35 Burst results for "About Sixty K. A Year"

AP News Radio
AP analysis finds growing number of poor, high-hazard dams
"An an an an AP AP AP AP analysis analysis analysis analysis finds finds finds finds a a a a growing growing growing growing number number number number of of of of poor poor poor poor high high high high hazard hazard hazard hazard dams dams dams dams the the the the AP AP AP AP found found found found more more more more than than than than twenty twenty twenty twenty two two two two hundred hundred hundred hundred dams dams dams dams in in in in poor poor poor poor or or or or unsatisfactory unsatisfactory unsatisfactory unsatisfactory condition condition condition condition the the the the average average average average age age age age of of of of a a a a dam dam dam dam is is is is about about about about sixty sixty sixty sixty years years years years old old old old and and and and so so so so there there there there many many many many dams dams dams dams that that that that are are are are well well well well over over over over a a a a hundred hundred hundred hundred years years years years old old old old del del del del Shannon Shannon Shannon Shannon with with with with the the the the United United United United States States States States society society society society on on on on dams dams dams dams says says says says there there there there needs needs needs needs to to to to be be be be a a a a fix fix fix fix because because because because a a a a warming warming warming warming atmosphere atmosphere atmosphere atmosphere is is is is bringing bringing bringing bringing more more more more storms storms storms storms if if if if you're you're you're you're in in in in the the the the area area area area impacted impacted impacted impacted by by by by a a a a flood flood flood flood caused caused caused caused by by by by the the the the failure failure failure failure of of of of that that that that damn damn damn damn your your your your your your your your your your your your life life life life is is is is potentially potentially potentially potentially at at at at risk risk risk risk it it it it should should should should be be be be it it it it should should should should that that that that they they they they have have have have failed failed failed failed the the the the one one one one trillion trillion trillion trillion dollar dollar dollar dollar infrastructure infrastructure infrastructure infrastructure bill bill bill bill signed signed signed signed last last last last year year year year by by by by president president president president Biden Biden Biden Biden will will will will pump pump pump pump about about about about three three three three billion billion billion billion dollars dollars dollars dollars in in in in two two two two damn damn damn damn related related related related projects projects projects projects Samuel Samuel Samuel Samuel Santos Santos Santos Santos goes goes goes goes fishing fishing fishing fishing at at at at the the the the dam dam dam dam at at at at el el el el Capitan Capitan Capitan Capitan reservoir reservoir reservoir reservoir in in in in California California California California earthquake earthquake earthquake earthquake the the the the big big big big earthquake earthquake earthquake earthquake you you you never never never know know know what's what's what's gonna gonna gonna happen happen happen if if if this this this is is is gonna gonna gonna hold hold hold Capitan Capitan Capitan is is is on on on a a a growing growing growing list list list of of of dams dams dams rated rated rated in in in poor poor poor condition condition condition or or or worse worse worse I'm I'm I'm at at at Donahue Donahue Donahue

AP News Radio
Police arrest suspect in Museum of Modern Art stabbing
"Philadelphia police have arrested a suspect in the stabbing of two employees inside the museum of modern art in New York authorities say sixty year old Kerry Cabana was arrested without incident early Tuesday officers had been searching for him in connection with a fire that was set at a Philadelphia hotel on Monday he was found sleeping on a bench at a bus terminal New York City police say Cabana was caught on video leaping over reception desk and stabbing to museum employees Saturday after he was denied entrance his membership had been revoked after two incidents of disorderly behavior at the museum the workers were stabbed several times they're recovering from non life threatening injuries I'm

AP News Radio
Don Wilson, guitarist with The Ventures, dies at 88
"Guitarist guitarist guitarist guitarist don don don don Wilson Wilson Wilson Wilson of of of of the the the the ventures ventures ventures ventures has has has has died died died died of of of of natural natural natural natural causes causes causes causes according according according according to to to to the the the the Tacoma Tacoma Tacoma Tacoma news news news news Tribune Tribune Tribune Tribune Wilson Wilson Wilson Wilson was was was was eighty eighty eighty eighty eight eight eight eight I I I I marches marches marches marches are are are are a a a a letter letter letter letter with with with with a a a a look look look look at at at at his his his his career career career career Wilson Wilson Wilson never never never got got got tired tired tired of of of playing playing playing walk walk walk don't don't don't run run run and and and he he he did did did for for for nearly nearly nearly sixty sixty sixty years years years the the the ventures ventures ventures are are are the the the best best best selling selling selling instrumental instrumental instrumental group group group of of of all all all time time time with with with more more more than than than one one one hundred hundred hundred million million million records records records sold sold sold one one one five five five oh oh oh was was was another another another big big big hit hit hit for for for them them them Wilson Wilson Wilson said said said in in in a a a two two two thousand thousand thousand eight eight eight A. A. A. P. P. P. interview interview interview they they they recorded recorded recorded in in in many many many genres genres genres but but but so so so many many many people people people thought thought thought of of of them them them as as as a a a surf surf surf band band band not not not that that that I'm I'm I'm putting putting putting surf surf surf music music music down down down I'm I'm I'm not not not but but but I I I think think think all all all of of of us us us surfing surfing surfing group group group alone alone alone the the the the the the I'm I'm I'm not not not happy happy happy about about about that that that

AP News Radio
#BettyWhiteChallenge raising money and awareness for animals
"Today today would would have have been been Betty Betty white's white's one one hundredth hundredth birthday birthday and and the the Betty Betty white white challenges challenges under under way way to to help help homeless homeless animals animals shortly shortly after after Betty Betty white's white's death death on on December December thirty thirty first first someone someone started started a a fundraising fundraising drive drive on on social social media media asking asking her her fans fans to to donate donate five five dollars dollars to to an an animal animal rescue rescue organization organization in in Betty Betty white's white's name name the the actress actress was was a a lifetime lifetime advocate advocate for for animals animals did did you you know know that that approximately approximately nine nine million million animals animals enter enter U. U. S. S. shelters shelters every every year year even even hosting hosting a a weekly weekly show show called called the the pets pets at at the the head head of of the the American American humane humane organization organization says says Betty Betty white white supported supported that that charity charity for for more more than than sixty sixty years years and and says says she she knows knows that that she's she's looking looking down down from from heaven heaven and and really really smiling smiling about about the the donations donations that that have have been been pouring pouring in in another another group group of of best best friends friends animal animal society society says says it's it's received received twenty twenty five five thousand thousand dollars dollars in in donations donations recently recently made made in in Betty Betty white's white's name name I'm I'm Jackie Jackie Quinn Quinn

AP News Radio
Louisiana governor pardons Homer Plessy, whose segregation protest went to the Supreme Court
"Louisiana's Louisiana's governor governor has has pardon pardon the the black black man man who's who's eighteen eighteen ninety ninety to to arrest arrest led led to to a a Supreme Supreme Court Court decision decision that that allowed allowed racial racial segregation segregation in in the the United United States States for for nearly nearly sixty sixty years years there's there's never never a a bad bad day day to to do do the the right right thing thing Louisiana Louisiana governor governor John John bel bel Edwards Edwards said said citing citing a a posthumous posthumous pardon pardon for for Homer Homer Plessy Plessy is is something something that that should should never never have have been been needed needed in in eighteen eighteen ninety ninety two two the the thirty thirty year year old old shoemaker shoemaker part part of of a a group group trying trying to to overturn overturn laws laws against against equal equal rights rights after after the the civil civil war war was was wide wide enough enough to to buy buy a a train train ticket ticket New New Orleans Orleans with with black black enough enough to to be be arrested arrested for for refusing refusing to to leave leave a a whites whites only only railroad railroad car car when when he he lost lost his his case case before before the the Supreme Supreme Court Court Plessy Plessy versus versus Ferguson Ferguson ushered ushered in in an an era era of of unabashed unabashed racism racism and and segregation segregation that that was was considered considered legal legal until until brown brown versus versus the the board board of of education education in in nineteen nineteen fifty fifty four four the the pernicious pernicious effects effects of of Plessy Plessy linger linger still still at at a a ceremony ceremony near near the the spot spot where where plus plus he he was was arrested arrested bel bel Edwards Edwards says says she she was was beyond beyond grateful grateful to to help help restore restore plus plus he's he's legacy legacy undefiled undefiled by by the the wrongness wrongness of of his his conviction conviction this this party party is is a a step step in in the the right right direction direction I'm I'm Jennifer Jennifer king king Louisiana's Louisiana's governor governor has has pardon pardon the the black black man man who's who's eighteen eighteen ninety ninety to to arrest arrest led led to to a a Supreme Supreme Court Court decision decision that that allowed allowed racial racial segregation segregation in in the the United United States States for for nearly nearly sixty sixty years years there's there's

