35 Burst results for "70%"

AP News Radio
Miami Beach sets spring break curfew after 2 fatal shootings
"As another spring break descends on Miami Beach, another curfew is being enforced following two deadly shootings. The curfew was overnight Sunday and mayor Dan gelber says they won another one next weekend. The volume of people in our city, the unruly nature of too many, and the presence of guns has created a peril that can not go unchecked. A deadly Friday night shooting near ocean drive in another in the wee hours of Sunday sent people fleeing gelber says over the past three weeks, 70 firearms were seized. We don't want spring break in our city. It's too rowdy, brings too much disorder, and is simply too difficult to police. Last year, Miami Beach also imposed a curfew following two shootings the year before there were about a thousand arrests and dozens of guns confiscated. I'm Julie Walker.

AP News Radio
Wong, Miller lead Miami past Indiana, into Sweet 16
"Connecticut and Miami advanced to the sweet 16 with wins in Albany, Yukon beat saint Mary's 70 to 55 in the west region while Miami downs Indiana 85 69 in the Midwest in Connecticut's victory, Jordan Hawkins scored all 12 of his points during a big second half for the huskies. I mean, it feels like running beatable. I mean, the last two games in the second half we just took off, I mean, when we were playing like that, I think a really good chance to win it all. In Miami's win, the hurricanes are led by 27 points for Isaiah Wong. The last two years we went to sweet 16 and last year lead 8 and it's just I'm appreciative and I just love to see. Connecticut bases to meet Arkansas while Miami will play Houston. I'm Mike Reeves.

AP News Radio
Florida Atlantic end's Fairleigh Dickinson run for Sweet 16
"It's Michigan state of Florida Atlantic moving on from Columbus. Florida Atlantic as a 9th seed ended 16th seed fairly Dickinson season with a 78 70 win after its first round upset of Purdue. The owls who got 29 points from Jonah Davis are heading to the school's first sweet 16. We've been talking late nights after the game at the prices all this time are we really, we really can make it too much manners and make some noise. We've been saying this since day one of the summer we got put out last year. 7th seed Michigan state got by number two seed marquette 69 to 60, Tyson walker let the Spartans with 23 points. Tom mccabe, Columbus

AP News Radio
Coles hits late floater, TCU edges Ariz St in March Madness
"TCU overcame an 11 point second half deficit to edge Arizona state 72 70, the difference maker was Jacoby calls us jumper with three seconds to go. There's a lot of shots today that was flat. And the last one I got it up and that was the difference and went in and it was a good shot and I'm happy for my team. I'm happy to win. The west regions 6th seated horned frogs advanced to a Sunday meeting with number three Gonzaga. The bulldogs pulled away in the second half to down Grand Canyon 82 70. In the south region, Baylor defeated Cal Santa Barbara 74 56, earning the bears a battle with creighton, which beat North Carolina state 72 63. Bruce Morton, Denver

The Dan Bongino Show
Dr. Joe Ladapo: COVID Vaccines Create Negative Effect After 7 Month
"Florida Surgeon General Joe ladapo a medical doctor and a PhD Telling the truth publicly about COVID Pushing masks pushing the vaccine in little kids All these low value divisive policies that they did Meanwhile here's the truth right You look at these studies of the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines There was a study published a few weeks ago in a journal called lancet a great a journal that's well known I should say And what did these authors show They showed that after 7 months the protection for infection right It started I don't know around 70% down down down down At 7 months it hops onto the other side of the axis right So it is negative And that continues And that the magnitude of that negativity increases over time What does that mean folks It literally means that the people who receive that vaccine were more likely to contract COVID-19 after 7 months than the people who did not That is a fact as the CDC or FDA ever said a word about that See I'm telling you there are people out there the tide is turning That is a ridiculously smart guy This is what happens when conservatives vote conservative stuff Folks I'm sorry I can't take it anymore The idea that oh gosh elections you know they only benefit Democrats ever Okay listen Democrats cheat in elections Oh okay great It happens Yes I understand that It's not great that they cheat I get your point But I'm not disputing that cheating is going on I believe back then I was the victim of it in an election I ran and based on actual information Having said that when we show up in mass like we did in Florida those are the kinds of people who get appointed in positions of government who have microphones who can start speaking to others

The Breakdown
Apparently, U.S. Regulated Banks Are Riskier Than Stablecoins
"All right Friends, well, today we are going to discuss the delicious irony of why, despite all the teeth gnashing of politicians, it wasn't stablecoins that disrupted the regulated financial system, but the regulated financial system that disrupted a stablecoin. First though, I want to do a few follow-ups from things we've discussed over the last few days. Yesterday we talked about Credit Suisse. You'll remember that markets were freaking out about it and pricing in a huge chance of default. After their biggest investor said absolutely not to further investment. As we discussed, despite the fact that its problems were quite different than Silicon Valley banks, having another bank in peril so close to last week's dramatic events inherently connected the two. Well, today, Credit Suisse has posted a record surge of as much as 40% and has seen major drops in their default swaps. The big update is that they were able to open up a CHF 50 billion credit line with the Swiss national bank, which is about $54 billion U.S.. They also announced plans to purchase some senior debt to the tune of about CHF 3 billion. So seems like the European banking crisis is over, right? Well, enough so that the ECB hiked rates by 50 basis points today, and I guess we'll have to see how that plays out over the next few days. Meanwhile, back in the U.S., all eyes have been on first republic. Indeed, before the New York department of financial services decided to off signature bank over the weekend, most believe that first republic was the most likely next U.S. domino. Well, on Sunday, first republic reported that it had more than 70 billion in unused liquidity from agreements with the fed and JPMorgan Chase, but its stock still cratered this week. Given that, word is that they're exploring a sale. Unlike SVB, silver gator signature, no one industry makes up more than 9% of first republics depositor base, and their emphasis on private banking and wealth management seemingly make them a juicy target. JPM is one that many have mentioned in conjunction with the sale, but it seems like others, including Bank of America subsidiary Merrill Lynch, and Morgan Stanley might also be interested.

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Sen. Bill Hagerty: A Failure Like SVB Would Not Happen in Tennessee
"Senator, that again, we're dealing with startups and the problem was 90% of the companies that had business at the bank were well over the $250,000 Mark, but many of these startups, it usually takes months if you're going to a main line bank to get the approval process and it was just taken about a week or so at SVB, so no wonder they were in such disarray. Yeah, SAB has a very different business model than most traditional banks. I mean, I've served on bank boards in Tennessee, we take a very conservative approach to banking in Tennessee, as you might imagine, this type of situation would not have occurred. I don't believe with any bank in Tennessee. But when you get to the core of what happened here, the management team should have been managing their investment portfolio. What happened was they were taking in a tremendous amount of deposits. They went from a $70 billion bank in 2019 to 211 billion in 2022. They weren't in a position to prudently lend that money out. So what they started doing is buying safe securities, meaning they're buying treasuries, mortgage backed securities that are backed by the government. But to get a higher yield on those, they were going further and further out in terms of the duration of those securities. And so when interest rates start rising dramatically as they did when the fed steps in to try to fight back this inflation that Joe Biden has created, they find those securities underwater because the security that's paying 1.5%, which is a lot of that was in their portfolio. Now that rates are up at 4.5%, you're going to get somebody to buy that security from you today. You're going to have to make up that difference by discounting the value of that security, meaning it may be worth 90 cents to the dollar 80 cents in the dollar 70 cents in the dollar. That's the size of discount. You'd have to get in this environment to want to take that 1.5% paper over the option to make four and a half percent if you just bought short term paper today. So that

