25 Burst results for "Alan Jackson"

AP News Radio
How is Harvey Weinstein's Los Angeles trial different from New York prosecution?
"The legal team for movie mogul Harvey Weinstein is presenting closing arguments in his rape and sexual assault trial in Los Angeles. I'm Archie's are a letter with the latest. Defense attorney Alan Jackson told a Los Angeles jury that fury from witnesses does not make fact and tears do not make truth. Weinstein is charged with raping and sexually assaulting two women and committing sexual battery against two others. Jackson says with two of the women, the encounters were consensual, and with the other two it never happened. Prosecutors said in their closing arguments, it's time for Weinstein's reign of terror to end

WTOP
"alan jackson" Discussed on WTOP
"Of this tragedy. Which started out as a Halloween celebration on Saturday night. Thousands of mostly young people flooded into the narrow streets of Seoul's nightlife district. But the crowd grew into a lethal crush. And the Halloween party turned into a her show. At least two American college students were among those killed in the surge. A woman says Harvey Weinstein sexually assaulted her in 1991 and in 2008. Oscar wells Gabriel reports. Kelly seyfried is total Los Angeles jury that disgraced Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, sexually assaulted her in a hotel room during the Toronto film festival in 1991, and that he did it again when she tried to confront him about it in the same hotel 17 years later. As you might expect, Weinstein's attorneys had a field day on this during cross examination, Alan Jackson noted that the person that cipher described to the jury seemed like someone she would avoid at all cost, but instead he noticed she took his calls and even visited him a second time in New York. Wednesday is not charged with the exit seifert alleges, prosecutors put around to show jurors Weinstein's propensity for the crimes he is charged with. A Moscow's Gabriel Money news at 25 and 55. This is a Bloomberg money minute. Here comes the fed, officials sit down later today for the start of a two day

AP News Radio
Woman says Weinstein sexually assaulted her in 1991 and 2008
"A woman has testified that Harvey Weinstein sexually assaulted her not just once but twice Killy cipher does total Los Angeles jury that disgraced Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein sexually assaulted her in a hotel room during the Toronto film festival in 1991 and that he did it again when she tried to confront him about it in the same hotel 17 years later As you might expect Weinstein's attorneys had a field day on this during cross examination Alan Jackson noted that the person that seifert described to the jury seemed

AP News Radio
Woman says Weinstein sexually assaulted her in 1991 and 2008
"A woman has testified that Harvey Weinstein sexually assaulted her not just once but twice Killy cipher does total Los Angeles jury that disgraced Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein sexually assaulted her in a hotel room during the Toronto film festival in 1991 and that he did it again when she tried to confront him about it in the same hotel 17 years later As you might expect Weinstein's attorneys had a field day on this during cross examination Alan Jackson noted that the person that seifert described to the jury seemed like someone she would avoid at all cost But in steady note she took his calls and even visited him a second time in New York once is not charged with the exit seifert alleges prosecutors put her on to show jurors Weinstein's propensity for the crimes he is charged with I'm Oscar wells Gabriel

AP News Radio
Weinstein lawyer presses woman over absence of rape evidence
"A tough day on the witness stand for the first accuser in the Harvey Weinstein rape trial in Los Angeles the previous two days Jane Doe one got to tell the jury her side of the story what bit by bit that account was picked apart by an attorney for Harvey Weinstein the main thrust of the cross examination there is no forensic evidence that proves the movie mogul returned 2013 as Weinstein attorney Alan Jackson or their photos no documentation of injuries no A rape kit No Video No but this time the accuser at it you think somebody have to rate makes a video the defense is seeking to convince the jury that the claims by Jane Doe one were all made up I'm Oscar wells Gabriel

The Doug Collins Podcast
"alan jackson" Discussed on The Doug Collins Podcast
"Jim sarker's with us. And he has written a book on 9 11. And I'm excited to have him with us to share about that book, but also share just a lot of what's going on around this because I know there's a special emphasis for this book as well and we want to get to that. So Jim, welcome to the Doug Collins podcast. Yes, sir, Doug, thank you for having me on today. I really, really, really appreciate it. I really understand we're coming to that special time and I say special time and I mean that in a solemn way. I mean in a positive way, but also in not a way of flippantly saying that. I think we look at it in many ways, what happened on that date changed a generation in many ways. And it changed not only a generation of my age because I was at that point. You know, in my 30s, you know, generations, you know, and you've gotten to know my producer. He was in, you know, before age ten, you know, my kids, my wife, your family's as well. Talk to us about your new book. Tell us what, you know, emphasize from it and, you know, who it's helping and then we'll just get into some specifics about it. Absolutely, sir. So the time is 9 11. So we see 9 11 at 9 11 a.m.. We see the time again at 9 11 p.m.. So for about four or 5 years leading up to me manufacturing or coming up with this concept, I kept seeing the time 9 11. So when I was an operations manager at the Indianapolis airport, I was searching an aircraft and when you're at an airport, you always want to know what time it is. For some reason, you have to know what time it is. And it seemed like in the morning when I was doing it, I would look, it would be 9 11. And then when I worked the late shift at night, two times a week, I would look in to be 9 11 p.m.. And I kept saying to my wife, there's got to be a rhyme or reason because when I see the time 9 11, I automatically think of that day of where I was and what we went through as a country in 2001. So about a year ago, I was watching a documentary on World War II, very compelling, very heartfelt, very powerful. And as soon as it was over, it was 9 11 p.m. and I looked at my wife, I say it's 9 11, and she said, Jimmy, you better get started on that book.