AP News Radio
Watch Betty White’s Funniest Moments, From ‘Golden Girls’ to Feuding With Ryan Reynolds
"TV TV legend legend in in golden golden girl girl Betty Betty white white has has died died at at ninety ninety nine nine the the Betty Betty white white was was America's America's not not a a sweetheart sweetheart her her wholesome wholesome smile smile and and saucy saucy delivery delivery made made her her a a television television mainstay mainstay who who charmed charmed viewers viewers for for more more than than sixty sixty years years she'll she'll be be remembered remembered as as the the loopy loopy widow widow rose rose Nylund Nylund in in the the golden golden girls girls who who drove drove her her roommates roommates crazy crazy with with her her tales tales of of her her childhood childhood in in fictional fictional St St Olaf Olaf Minnesota Minnesota the the judge judge two two nine nine very very dangerous dangerous anymore anymore born born in in nineteen nineteen twenty twenty two two in in Oak Oak Park Park Illinois Illinois she she moved moved to to Los Los Angeles Angeles as as a a toddler toddler graduated graduated from from Beverly Beverly hills hills high high school school got got her her start start in in local local

AP News Radio
Harry Reid, former Senate majority leader, dies at 82
"Long long time time Senate Senate Majority Majority Leader Leader Harry Harry Reid Reid Nevada's Nevada's longest longest serving serving member member of of Congress Congress has has died died Democrat Democrat Harry Harry Reid Reid was was Senate Senate Majority Majority Leader Leader during during the the administrations administrations of of both both president president George George W. W. bush bush a a Republican Republican and and Democrat Democrat Barack Barack Obama Obama in in twenty twenty sixteen sixteen as as he he was was leaving leaving the the Senate Senate re re talk talk about about the the highs highs and and lows lows of of leadership leadership have have been been times times when when I've I've been been terrified terrified frustrated frustrated but but you you know know the the Karen Karen the the frustration frustration passes passes quickly quickly read read was was known known as as a a fighter fighter and and tough tough negotiator negotiator during during his his decades decades in in office office former former president president Bill Bill Clinton Clinton noted noted that that his his work work in in the the Senate Senate resulted resulted in in millions millions of of Americans Americans living living better better lives lives reed's reed's wife wife of of more more than than sixty sixty years years lander lander reed reed says says he he died died peacefully peacefully following following a a four four year year battle battle with with pancreatic pancreatic cancer cancer he he was was eighty eighty two two I'm I'm Tim Tim McGuire McGuire

AP News Radio
LSU hires Kelly away from Notre Dame to be Tigers next coach
"The the Brian Brian Kelly Kelly R. R. at at Notre Notre Dame Dame is is coming coming to to a a close close after after Kelly Kelly agreed agreed to to a a deal deal to to become become the the next next football football coach coach at at LSU LSU the the sixty sixty year year old old Kelly Kelly will will make make the the jump jump to to the the SEC SEC after after guiding guiding sixth sixth ranked ranked Notre Notre Dame Dame to to eleven eleven and and one one season season under under Kelly Kelly the the fighting fighting Irish Irish appeared appeared in in the the college college football football playoff playoff in in two two of of the the last last three three seasons seasons Kelly Kelly leaves leaves as as the the winningest winningest coach coach in in Notre Notre Dame Dame history history with with a a one one hundred hundred thirteen thirteen and and forty forty record record in in twelve twelve seasons seasons he he replaces replaces ed ed Orgeron Orgeron who who Ellis Ellis you you agreed agreed to to part part ways ways with with despite despite winning winning a a national national championship championship in in two two thousand thousand nineteen nineteen I'm I'm captain captain cool cool bar bar

AP News Radio
Oklahoma executes inmate who dies vomiting and convulsing
"The first execution in Oklahoma after a series of botched executions in twenty fourteen and twenty fifteen didn't go quite as planned sixty year old John Marion grants sentence to death for the nineteen ninety eight stabbing death of prison cafeteria worker gay Carter is the first Oklahoma inmate put to death since twenty fifteen he convulsed and vomited after being given a sedative the first of three drugs used in the execution two members of the execution team wipe the vomit from his face in his neck retired AP reporter Michael Graczyk still covers executions for the Associated Press has witnessed some four hundred fifty such debts and recalls only one instance of someone vomiting during the execution in an email statement the department of corrections said the execution was carried out according to protocols and without complication six more Oklahoma inmates are scheduled to die by lethal injection through next March I'm Tim acquire

AP News Radio
Judge says Oklahoma can proceed with 5 lethal injections
"Hi Mike Rossi a reporting a judge says Oklahoma can proceed with five lethal injections a federal judge has cleared the way for the state of Oklahoma to move forward with scheduled lethal injections for five death row inmates judge Steven free yet denied a motion for a preliminary injunction that attorneys for the five inmates were seeking the first execution in Oklahoma in more than six years is scheduled for Thursday one sixty year old John Marion grant is to receive a lethal injection for the nineteen ninety eight killing of a prison cafeteria worker granted for other death row inmates were removed from a federal lawsuit challenging Oklahoma's three drug lethal injection protocol because they all failed to offer an alternative method of execution hi

MinddogTV Your Mind's Best Friend
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on MinddogTV Your Mind's Best Friend
"I don't have that so that person is happy. I'm not happy here. In a part of the book is is really kind of acknowledging. Go ahead competitive. Go ahead and look to other people and want to be there but don't forget to acknowledge the massive amount of good and positive in your life because that's the human condition we take for granted all the good and we just focus on what we don't have an what's lacking in what we want. Yes i agree. I totally i and i think you know i. It's almost impossible to avoid this idea of comparison looking at somebody else's life and thinking They have it better than you. In some way a. But i will try to relate this story as quickly as can my life's changed about seven years ago when i was buying an amplifier from a guy in a mall parking lot off of craigslist. And he asked me what i do and i said play in a band he said. Oh you'll live the dream. And this. I left him its phases. You don't know the life i live. I'm not a rockstar. i'm club level musician. I enjoy what i do and he stopped me. Listen i made a lot of money in in the stock market and commodities exchange in retirement. I always wanted to play in a band of selling you my amplify it and not planning about sixty nine years old and we tie. That means i'm never gonna plan a ban in my from my perspective. You'll living a dream so here. He was comparing himself to me and for me. That was the first that we all do that. We look at other people and think the grass is greener on the other side and their life is better than mine so now and so no matter where you are whether you're up here on the food chain of The financial status or down. Here you can look at somebody else and think wow their life is better than they got it all altogether but we don't know you don't know somebody else's life until you walk in msu daylight absolutely and and.

The Charlie Kirk Show
There Is a Dearth of Courage in America Unlike Ever Before
"All of you are can play a part and will play a part in what is missing most in this country and so obviously were missing lots of things right now in our country or missing president. You know we're missing integrity truth but the thing that is missing all of you are playing a role in fixing every single day is courage. Courage is lacking in our country. Unlike any other time that i personally have seen an honestly in the last sixty years and the reason why courage is lacking is because so many people are afraid to do. What they know is the right thing. Because they're afraid of the downside georgia's patton who is one of the greatest men ever to live said. Moral courage is the most necessary yet. Absent characteristic and men now every single person here. Tonight is here on a friday night where you could be doing something else because you understand that. The country's falling apart quickly you're losing the nation at you once understood that you want to be part of and you want to do something about it but all of you here as a young conservative. You understand that this comes at a price and you're willing to do the right thing regardless of what that price might be. How many of you raise your hands for the adults to see. We'll be graded differently because you are a conservative in class. Yeah every single hand goes up and so what. You're willing to pay that price. You're willing to do the right thing. So here's what i do. I want to encourage all of you to start the speech that every single time. You're on these campuses. And you're starting a new chapter or your tabling or recruiting or doing voter registration. You're playing a role in doing the most important thing that we need to do. In our nation