AP News Radio
After clashes, Pakistani police pause siege at ex-PM's home
"Clashes between police and supporters of ex Pakistani prime minister Imran Khan, persisted in the eastern city of Lahore, a day after police came to arrest him. Supporters of Khan tried to block access to the police who had come to detain him for failing to appear in court on graft charges. The officers fired tear gas at the house as the 70 year old opposition leader's supporters held rocks and bricks in retaliation, Khan's party lawyer latifah told the AP that the police came without any legal documents. And bombard with shelling and plain water mixed with dangerous chemicals. We are feeling burning in our skin in our hands in our eyes. The following morning tempers were still high as supporters continued to protect Khan and police continued their efforts to arrest him. Khan has claimed that the string of cases against him are a plot by the government of his successor prime minister chapari to

The Breakdown
The Banking System Broke; Will That Force a Fed Pivot?
"All right guys, it continues to be interesting times and today was supposed to be the big financial event of the week with the CPI report. So let's pick up the story from where we left off yesterday and see if the CPI report actually had as much significance as it might once have seemed. So here's where we were. The falling dominoes were silvergate closing down on Wednesday, Silicon Valley bank being put into receivership on Friday, and over the weekend, the squawking chaos is the tech industry viewed itself facing moral peril. All of this led to the fed's coming in on Sunday Night as the white knight, saying, hey, we're invoking systemic risk. Everyone's deposits are safe, management is not protected and taxpayers don't have to foot the bill. Oh, and by the way, we shut down signature bank as well. Yeah, the crypto won. No, don't ask us to explain why. And into all of that on Monday morning, market started in turmoil. First republic began the day 70 plus percent down in small and regional banks everywhere had their trading halted for volatility. However, then, at least in the non banking sectors, markets started to recover and even move into the green. Many commentators were incredulous. Dimitri kofinis from the inimitable hidden forces wrote, we got a global pandemic that killed millions of people, the start of a potential World War that could kill millions more, the steepest interest rate cycle in 40 years and now the second largest bank failure in U.S. history and markets are still like nah, we going up. And it wasn't just stocks. Crypto absolutely roared yesterday led by Bitcoin, which was up nearly 20% on the day. And by the way, has continued to increase today as well, hitting 26,000 at the time of this recording. So what the heck you may ask is going on. Well, let's talk first about the crypto side. Yesterday I did a YouTube video exploring three possible explanations for why Bitcoin was going up. The first one is the one I'd most like to be true. And that is that this moment is piercing the veil of people's perceptions of the solidity of the banking system and showing them that they are a part of something that is more complex and risky than they might have been led to believe. Even if one isn't clamoring for the destruction of the fed and the end of Fiat money, it certainly strikes us that it might be better if a more informed electorate better understood the part they play and more specifically the role their money plays in the system we have

AP News Radio
Another atmospheric river pounds California, 27K to evacuate
"Another atmospheric river is wrecking havoc in California while heavy snow hits the east coast. I'm Lisa dwyer. Forecasters are warning of more flooding and potentially damaging winds as a new atmospheric river pushes into a swamped California. Nearly 27,000 people are under evacuation orders statewide with emergency declarations for 40 counties. There's been damaging winds with gusts of up to 70 mph. There are also numerous reports of fallen trees and more than 330,000 customers without power. The national weather service says the storm is moving faster than expected, and most of the rainfall should shift southward. California has been battered by ten previous atmospheric rivers this winter on the east coast heavy wet snow cause a plane to slide off a runway and led to hundreds of school closings canceled flights and thousands of power outages there. I'm Lisa dwyer

HASHR8
Bitcoin Mining Stocks Rally As Fed Bails Out SVB
"Again, welcome to the podcast. Thanks for having me. Great. So we'll jump right into it. Let's just start off with low context here. We are recording Monday at 1130 mountain time. I guess one 30 p.m. Eastern Time. And the lay of the land is SVB, Silicon Valley bank was shuttered last week, silver gate bank announced that it was going to voluntarily liquidate itself about two weeks ago now, and then yesterday is Sunday, signature bank. There was announcement that the FDIC and state regulators had decided to shut down that bank. All three of these banks had touches on crypto, notably, silver gate and a signature were used quite often by crypto banks or crypto companies in order to bank. This morning we saw a lot of commercialized banks see their stocks halt trading of the New York Stock Exchange, SOM went down 60, 70%, just more contagion in the banking sector. On the flip side, we saw Bitcoin go up about 10%. It's about $24,000 as of right now. And that means that our favorite mining stocks are also shooting at quite a bit. Reminding stocks are often a beta play on top of Bitcoin, meaning if Bitcoin price goes up, Bitcoin might suck scope a lot. If Bitcoin goes down, mining stocks go down a lot. So right now, as of one 30 eastern our change leaders for the day, of course, scientific up 27% up to 21%, marathon up 18% in digi host of 18%. The smallest gain right now is mawson basically about flat. So big day for mining stocks, anything toss it over to you. It's weird to look at this picture though and try to see why Bitcoin is going up. The steam has made the most sense to me was binance did announce they're buying $1 billion worth of Bitcoin ether and B and B this morning. But besides that it does seem to be some sort of narrative play, but there's not a strong link there at the moment. I'll be honest, I wasn't expecting the level of increase today that came as a bit of a shock with Bitcoin spite all the needs of the week and was right as you said about XV and the issues there and then these should we can sort of the banking institutions which again is mourning the markets initially. We've seen some recovery and of the UK bank HSBC have come in and informed the markets they are prepared to purchase the UK arm of SDB and so that will alleviate new take government having to sort of worry about the deposits for those people in there. So HTTP will sort that out.

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Should the Retirement Age Be Raised to Sustain Social Security?
"The average age so if you're going to, if you're going to get social security benefits, you're eligible for full benefits what at 62. You can delay, you can delay that as you can up to what age 70, I think, and of course your benefit about will increase. But a lot of people are debating whether or not they're actually going to retire at the age of 62. Now keep in mind that back when that age was set, most people were not what life expectancy was not that far past the age of 62 for most folks. So anyway, senator John Kennedy, the Republican from Louise Anna, was asked about this, cut number 7. I mean, the life expectancy of the average American right now is about 77 years old. For people who are in their 20s, their life expectancy will probably be 80 5 to 90. Does it really make sense to allow someone who's in their 20s today to retire at 62? Those are the kind of things that we should talk about. It's a fair question. Because social security was not created for the average person to live until their 80s or their 90s.

American Institute for Crypto Investors
Im Still Not Buying Bitcoin until This Is Over
"9 p.m. Thursday March 9th, 2023. I'm still not buying Bitcoin until this is over. I'm still not buying Bitcoin BTC until after we see how the upcoming empty gox settlement impacts its price. In case you're new year empty gauze is the now defunct cryptocurrency exchange that once handled 70 of all Bitcoin transactions worldwide. Read more the post them still not buying Bitcoin until this is over appeared first on American institute for crypto investors.