The Eric Metaxas Show
"alan jackson" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"Today. So we need to get this right. We'll be right back talking to pastor Alan Jackson, the brand new book is out. We'll be right back. Snow. Seems. And I believe. Welcome back. We're talking to the author of a brand new book, big trouble ahead. Big trouble ahead, a real plan for flourishing in a time of fear and deception. Pastor Alan Jackson author of big trouble ahead. I think part of what you say in this book has to do with the idea that things are so bad that many people are turning to God. They're realizing there's no natural solution. There's no human solution. There's no political solution. We have to turn to God because it's too much for us to bear. We need to know that there is a God who cares. Absolutely, there is. We have tragedy fatigue. It seems like every day there's another shooting someplace or expression of violence or we see pictures of thousands of more people pouring across our border. Whatever it is and we're exhausted with it, to the point that people want to withdraw and it's creating depression and defeat and discouragement, church participation is lower than it's ever been. And there's such an opportunity in that to tell the story of scripture. Jesus didn't come to lead a political movement. He came to launch a spiritual initiative to set humanity free from the bondage to darkness. And that is the heart of the church's story. It's not whether we're methodist or Presbyterian or Roman Catholic or Greek Orthodox. Our story is centered in the redemptive work of Jesus. And that stretches across time and culture. It's not new to the 21st century. We have just lived such blessed lives. We've had such a fluence. So much freedom, so much opportunity that those things now that they're being threatened and disrupted, well, it has to be the end of the world. Well, that's a pretty awkward message if you're talking to a Ukrainian believer these days. Or if you have the opportunity to know somebody that lived in Rwanda in the 90s, when a million people in a hundred days were slaughtered, most of them with machetes, I'm pretty sure that felt like the end of the world, if you were living there. Sudan and their extensive Civil War two and a half million people have lost their lives. They're here crisis all over the world. We've just led pretty protected lives. And so we've had this rather cosmetic faith and God in his mercy has awakened us from that slumber so that we can actually invest ourselves in the eternal purposes of his kingdom. I don't even see it as punishment. I think it's a gift. He's asking us to mature and to grow up to learn to stand up. He's asking us to use spiritual muscles. We haven't used in decades to be honest. And that's uncomfortable. It's awkward. We're a little sore spiritually. We're looking at one another trying to decide if this is the right way to do this. And it is. Find a place where they're telling you the truth. Find those outlets, stop listening to the latest conspiracy theory and start listening to the spirit of God. We don't need another seminar debating whether the holy spirit exists or not. We need to know how to cooperate with him, recognize his prompting and yield his authority in our lives..

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
"alan jackson" Discussed on ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
"Or if you study the Hebrew Bible, you tried to understand what the Hebrew prophets had to say in the light of the culture in which they live. It strikes me as more than just a bit ironic that we would be interested in first century culture in our Bible, but not interested in 21st century culture in our Bible. I'm pretty confident John the Baptist would have lived to have been an old man if he hadn't talked about current events. The apostle Paul would have been spent much less time in prison and caused fewer riots if he hadn't talked about current events in the cities that he visited. We have to have the courage to tell the truth about our culture in light of a biblical perspective. I understand why there's anxiety around it, not everybody agrees. It's a pastors are employees. Sometimes it puts their jobs at risk. But we still have to have the courage to tell the truth. All right, pastor, we're going to leave it there. Congratulations on this very important new book. Big trouble ahead, a real plan for flourishing in a time of fear and deception folks. We've got a cop, we've got a link to this over on our website, but you can also go to Alan Jackson dot com ALL in Alan Jackson dot com and check out the pastor in all of his great work. All right, pastor, don't be a stranger, come down I 40, we're just hanging out here at Memphis, Tennessee. All right, good to talk to you again. All right, pastor Alan Jackson, everybody on the Todd starns radio show. You know, we talk a lot about patriot mobile, America's only conservative Christian wireless carrier, and they have been a longtime supporter of the work we are doing here, and I really appreciate the things they're doing at patriot mobile because they're mobilizing freedom across this nation. And they're also helping to support organizations that are fighting for causes we care about. Most recently, they are leading efforts in many communities to take back local school boards. And that's something we need to be doing on a local level in every municipality in this country. And I want to encourage you to switch to patriot mobile. They've got incredible nationwide coverage, and they have a plan if at any budget. If you're a first responder, if you're a veteran, they're going to give you even bigger discounts. Patriot mobile dot com slash Todd that's patriot mobile dot com slash Todd. That is the website. Got to use my promo code Todd, and they're going to give you a special discount and free premiere activation. You can also call 9 7 two patriot that's 9 7 two patriot, you're going to talk to somebody who is an American. Their customer service team is based right here in the good old U.S. of a. So again, 9 7 two patriot or patriot mobile dot com slash Todd. All right, I want to explain what just happened to our listeners. Now, if you were in the Memphis area, you didn't notice anything or if you're listening to us on the stream, but this program, it emanates that originates from Memphis and then goes up to the Westwood one satellite and at that point it's distributed to our radio stations around the nation. The satellite went down and so there was some dead air. We have it back up now. So you should be hearing us, but I got a note from one of our affiliate owners, a great guy out in the states of North Carolina. Hey, steins, we had to put on some bluegrass. You better hurry up because people are starting to enjoy the music. That could be a problem. I don't play the banjo. So anyway, so our apologies folks, it's really out of our hands. But we're glad we're back up and running. And of course, if you if you miss the Alan Jackson interview, we'll have that posted on the podcast and that's free of charge..