MSNBC Rachel Maddow (audio)
California Has a Lot of Recall Attempts, and Not Just for Governors
"The city of los angeles alone. There are currently three efforts underway right now to recall members of the los angeles city council and the tone of the l. a. times here is telling quote another day another recall notice in the city of los angeles. You need a grand total of five voters to get together to begin the process of calling for a recall for los angeles official five voters. Literally you can start a recall with the number of people you can fit in your camry and it's not just lay across the state of california. There are more than seventy elected officials who are facing the threat of recall just this year. Because that's how they do it in california california asked for recalls all the time you can mount a recall campaign against any statewide elected official for any reason at all if you can achieve the grand results of collecting signatures from just twelve percent of people. Who voted in the last election for that seat. Not twelve percent of registered voters but twelve percent of the number of people who voted in the last election for that seat specifically. That's all you need to be able to get that. Statewide elected official. Put up for recall as low bars. Go this is kind of so low. It just sits there on the floor and invites you to walk on it. And so every governor in california for the past sixty years as faced at one attempt to recall them And you will of course recalled the successful two thousand and three recall of democrat. California governor gray davis. That's how we ended up. Bizarrely with governor arnold schwarzenegger for a hot but now the republicans are trying again with this. Recall attempt that they are mounting against democratic governor gavin. Newsom the polls close tomorrow tonight Excuse me close tomorrow night at eight. Pm pacific time

The Charlie Kirk Show
Will You Step up for Those Who Don't Want to Get Vaccinated?
"And for the people that have been vaccinated out there maybe willingly. Are you going to start to step up and fight for the people that don't want to get vaccinated. You know what i have found is so many conservatives that have been vaccinated there silent on this issue they really don't care and it goes to show that the circle of tyranny gets smaller and smaller and we saw this exact same thing happened with the tech companies. The exact same thing the same thing with tech companies when so many conservatives are like who cares if alex jones gets gets kicked off of apple and twitter and facebook and youtube. It's not me. Alex is alex and we don't like alice and that's that was the wrong way to go about it. That's the last type strategy and eat me last. Conservatives have been governing this country for the last sixty years

The Adam Carolla Show
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on The Adam Carolla Show
"Can see dr phil just watching it being like. This is great best. What point is your bank account. Get fat enough where you're just like fuck it. You know what i mean like. I don't need to see the guys freak out anymore. Yeah dr phil perspective. I'm just saying like right. Dr phil you figure out how old he is but sixty to suck the way. One hundred fifty million dollars got another golf. Yeah what. i'm what i'm saying is is someone someone might go. Well what do you got on the planet. Well okay got another nineteen years on the planet. Yeah but nine. Those are going to be going going back and forth to the hospital. Like you've got a good decade where you can go out and do a little sailing. Play a little golf watcher. Low internet porn. And then it's about sixty four years of age. I don't wanna two hundred fifty million dollars sitting in a bank accounts and don't wanna make money off exploiting people to the moment you die you wanna you wanna get your lake joy at a little bit give something in order to shoot one round of golf in between the grave and exploiting glac folk just one even if it's a pitch pot and we just do the nine holes and we did a par three. Yeah all right. Just hit a bucket at the range down the street. That's yeah that's what i'm saying but not right off the exploiting the feelings and of folks that are high on coding and then coming to the grave crazy about that clip is that he was like the first thing. It started out with a guy like crying and being like. I don't want people to see me on tv. Like this and dr phil been gets okay like you would. Most people would edit that part when it's like. I don't want people to see me on tv like bear. No more editing. Going on in our society. Gordon ever takes the stand. He's going to need a coach. Because i don't think good defense is love people. I love babies now going to help. Yeah emphasize not all. Babies are fantastic. Well said well. A person claiming to be affiliated with the internet activist collective known as anonymous has released a video aimed at kanye west. The video shows a person in the guy fawkes v for vendetta mask. Get up taking khania to task for being infantile and self obsessed and we have a clip of that. Don't.

The Rich Roll Podcast
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on The Rich Roll Podcast
"There was that too. You see like someone in their house like up above big rock was inside. It was a father and his teenage daughter. And they were videoing. I don't know if you saw this viral video around the pool. See the big rock is is quite far from where the range that far do they go that far. Oh yeah it's interesting. I mean. I run trails all around where this mountain line was seen. And i've never once seen one. I know they're around. Let me google mountain line range. Yeah how how far they wander. This is live online range. The kid is going to be fine although he was Wounded i guess it was a juvenile about sixty five pounds He had wounds. The kid had wounds head neck and upper torso. But i think he's going to be okay. The kids give me okay. Yeah they're saying it'll travel eight kilometers a day and up and eight kilometers a day but they returned to some kind of hub or do they just meander. This one is saying twenty. Miles might be there. They're in total range. That's twenty square miles. That's why yeah. That's a big rock would be kind of going over this peak down the other side. It's definitely in the rain. Yeah i think you've probably e biked up that exact territory. Are you making fun of me. Know if my e bike your mask that e bike out there. here's rich. Adam is to No that's not mine. That's that's dan's actually. Adam is to swim mask as riches to e by Another good slogan for a little bit but got back off a cycling also. I'm all about the swim. Swim is gonna help your back. You know that. I know. I'm hoping that's the case and i would love to get some pointers from a swim. Maybe we can yourself Do assume workout must do it. Prior to the next role do that pushed through the paces. Shout al roker. Did you see him out there. I did not. I see this link in the outline was about sixty seven years old. He was out there in in hurricane ida on a street but when you're watching them at i really in tight and you just see waves thrashing video roker pummeled by ways as hurricane ida targets new stays on his feet and then they pan out you actually on a sidewalk like he's not it. Looks like he's in the water at first but i actually on the sidewalk. Because he's he's a stud shout al roker. Yeah how about now roker shoutout. Who doesn't who didn't love al. I don't know. I don't know what he's like personal well. That's one form of endurance. But we got a bunch of other endurance to discuss today. Do enduro corner is back with newer high-altitude trails and glacier dodging the sports. You didn't know about hot on the heels of the three celebrities. You've never heard of that will be competing in mouths. Ports absences took your celebrity spot atom. You bowed out of malibu. They're like adam can't do it. Okay let's go we'll go to alexi. You guys are real celebrities long division. No the leadville. One hundred was this past week. Heard of that heard of it might have come up on the show before. Yes we've been talking about it because of robbie balancer This is an epic legendary. Ultra race this past year there were six hundred. Seventy eight runners and leadville for those who don't know is at very high altitude in colorado. I think around ten thousand feet. This ron has sixteen thousand feet of gain. Its highpoint is at hope pass. Which is twelve thousand six hundred feet. He hit that twice. Yeah it's it's an out and back. And robbie ballinger used it to complete his colorado crush so shout robbie mazing. Yeah i mean over the course of the summer he just never stopped running did the leadville marathon colorado trail which is five hundred miles a civil rush fifty. Then he summited all fifty eight of the colorado peak over. Fourteen thousand feet and culminated with the leadville. One hundred Which is quite something. I'm sure there's a documentary Or at least some some kind of film that's being made reece robinson was falling around chronicling all of this so shout out to my team. Ten thousand brother the mazer mother. His his post was great. He said his. I thirteen miles. He was surprisingly in good shape and he was like flying and then from then on it was like just brutal very hard to get seven miles like hitting the wall. Thirteen is i think. He only had like a day or two right in between his final colorado peak and that one hundred and it's unbelievable unbelievable. Yeah summit how much is this. Total elevation gain. Did he ever say. I don't know that'd be fun. Related it. yeah it's gotta be just bananas. Oh yeah. I mean it's gotta be hundreds of thousands. Yeah i know I in the race was adrian mcdonald. He did this race in sixteen hours and eighteen. Minutes was just like insane hundred miles with that kind of elevation gain in in just over sixteen hours. It was sub ten minute per mile average pace for the entire thing he wanted by forty minutes so dominated in sherman came in second. He's a four time leadville champ at sixteen fifty nine and third and this is really the interesting story from my perspective is anton crew pekka. Who's thirty eight now Came back after six years off competing essentially in any ultra race that he might have done one thing here or there but nothing of any significance since two thousand fifteen. He's a two time champion of this race. He wanted in two thousand six in two thousand seven and then kind of disappeared And he's somebody that was in initial inspiration for my journey. He's been around for a long time. I followed him forever. He used to do this blog where he would share his runs and he'd have these tow- maps and show you where he was training and kind of like this soul surfer of ultra running like ricky has ricky gates five to them a little bit And just you know somebody who i just think is cool like super cool and to see him. Come back And reestablish himself by getting third in this race i think is extraordinary. And it's really not that far behind not that far behind mean. He's been hampered by all kinds of injuries that all kinds of problems the rock climbs and rises bike. But i just thought he was done. I had no idea that he you know would make this kind of comeback. And i think what's cool interesting about it. Not just you know. Aside from the fact that he's just a cool dude and somebody that everybody wants to see do well. He's defied this sort of unwritten rule. That ultra running champions have a pretty short shelf life when it comes to maintaining their peak performance like there's a long history of ultra running champions who come on the scene unbeatable. They win a ton of races in a compressed period of a couple of years and then really struggle to maintain that or to stay on top. They never are able to really return to form. And i don't know whether it's because it's just too brutal on the body or the over train. I'm not sure. But the fact that he kind of took this break and came back and and just you know. Put his stamp on this race. I think is really cool. And it'll be interesting to see whether other ultra runners. These ultra owners. They go. they can't they can't compete at the high level in these races anymore. So then they go. And they tackle these f. kt's and do other types of adventures timothy olsen scott uric etcetera And you know being thirty eight. Anton i mean. I think it's pretty cool. What's the what what's like. Who's the all time leader in victories in these children. Not steeped enough in the history. Know that there's. I'm gonna get shellacked knowing that offhand. I mean there's plenty of people out. I mean scott. You're like there's there's lots of you know runners who go on these jags and they win tons of races. I don't know who is the most victorious of killian. Maybe scott your. I'm not sure okay But i should know that. But i don't and time with n hughes one on the women's side she's only twenty three and she's a leadville resident..

