure. In many places, but also the cost. The thing is, we fix problems like this before. In 1930 for only 11% of rural Americans had electricity. President Franklin Roosevelt created the rural Electrification Administration. New lines going up almost everywhere. At the rate of 500 miles a day, and within 20 years, 90% of those homes had cheap, reliable electricity. Now. Over the years, the government has come up with a basket of programs designed to help with Internet affordability and accessibility. Unfortunately, sewn says they haven't always worked as designed. The FCC has now for well over a decade paid out tens of billions of dollars to rule broadband companies to build Internet access. In places where there isn't any And the fact of the matter is is that the government has gotten a very, very poor return on its investment. This FCC and I'll even say you know, the FCC that I work for has not done a very good job of demanding that these companies tell us what they've actually built with the money they've gotten. This is not making the FCC looked too good. I don't think it's incompetence. I think part of it is resource is you know the the FCC staff has shrunk enormously. In the last decade or so, where to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the FCC chairman a Jeep. I declined our request for an interview. But in a written response, the FCC says We ensure efficient cost effective spending on subsidies for rural broadband. Earlier this year, Congress passed a law requiring the FCC to improve the way it measures Internet access. But the FCC says that nothing will happen unless Congress also pays for it. The FCC simply does not have the $65 million we need to start the process and implement that law through its first year. Meanwhile, the agency is promoting new technologies like five g, cellular and low earth orbit satellites that might address our broadband problems someday. But for now, most seem to agree on one thing. Especially these days, the Internet should be considered a necessity.

FCC Austin Congress President Franklin Roosevelt Texas Electrification Administration Chairman
What are the best hemp oil benefits?

Business Rockstars

04:03 min | 3 years ago

What are the best hemp oil benefits?

"Dr CASS Ingram, the head boil. Miracle is one of his books The power of raw Whole food, hemp. Oh, you're better health, Dr CASS Ingram. If you wouldn't mind. You haven't done this in a while and we love when you do this, If you could go back to ancient times and how this plant has been used routinely because you write about it in this magnificent little book, the hemp oil Miracle. And you and you write about the history of hamper. I mean, we've We have many of us had no clue that this was used. For for eons of thousands and thousands of years. Well, you have this Neolithic carvings or painting for about 10,000 BC, where that shows that they were farming hemp and using it as a drug. And the ancient Chinese were using the seed and the plant medicinal, of course. You had the Turks about 10,000 BC. The Mongols Who were raising the seed and using that as a gruel for sick people to get them to recover. It had so much nutrition You have your synth Ian's about 1800 BC five RBC who used to take the more him the more cannabis type him the more more marijuana type, and they would They would. They would throw it on hot rock to then go into a wild frenzy dance as they inhaled the fumes. So, obviously that That was powerful in the time before we hyper dies that manipulated his kind of messed up. And you have, of course, the Islamic on the Greeks who made a anaesthetic from opium or running from him would be almost like the hashish type. And that anesthetic they used for surgery. They weren't getting high on it or something they used. It is a drug to sedate people. They couldn't feel the knife. Feel the surgical I mean, then you had the Indian people who used it as a therapeutic aid, But they would also kind of get a little bit hallucinatory. They would overused it on purpose. They would put it in men's milk. They called it With other spices. But mainly, they used it. Medicinal e ru vedek use such that the British positions. You know, they conquered India right? They found the Indians using that they began doing clinical studies. On him back in about 18 40 that cannabis indica in every doctor's bag back about 18 82 1930 till it got banned. They even banned the drug, right so What kind of hand did not? Yes. So what is hemp Oil? Make the distinction for us, Please. You have hemp oil either from marijuana, or you have it from him Industrial hemp, and what That is, is the resident. The resins and the cannabinoids. Turpin's All the different aromatic compounds you're taking. The oil fraction out of the plant. Now that could could be done by so cannon and alcohol. You could soak it in. Although there's a fatty Fatty layer or fatty component's and it's not the seed. Forget the seat. You compress the seed and make an oil. That's different. This is the plan itself with flour. It could be done with hex ain. This is common now. Beauty and gas, propane gas. And other petro chemicals. You used those to extract out the oil phase or go to which is carbon dioxide, which is harmless, But it's the best one do. That's kind of how it's done.