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
"alan jackson" Discussed on ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
"Some of the things you recommend people need to be doing. Well, first of all, limit your exposure to the media. 15 or 20 minutes a day and you can get the update on the news cycle. If you're spending hours a day listening to cable news or tracking down your favorite conspiracy theory on the Internet, it'll make you crazy. And so you want to stay informed and pay attention to what's happening, but you need to limit your intake. It's like sugar. A little bit good, a lot is pretty destructive. And then after you've done that, you want to be sure that you're spending time getting a God perspective. And some of that comes from spending time with your Bible, some of that comes from spending time with friends or acquaintances who have a biblical worldview. There is a clash of worldviews being lived out in the public square right now. And unfortunately, too many of our churches are not really reinforcing a biblical worldview. And so you need some voices in your life that will help you not only construct that, but understand that. Otherwise, you'll feel like you are losing your perspective. It's unsettling when they redefine marriage and redefine family and tell us gender is confusing. Gender is not confusing. People are confusing it. That's an evil thing to do to children. So be sure you have some you spend some time constructing that worldview based on scripture. And then offload your fear, don't make fear a companion. There are frightening things happening in our world, but we don't have to lead fearful lives. Our trust is in someone who will secure our future beyond the constitution beyond the Bill of Rights beyond Wall Street or the strength of our economy. The one who secures our future created the earth and everything that's in it. And we have to spend time actually thinking about that. Focusing on that, if we begin to do those things, then I think we have a stable platform with which we can integrate with our culture and our society as ambassadors and not be fearful. All right, pastor Alan Jackson on the patriot mobile newsmaker line, his brand new book out called big trouble ahead, a real plan for flourishing in a time of fear and deception. You know, pastor, one of the big concerns I've had is this movement among some churches to disengage from the culture and really going so far as to encourage their church members not to engage or participate in the political world. And I'm wondering what you would say to that and how would you counsel people who are Christians? First of all, I'd thank you because you're a truth seller and I appreciate your courage to do that. And then I think we have to recognize the church has an assignment to engage our current culture. I agree that we don't have to be political. I'm not advocating for candidates or parties or platforms. I'm an advocate for the kingdom of God. But our faith has to be understood in the context of the culture at which we live. Anyone who has had theological education in a formal way or even if you've done formal Bible studies, you've attempted to understand your New Testament in the context of the culture of that first century environment..

WGN Radio
"alan jackson" Discussed on WGN Radio
"Me And then you have the cherry And he says how can I meet this girl How can I meet this girl So he's just take a drama class And so one of my other friends when I was there with my girlfriend he introduced me to Ronaldo and I mean we just I dated a lot but once I saw Aldo and looking and we just clicked I mean we just clicked And I said yeah let's your brother And just after that rally you know like the song that was playing I know you don't like certain But it was Alan Jackson Remember when And the slide show is like remember when we got married you met your but it all fit in It was wonderful And it's just oh my God you know when we were in Florida I mean I just you know my sister in law put that on my computer And I kept it together everybody they thought you know they were worried about me That everybody was so proud of me how I kept myself together and I was talking to everybody And trying to introduce everybody but it really it just went perfectly So many and so many friends and everybody just talking me and everything and I'm trying to Rick this is so and so and all that and it just it was perfect and then we just you know we have to be left So everybody was staying outside for a while So Bruce who came with Calvin and Marcia he was with eve was carrying my purse He was my new best friend too And I was just talking to our other friends we haven't seen in years And I said it looks like it's clouding up Maybe I should go back To the van So I just got in and then my nephew Chris came out and he was just talking to me and talking to me So I said you know your uncle rondo and I really loved you a lot because he was very close to Aldo And Kelvin he really I mean he looked very nice And but just the thing he said well every time in school you know when Ronaldo was walking with me you know so tall with his leather jacket and the cigarette He said when I pass by like some mean kids I want to have to run Because rondo looked like you know you're not going to mess with anything And he said Rollins always if somebody did something bad to him Ronald always got back at the person And I didn't even know he had these things But anyway that went just absolutely fabulous And then We started this out and forgetting so much has happened Then Monday I had the crew of guys came out to declutter my house Oh great Great I mean God was really working Because I had Mike Eli and Joe And I said oh my God And they did it's amazing Raleigh with telling it you know donate toss keep you know they did the living room They did the dining room The kitchen and then I couldn't believe it I mean in all the years that we had everything all over the place I mean it's like I have my old house You know there's boxes that I have to go through you know and still 6 and put things away and stuff It was amazing They were they clean the kitchen I mean oh my God they opened the traits they cleaned the drinks They polished And then and then on Monday I had AMG She's from also senior services My helper So I have this nice young lady coming She says oh Stacey I'm here to help you Whatever you want me to do Right And she reminded me of my niece melodies She was so cute Angie says you want food Do you want coffee I'll do anything And as I said well just for now she has oh my God Oh everybody I just got so close with everybody and they were great And then the guys they came back we were supposed to get a big dumpster but they had gone to lunch But Tuesday I'm trying to make this fast So Tuesday I think we did get the large dumpster on my driveway And then the guys come and they're finishing up And so then they said we have to do upstairs The main master suite was the bathroom So then all the data gets to the no they didn't get to the yet Okay they came Monday and Tuesday and then Wednesday Angie came again And was helping And I'm telling you Raleigh you know I had written the check you know Marianne would tell us Yeah And I got blessings Let me tell you Say it works Every kind was amazing And then okay when's the guys they had another job So they came back Wednesday Wednesday Oh okay they came back Friday and.