The John Maxwell Leadership Podcast
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on The John Maxwell Leadership Podcast
"You wanna learn something you wanna pick up a nugget. You wanna do something with it. And today john maxwell is going to join us and he's going to share with you a lesson that i think really emulates john maxwell better than most any lesson does. Today's title is how to become a lifelong learner. Or as long as i've known john twenty one years for as long as i've her. John talk about his years of awareness. Which is about sixty five years and really as as john is. Live seventy four years. John has been a lifelong learner. And i think that's the commonality to those of you in this podcast community. We want to learn showing up to learn something. i'm joined today after. John teaches with our co host. Tracy moral another individual that we could take a whole podcast and talk about how she has disciplined her line to grow and to be a lifelong now. John is going to be teaching after he is done. We'll come back and give application. Give you business ideas to create lifelong learning cultures in your organization if you would like to follow along as john teaches. We've provided fill in the blank worksheets for you and you can capture that at maxwell podcasts dot com forward slash learner. I look forward to joining you after. John teaches and share some things that will help us grow together. Now here is john maxwell..

Entrepreneur Stories for Inspiration: Millionaire Interviews
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on Entrepreneur Stories for Inspiration: Millionaire Interviews
"Got so excited. Sitting there at that hardee's restaurant i said. Wait and i sat down and drew up what he said and i realized it could work. I immediately called my surveyor. Who was about sixty five years old. Had a great reputation with the county for being a great upstanding man i said hey listen to this idea. And he said oh no. You've gotta be kidding. That's crazy. I know so. I convinced him to go with made to the county planning and zoning department two days later and we met with them. And i think he was quite embarrassed and that i was presenting this crazy idea and when i was finished presenting the lady behind the counter. She looked up at me over her glasses and she shook her. She said i've been working here for decades and no one's ever come to me with such an outrageous idea to circle the law and then she smiled. She goes but you did and she said. I don't know how you did it but nobody's ever thought of this and you did think of it. There's a loophole in our law. And you're right. You can legally subdivide this land and i couldn't stop you nor will i. I give you my approval. And i will stamp it when it comes in from the surveyor so i can't say that that was the end of our problems. That was the beginning of a painful difficult thirteen month process where we were rejected by banks where we fought using attorneys where we had to get new banks. We had to get surveying done. We had to get soil tests. We had to find five buyers for expensive waterfront. Lots in a very very difficult time to sell any lot far less an expensive waterfront lot and right in the middle of the mess. August september october of two thousand eight. We sold four of those five lots and we sold the fifth one not that long later and by within thirteen months by the spring of two nine we were one hundred percent debt. Free in fact we've been paid off our house and that's all because he started giving away your debt. We didn't give away any debt. We gave away money. Yeah well you give away money and more into debt. We actually did. We actually went deeper into debt for a while. And i don't recommend that.

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"Astronomers ability to determine the totally impact probability as well as hoping to predict the orbits of other asteroids. The program manager finesses nearer object observation program. Kelly fast says the agency's punchy defense mission is defined and monitor asteroids and comets that come near the earth and pose a threat this includes undertaking detailed astronomical surveys collecting data to discover previously. I know objects and refined over the models for them cyrus. Rex was designed to refine and test these models. They're hoping astronomers better predict where banou will be when it makes its closest approach to worth in twenty one thirty five. We'll make a close approach to earth. Now it won't hit the planet but it will pass awfully close and how close it passes. We'll be affected by earth's gravitational interaction with it put simply the fly by will change projector and consequently featuring counters with earth using this as deep space network instead of the computer models scientists significantly shrink uncertainties about ban's orbit determine the it's totally impact probability through to the twenty three hundred to be around one in one thousand seven hundred and fifty. They were also able to identify september. The twenty four twenty one eighty two as the most significant single date with a one in two thousand seven hundred probability of an impact. If it were to hit the earth resulting impact would be the equivalent of twelve hundred megatons. Kerley banou is one of the two most hazardous asteroids our solar system along with another asteroid called nineteen fifty. Da a one point one kilometre wide mountainside space rock a cyrus rix but more than two years in close proximity to gather information about it size shape. Mass and composition and monitoring it spin to victory the spacecraft also scooped up a sample of rock and dust from the asteroid surface. It'll be delivering that to earth on september. The twenty twenty twenty three for the scientific investigation. The precision measurements of banou will hope astronomers determine how the asteroids orbit will evolve over time and whether it will pass through gravitational keyhole during its twenty one thirty five close approach. This is in area in space. Which would sit below onto a path towards a future impact with the earth the asteroid where to pass through the right time to the effect of earth's gravitational pull but as well as gravity there are other forces also acting on banou including the accost ski effect the process by which the asteroid surface is heated by the sun during the daytime and releases that haters infrared radiation at night in the process generating a small but measurable amount of force capable of time of deflecting and change in asteroid over the path cyrus rix determine the akasa victim. Banou is the equivalent to an extra of about three grapes consistently acting on the asteroid. Now it's a tiny amount. Sure that still significant. When determining bananas future impact chances over the decades and centuries to come with is also considered other forces such as the gravity of the sun the other planets their moons and more than three hundred other asteroids as well as the drag caused by interplanetary dust the pressure of the solar wind and even be news paddock projection events. In fact the team even took you to account the force that cyrus. Rex exerted when performing. It's touching go. Sample collection maneuver last year launch from cape canaveral on september twenty. Sixteen the two thousand one hundred and ten kilogram. Sarah's rick spacecraft arrived in october two thousand eighteen. It's been three years orbiting the asteroid out the dudes as low as five kilometres mapping at surface it's geology its composition it's chemical makeup and mineralogy and of course collecting those samples for return worth this space time. Still the com- countdown to nassar's europa clip emission and crash and burn a major failure india space program all that and more still to come on space time in sixteen ten galileo paid through his telescope and sputtered fulbright moons orbiting jupiter. The discovery of these galais moons is the ben code higher europa getting meeting callisto dispelled once and for all the long held notion that also jill bodies revolve around the earth. Now work progresses on the construction of nasr's europe a clinician to the jovian ice moon. Europa which may also find evidence that fundamentally the understanding of the solar system europa has a radius of one thousand five hundred sixty one kilometers and means it's similar in size to the earth's moon data from one thousand nine hundred nine galileo. Probe studying the jovian system as all. The hubble space telescope suggests that a massive global subsurface liquid water ocean intending three times more water than all the earth oceans combined exists beneath europa's thick icy crust. Your ebbert self has been around for about four point five billion years but it surface is geologically very young about sixty million years old. It's incredibly smooth with very few craters especially compared to somewhere like the moon which is about the same age and that suggests that you rub is being continuously resurfacing itself. Perhaps through a process similar to earth's shifting plate tectonics that's roper travels around jupiter elliptical orbit and the planet strong gravitational poor 'cause this tiny deflects and stretch like a rubber ball in the process producing a lot of internal hate. And it's that internal hate which is maintaining the subsurface oceans liquid state hydrothermal energy from the moon's court left over from its formation. Could also be hitting the ocean at the sea floor. These unique characteristics have led nested dame europa to be the most promising place in our solar system the fine prison day environment suitable for some sort of life beyond earth you see. There's a growing chorus of astra. Biologists now believing that life on earth made began in the hot geothermal vents of earth's mission ridges kilmeade is below the surface and europa clipper could tell science more beth potential for life on other worlds importantly while earth and magazine swapping rocks for billions of years air by leading to the possibility of life on mars originating on the earth or alternatively life on earth possibly having started on mars any discovery of life on europa would most likely have originated there and if you have two places in our solar system where life started independently and that suggests life may be common throughout the universe but of course for life to exist in the oceans of europa the needs to be more than just watering energy also needs essential chemicals like hydrogen carbon and oxygen and that's where the clip emission comes in. It will try and confirm the existence of these ingredients. The missions launch from the cape canaveral space for space in florida was originally programmed for an atlas five rocket with a flight time of six years using one gravity assists from venus and two from the earth..