AP News Radio
'This is what it's all about' — Shaka Smart speaks on Marquette defeating UConn to advance to the Big East Championship
"It will be a match above marquette and Xavier and the biggies tournament final at Madison Square Garden. The 6th ranked golden eagles were pushed by David Joplin and Tyler Cole who had 17 points apiece as they edge 11th ranked UConn 70 to 68. Marquette head coach Shaka smart said his team definitely played with the chip on his shoulder. A lot of people were just kind of giving you kind of game coming in. And you know, there was comments made about who owns the garden and that kind of stuff. And you know, we said, wait a minute, we won this league. So we're

AP News Radio
Jackson-Davis, Hood-Schifino lead Indiana past Maryland
"Mason Gillis scored 20 points as Purdue, the number one seed in the Big Ten tournament defeated Rutgers 70 to 65. Purdue coach Matt painter. We had some guys have some good games built on it. We had a couple other guys that didn't have the best game. It's all right. You know, it's all right when you still advance, right? Purdue will next face Ohio State and Saturday semifinals as the buckeyes down Michigan state 68 58. The other semifinal will have Indiana and Penn State, the hoosiers defeating Maryland 70 to 60 and quarterfinal action, while the nittany Lions needed overtime to upset the tournament's second seed northwestern 67 65. David Schuster, Chicago

AP News Radio
No. 8 Arizona pulls away from Stanford, reaches Pac-12 semis
"Despite a bit of a scare, second ranked UCLA advanced to the semifinals of the pectoral tournament thanks to an 80 to 69 win over Colorado. The tournament's top seed trailed with less than 6 minutes to play, but ended the game on a 20 to 8 run. UCLA guard Jaime Hawkeye's junior. We've got a lot of games under my belt here and I know a lot of my teammates do as well like Tiger and David and we just know when we get in those situations we know how to win and we understand that and crunch time you got to get stops and that's what we did. UCLA will take on Oregon on Friday after the ducks 75 to 70 win over Washington state, 8th ranked Arizona beat Stanford 95 to 84 while Arizona state beat USC 77 to 72. Adam spelling, Las Vegas.

AP News Radio
No. 24 Creighton beats Villanova 87-74 in Big East quarters
"St. John's took topsy in 6th ranked marquette so over time with the golden eagles pulled as 72 70 when, then 11th ranked Yukon, held off the grits of Providence team in the second game 73 66. The evening session featured tenth seed depaul versus second C and 15th ranked Xavier, the blue demon shot the lights at a 61% pace, making coach Sean Miller a little nervous. We were tentative for a lot of the first half and when the ball keeps going in, it can sometimes strip you of your confidence. The musketeers caught up with two minutes left and came out with an 89 to 84 win. Finally defending champion Villanova squared off with 24th ranked creighton, so Blue Jays led from end to end winning 87 to 74. Matt mankiewicz New York

The Charlie Kirk Show
Joe Rogan Drops Major J6 Truth Bomb and Julie Kelly Reacts
"This tape last hour, but I find this to be unbelievably persuasive and Julie, I think you'll enjoy hearing it. Cut 70 9 is Joe Rogan and Michael malice reacting in real time. It's as if you had a private hidden camera of how they react to the footage that is now being made public to people that are not right wing ideologues by any measure. Play cut 79, please. Right, you're not supposed to go into the capitol building. Grant. I thought you were not like that. Yeah, I don't like that idea. Not like that. But when you see the people taking them around, essentially on a tour. That's not what I thought it was. Not even defending them. It's just forget about it. Let's look at what actually happened. We didn't know that happened. Right. We had a version of it was just chaos and the cops ran away. And cops were murdered. I would have never imagined that this. I've shocked to see that. That's so wild. And so I think people are just starting to recognize that it's not what you thought it was. So Julie, that clip is very powerful. What is your reaction? To not just that clip, but this idea that finally the American people can get educated and informed of what happened on January 6th. And while you're at it, tell us about potential Brady violations as well. So Charlie, that's very similar to the response that I got from a lot of people. Even people who have been sort of following January 6th that they were expecting some bombshells, but not to the level that what Tucker presented on Monday and Tuesday. When you see what happened with Jacob chansley, completely railroaded by his Justice Department, get this, Charlie. I really looked up his documents today. Jacob chansley, as we now see walking peacefully around building accompanied by numerous capital police officers, that was January 6th on January 11th, 5 days later, a grand jury in Washington D.C. handed down several crimes against Jacob chandley 5 days later. It's like this was preset ready to go this DoJ D.C. U.S. attorney's office had all of the charges collected that they were going to use against these people. I mean, that is pretty stunning, something

70 Over 70
"70%" Discussed on 70 Over 70
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70 Over 70
"70%" Discussed on 70 Over 70
"The staff of the satirical newspaper. The onion woke up on the morning after nine eleven and they had to do the impossible. Put out a new issue filled with jokes hilarious headlines about the news of the day. You see the dilemma. How did a group of anti-establishment comedy writers traumatized all of their fellow new yorkers create something funny in meaningful in the wake of tragedy. That's just one of the stories in nine twelve. The new podcast series for my colleagues pineapple street studios and amazon music. In each episode of nine twelve host. Danta burski tells the stories of characters whose lives would never be the same after september eleventh and through them we begin to realize that there are new lessons to be learned and then we just might have enough distance now from nine eleven to make sense of some things. We couldn't understand before. Follow nine twelve wherever you get your podcasts or you can binge all seven episodes right now on amazon music or with wondering plus as you might have heard i've been talking about this company called artifact what they do is they help you capture the life stories of your loved ones and create something that and feels like a podcast. But it's just for you and one of the things that people have mentioned to me after hearing about artifact is they're not totally sure where they're start turns out kinda hard. Tell your life story but artifact makes it super easy because they break it up into chapters. There's like a childhood and teenage years chapter. There's a coming of age chapter. There's a family life and career chapter. They have professional interviewers come in and conduct these interviews. And here's another thing. It used to cost four hundred seventy five bucks to make one of these three chapter life stories with artifact but now they're doing it for just two hundred ninety nine dollars. That is an incredible price for the level of audio production. That you're getting and that's really what artifact does go to hey artifact dot com and click get started. The interview lasts about a half an hour. You just do it over the phone. Bottomline artifact is your shortcut to creating something you'll keep coming back to and right now you can save twenty bucks on your first artifact when you enter the code. Seventy that's seven zero get started at. Hey artifact dot com. How did you get comfortable talking about sex. You've asked a very good question a very hard question because nobody ever talked. I don't ever remember having earned the conversation but in growing up on a farm. Course you see all the sex. Among all of the animal announced he understood that and my parents were as they were never through conservative. They taught us to love everybody and to do our best. But they didn't talk to you about the birds and the bees learn learned more about the birds in the bays our Bank kotex there is a little booklet by put out that explained menstruation about birds in the back candidate thing. I i still have one at brag about it but they put out in when you bought boxes kotex. I don't know that they make so takes anymore. And just last week told trojan week spent two years working on the trojan bible and plus i know what boys they need to know the. You know the facts and now we need to put all of that together. In a little book turned thirteen to fourteen. Wherever the magic age it may puberty before and we need to send them a sample of all the condom. Get it on the birthday. I don't think they thought that was that idea. But think it was a bad idea but you know just so. I'm clear you're telling me that you're still like working with trojan. Yes i was chairman of the what. We saw tation trojan sexual health advisory committee. So are they going to do it. I don't think running do it. But at the that that was most valuable little book on sexual health. But i had we didn't have arabia. We didn't have tv. We didn't have the things y'all when you're in that like that room with trojan or just generally when you're talking about sex now at eighty seven. How is it different. Probably in that. I think everybody's more relaxed and nobody is flying up you. We talked about sexists pleasure. You know nobody could talk about sexist pleasure but you know a response was not meant to be a baby and i'll never forget. I was on a plane working on the speech and there was a group of parents. They were flying the sweetener someplace and asked her out. Well ninety nine percent of sex about pleasure in this old actor elders you need to add more nine to that nine point nine and but you know it got. It was easy as more and more people accepted talked about it was it became easier easier. will move. I headed talk about sex. It was talking about masturbation. We was really trying to prevent age. You have to remember nineteen ninety two. I was really about can prevent hiv and at the world fades conference. I was asked about how to prevent age. And actually let. Let's talk about the abc. The wade's prevention a is for accident. But we're sexual banned from the time we were born telegram With i be is be faithful as a you know. A lot of people aren't faithful people See use a latex condom and then people say why doctor condoms will break other wearing show literally blow condoms. They use a balloon or steakho- bologna in still wouldn't break and d- do other things and then they asked me. Well what did i mean do things. Well that was when we talk about ashton station At the conference ask being gave a long talk about masturbation. And i said one of the things we know. It's never 'cause anybody to get go blind. Never 'cause anybody to lose their mind and always know you're having sex with somebody love self love right and so there's there's this moment at that conference at that confront big question and regard to masturbation. I think that that is something that it's part of human sexuality and it is a part of something that should be taught but we've not even taught our children the very basics and i feel that we have tried ignorance for very long time. And it's time we try. Education didn't thinking everything most people have conferencing them up too much about it given vomit right but on the way back the reporter who went with me and he asked me Thank people are going to be concerned about. That matt said well ninety percent of men masturbate a and we have probably sixty seven eighty percent of women mash debate and then the rest lie but then it became a huge deal. Became a world deal a world deal.