Home Gadget Geeks
"alan jackson" Discussed on Home Gadget Geeks
"Sometimes if you want to add in the for what we're doing at church and you've got save only got three musicians, but you want to make it feel like there's more than that. And you want to play, would you use an app like this for that or is there another app that you might use to augment or add in additional musicians? Yeah, so we have an application that is actually forgetting what it's called now. That one? Multi tracks and then it is the playback app. So multi tracks is kind of like the website. And then within that, they have multiple offerings at the website and so we have this playback app that we use that is, it's like a really, really user friendly, not quite recording interface, but it's super cool because you can purchase a song that has 90% of the recorded individual tracks. So individual instruments, right? Yeah, yeah, so it'll have drums and it'll have alternate percussion. It has multiple keys, parts, synthesizers, base, every guitar track, they're recorded for the song. And what's cool is that we can pump it through the main mix. And then at the laptop right next to me, I can control the levels of all of that stuff. So that always the drummer's job or do you just take that on? I'd say traditionally it is in a lot of musical contexts if there's some type of laptop that's running either just click track or some type of tracks of some kind then the drummer is probably the most traditional. Conductor of that particular aspect. But we have had keyboard players do in the past. But just usually the way because the main reason most people use it is because it has the click track and it has what we call a guide in it. And so what's cool about that, it kind of limits you and puts you in a little bit more of a confined space per se. But it's structures everything really well. And so throughout the course of this particular track, obviously it's an exact amount of time. It will give you cues and it'll say verse. Chorus, and then it's counting, it's got a metronome that's in there, counting for you the whole time. So it really helps solidify the band, it helps, you don't have to completely memorize the song sometimes. The band is hearing those vocals. Yeah, yeah. So we have these days to get away with something like that. You got to use an in ear monitor books. Yeah, so everybody's wearing pretty heavily sound isolated headphones for the most part. And the cool part is that through a different application we use in our sound board. It's another app that we have on our phones, we can control our own mixes as well. So again, lots of layers, but the playback app is super cool because in the past we use this program called Ableton live. And it was basically pro tools. And you almost had to be like a rocket science to run this rock and scientist to run this program. It's not user friendly. There's all kinds of hot keys and little places to do little things. I mean, the sky was the limit. Space is the limit. You could do anything. Almost had to take a college course to know how to run this thing. Properly. And so it was really hard if we ran into problems, I didn't know what to do. I'd always have to ask our music director like, hey, do you know how to fix this problem? I know how to start and stop it. And that's it. So he had to spend a lot of time building these tracks and finding the right audio files and so like the cool thing about this playback app is it's all built in. All the sounds are there. You actually manipulate the different keys that you want to play in. So if you want to play an a, B flat, whatever the key is, you can manipulate that stuff too. And it's a much more intuitive user friendly. I figured out how to use most of the features, the first weekend that we used in, and it was fantastic. And I loved it. Really meant to be used on a phone or on a tablet device. And we use it on a laptop. So I just got a laptop and a little stand right next to me, and yeah, it's pretty great. So the Moses moist is moist. Okay, it's really you would take a song and the AI part is it figures out. You can take any song. And it'll figure out the parts. It'll go in and based on the frequency and whatever, right? It'll find the parts for you. And then you can start isolating them. Would allow you to take a song off the radio or whatever and do the cover on it. Where this multi track had some 19,000 and this is, it looks like I was looking through their catalog. Gigantic church collection, a lot of churches use this kind of stuff. But really, the difference is, is they have every part or almost every part in there. And it's able to modulate by keys. Which is you wouldn't do it. You wouldn't do that necessarily on the moist app. What is this app? Yeah. That would just be, hey, whatever the band did it in. You know what? There might be a way to modulate the keys in that app. I haven't or dove that deep into that. Aspect of it. But much more control. From a live music standpoint with the playback app. And it's a little bit more of a niche thing too. Mostly churches using it. Maybe if you were to cover band, depending on what kind of audio files they have available, I haven't gotten into that aspect of it either, but the context that we use it is definitely church, and that's the majority of the files you could download on it or for that. I remember going to concerts in the 80s and, well, let's just say the 80s. And bands are played, right? They just played and then they could go as long or short change it or whatever they wanted to, right? I'm not sure they were using click tracks in those days. I think the drummer, the probably not. Right? Yeah, pretty much. And I remember going, oh, this would have been maybe the early 2000s. I went to conference and they had three sound stages in Alan Jackson, who's a country country music guy at the time. And he was playing all of his songs to video. So as he was singing, his music video was playing behind. And I thought, that one, that takes an enormous amount of discipline because you have to do it exactly like the video, right? You can't know riffing, no, hey, let's go around for another chorus, right? No, you're gonna do it. You're gonna play it exactly like just as long as a video. And then as I've kind of watched you in the, you know, in kind of helped out from the fringe of what's going on in church. Realizing now just how locked in in some cases you guys are from a musical standpoint if you want to play to a music video or if you've got a certain you have certain instruments that you want to play with in the track, well then they just can't go around for another you know that it kind of requires some discipline that when I was leading music, you know, when we were doing when you were in my band at chapel hundred years ago.