Here & Now
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on Here & Now
"Jean morocco in alabama. She has the division of allergy and infectious disease at the university of alabama in birmingham and. Dr murad said welcome back. He's got thank you having me. Negative twenty nine. Icu beds in your state. Hospitalizations up something tenfold since june. What does it look like well. It's very worrisome. For a number of reasons first of all we are seeing younger people getting placed into the icu's and actually going onto ventilators. And in fact. I think when the toll is counted we will probably see the death toll clearly escalating for younger people in this phase of the pandemic so in the previous face we had people who were on average about sixty five years old getting into our hospital. We're now looking at people about fifty three The other point. I'd make is that in contrast to our previous experience. Most of the people who are getting admitting to our issues are requiring intimation or getting ventilated. We'll give you our statistics today. Fifty of our sixty four patients in the icu are actually intimated. And that really ratchets up requirements for level of care intensity of monitoring and makes you very nervous about not having. Icu beds and staff. And i want to ask you about that. Mean hospitals staff. Are they able to keep up. Is it going to get worse for them. Are they able to keep up. Yes but by heroic measures so the spirit of volunteerism and sacrifice. I would say has been unparalleled in my medical lifetime. It's pretty amazing. It involves pulling people from other activities for example people who were supposed to be working on specialty services. Like say cardiology are now being asked to staff the icu's as grew care attending so that's certainly happening In terms of the facilities will. We're making it work. I can guarantee you if you're on a ventilator you don't really want to be in a hallway in the er so very very challenging and it is going to get worse which is what is making all very agitated. I wanna ask briefly about schools and masks as the semester begins in florida to more counties as you know have to find the governor and pass mandatory masking the numbers and some of these districts are startling. So what is the science. Is it reasonable to think that these districts that are defying the mask band mayfair a little better this fall absolutely and i applaud them I applaud them in not only following the science but in also paying attention to what the cdc has very clearly recommended. The evidence from ask wearing is now incredibly robust. We have pre vaccine data right from the previous era as well as post vaccine fantastic analysis out of north carolina just this past month looking specifically at schools who did and did not have mask use required clearly a difference in terms of the rate of infection being transmitted in those schools with mask. Especially because you can't vaccinate kids yet right you really are very limited in what you can do anything to keep kids protected And to keep that environment safe. I think should be very very strongly considered and and very quickly yesterday governor onto santa's in florida said kids who test positive with no symptoms should not have to quarantine. What is the science suggest about what happened here. Well last time. I checked Governor disentis can read and he also has access to the cdc website which is publicly available. The cdc website is very clear has an excellent excellent section on on schools And management and basically kids are treated exactly the same way adults. They are unvaccinated so they are expected to quarantine if they are exposed. You can test out of quarantine remember. You can get tested at five seven days and get out. Same thing for kids So again a measure to keep. Everybody is protected as possible university of alabama at birmingham infectious. Disease specialist jean. Murat thanks again thanks. Got a.

AP News Radio
Devastating Wildfires Advancing Through Northern California
"California wildfires that already incinerated to Sierra Nevada communities continue tearing through the state burning another town to the ground the colder fire which began Saturday ravaged grizzly flats the forest community of around twelve hundred people I'm nearly sixty years old by a whole house full of beautiful things that's Terrick shaves who evacuated to the outskirts of town we are watching orange and gray skies and watching our words are down to burn to the ground he returned Tuesday to see what was left I have been my drug use what I own what's left of his home in the tight knit community he calls home breaks his heart lied physically saw my home which is a pile of ash which is on an acre property and a thirteen sixty but on it's it's well ash everybody on my block is a pile of ash the scene repeated from street to street in grizzly flats a post office in elementary school also destroyed I'm Julie Walker

TED Talks Daily
Remembering Climate Change, a Message From the Year 2071
"Twenty two thousand. As we're a crux in human history they began with the first pandemic a slap to the face of everyone as they had to acknowledge that they were a single civilization on a single biosphere utterly dependent on science to keep them alive. Civilization is a fragile thing and although people started the twenties hoping to ignore that profound truth even after the first pandemic the great heat waves of twenty twenty three torched any such hope humans cannot survive combinations of high heat and high humidity that rise above an index temperature called wet bulb thirty five and that year the wet bulb thirty six events in india in southeast asia and in the american midwest killed so many more people than the first pandemic that it was made clear to everyone things simply had to change the arrival of the second pandemic put an exclamation mark on all that the question that desperate point was could things change could humanity stop it's destructive ways and restore balance to its relationship to its biosphere crucially. Could it lower the global average temperature of the earth in time to avoid killing millions more people more animals and indeed entire species looking back from our perspective sixty years later this of course looks possible because they did but it was by no means a sure thing you have to imagine what it felt like at the time when panic filled the air and no one could be sure. Success was even physically possible many declared that humanity was doomed. This is why that decade gets called the turbulent twenties or the terrifying twenties only much later did some historians began to call it the terrific twenties or even the roaring twenties although that's a historians joke and as usual a bad one it was not at all like the roaring twenties of a century before it was much stranger than that in these critical years lessons learned in the first pandemic put to use. The scientific community had rallied to meet that crisis in an unprecedented way. Unleashing a burst of cooperation and creativity never seen before and now they did it again.

The Garden Question
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on The Garden Question
"Joe how would you describe. Hills and dales. Heels entails is in a state it was a historic home of fuller e callaway senior. A lot of people are familiar with the callaway name. Through callaway gardens hills entails predates callaway gardens. It was started bad. The gentleman that began callaway gardens suit. Hillsdale's was actually started by his father and his mother was a private estate for many many years. The very interesting thing to me about hillsdale's at the garden predates the estate in. It's kind of our reason to exist. There's a historic boxwood garden. That's on the estate that was started in the nineteenth th century actually around eighteen forty one and when the callaway family purchased this property they purchased it because the garden here. That was the very reason that they wanted. This property they added onto the original partial in they purchased and built a home here to complement the garden. It was as i said a private estate from nineteen sixteen until nineteen ninety eight post nineteen ninety eight. We knew that it was going to become a public garden. And we knew that that was the wishes of the family of the last generation that lived in the house so we open to the public in two thousand four has been a public home and garden ever since well over one hundred seventy five years of of a garden being implies us rather amazing would that qualifies the oldest garden in the state that it's the very oldest. It is considered one of the best preserved nineteenth century gardens in the entire country. The fact that it has been continued under cultivation. It was never fallen into disrepair. There's so much of it. The design is still intact from the original century. Design's pretty remarkable that. It's right here in west central georgia. They will for people to come and see what would be the best way to describe. The gardens theme story garden is a boxwood par terre garden the over arching theme of it is somewhat spiritual in nature woman that initiated the garden in the eighteen hundreds was named sarah farrell in she and her husband blunt. Feral lived here the garden she created. It was her life's work. She lived here for about sixty two years gardening. She was very well. Educated woman very religious woman there is definitely a theme in the garden that emanates her relationship with god. There's a huge painting of the word. God we have a church garden. There are mottos letters. Sculpted out boxwood. That say god is love that kind of sets it apart from a lot of other historic gardens. There's not another one that we know of at has such a a religious thing to thorough viral started. The garden outta calloway was a second owner with her husband than alice. Calloway how did the other two calloway lady's influence the garden. I i heard this expression for this is not original. May i think it's actually in our orientation film but the garden beguiled her. Her husband fuller senior. Grew up in tripp county and new mrs. Feral personally knew of the garden in he visited here and had a relationship with his feral. That's quite warm. From the time he was a boy on he married he met ida as a college student. She was going to college here greinke. They met and eventually married. I'm sure that she knew. Mrs farrell is well when the ferals passed away. Callaway family lower that mrs farrell had prior to her dad had encouraged fuller senior to purchase this property because she knew his love for it. That eventually did happen. It wasn't automatic but that did happen ida from all of her notes that we have her gardening notebook..