70 Over 70
"70%" Discussed on 70 Over 70
"Ever. Since we launched seventy over seventy we've been hearing from people who wanna capture the kinds of stories and conversations. You've been hearing on the show with people in their own lives and a friend of mine. His name is george. He just started this company. It's called artifact. That does exactly they set the person that you want to hear from up with a professional interviewer someone. Who's really really good at guiding people through stories and memories and then they take those interviews and they edit them into private podcast quality episodes. That sound. kind of like what. You've been hearing on seventy over seventy. I mean into microphones all day every day. But it's been wonderful to use artifact to hear from some people in my life and make something really beautiful. That's just for us. All you do is go to. Hey artifact dot com you just choose the type of interview you like to do. There's a whole bunch of options or you can create your own and then artifact makes it super easy to book the interview on their website. The interview only lasts like half an hour. You do it over the phone. What you end up with. Is this thing that you'll keep coming back to again year after year right. Now you can say forty bucks on your first artifact when you enter the code. Seventy that's seven zero get started today at artifact dot com When you were talking about how the idea of time speeds up exponentially as you get older. Maybe it's just walk into the garage but like when do you feel that speeding up you know. I think that it's a it's a pervasive feeling. Max is like when i get up. I don't need an alarm. I get up around three forty five to four thirty a. m. i wanna be up before the sun. I wanna see the first first late in the morning and not missing. I don't want to miss anything. And i feel it all day. I'm going over to play tennis match. And i'm so engrossed with the energy drink i'm drinking on the way over. I'm thinking about my serve. Am i finally going to get that that. Snap at the top of the serb. And when i get there. I play as if i'm at wimbledon and believe me it's nothing like wimbledon but all day long i'm imbued with this feeling of that. Oh my god that was. That was a worthwhile our so. I'm i'm more engaged and more aware than i presence your word than i've ever been in my life. I'm not. I'm really not trying to make light of the wave your life. Would you just described completely exhausting to me. Totally totally exhausting. You know there. There are people and my mother was really good at saying she said you are. You're so exhausting to be around. So i take that as a compliment but you can imagine a my end. Yeah i put a lot of energy out but look clearly. I get from it you know. I'm i'm hi. i'm on high. Do seeing that high. There's a connection between those two that you were just saying so. I asked you what your doubts were. And what i heard you saying was. I don't know how much longer i will be in control. I don't know how much longer. I'll be able to live my life in the way that i want to live it. Does that sound right. it does. And then there's this other piece of it which is you feel this time. Speeding up and it just gives you energy to do everything and your energy drink is a celestial experience. You know. I think that. I'm wondering about is. Is there something negative or scary in there. You know what i mean. This idea that you're gonna lose control that the clock is ending. I understand how it fuels you to live your life the way you want to but is there any way in which it stops you or hold you back or just scares you said well wasn't necessarily going to share this but i will tell you that on november ninth twenty twenty after waking up. Every day the way. I described it to you feeling like a million bucks. I woke up with extreme ten level pain in both shoulders. Both roy's and the neck. It took me eleven or twelve minutes literally to get out of bed. I thought i have a. ls. Do i have ms is lupus. But how could. I have gone to bed last night. One hundred percent and wake up with with something. I just can't understand so we took three weeks. But i was diagnosed with a fairly rare thing called. Poly myalgia rheumatic. And i'm doing a lot better. Now i'm back to playing tennis but this is my first little hint that i am. I'm only human. I if do live to ninety or one hundred. I'm going to go through decline i. It's been hard for me to learn. I used to think my will can overcome anything. But this little paulie myalgia romantika has sort of taught me taught me to say i'm going to see that i'm going to go through things i'm going to go through some degeneration a body and or mind and i better just get some grace with it. Sounds like you've done a lot of work to process it in a in. A classic diana's fashion like i just attacked the thing but tell me a little bit more. About what those eleven or twelve minutes for like. When you couldn't get out of bed. I was scared i called. Bonnie bonnie stoll by the way is my best friend for forty years now and i used to be her trader and then many years later in my sixties she became my trainer but she came over and by the time she came over. I was standing up a barely walking and i- i- catastrophes. I went to the point like this is never going to get better. This is the way i'm gonna live from now on. This is life for me now. I went from being bad ass to debilitated in the overnight. When you say you. Catastrophe does does panicked. I wasn't a bit of a panic. And i will say that. That's that's one negative trait. I've had you know you could people think. Oh you're so positive. You think he can do everything. No i worry about everything before. It happens but bonnie's always saying to me. It's good to be prepared but don't get stuck on. What if this happens. And what if that happens. What if i lose. And what have i know. I don't make it and what about you. Just just stay calm and revised that that might be one of the outcomes. You're losing or you're not making it or you're failing and you'll deal with that but don't sit in a place of what if that's probably what's going to happen right. There's something about the way you're describing it right. Searing pain unable to move that fuel. So reminiscent of your worst moments in the water from that from the outside clicked right being stung by those box jellyfish. Just being unable to move vomiting your your body giving out when when you just told me that story all i was thinking about what these descriptions of you on these epochs swims but did not feel that way to you. Did you panic in the water. No maybe during the box. Jellyfish i thought am i gonna die. Here is 'cause. I was really having trouble breathing. The whole law professional medical team university of miami. Er doctors were having trouble reviving me We weren't sure and many people have died being stung. It's called the irukandji syndrome..