The Bobby Bones Show
"alan jackson" Discussed on The Bobby Bones Show
"Because i'm afraid of that happening and it's like a really it's it's happened ever since that moment and that's carried with me my entire life and i wasn't even close to it so i can't imagine the people that were up there around those attacks they carry with them. Yeah oh my gosh things i do. They have even just being a spectator on the streets. Like seeing that it gives you a whole different feeling of being in crowded places like you said i know. Yeah it's really crazy to think how our world has changed since that moment. Oh yeah and even flying. mike. Jokingly say i'm ready to fight at any moment in time but that was one of those things where every time i get on a plane now like i'm i don't go. I know people like to drink at the airports and get tossed and get on the plane and whatever that's fine but for me. I like to to the plane sober because if something goes down. I'm like okay. What could i use as an object. The takeout that person and i dunno. Airplanes have changed a little bit. Now the the the cockpit door now has like a lock on it and it's bulletproof and all these things but still you know. I'm not i wanna be aware and go here and that if someone tries to take over the plane they're gonna they're gonna come through me and a couple other people that i've scouted out. They're gonna come help me. I mean he's my belt as a weapon. They've got to use as a weapon but it sucks that. We have to think that way because we shouldn't have to think that way then the kaku. How do we need to fight or flight in a sense and at any situation at a venue on a plane at school because the things like columbine and those theatre shootings. It's almost like those things they happen. They teach us how to move forward in life. But it also sucks. They happened in the first place. It is a absolute terrible thing that teaches us a really hard lesson. Yeah we don't wanna learn totally and also makes you think of like crap as the father now like what happened to that that adult or that teen and their life to make them want to do these things to hurt other people like like was no one around. No one saw any signs. I always like well. It was a good kid the always see in the news. He was a good cook always kept himself and he had straight a.'s. And all this stuff and you must have been something that showed that this person has some sort of signs of something like someone. someone just doesn't go from being a regular everyday kid to to blowing things up or shooting school down. It's like what happened. So i always look at it that way of like like. How could you help somebody even in our everyday life if someone down on like okay well no i don't i don't i don't i don't want to go to the extreme okay. This person's down. They're gonna they're gonna blow school but mike but something lead to that where someone is down and then they think of things that they wouldn't normally think of because they're down for whatever. The reason may be so i always i guess my point is i always try to look look at people with a different perspective in a different light of okay. Everyone's hurting in some way. How badly is somebody hurting. Because you don't want them to take it out on on others absolutely like you just lead with kindness because you don't ever know what somebody else is going through and you don't need to be the reason that's something else gets worse. Oh totally you'd want to trigger them in some sense yes is very easy to be kind to people and it's very also easy to get lost in like the hustle bustle of life in treat people differently because you're struggling or you're stressed or whatever so like as hard as that is like being kind no matter what in how much you don't want to sometimes is like the most necessary thing for all of us to kind of relearn again right outside of that like stop getting stuck in what we are going through and just be like okay. That's my life. Total not putting that on other people you know like i'm going to be kind and i helped them and then like go back and somebody else is going to help me because that's how it works paying afford but also sucks that knowing people out there and they they think they have no wanna go to return to talk to the. I feel like you could find somebody in your life if you're feeling some sort of if you're feeling one of these feelings or whatever you gotta find somebody to talk to you. Can't you can't let it eat you up and like i know. Sometimes parents are difficult to deal with and they're always telling me what to do and they're giving me rules. But i guarantee you one year parents would listen to you if you came to them with your issue versus you plotting out a plan to do something terrible in. What's really cool now. You know the more years that pass by mental health is becoming such a appropriate thing to talk about racist stigma. Yes yeah and it should be talked about so. It's changing the way that that happens. Which i think is so awesome. Just wish it was changing faster. Happening faster totally and happened sooner. Yes yeah because it's not. It isn't anything that we should meet afraid to talk about life like that is just what everybody everybody has something right. It doesn't matter if they decide to deal with that or not. Yeah they Chances harvey talk about someone you know as either dealt with it or or can relate to it in some sort of way and give you their wisdom and knowledge of how they dealt with it and you can take their knowledge or at least know that. Hey i got it off my chest and someone can can relate with me. That's great so now. I can just move on from it or through faster agreed. Oh man i know he had to end on like a somber moment and we should because today is a very important day. Oh yeah history in everything that happened. But i'm glad we got talk about it. And i'm glad you shared your stuff that happened because it is kind of crazy to look back on and see all of this and kind of relive it But i think it's important to talk about how we remember things totally and then through music. It's a great therapy and daryl. That's pretty cool to see that performance. Yeah i mean this song. Have you forgotten. And alan jackson jackson's actions at an h to his alan jackson's where were you in the world. Stop turning were to songs that i remember being on repeat in my family's house as soon as they both came out and it was funny. I would like to know who. I know who came up. I it was there. Wurley song came out first. Now jackson came out second. And i always wonder is alan jackson's that was already planned or as a reactionary to daryl's well. Hey i talked about it in the skinny this it came to him in like a dream okay. Chorus of the song he was like. I almost don't even feel like. I own the song because it came out to me so perfectly that just came to him that so obviously came after later but i. It wasn't planned from the way that he tells that story. So i think it was like something that was emotional and he must have been thinking about things and yeah. That's pretty cool. Which is yeah which is so crazy but yeah those those two songs were so very like very much a part of those few years after that and then even i know everyone of the show hates nickelback but they had that one song that was pretty big era where they they either created a song or they took one of their songs and they embedded a bunch of september eleventh like audio into the song. Do you remember that vaguely remember this. Actually a really quick nickelback Nine eleven still say everybody. 'cause i don't hate nickelback okay. Cool hero heroes actually from spiderman. But they took hero and they embedded some like not. I remember when they when they first came out with it. And i i. I wasn't there. And i had had no personal connection but i remember hearing that first version. I think he was in my hometown was in orlando and xl. Wanna six seven. They played it and it was one of those things where it just hearing the lyrics of. I'm so high. And i can hear heaven and a hero can save whatever and hero was and knocked on. We're but and they enter. We've like like like nine eleven calls and like people scream from the top like all that stuff woven into the song is remember hearing. Wow this is so powerful so my point is just music is a great therapy for tragic events. Always it makes you feel and generates feelings but it also brings awareness and all these great things so those are the three songs from that. Alan jackson the nickelback hero. Three really big huge songs. That helped us. I guess.