LGBTQ&A
Edafe Okporo: Seeking Asylum in the U.S.
"Law that passed into doesn't fourteen in nigeria. That made same sex relationships illegal. I want definitely get to that but before while you were growing up. But was the general feeling attitude toward gay people. generally jerry's predominantly pit rocky so like men. I supposed to be man. We met a supposed to steer to them. Just like united st sixty years ago but the was put that was done by amnesty international into sanity that shows their ninety. Eight percent of nigerians believed that gay people added costs of the country problem but green up really really young. I was kind of a firm units but because of the kind of violence. I is key that people. Why do you like that. You should play soccer things like that made me kind of change. Our ib to become on the airstream rights to be very very much. And i grew up in a predominantly christina varmints and the christian religion. Don't believe that's should be like if you're gay you are possessed by demonic spirits or something like that says really long way for me to fight true or this kind of towards and really say that i am gay is hard to grow in such kind of cities and things that you're gay while so. When did you start to feel comfortable telling people so people were in closets all his know that it is hard to come out of your closet. It is very difficult. I forward myself almost three years. I did a go. I joined charged seminary. I became a political surpassed like augustine's. You're like i knew him key but i just don't want to believe our gay but one the i was reading on the internet is a quote from make that dr bernard out we give our oppressors biden align ourselves to be ourselves so i ran out undefeated on a was seen to myself. Am i really key things like that. So one day. I went on the internet and i discovered a gated uppercut manager is football in like our earned some parts of africa by the. What's it called. Menachem man jam. Gotcha i emit a guy who to me. If you have feelings florida guys. you'll be. And as i said only g.

Double Date with Marlo Thomas & Phil Donahue
On a Date With Reverend Jesse and Jacqueline Jackson
"It was a bitter cold november morning. When we got to the airport we were heading out to chicago. My old stomping grounds to visit reverend. Jesse jackson and jacqueline jackson not only are these two civil rights icons his work with martin luther king her lifelong activism. But they've been married throughout all yearly sixty years. I was really looking forward to it only problem. Our flight from new york was severely delayed and we were five hours late for our date. It was awful. I really hate being late for anything but even though it was already evening by the time we landed. They said come on over anyway. I've known them for decades and that's the kind of generous people. They are The children well. They all still talk to me. That's a good side. Jesse was diagnosed with parkinson's disease several years ago but despite his condition his spirits were lively and jackie. She's always full of life. As we settled in jesse began to recall their early days in college. She was a into modern dance and she had been librar- and beautiful begun. Measure parents versus freaked on her bills. A-plus all the time though the pluses so you beginning you say wait. What would values you share. The foundation was marriages. Don't last long as they have. No the norwich told free. Russa's deep is larussa foundation when the wind blows can't take it as i see what roles without roots. It cannot grow right over. How lucky you were to find. Jackie i mean other women would have run out the door because you were never home. I love you. I was lucky. I told him because he was going and going and going and then he wouldn't inform me. I went to him. And i said reverend. You're supposed to make me abbey. And i was. I mean because i really felt a man is supposed to make you happy. That's his

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"It's undertaking survey of the entire southern wisconsin in six different with from the ultraviolet type of a section of the red pen. Basically it will ultimately catalog or something like six billion all jigs in southern scott that people can access one about bodices of stars because temperatures the motions that we can get from guys by else go. We can learn a lot about this. Tonight's the saas to that bullets about the galaxy. So there's been going for about five years now we've had three releases. The diner is publicly accessible. Gone up. I knew dot edu dot you. People download images of the five at five of the scott expect to finish way in about a year. Yes the oldest man stars found in the halo of the galaxy. Were fairly simple. Answer that in the sense that we think the highlights which is roughly circle allegiance surrounding the galaxy but that was the first operation could while gas was still in roughly spirit and shy. it hasn't yet collapsed down to the these where we see most stuff relation galaxy today. Now the fact that you've got an age for when this star formed of around thirteen billion years that must also therefore give you a set of parameters fool win population three stas existed. Yeah i mean we actually eyesight this particular stop. It's very hard to get the individual stuff so basically we're shooting that because it is a very little four. One thousand of the solid is the former very early and models of how the elements up time suggest that you get to these kind of bonuses about sixty million years detroit stars for becker says this could be much older than thirteen billion years. We think we know. The universe from the cosmic wired report point eight billion and then three hundred to four hundred million years after that. We had the first docile. And that's when we first population three stars formed and if they lived for maybe just two or three million years. Would you think they bid like james dane. That's it that they're very massive very message. Dog burn their feel very quickly and explode generally at label on catches blackhall. Vince professor gary kosta at of the first star team at astra three d. at the australian national university and this space time still the com l. Milky way black hole as a snack and richard branson undertakes a successful suborbital test flight on virgin galactic unity rocket plane all that and more from space time..

The Children's Hour
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on The Children's Hour
"That's another really good all the penguins in the world except one lives in what is called the southern hemisphere. The part of the world below the equator so there are no penguins in the north where we live. There are no payments. You see a polar bear. You won't see penguins so penguins all live in southern hemisphere from the equator to the south me. And there's one penguin that it's actually found inland northern hemisphere that crosses the equator in only one and that one penguin is the galapagos penguin and there is one little colony of those winds found. Exactly one half mile north of the equator in the galapagos islands. And that's the only penguin that lives in the northern hemisphere to go see all eighteen species of penguins. You had to go to some pretty far flung places. Yeah i i have been to some very very very remote places places that you can only get to by special arrangement antarctica's very far away hard to get to an antarctica surrounded by an ocean which makes it even harder in in that ocean lots of little islands and some of those islands are the only place you can see a particular species of penguin. So you've got to figure out how to get to really far away islands. But they're beautiful. When it was higher it was a lot of fun adventures. I think i'm always surprised by penguins. They're so small when we see photographs of emperor. Penguins live down in antarctica. It just in my mind. I had always envisioned that. They were these huge animals. And then when i see them at zoo or somewhere in person they're actually pretty tiny little creatures. Aren't they well. The emperor penguin is three and a half feet tall to four. It can give me. It can get quite large when you see it in person it's strikingly big and it's closely related to the king penguin which is just about three theme and of the others are about two feet twenty inches to twenty four inches. So that's not a big not a big bird but they're not teeny like sparrows either. So it's all kind of relative. I guess you can say are penguins all related to each other. Yeah they're they're all they're all numbers. Less family called cintas. Could i so they are. They are definitely related by the way the ancestor paying when the the fossil in one of the big fossils fines for penguins from about sixty million years ago was a six foot tall penguin biggest bigger than a person. Bigger than all the kids. here we're talking with dr charles bergman. He has visited in person all eighteen species of wild penguins. We've got a lot more questions for dr bergman right after this. This is the children's hour.