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"This episode is brought to you by hp plus in a world full of smart devices. Isn't it about time. Your printer got smart to now. Printing is smart with hp loss and the hp smart app is how it all happens. You can print from your phone with just a tab no matter where you are even from your garage slash home office slash yoga studio. That is smart. Hp plus learn more about smart printing at hp dot com slash smart. Hey it's max. I've got a podcast recommendation for you today. It's a new show by my colleagues at pineapple street studios and it's hosted by dan burski. Dan is also the host of missing. Richard simmons and running from cops and the line. Some of my favorite podcasts ever made and dan and the team have put together a new series. It's so so special. You have to take some time and listen to. The show is called nine twelve and it's about what happened the day after september eleventh and every day since nine hundred is about how nine eleven the day became nine eleven. The idea and how that idea has shaped the world our culture and ourselves for the last twenty years you'll meet the teenager whose personal conspiracy theory spread around the globe and the rollerblading tour guide. Who tried to take them down. You'll follow the staffers for this tier. Go newspaper the onion who woke up the morning after nine eleven and realized they had to do the impossible right jokes hilarious headlines about the news of the day now on the twentieth anniversary of nine eleven. We finally have enough distance. Maybe to see some things that we couldn't see before.

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"Ago like everything. But that's part of what makes your job so hard at least from the outside is like you're supposed to be the voice of reason but you don't have all the data you're supposed to know it all and you don't know at all. So how do you do that. Well if you don't know what you should know at a time that you know it. Then you're you're remiss but when you're living through an evolving outbreak and you have no way of knowing certain things then of course you would have done it differently if you had all the knowledge would and it's very pronounced with covert nineteen but there was a little bit of that Back in the early years of hiv. You know when we you know had no idea what the geologic agent was. Well there's one of the thing about that time that feels similar to now. Which is that a large group of people. Were really mad at you personally for a different reason for almost the exact opposite reason so for people who who don't know this history aids activists were fighting for access to experimental drugs that were being developed up until that point. The system was that did you. Drugs had to go through multiple rounds of trials to see if there are safe and then to see if they were effective before they could go out to the general public right but because aids was essentially a death sentence any access to anything that might work could save lives and so what the activists were saying was. Let us into these trials earlier and for a while you were saying this is the way it is done but through these conversations that you went in had with activists and gay communities across the country. You changed your mind and you change the way that this system works. You allowed people into these clinical trials before the drugs have been proven to be effective. Totally right that's exactly what was was in the beginning as a scientist and as a public health person i was actually doing whatever i can to address what this brand new outbreak was in. How do we get drugs out there quickly. And things like that but the activists were looking to bring attention to the fact that the old paradigm of how you address an emerging disease how you develop drugs how you test them and how you involve. The afflicted community was an antiquated approach in the beginning and people were dying as a result. Well yeah and it. It isn't like we had the magic wand to prevent it. But i was out there very publicly trying to call attention to the things you can do. Where condom and i became the face of the federal government so when the activists decided that they wanted to call attention to what they felt a correctly in some respects was an inadequate approach of the federal government. The president reagan at the time was not using the bully pulpit of the presidency to call attention to the risks of this. The the support of research was not adequate at the time. So what did they do. They picked out the face of the federal government. I e me. Yeah and the next thing. I knew it. Was you know these iconoclastic theatrical demonstrations against me and i think one of the most important best things i've ever done is that i kept an open mind and when they did that i said to myself. Wait a minute. These people are suffering. They're concerned that they and their colleagues and their friends and their love is a dying which they were and they don't feel that the federal government is paying enough attention and really not on the right track but no one was listening to them. So they became very confrontational very disruptive including against agencies. Like the nih the fda. So where the oh totally personal. Because i was different. Everybody else was running away from it i. I was the only one that was out there publicly give talking about it most infect or the scientists when they demonstrate and try to shut down wall street. Shut down the golden gate bridge shutdown saint patrick's cathedral. Everybody would they hear about the activists that they would run away and every time. The activists became more provocative. They would pull back even more scientists. So i said wait a minute. I'm going to do the opposite. i'm going to surprise them. I'm going to listen to what they were saying. And when i began to listen to what they were saying they will making perfect sense right and i put myself in their shoes and i said holy mackerel. If i were in their shoes i would do exactly what they were doing. And that's when. I started to bring them in around this table that i'm sitting at right now actually historically when instead of when they were demonstrating the police trying to arrest him. I said no. Don't arrest them. Bring up five or six of their leaders. Let's sit down and talk about this. And i listened to them and and boy did they make sense. And that's when we started a dialogue of getting the activists involved in all of the things we did the planning the implementation discussions the and the clinical trials. And i think that's a connection that people today might not make. Which is the reason that we had cova vaccines ten months ago before they were officially approved by the fda was because they were emergency authorized and that emergency authorization. The idea of that is born out of this experience that you had in the eighties with the aids epidemic. And so when you think about these people who are mad at you now for for whom you have become like the the face of the enemy when you put yourself in their shoes. How do you make sense of the fact that they don't want to take the vaccine well. We're talking about apples and oranges now. Mac's apples and oranges. So let me explain. So here's the deal. For the people who really feel that they don't wanna get vaccinated there are a heterogeneous group there are people who don't want to get vaccinated because they want more information so today. Interestingly today the fda gave full licensor to the which many people were saying well. I'm waiting for the full licensure. I don't trust that. I think you went to to Quickly so you never get a accusatory to those people you never confront them because even though some of their concern.

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"Being rolled <Speech_Female> in the river. <Speech_Female> And <Speech_Music_Female> as you get older <Speech_Music_Female> you understand <Speech_Music_Female> the process <Speech_Music_Female> and you have stability <Music> within that <SpeakerChange> process <Music> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> in <Speech_Music_Female> the mirror. <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> What <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Male> a brand <Speech_Music_Male> <Music> is <Music> <Advertisement> sign <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> me. <Speech_Music_Male> Seventy over seventy <Speech_Music_Male> a production <Speech_Music_Male> of pineap- street studios <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> produced by just hackel <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> our associate producer <Speech_Music_Male> of l. andersen <Speech_Music_Male> our editors <Speech_Music_Male> are mattie sprung. Kaiser <Speech_Music_Male> drew level <Speech_Music_Male> research an <Speech_Music_Male> additional reporting <Speech_Music_Male> by charter knock. <Speech_Music_Male> Our <Speech_Music_Male> mixer is davy. Sumner <Speech_Music_Male> and generous. <Speech_Music_Male> Berman and i <Speech_Music_Male> are. The executive producers <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> are theme songs <Speech_Music_Male> like a dream by <Speech_Music_Male> francis and the lights <Speech_Music_Male> and the music. You're <Speech_Music_Male> listening to right. Now <Speech_Music_Male> is by mavis <Speech_Music_Male> staples. Who's <Speech_Music_Male> eighty two years. Old <Speech_Music_Male> original <Speech_Music_Male> music by terence bernardo <Speech_Music_Male> additional music <Speech_Music_Male> by noble kids <Speech_Music_Male> and music <Speech_Music_Male> licensing by dan. <Speech_Music_Male> Comiskey <Speech_Music_Male> are episode. <Speech_Music_Male> Is lynn staley. <Speech_Music_Male> Seventy <Speech_Music_Male> three <Speech_Music_Male> and also my mom. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> Thank you gotten gotten shirley. <Speech_Music_Male> Thank <Speech_Music_Male> you my recall <Speech_Music_Male> for the conversation <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> for <Speech_Music_Male> the cover art <Speech_Music_Male> for <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> a maximum t. <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> thankless <Speech_Music_Male> <Music>

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"I know this program is seventy over seventy but I really wish i were younger. I wish our seventy. But i am ready. I'm seventy two years and seventy-five five miraculously enough. I m eighty three years. I am eighty eight years. I'm here at ninety. Two ninety four in may do one year old. My name.