thebuzzr pod
"alan jackson" Discussed on thebuzzr pod
"Really really stuck with me. The great humor in songs on marvelous delivery to his performances in the shows singing just such a beautiful gentle man. It's hard enough to be inspired by people like that for me on lake. Marie go back over his career. Certain songs is a. He's one of my favorite songwriters will for all your songs are stories are storytelling a credible storage l. Bowers no. I guess so. Yeah i like bruce story songs. There's a lot of the men. There are leakers acoust- or says maybe a solo albums as really enjoyed like devils and dust. The ghost of jolt on. I'm very attracted to the story songs. An acoustic performances for the song has to be strong economy. Giveaway civilians on praying was was amazing. Springsteen is bob is the san bob dylan. Tom waits in. Oh there's a whole whole line of amazing musicians dude. Warren's yvonne as well know on here in ireland a lot of story sums imbalance are a really strong and really packed of society as well so go back really force question was something i was brought up on his level. You know the songs told the story of ireland's history of of community of the lands of the hills of the brits invaded us. We rhythm a little bit away silly little bit ago there but all in the history of songs on your learn a great deal of which country about your ancestors Unrealized may be poetic license in them. But that's okay i love. I love this stories. The way you approach writing song years earlier sir incredible They're very strong. The tracks coming up just like the one Is very me very haunting. Love song The lyric i confess more than what i say is incredible. Incredible high lobster can talk of. What can you talk about that. Sorry on what blood but sure that some lately i she. I think that's the line that the song is is hoped on our son. If not the main songs noted built around that kinda line he was written as as you hear it. I think it's very important On says an awful la of the town means. I think it's about that lane in particular is about self-love not being too hard on yourself confessing more than your sins. Honest about trying to find the strength. The strength of your soul in your spirit too. I'm just like the win. Things can change so quickly to win here. In those off the atlantic coast and can can be warm or cold. okay. That's sort of the haunting came from me with the south faction part of it while the intro was very reflective and tribal of at the bongos flu. I love it. Really created atmosphere for the song yet did elect that interest. You want to do something different with the intro. And as you alluded to with a haunting aspect of the sound talked to whistle and really well together and a little. Bit of inspiration from paul simon's graceland album for that. You know the way. Paul simon's mixed up a lot of his music over the years with african tribal beats on.

RiYL
"alan jackson" Discussed on RiYL
"Let's do it exactly i'd yet. Yeah no no. The epilogue was was fine. It's a it's a. It's a finite amount of text. It was something that i think it needed to be written Enough had changed that. I didn't want the book to feel dated. You know so data that it would continue to be used in people. Use it in adamy classes in high school science classes so i wanted to bring it up to date but now there's not that much united it's not like there's a whole lot of new things being done with cadavers. If anything there are there fewer. There's fewer need fewer per fewer uses for them as we develop more virtual programs and Yeah packing for mars. Seems like something that could probably get siegel at some point Yeah that could be. The kids was was fun to do for that one. Yeah i could probably do. Although it's it's the basics of taking in this entity a human being which evolved for earth gravity and we're putting it up in space without air without ready with all the things without the things it needs to survive. How do you deal with that. Plus the psychology of it. And that's pretty much. That's pretty unchanged i mean there are certainly you know the ace program and its goals have changed now. We have a private space. Reysen alan jackson richard and all of that. But that's sort of a different story. How was it experience of going back in not rewriting but i guess kind of re contextualising. This older book. It was fun. Initially my agent was like that sounds. Fun is cleaning out all your closets. Miss kinda like why would you wanna do that. And i said because otherwise they're gonna farm out. There are people whose job is to take a adult book in sorta run it through this grinder. Spit out kids book and my name would be on that. Because i have a particular voice i mean. Everyone has voice. But i didn't feel comfortable with that. And i also because the pandemic i had the time to do it so and i i enjoyed it it was. It was more writing than i thought it was easy to get into that rhythm of of shorter simpler sentences not packing too much into one sentence but but i had great editor. Who is very good at that. Works humorwise in that dozen ten. That is too complicated. And he has built in sense of what is appropriate for that age level and it was once kind of internalized that It pretty quick going in its Fun i enjoyed it. Could you see yourself at some point. Writing a kids book from scratch. Sure yeah i could imagine it for sure or even at a doing another adaptation. Probably not baulk. Not sure which one. But even step possibly. I don't know. I could definitely imagine doing that again. Related to bunk. That was the question ahead about packing for. Mars is there are also. Some sort of there is some kind of reindeer. I guess my question is is do. The poop stuff's day the Absolutely the poop step stayed the sex chapter did. Not that's go- that's been excised. Oh yeah the.

Pop Culture Affidavit
"alan jackson" Discussed on Pop Culture Affidavit
"I do feel. I should mention out of obligation really is the song. Where were you when the world stopped. Turning by alan jackson because it was one of the earliest songs about nine eleven to get wide. Release in airplay. That happened on november. Twenty six two thousand one and after he had debuted the song on november seventh. Two thousand one at the cna awards. Radio stations actually started playing that cna awards performance in lieu of novell single and the song entered the country. Charts number twenty five. That's the highest debut for a country song since garth brooks is the thunder rolls in the early nineteen nineties. Where were you in the world. Stop turning was eventually a number one single on the country. Charts it peaked. At number twenty eight on the billboard hot one hundred and earned jackson a grammy for best country song of the year as well as grammy for song of the year. Here's a small clip involved lawsuit near loved ones. The one to jaws for the people who walk saw. The ones live down with prime rib. Wine died just got some and look at yourself and what really another.

The Bobby Bones Show
"alan jackson" Discussed on The Bobby Bones Show
"Alan jackson. Okay i'll go without i'm down. Yes i mean. When i think nineties i do think allen so i love. I just love anything nineties. What song with like a song from the nineties that you really love cowboy. Take me away. That's an essential country like ninety countries. On yeah i would say that one. Take me away the chicks. Yes not goodbye earl. Do i mean that for sure. I do feel like goodbye. Earl is a very essential because it made so much of the nineties and it was controversial writings. Such a crazy song time right and now we all still sing it at the top of our lungs and it's still a controversial song. I know it's so fun to sing though. 'cause you're like okay you're meal oh good. Byrol my gosh white house okay. How does it going from lyrics. Yeah wait then Okay ready will maryanne. And wanda were the best of friends. All through their school days both members of the forage club of active. And they have a whole after graduation. Marianne win out looking for a brand new world right. Yeah look dollar around this town. And all sheaf foul earl turning down. I think we have blasted our ears about that. Okay oh we are really. We had dang how does it. I'm trying to hide the lyrics. Okay well it wasn't married that long to start again abused she but on dark glasses and long-sleeve houses and make together ever come on all finally governor defile. Devore's me take it from there. I don't know if we can this. We have to stop past fifteen seconds. Oh shoot we're going to get copyright or whatever it is and that was really bad. Because i can't even hear myself right now so sorry about that but i mean for me. There was a great great. Well i think you degrade but like for me. That was considered semi good. Oh yeah we have. We have something to talk about because your audition when when it makes it in this list brought back some. Ptsd for me okay. Yeah i wanna hear this. Because i was not here i. I don't think i knew about this. So i'm excited little bit to talk about but here it is. This is when we talk about our essential nineties country songs and you might want to have a pen and paper because you should write these down and make a playlist number six. There was a list on a website called the national news and they put out their top ten essential nineties country songs now before i get to their list. I'm gonna go around the room and have you guys pictures on the list. F three for kind of difference. My number one from nineteen ninety-one is brooks and dunn. Neon moon that to me is pound for pound the best brooks and dunn saw. Of course rodney dot saying it at our wedding and love song but still. I was like singing at our wedding. 'cause that's the best song so i put that on there. I also put.