In The Thick
What Is the U.S. Doing to Help Cuba?
"Get to it with our first topic. Which is actually about the historic protests in cuba where thousands of people took to the streets all across the country amid an economic crisis in food shortages exacerbated by the corona virus pandemic. In the last few days we've seen the government in cuba restrict internet access and block most social media sites. Although from what i read. Twitter is still like bobbin in cuba because the government uses twitter and also there were reports of over one hundred people who have been arrested or missing and that actually is. According to amnesty international and at least one person has died in clashes with police on wednesday. The president of cuba miguel diaz canal announce that they would lift restrictions to allow travelers to bring food and medicine into cuba from abroad. There is also an admission by him saying that his government could have done better with these protests that was interesting meanwhile back in the united states i feel like a comic book like meanwhile back at the white house on thursday president joe biden call. Cuba quote failed state and condemn their government's actions. We also know that the us has a role in this as there has been a decades old. I mean more than sixty years trade embargo by the united states against cuba which essentially prevents any business between the countries didn't back to nineteen sixty two k. So this has become an american tradition. Now the embargo just what it is. Yeah right you know what i'm saying. So but then the other thing is during the trump administration and this is what i find interesting. There were more sanctions put on cuba under trump and flight and remittances from family members in the us to cuba were even further restricted by the bynum ministrations. Pretty much has done. Nothing since biden has come into office. Nothing's really changed when it comes to cuba which you would think by now you know if we all remember obama he was like. Let's lift the embargo. You know what i mean. It was like you're in that administration. Joe right but according to the vitamin administration. They said that they are reviewing these policies but they've yet to reverse. Any of them are fabulous intern. Sarah her shandor spoke with an i guests. She has been on. Itt before seventy nine three goes who is a correspondent for political and somebody is of cuban-american descent and she has been reporting on cuba. This week and sabrina talked about the government's suppressive tactics like cutting internet access. And what cubans are hoping for so. Let's listen connecting for people has been a difficult. There's friends that. I haven't heard from in days that i know went out for the protests in there is that frustration anxiety about were. They beat in where they arrested. Are they missing an. It's hard to connect with people at this moment but a lot of people feel a level of frustration and desperation. That i had not heard before i mean. People have been tired of the dictatorship in cuba. But i will actually say from my perspective. Who was born and raised in cuba has been in exile in the united states for the majority of her life at this point. She's ninety one and she is optimistic. That change can happen. I mean her attitude about this is it can't stay this way forever and that these human rights can be violated forever. People can't be going hungry in dying on the streets from the pandemic without access to a hospital without access to medicine let it cannot continue that way indefinitely so that if it doesn't happen this time it has to happen at some point

Loving BDSM
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on Loving BDSM
"All kinds of stuff like all the specialty stuff that the average bakery just doesn't cater to and they have a whole rest of menu of kito recipe like baked goods kind of thing. And you had one thing you want. I went to order it. And they're like oh we're on vacation that we and the earliest. We could have an order. Ready for you would be like july tonia birthday. That's the almost sixteen year olds word like he doesn't wanna keep over. Linda's the sixty year old does so. I'm like i can't i can't get you your kitoke. It was the only thing you asked for. We hope we'll go out or order. Something nice and i don't know what you do that but it's like i can't really throw you like a party one party throwing kind But to what so. Yeah i'm just trying to be really supportive when and make sure it's a great day us me but you. Yeah you've kind of had a mental thing about it so cheered up. It's it's kind weird. I had a tough time. When i turned thirty and every birthday since thirty has not been a problem but something about sixty thirty year. Yeah yeah i like about thirty was all non twice as well i think part of it was you know i grew up in hippie mentality. Don't trust anybody over thirty. Like i'm thirty. I can't trust myself anymore. I turn thirty your deadly. Frankly i find the demands more trustworthy than the non deviant and yesterday the folks asking. Can't you bake a cake. I could but part of the fun was these are way better than anything ever gonna make figured out. He was celebrating. But it was the one thing you ask. I can't give you the one thing you asked for. And thank you for the birthday wishes lists and a happy early birthday to you now. We're a family of cancers faulk and house. If i go by the records on lola's paperwork she's they gave her a july birthday. I think that's based on the day. They found her. I don't care july eleventh actually remembering correctly you The fifteen year old might aunt own she if those who are like i know about the cancer in the true sense the amount of texts. I've gotten about this storm. That was not a storm house. And what's so funny. Is that two of the cancers are a lot alike but neither one seeks or wants to admit it but they can't understand why the butt heads all the time. I'll just keep my scorpio ass over here staring at both of them with a knowing. Look so.

The Fantasmagorium Show
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on The Fantasmagorium Show
"It's just an interesting sort of. If that's the way that the the show runner envisioned the end of tony soprano or at least. The audiences connection with tony soprano. Maybe there would have been an indignity to seeing him die or be schlumpy family. Who continuing on with his. New ferries deeds. You wanna re read these last two sure absolutely and so damn your back. I love how it's not. It's not swearing. Youtube is his name. I loved the show But the ending is what i was talking about when i said it was dreadful now. Okay i'll be. I know a and you're not. You're not obviously you're not wrong but you're not alone. People think that. Feel the same way. So and i get it. I understand Just for me it just hit me in. I felt it was a perfect ending for his character. At i think he i think he got back. I there is no right or wrong. Answer and then is and then i think finally as we go damn says scott and i've talked about this before we probably have but i love when tv show followed the bad guy but when you end up loving them kind of having sympathy for them. Tony soprano walter. White dexter bad guys. You root for great. Tv show writing. Well heck even. And i know this isn't on the scene but don draper is not a good man but he is a philandering dick literally. His name is dick and sons of anarchy. I i it. These aren't heroes. Their flawed fucked up. People that are the but there are presented in a way that like you said that you get sympathy for them like What do you call Unlike the not a reluctant hero there like a an anti hero in yes anti here. Now i agree and those are some of my favorite shots. Sopranos dexter great seeing. I've only seen the first season of breaking bad. I know but. I've only seen the first season and watching that evolution just within the first season to see how walter white can go from milquetoast science teacher car wash employees to the time when at at the end of the first season with his first real hit on everyone in seeing his emotional reaction. You understand and you And you sort of sympathize even though he is doing horrible horrible thing. Yeah and. I'm sure it gets even worse but we we can talk about my breaking bad issues at a later date other so much to. There's so much good ness in the subseq-subsequent seasons seasons do man at brian. Johnson has a really good episode. I've heard i've heard today notes. Yes yeah. I love that show. I was leading the party onto. Took a bunch of people on the internet's interwebs. Tell me all right. Go watch ship. Can you imagine living in the seventy s and not having a vcr and the only way that you would be able to re watch television shows or anything it would be through reruns or maybe. If you get the only way you'd be able to see a james bond movie if it was on the abc sunday night movie like four channels so now go watch. W- we live where we live in a day and age that it's up. Lots of amazing Special per let Movies or just genre film. In in general we laid out the little age of these amazing not only properties of books or comic books brac novels coming to ask all these different Platforms that man. I it just you know. It's like a religious you know. Manna from heaven. Almost no absolutely yeah and it is fantastic. And i would say i would say if you are an to go against what steve just said but like we do have a plethora across the board. But if you if you aren't interested in any of the stuff that's coming up now and nothing's really tickle your fancy. Don't forget there's a hundred years of film history about sixty seventy years of television history. You can go through. There is going to be something that blows your mind and going to your point.

SpyHards Podcast
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on SpyHards Podcast
"Amazing screenings of a huge amount of older films. And yeah and then. I've been back a couple of times for screenings and someone who's well of got some tickets booked for this weekend at my local cinema to get back there so i am one hundred percent back in the swing of it. I have missed it so so much and you know they are being very careful to. Have you know the seats. Role terribly distanced. And keep your masks on for unless you're not eating or drinking during the during the film but but even then even so even with those limitations. It is just a tonic to be back in the cinema. I have my first my first ticket for this friday for an advance screening of quiet place. Part two oh cool. I should be fun or not. Fun as the case may be that very scary potentially the prince charles sitting. Actually i'm going down there to see goldeneye off the end of july and that should be fun and as for your your book. I actually just picked up a copy today versus hollywood. That's coming through in the post next couple of days. So i'll i'll shipped over to sign at some point absolutely to agent scott course now. What inspired you to write this book. Well yeah the these are kind of issues. I've been talking about and writing about for a while. You know You're a regular npr podcast. You probably heard me talking about some of the stuff about women in film and you know some of the horrific statistics about the lack of female directors and the lack of female leads. But this was an attempt to kind of decode it for myself really as much as for readers so it was attempt to kind of go through and look hollywood history. And and look how this came about why we tend to assume that you know Women aren't directors. You know that's that's sort of a male job by default and and how that kind of became almost know solidified in in of hollywood history because there were women there at the dawn of the silent era and they did make films and they were directors and producers and studio heads. And all the rest of it and then just disappears for about sixty seventy years. It still not quite back yet. So so yeah it was just trying to look at some of the different forces that have kind of created this situation where over eighty percent of directors are male over eighty percent of film. Leads are male as well so just like most films are about man a man stuff. Most oscar winners about men There's much more overlap between best picture and best actor than there is between best picture and best actress because women films about women don't tend to win best picture..