Dr Cass Ingram India Marijuana Cannabis Opium Hashish Turpin IAN
BBC staff to testify at UN on Iran targeting Persian service

BBC World Service

02:24 min | 6 years ago

BBC staff to testify at UN on Iran targeting Persian service

"Rights of journalists from its persian service and their families they've faced intimidation by authorities in a room the corporation is launching its appeal of the un human rights council in geneva tim robbins records the bbc has been broadcasting its person tv service from london since two thousand nine the iranian authorities have never liked the challenge to their own domestic media which can easily be influenced all control in recent months many bds he persian staff have given evidence for the latest un report on human rights in iran and according to that report family members in iran have been arbitrarily arrested detained and subjected to travel bans world news from the bbc the helicopters crashed into the east river in new york city killing five passengers the pilot managed to escape the sinking aircraft alive the eurocopter a as 350 was understood to be carrying people involved in a photo shoot dramatic images shared on social media showed the helicopter capsizing with it's blades thrashing the water the polls have closed in cuba's parliamentary election it's the start of a process which will culminate in need is meeting behind closed doors to choose a president to succeed rao castro from cuba's second largest city santiago will trump reports the involvement ordinary voters in the election of the next president in cuba reached now over the remaining steps will be taken by a parliamentary body which is principally comprised of members of the cuban communist party and has unanimously approved every government proposal put in front of it nevertheless the vote did feel like an important milestone towards genuine change on the island the next president will have a tough job on his hands creating the improved living standards many cubans crave however the sensibly new provided by a change in leadership should at least ensure him a degree of public support initial term of the acne mees a police chief has been arrested on suspicion of organizing a multi million dollar international gambling ring police major general william thanh hoa is the most senior police officer to be targeted in a sweeping government crackdown on corruption he'd been in charge of a police department tackling online fraud and gambling austria is marking the eighty th anniversary of its annexation by nazi germany on the twelve about should 1930 eight german troops crossed the.

Rao Castro Germany London Austria Fraud Officer William Thanh Hoa Cuban Communist Party Tim Robbins President Trump Cuba New York City Iran BBC Million Dollar
Ben

All News, Traffic and Weather

02:00 min | 6 years ago

Ben

"The story of inspiration courage and friendship that i want to recommend lisa fen former espn producer is written carryon a story of resilience redemption and an unlikely family lisa produced human interest pieces reas pnn she came across one stories you couldn't let go of two teenagers leroy sudden who lost his legs in a child who train accident and d'artagnan crockett legally blind and homeless initially drawn together by their disabilities the to forge a brotherhood entered the sport of high school wrestling made others take notice leroy would ride the back of the sightless d'artagnan when one russell the other would sit by the edge of the matt we'll carry on is also the story of lisa herself who while filming the peace on the to france found herself growing more connected to leroy and d'artagnan once the filming ended she could not walk away and worked tirelessly to help them through school and obvious physical and emotional it's the touching story of out empathy and understanding changes people for the better the best sports stories only start with the sport they're really about heart in the human condition the book club wbz newsradio 1030 wbz news time five twenty six the cofounder of ben and jerry's ice cream arrested for disorderly conduct that a demonstration over whether f thirty five fighter planes should be based in vermont police say businessman ben cohen was one of three activists arrested saturday the burlington free press reports the demonstrators played jet noise from a tower of speakers at a level that they say simulated what it would be like to be beneath of path all arrested received issued citations to appear in court at a later date on this date in history march fourth 1930 three during his first inaugural address president franklin roosevelt delivered one of most celebrated lines of the 20th century let mayor live per boy that'd be on with thing where you have to well it well roosevelt elected elected times but uh down elected three times but died shortly after being elected to.