4 Things with Amy Brown
"alan jackson" Discussed on 4 Things with Amy Brown
"But i'm like whatever people need to breathe. I get that even sometimes guests might be seen in some people's eyes as controversial. I can still turn on the tv or turn on another podcast. And i can still listen to what other people have to say. And i can still take in through my filter. Does this resonate with me. And what i need to do with it and if i don't need to do anything with it then i'm like okay. Cool wasn't for me. I don't need to like attack. Someone for having someone on that said something doesn't resonate with me. I don't get it either. Nancy was asking me how i put up with a negativity. And i guess that's how i just kind of have to brush it off nancy here. When she had a negative encounter at work she decided to go. Do something kind like send me a nice email and kind of vent but also be positive. So what do you do in something. Negative happens to you. So you're gonna think i'm just saying this because it's you but it's the truth you got me in the gratitude journaling and now i've made it like a priority that if i'm really irritated after meeting or someone does something to like throw me off ice it down and i write down for things that i'm grateful for. Oh look at you. Are you sure you're just that's like because sometimes it's especially tough for me when i'm irritated but it's the best time for me to it. Okay yeah i've things to be gripped for this person can throw me off. Yeah i agree with that method. I think it's a good one and yeah that's another thing that we've tried to encourage her on. The podcast is gratitude. And one thing that megan devine said and i keep repeating. It said it multiple times. It's like i have looked at gratitude as a way to maybe get over something but she said in grief she likes to look at gratitude as a companion. So you're not ever going to get over grieving. I mean you're gonna have different days in how hits right. It's a roller coaster announ paraphrasing but she did say one hundred percent gratitude companion to grief and i love that so much because we don't need to just like mask or cover up or put a band aid on our grief but i will say with the negative things that are happening that it can be a thing that changes your the trajectory of your day. Your our your minute everyday lately. I'm one day at time other days. I'm one hour at a time and then some days. I'm like one minute but it there's simple things i can do to feel more grounded. I could get with my therapist. And you know recap some of the things over the last several months that i've been doing to kind of reset if i need to and i think some of that if you're ever in a negative moment that's what you sometimes need to do is reset so i can. Maybe try to dig deep into all the different tools i've been given and maybe make it a thing of an episode one day. Yeah but i love your tip. Four things gratitude. We have a four things gratitude journal. But you don't have to have that you can write it in your own notebook. You just right on four things or you can tap into your phone or if you do want our journal. Same thing radio dot com for things dot com all the things which i see. I have to say tree talked about. How cool it is. That every morning. On robin roberts instagram. When she does the morning prayer. I see her for things. Gratitude journal every morning. I now so. I have screen shots of all the mornings. I feel like a stalker. Would every morning. We'll together day. I had posted about it. I posted a bunch of the screen shots to like. Show that i'm a creeper and i stock it and i circled the journal every time and then ironically or like. It was just a coincidence. But it could. I kind of felt like on per second after i posted it the one day. I go to see whatever morning prayers. The journal wasn't there and i was like. Oh no which did she watch my stories and now she's like. Oh this is weird. I've got to move this. But i think it was just an accident different book. Well there was the day that i looked that was like oh man. I kind of creeped her out. But i didn't which robin if you're listening. Happy sixteen year anniversary with sweet amber. You're probably not listening but you are. Shot up okay. Chase thank you for joining me is always good to have somebody just converse with. I'm anne thank you again to everybody that sent in an email. I know i only read to listener emails today. But i got some real long ones from other people and they seemed super personal. Said didn't feel right reading the whole thing so all right hope you have a great day. Thursday i will be having. Mattie jackson selectmen on for all four things and she's an awesome woman and entrepreneur. That lives here national but her dad has alan jackson y-yeah and speaking of grief and loss. She lost her husband tragically. Some of you may be saw in the news. But i think it was almost three years ago. They were out on a boat. And i think fell and hit his head and had a brain injury that took his life and they hadn't even been married a year and so she's coming on and we're gonna talk about some real things and they already done but i even asked her like what her favorite alan jackson song is. Because you know the family members always have a different take than like the rest of us that grew up listening to it and love like all the radio hits the favorite things so she you know that's the only time that we talked about her dad. The other four things we talk about about her and given everything that she's been through she has a lot to share. And it's got some wisdom so i hope you all will check out this thursday's episode with mattie jackson. Okay chase see later is by..