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"The nineteen sixties <Speech_Male> the thing that could mobilize <Speech_Male> people the simple <Speech_Music_Male> <Silence> act <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> that can <Silence> mobilize people <Speech_Music_Male> was <Speech_Male> not eating grapes. <Speech_Male> Do you have <Speech_Male> some sense of what <Speech_Male> that thing could <Speech_Male> be. Now what is the <Speech_Male> simple thing <Speech_Male> that americans could <Silence> do. Now that <SpeakerChange> would change the <Silence> world. <Speech_Female> Yeah it's called <Speech_Music_Female> voting. <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> Seventy <Speech_Male> over seventy is <Speech_Male> a production of pineapple <Speech_Male> street studios <Speech_Music_Male> and it's produced <Speech_Male> by just hackel. <Speech_Male> Our associate <Speech_Male> producer is jean l. <Speech_Male> Andersen our <Speech_Male> editors are maddie sprung <Speech_Male> kaiser and joel <Speech_Male> level research <Speech_Male> and additional <Speech_Male> reporting by. Charlie <Speech_Male> lock <Speech_Male> our mixer <Speech_Male> is elliott adler <Speech_Male> and genoa's <Speech_Male> berman. I are the <Speech_Male> executive producers <Speech_Male> are theme. <Speech_Male> Song is like a dream <Speech_Male> by francis <Speech_Male> and the lights <Speech_Male> and the music. You're listening to <Speech_Male> right now. Is <Speech_Male> by arthur russell. <Speech_Male> It would have been seventy <Speech_Male> this year. <Speech_Male> Original <Speech_Male> music by parents. Bernardo <Speech_Male> additional <Speech_Male> music by noble kids <Speech_Male> and music <Speech_Male> licensing by dan. <Speech_Male> Kaminsky <Speech_Male> are cover. <Speech_Male> Art is by mira <Speech_Male> common who seventy <Speech_Male> two <Speech_Male> and our episode art <Speech_Male> by lynn. Staley <Speech_Male> she seventy <Speech_Male> three <Speech_Music_Male> and she's also my <Speech_Music_Male> mom. <Speech_Male> Thank <Speech_Male> you dr ford <Speech_Male> wimberly <Speech_Male> in. Thank you <Speech_Male> dolores huerta. <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> I'm excellent ski. <Music> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> Thanks for listening. <Music> <Advertisement>

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"This episode is brought to you by hp whenever you do your best thinking. Hp specter x three sixty is ready when inspiration strikes with power. Save for battery life and focus mode multitask. You can do your best thinking whenever and wherever it happens. The hp specter x three sixty two and one convertible pc with windows ten saves battery life for whenever an idea hints you each piece specter x three sixty a more thoughtful laptop program. Seventy over seventy but I really wish i were younger. I wish over seventy. But i am ready. I'm seventy two years sogang seventy-five. Miraculously i m eighty three year..

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"Other person to you. Well you know. There's always the impostor syndrome but more it was like that there is this character madeline albright and then there's me you know who actually has had a fairly normal life as A mother and somebody who does the dishes occasionally Farm various things in and then. I'm a normal person. And i didn't get to be the madeleine albright. You know until in my late fifties. And then i stopped being that other madeline. Not you know. The character madeline albright. What was the gap between yourself in the character report. I'm not in larger than life and literally not anymore because i keep shrinking and there would be all kinds of things that happened for the madeleine albright character and then there was li. Did you like the madeleine albright character. Mostly gotta ask madam what. What was the part of the character that you didn't like. I guess maybe another way of asking. What i'm trying to ask is like. Did you feel like you could be yourself in that job. Well after a while. I thought i could. You know when i wasn't kind of tongue tied in terms of only following the talking points or thinking. Well that is not the way that we thought this discussion would go. So i have to go a different way and i know what i wanna do and say know but the truth is it goes back to what we were talking about before i love being secretary of state and i loved the idea that i was the first woman secretary of state and refugees so i loved that no matter what i will always be a footnote in american history. And i'm so proud to be an american. Not long ago i was at a and i was supposed to describe myself in six words. And i said worried optimists. Problem-solver grateful american. And they all go together. I love to about naturalization certificates at ceremonies. In the first time i did it was july fourth two thousand at monticello and i figured since i had thomas jefferson job. I could do it. So i'm gave this man his naturalization certificate a walks away and he says can you believe it. I'm a refugee. And i just got my naturalization certificate from the secretary of state and i went to find him and i said. Can you believe that a refugee is secretary state. And that is the kind of thing where i love the character and in some ways. It's not just a character but it's me. That's an incredible moment and i can imagine that that job is just like a stack of incredible moments after incredible moments. And i don't even meaning imposter syndrome way but having this feeling of like. I can't believe this is where i am. I can't believe this is what i get to do. And i wondered reading your memoir and thinking about talking you today. What the lake. Eleven year old girl who came from czechoslovakia and showed up at ellis island. What do you think that eleven year. Old girl with think of Eighty three year. Old madeleine brown. Think that eleven year old girl who had come in on the ss america past the statue of liberty would be thinking. She turned out pretty well. He made a difference and so. I hope that that's what she would think. And that the things that i like to do are the things that i need to do. And that the ones that i need to do. I like doing and so. I hope she'd be proud of. And what else can you ask. What really things you like to do the things you need to do. I think it works. You know and. I really do think the things i'm doing now are the best combination of using what i learned to keep going and doing different things to lake difference through connecting the dots. Connecting the dots. Do you ever think about slowing down. No retirement as far as i'm concerned as a four letter word. Absolutely not wait. What's the four letter. Just think about it. You'd have to blotted out. Do you still feel like you have a twin Sometimes yes in heathrow airport. I was picked on one time to be the person that they decided had to open every thing in the suitcase and on there on the floor taking everything out. And i never did this but i said excuse me. Do you know who i am and the guy said no but we can find a doctor who can help you figure it out. So i couldn't help but laugh but as secretary it didn't often say i was secretary of state you know and so sometimes it would have helped but sometimes it doesn't but i loved it you know and i do think if i'd had my druthers i would have happily stayed forever. This is a pretty meta question. But do you feel like you're Yourself right now in this conversation or you playing the character. Marin myself i am myself. This is what i'm like. You know talkative. I'm glad to hear it being in those rooms in realizing the people on the other side of the table or just people that like it's all more complicated and messier and more human than people who haven't been in. Those rooms might think did that. Help you feel optimistic about the world in about humanity or did it scare you for the most part. it did. Make me feel better about things that there was a way that people work their way through problems. I do think however there were some people that did scare me and give their backgrounds. That the chances of the making a decision that i thought was going in the right direction was not gonna happen so the question is how long were they gonna be around but on the whole i really do think that understanding that there were human beings on the other side made a big difference in terms of how they saw things and then the way that i heard some of them described banks. There's no way to describe to you how much time we spend a group of us during the whole war kossovo and i invented something really knew at that point which will make you laugh. The international telephone conference and so We were talking about what we should do. in kosovo. There was a question about whether there should be a bombing pause over Easter and there was somebody who felt that we should and then truly one of my best friends. Now is the former german for a minister joschka. Fischer he said. Why would we pause to honor one religion while we're killing people of another religion and that was such a deep feeling and then also when we were talking about some of the ethnic cleansing he said that's what the nazis did and there's nobody else who could really said that and so those were the kinds of things people you develop a sense of trust in friendship to understand how people can say things like that.