insaneopedia
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on insaneopedia
"And i were like. Oh yeah now i take that as a real thing just like a squirrel in the forest to me i believe in spiritual things i believe in what i've seen him when i i'm not gonna have anybody tell me it's not real because they don't believe it or they haven't been able to open their mind to it right but what do you think about. The earth's corby lopsided article the other day about the that's cool. I read a lot about that a while ago when they were looking at the two struck. There's two structures inside the core that are upside down going the other way. They think that's from the impacter caused the moon. Possibly and now the reason it's lopsided no is if you think about getting whacked from the one side. It's still lopsided from that in some of the heavier metals. Always sink to the bottom of like where it was heated. The most asked for is crazy. So probably that one side has the most heavy metals and those two crystalline structures that stick down from the mantle. They think those are in opposition to the weight. There right right. So it's basically offsetting talked about centrifugal force and polar polar shifts and crustal displacement. Charles hapgood serious. Crustal displacement where like moves quick on the the mantle moves quick over the so a part of that might be something where every now and then because we're spending so fast the irt just does a quick adjustment. i would've out that water's disappearing everywhere. I recall we're talking about the moon just reminded me. Oh this can never be good. It'll be quick. Oh boy there's this guy I can't remember his name right now. But i will. I won't remember it. Probably now at some point will drop it out there. But that's what we call syndrome. There's a there's a cool theory this guy. A scientist has a another one of these harvard. Physicists that does all these a lot of guys have been looking for reasons. Why the moon is here. I don't know. Did i talk about the moon capture thing. He's he's thinking that he's done some. Some number crunching is well-known physicist right and his theory is that the moon was captured by the earth about sixty thousand years ago. And that would explain. A lot of these mem- remember. I talked about how looks like the pacific washed up and pushed all the dirt to the right from the west east. His theories pretty cool because he thinks it came in from the west and tidal bulge polls the planet which forces like the tidal wave to go in front of it will he thinks it came so close it was actually pulling the entire crust of our planet up like thousands of feet as it rippled across in a matter of our and brought all the water from the pacific bat which would be basically explaining by pulling the moon because gravity used to pull the moon as the moon was close. It's pulling against the earth. all right. yeah. I got because it's gravity is going to jr against the plan. I always think of the opposite way so it was kind of pulling the bulge. The moon would do the same thing. We'll probably have a bulge towards the earth. Probably a bigger one than we would say..

WORLD OVER
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on WORLD OVER
"Archbishop would this embrace eucharistic exclusion and obscure those other issues in catholic social teaching. First of all Roads the chairman of the doctrine committee made it very clear that the document is not going to single out any one issue. It may mention a number of different issues as examples of direct attacks on human life and dignity mobile not single them out saturday. Catholics are divided on this issue of abortion. But the bishops have called it the preeminent issue of the day. It's not just another policy issue. As i just said a moment ago every big moral question has a political dimension so i look back in history where we now shudder in horror. Mid nineteenth century the our country had to go to war over the question of slavery we should abhor that. Were slaves at one. Time saver exist in this country Going back About sixty seventy years ago that the lack of civil rights pre-civil rights south. We are in order. Think that some people african americans raven lynched and this was condoned and even celebrated by some Leaders in the pre civil rights south where in the us bishops on that on the ishmael slavery. They were quiet. Bala church was just beginning. It was very of vulnerable position trying to fit into the american experiment. That was quite a challenge for catholics immigration and the bishops despite the emphatic teachings of the pope denouncing slavery were were complacent in order not to create any political weights one hundred years later clergy religious and lay people and the catholic church join forces by their faith leaders to bring about civil rights. Sunday people will look back on this era of history and shudder..

Stuff To Blow Your Mind
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on Stuff To Blow Your Mind
"Or four counting system in which the number twelve would be very significant But like i said it's still not you know there's no consensus on exactly what this is and how it was used. But it's such a fascinating artifact and If the schengen bone is in fact a piece of mathematical technology from prehistoric times it would not be the only artifact that has been interpreted this way. there are some other ones. I want to mention There isn't even older artifact known as the lebombo bone that was discovered in a cave between swaziland and south africa of seen several dates cited for it Moster between thirty thousand and forty thousand years old but it is a baboon fibula with twenty nine notches on it that has also been interpreted as a possible Counting aid for a lunar calendar. Yeah interesting oregon press overthinking. It's like basically breaks down to you. Get you get thirty. Notches on your baboon bone. Then you're thirty first baboon absolutely free. Well that does bring up the issue of the difficulty. In interpreting things like this i mean the the groupings of numbers on the schengen bone really do seem mathematically significant But but it's it's always hard to know right. It's always hard to know what to make of these things when you don't have like a written record that corresponds with it. That can tell you how it was used. But but i guess the the numbers don't lie like the numbers of the thing that's most tantalizing about it because yeah they have values. They have relationships to each other. It comes back to what we were talking about in the last episode about about what number specifically are they're not just You know it's not just. The fact is an individual quantity but it has relationships to to other quantities to other counts. So i wanna mention yet. Another ancient bone ancient prehistoric piece of bone with with his on the may have had mathematical significance. This one i read about in an article that actually mentioned in the previous episode. But i'm going to refer to a bit here This was an article that was a news feature in the journal. Nature by colin barris called how did neanderthals and other ancient. Humans learned to count. Obviously this is what we're talking about today. And this one brings up another artifact of this kind of this is an artifact discovered in the nineteen seventies at the site of Late pro-dole near laima and it's a chunk of bone from the femur of prehistoric hyena and so about sixty thousand years ago one of the neanderthals. Who inhabited this region at the time. Made a fine modification to this bone. Chard cutting exactly nine notches in the bone with a sharp implement. Now there are tons of ancient bone pieces that have cuts in them that are clearly random an accidental and these are almost certainly from the processing of animal carcasses and there are features of those kinds of cuts. You can sorta you can tell what you're looking at. Usually they're like you know they have certain qualities that you know. Usually you can look at and say yes. This really does look like it was from the processing of carcass to get the meat off of it but there are also plenty of ancient bones and shells that are carved in a deliberate regular way that seems to indicate some ancient form of art or decoration. And this article by cullen barris calls attention to an archaeologist at the university of bordeaux named francesco jericho who believes that this bone artifact from sixty thousand years ago in france may be different from some of the those other ones that have the regular decorative slashes and carvings in them So it's not an accident of butchery. He says and maybe not. A work of art but of storing or numerical information. He believes these markings are the signs of tally. And if that's correct of course it would mean that..

Scale The Podcast
"about sixty k. year" Discussed on Scale The Podcast
"Percent return on your time invested when you do it right the five minutes for two hours so when you're thinking about on boarding somebody whether it's generating revenue with nine essay or removing administrative or marketing tasks from your business. Just be very thoughtful about the things that you're going to have them and just approach it like any project. I'm going to teach them to do this. I'm gonna teach him to do that. I'm a and then once they get this. I'm gonna go to this when this. I'm gonna go that. That kind of clarity up fronts will will build value and build a team in build that that kind of employee employer relationship. Where like russ you can say man. I'm never this this. This person is indispensable to my business. Look forty to years of being in partnership with and by the way it's about sixty percent year less in cost than hiring somebody physical so you've got the cost savings and you've got the return on time. Invested of seven hundred thirty three percent. And now once you've given something away you can go on and do higher dollar productive baillieu stuff and i just think we assails people. We like talking. I could talk for another two hours with And you guys. That's what we do. And that's what i think. The focus of a real estate company broker agent should be on talking. That's a good point daniel Seventeen forty seven. That's all in its taxes insurance Yeah and we give vacation time. We they have a great healthcare program that a hundred percent of our virtual assistance. You know us We to conferences a year. We have people for support over there in the philippines. I'm actually going next week to do our. We have a new year party a kickoff for the two thousand nineteen party in different areas. So you know. We are thinking of us as your staffing company with a real estate emphasis and the the ability to take advantage of this much reduced cost. We're basically bringing outsourcing tune entire industry. That didn't have it ten years ago. That's what we did down. It was a it was great and because people know who this person is but there was a buddy of mine and i will mention his name not with elevator. Anything on he was he was hiring. Va's through craigslist in the philippines and for some reason was just never working out and then i says well i said you should call my out. Ask me did and i think he had two gals from you for a long time. And he says while it's it's it's never been like before so Yeah it is a one. Stop shop Yeah we align our values as a company and your guys is values as an organization. We just freaking line. And that's why i love about it. A servant leadership. We have a servant's heart so we believe that if we're helping enough people that will lead to us building a large business and so go to the website if you wanna have a consultation or happy to give all those guys were happy to talk to you and and you know. I'm certain that we dive into your business. We can help you discover what is.