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"And then from that time on. I started to appreciate what my chinese name means..

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"Why <Silence> <Speech_Female> because <Speech_Female> people look <Speech_Male> at mean. Isn't it business <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> really could get to cry. <Silence> If you've done. Your job <Speech_Male> <Speech_Female> is easier for you to say <Speech_Male> then. They have <Speech_Male> a whole bunch of people looking <Silence> at you. <Speech_Male> I'm sure <Speech_Male> that's true. <Silence> I'm sure that's true. <Speech_Male> What <Silence> do you think your grandmother would think <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> where <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> you are. Now <Silence> <Advertisement> thank you. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> I think she'd be incredibly <Silence> pleased. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> And i think she <Speech_Female> also would laugh at <Speech_Male> me. That i can't make <Speech_Male> biscuits <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> that <Speech_Male> they should be pleased about <Speech_Music_Male> everything. <SpeakerChange> Else <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Seventy over seventy <Speech_Music_Male> is a production <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> of pineapple street studios <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> and it's produced <Speech_Music_Male> by hackel. <Speech_Music_Male> Our associate <Speech_Music_Male> producer canal <Speech_Music_Male> andersen. Our <Speech_Music_Male> editors are mattie <Speech_Music_Male> sprung kaiser joe <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> level <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> research an additional <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> reporting by charlie <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> lock <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> our mixers <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> raj makita <Speech_Music_Male> and elliott adler <Speech_Music_Male> and geno as <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> permanent. I are <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> the executive producers <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> are <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> theme song is like <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> a dream by <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> francis and the lights <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and the music <Speech_Music_Male> listening to right now <Speech_Music_Male> is by beverly <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> glenn copeland <Speech_Music_Male> who seventy seven <Speech_Music_Male> years. Old <Speech_Music_Male> original music <Speech_Male> by terence bernardo <Speech_Male> additional music <Speech_Music_Male> noble kids <Speech_Music_Male> and music <Speech_Music_Male> licensing by. Dan <Speech_Music_Male> initially <Speech_Music_Male> are <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> cover. Art is by mira. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Common seventy <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> two <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and our episode art <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> is by lynn. Staley <Speech_Music_Male> she seventy <Speech_Music_Male> three <Speech_Music_Male> and she's also my mom. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Thank you howard makita <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and thank you. Nikki giovanni <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> macklin ski. <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> Thanks for <Music> listening

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"We all know that we should read more but with literati. You actually will join book clubs hosted by incredible people like malala. Richard branson steph curry. And you'll fill your shelves with riveting books you can't put down that have been picked by these amazing people authors leaders activists they spark these lively conversations in twelve unique book clubs engaging a diverse community of readers from all around the world. That means you can talk about steph. Curry's favorite books with steph curry for real. Just so we're clear. They're picking books and then they just come to your house. You don't have to do anything. And then once you've read the book or while you're in the process steph curry richard branson malala they're hosting interviews with the authors that you can sit in on plus you can move freely between them or you can use a standard membership and access everything reimagined. What a book club can be redeem your thirty day. Trial for only ninety nine cents at literati dot com slash. seventy over seventy had delibarate dot com slash. Seventy over seventy to learn more and read more with literati. Literati dot com slash. Seventy over seventy. I'm a big believer in habits if you're busy if you're not sleeping enough if you're stressed habits can help keep you on track. Just do the same thing every day without thinking about it. And i've got a new habit that i want to tell you about this over the last couple months every morning. I've had this thing called athletic. Greens it's powder and you mix it up and water takes about thirty seconds from when you open the pouch to when you're done drinking it and in those thirty seconds you get seventy five vitamins minerals and whole food sourced ingredients seventy five athletic. Greens has replaced all my vitamins. It's got everything i need. Plus probiotics in superfoods that help with energy and focus digestion also legitimately it tastes really good. I think athletic. Greens could become a habit for you to and for seventy over seventy listeners. The thrown in a free one year supply of vitamin d and five free travel packs of athletic greens simply visit athletic. Greens dot com slash. Seventy over seventy enjoying health. Experts athletes and health conscious go getters around the world who make a daily commitment to their health again simply visit athletic. Greens dot com slash. Seventy over seventy and get your free year. Supply of vitamin d and five. Free travel packs. Today this episode is brought to you by. Hp instant inc. No one is reading your mind. But hp instant inc knows when your printer is running low and sends you new cartridges. So you never have to think about anc. Save up to fifty percent. You'll pay less than five dollars a month for ink and never run out again. Find out if your printer is eligible and enroll today at hp instant inc dot com conditions apply for details visit hp dot com slash. Instant inc. spotify. If your kids know things about you that you wouldn't realize what are your students know about. You have no idea. Tragic rejoined into thirty. Two students were murdered. And virginia has kerry law still does that you can carry and i said to my students that i'm against the kerry law and so i had some students because you know they come from all over nestle. Well we have to have gone if somebody had a gun. Maybe some of those labs could have been saved. And i said or and this is my solution to it. If i had my way i would have olive you strip so before you come into my class. You would strip naked. And then you'd come in and i'd be naked so you can make sure i wasn't killing you and we'd have class and it's not a mickey again do that and i said well i hate to tell you this but i know you've either seen or felt everything when there's no secret fits and the boys just went. Oh no. She didn't say that. But i don't i don't know what they they probably say. Oh this crazy fool. But i'm trying to get them to understand what are we afraid of. Ny because there's nothing be afraid of so you don't need to carry again you know. I'd rather be naked than carry a gun. What else are you trying to get them to understand. That is their life and they have to do something else with it because this. This just isn't working. You know no matter what Are how we look at it. This is not working. I have ruined several things for my students have ruined thanksgiving for my students because we have a turkey whose been murdered and may have turkey. Who has been what it's called part you get you guys get the pardoned turkeys another. Yeah a lot of people. Don't but we do and the turkey. Who was what is called. Part has to ask himself or herself rather turkey. Why am i going to be without my friend. What is it about me that made me not be the chosen one. I would rather be chosen than to have to go back. The turkey feels bad because everything christ we could go out right now and cut a limb off a tree we would call it sat. I would call it tears. And so i'm just trying to get them to think. What are we hurting. And why are we hurting. Ruin thanksgiving for it. They won't eat durkee anymore. They hate turkey. What else have you ruined besides Thanksgiving and maple syrup at as close as i can to ruining christmas such a bad idea that you running around san. What will santa claus give me. The true joy of that holiday should be. And what can i give. Who can i share something with. What kind of life is it that you have spent half of the year trying to figure out what you want for christmas when the question should be but can you give. Who can you give something to. How can you share. Because it's a much better feeling. You are so much better for what you did in which you take and much. They can understand that. You're going to be good riders to. Did you know that when you were your students age. Goodness we talked about watching. Can't you see. Don't you see loneliness. Don't you see people who were cold. Don't you see a dog. that's missing leg. Qassam full ran over him. What are you doing with your eyes. If you're not looking. Have you always just seen that. I just don't remember not seeing a road appoint wants because I was here at home. Doing whatever one does in a spider Up the wall or something. And without thinking i killed a spider and look the point is called allowable an incredibly embarrassed about myself at the. Oh my quiet. I killed a spider and it was a reflex and not the on. You're not allowed to kill something because you're afraid of an i did write the polling and couldn't kill the spider but i don't do that because it was just it was just a regular spanish wasn't a black widow or you know one of the browns might something that would hurt you. It was just reckless spider. And at that act to be ashamed and i am i can do about it i am. You know you make mistakes you do you make mistakes you do things that are embarrassing and you do things that are contradictory that you wish you hadn't done. Do.

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"What's my favorite food. A love steak especially you career. And i love pasta actually. They're my favorite right now the but they used to give me a lot of trouble when i was much younger..

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"High school millions of them. Great scientists say. I don't want to become a scientist is boring. it's just memorizing. The parts of a flower is regurgitating. Boring stuff that. I'll never use again. We lose them because we make science. So boring is all memorization that who wants to become a scientist scientists about principles concepts like evolution or the aerodynamics of flying. It has nothing to do with well something to do with names. You had to give names to some of these things. But that's not what science is but that's what people think sciences. So when i write a book i tried to put principles concepts. That'll stay with you for the rest of your life. Rather than simply giving names to the stars or names the planets that's not size also about creativity. Great divvy and the mysterious and the unknown. I signed says that was more important than knowledge is the unknown. The mystery of the universe. That's what inspires people not the names of the planets but the possibilities of unknown clients. That's what stimulates scientific investigation. Don't ask you about one. More thing that i'll let you go okay. Miss might just be betraying myself as as a total pessimists even after this conversation but are you scared of dying well. I think it's genetic that we have no choice but to be afraid of dying because that's what evolution says you have to survive. Have children have progeny. Help the next generation survive so there gene can propagate. But you know. Like i said i think digitally will live forever is none. Of course the biological you but something of you will live forever and your memories. Your thoughts desires. Your consciousness will live forever. When you're digitized and you'll be able to interact with other digitized souls as well so you see there's hope but you try not to think.

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"If you've always said that you wanted to read more this summer's the time empower inter reader with literati book clubs where the world's most inspiring people share the books that most inspired them. And these are legitimately incredible people malala steph curry richard branson. It's super simple on your end. The books just show up every month and then once you're into it you can go on the literati app and they've got a whole bunch of extra context and insight into the work but then you really also in a book club with whoever it is pick these books so steph curry's doing interviews with the authors and you're able to ask questions yourself plus you can move freely between the clubs or you can get a standard membership. You can access everything and choose the books you want delivered reimagined. What a book club can be redeem your free trial at literati dot com slash. Seventy over seventy had to literally dot com slash seventy over seventy to learn more and read war with literati literati dot com slash. Seventy over seventy hiring. Great people is never easy right now. It feels particularly hard. And that's why you should get some help with indeed as soon as you sponsor opposed on indeed you get your quality. Shortlist of resumes that match your job. Description indeed has three million companies worldwide. Who use it to hire great people and grow their teams faster and the process is super simple. You can post screen and interview all right there on indeed and it makes connecting with and hiring the right talent fast and easy plus. They've got their own tools. Indeed instant match and indeed skills tests that on average reduce hiring time by twenty seven percent get started right now with a free seventy five dollars sponsored job credit to upgrade your job post at indeed dot com slash. Seventy over seventy. Get a seventy five dollars. Credit at indeed dot com slash. Seventy over seventy indeed dot com slash. Seventy over seventy offer. Valid through june thirtieth terms and conditions apply. This episode is brought to you by. Hp instant inc. No one is reading your mind. But hp instant inc knows when you're printers running low and sends you new cartridges. So you never have to think about amc. Save up to fifty percent. You'll pay less than five dollars a month for ink and never run out again. Find out if your printer is eligible and enroll today at hp instant inc dot com conditions. Apply for details visit hp dot com slash instant. Inc spotify Can you remember that first night. March ninth can. You remember what it felt like. Sure show of course. I remember her very well. It was in the old. Cbs eighty do studios at five twenty four west fifty seven th street. I was a little nervous. But the two things i kept saying to myself at who remember saying these things myself. One was aversion version. I can do it in spent nearly my whole adult life in preparing to do this and the other was. Don't take yourself seriously take work seriously. I already knew that. Being named to succeed walter. Cronkite would put me in a position of frankly inhaling every day kind of nasa grade rocket fuel the eagle and that could be dangerous. Yeah that sounds pretty dangerous. It also sounds like a little bit lonely. You know they say is slow to talk. I want to keep this in perspective. That i've never visited myself you alone person. I don't suffer rate loans. I didn't been but there certainly is a sense that you're it. It wasn't doing anchor. One person and there was always a great weight. I couldn't complain about it. Because i knew going in. But just stop and think trying to succeed walter cronkite. I mean close. Friends of mine urged me not to take the job. they said. listen. Nobody can succeed. Walter cronkite the first person who tries to do. It is bound to fail. It'll be the second person comes along. That's just the way life is. Dan and there wasn't a sense. I had a lot of help. A lot of friends thought was generally will of it. Cbs but in the end when the red light goes on is just you in the end. You're by yourself you're by yourself but also you've got to be so many things to so many people in that moment. Was it hard to like. Hold onto yourself in that job. Franklin candidate the answer is yes and the law muren that role the more difficult it is to say true self and to remember who you are and who you want to be As opposed to who a lot about people wanting to be one of the many legitimate criticisms can made of me is i. Try to be pleaser. That i i suffer. What's up its shero. Once called the americans z's wishes you want everybody to love and particularly when you're on television five nights a week the question of of who am i. You should ask more often what you wind up asking much more often is a what do they think. I did feel from that first night in nineteen eighty one for a good time after that. I did say aversion to myself. When you've always said yourself you wanna be a pressure later. Here it is. Here's the pressure so meet the pressure. you feel like both things can be true at the same time like you can both wonder what people are thinking in want to please and also be present in the moment in rising to the pressure like can those two things exist at the same time yes. I'm here to bear witness tuesday because it did with me. It won't always be successful. It'll sometimes the undertow of trying to please put your ability be depression. And other times. You're able to say to yourself frankly. I don't give a damn what they think i know. What's right are what we need to do. And you move to but you know i- lifetime in journalism is taught me that many people don't understand about journalism is whole that is it. Journalism is not an exact science. Journalism is more accrued artan. Nobody can do it perfectly. Nobody how has you're trying to help. The two are no matter how great you are and the mirage and to the world would tell you the same thing that even on its best days is you're likely to make some mistakes and part of being a complete professional at the level. We're talking you learn to accept that on most days up. Almost every day you'll fall short during it perfectly. Yeah you know. i'm. I'm in a way i'm not surprised to hear you say that in and i think that that's true but i also think that that idea is in like direct tension with the experience of the cbs evening news. While you were anchoring that show and really like what you were expected to do which was to be if not perfect then definitive shoe. I'd agree with that. And that idea the thing you're talking about the journalism crude art that it can't be perfected that it's not a science and yet everything from the aesthetics of that show to the tone to the way that you delivered the news. At least my impression is that it was designed to feel that.

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