The Bobby Bones Show
"alan jackson" Discussed on The Bobby Bones Show
"It's powerful. Yeah just everything about it even like the music video like everything that went along with. It was just insanely memorable in the best. In worst ways. Yeah it gives me chills just thinking about trying not to cry. It's so funny. You picked that one because mine is also an alan jackson song to. I guess that yup is drive because it just brings back so many childhood memories. My dad talked about this before. He's got three daughters. His dad passed away and allen wrote that song about his dad who passed and then he talks about in the end like his taking his daughters and teaching them how to drive and things like that and I'm sure he's heard the song before. But you know the first part of the song just takes you through a little boy with his dad and him teaching him and i just know my dad was so close with his dad and so that song is just always going to be so special and i mean i remember driving around town with my dad and listening to alan jackson and now that i'm older it's reverse. I'm the one driving. And we're still listening to alan jackson in that song. So i would definitely say that one for sure one alan jackson i mean he just in. The last. Few weeks released a new album. Yes and it was really good like we haven't heard really from alan jackson. That much new music and a long time has been. I think it was six years since he had released. Actual album And i know me and you are such big alan fans who talked about before. We've actually had alan jackson jam session in the car but he just brings back so many amazing childhood memories for me and yeah i can just turn on and alan jackson album and just be right back in my childhood sitting in the front seat with my dad driving around town yes and on a previous best bit. It's like it was the last one hillary was on..

Newsradio 700 WLW
"alan jackson" Discussed on Newsradio 700 WLW
"Welcome back to news radio 700 wlw to my producer Jeff Carr, DJ Jeff car. It's got me cracking up with that one feels like I'm at the Bob Evans Farm Festival. My friend back home and Value County. Little little bluegrass at bluegrass. So what that is fell. Alan Jackson Bluegrass album. Oh, Yeah, I heard Eric Ken Brew talking a little Alan Jackson. What do you say he went and solemn a couple years ago or Recently, maybe year. I think so. I thought he was having like some kind of awesome showdown in Nashville at the Grand Ole operate or something, although I think he does that every year, So yeah. Yeah, I just last week I heard Kimbrough talking about Alan Jackson. Was that you? There was Playing. There might have been Alex Frank that was on the DJ that that night. Poof! And I gotta I gotta I gotta get it together here, man. I'm like that, son. I got a little extra sun today, man at the pool. You don't really Sometimes you just don't realize how much of Just being out of the pool for like, three or four hours of the beach. Just where's you out? Until you know you get home and Or, you know, there's a few hours later. You're like, I don't even do any exercise to their anything. And I'm like I'm feeling like I ran a marathon. Oh, well for me. I don't know what? Let me make this clear. I've never run a marathon, so I don't know what that feels like. But anyway, uh It's the open mic time where I'm going to take your calls. Got a question for you, But first I want to give you the numbers 5137491 7808 43. 2441 Town 780 T. Uh, My my question to you, and I don't know if you heard my first segment, but I wanted to mix it up a little bit tonight. I know there's a trump rally going on right now. Maybe you want to talk about that. Maybe he hurts your falling on Twitter. You've heard some of the clips you're watching it on. I believe it's on C span, and I know you know, there's plenty of places where you can follow this stuff. Um, And if you want to weigh in on that have at it, But you know my first segment, you know, I just I got the idea of Just I just felt like the last few weeks. People are tired. Ready for vacation or they're just a little checked out right now on, people are tired. You you are You tired of Pandemic news. Are you tired of political news right now? Are you tired of just news in general and just want to unplug? Get out and get in a camper van and I don't know. Drive down the Tennessee or California or wherever. Or get to the beach or Uh, you know those kinds of things. Um, yeah, And so I just thought, Let's mix it up tonight. Let's let's get away from politics. At least in that first half hour. Sofia Mindy was awesome. In terms of you know Sharon about their new company, Eclipse Camper vans, and I'm just I'm on the website right now. I'm looking at it, and I'll tell you if you're if you're looking for some kind of a fun, different thing to do. And and again, these aren't rustic. Campers. These are these are these are sleek and modern. You know, I probably hand done uh, you know, decked out camper vans and you know, if you go on YouTube, you'll fight you just punch in van life. As a whole huge movement around it, and, you know, so there's a lot of this out West and purchase to see that here in Cincinnati and to see this company pop up and you know, I think it's awesome. And and so my question was going. I'm getting to it. I'm not being very succinct. Um, but The positive is a positive thing that happened in the pandemic for two to Cincinnati ins, Emily Bruns and, uh, Sophie. Um, um, nd came together They met it to flying Pig Marathon. And they decided they were going to start this business. Other business takes off. Because of the pandemics. That's a positive thing. And I was really thinking this week. What's a positive thing? That that came out of the pandemic for you. We can. I can think of a whole lot of negative things I can think of a whole lot of negative things. But I don't want to dwell on the negative. Want to think of the positive and for me, the positive has been that I just feel like I'm a much more in tune, Father. The pandemic really? Woke me up to like how important it is to be intentional about spending time. I have two young sons eight and four and to try to find Time each day, not with them, just them both together but also separately to just build into them and and and lead them and and be it engage full on in their life, putting the phone down. Not having my nose on the phone while I'm sitting there hanging out with my son's. Well, I'm you know, maybe sitting there playing a video game and my son or Yeah, I wrote a column for Cincinnati dot com They acquire this week where This is organic, and I just really been wanting to connect with my youngest son. He is four and I know people are saying, Hey, you know, he's four years old. It's okay. And it is. Okay. Um, but June 6th. I came home from South Carolina visit my family. My mom and dad lived down there and God, That was a Sunday, you know, got home. I don't know. 78 o'clock at night. Still daylight and my son's waiting my four year old and he wants to go on a cicada hunt. And there's no hunting me. There was no hunting being done, so there's nothing that was captured her Killed the skater. Hunt just met a cicada observation around the neighborhood. So we started doing this and then we kept. We went the next day, and then we went the next day, And next thing I know it's Two weeks later. And this past Monday night was our final daily cicada hunt. We found our last one and I said, You know, buddy, this is Probably last one you're gonna find alive and We basically set our goodbye to the cicada hunt. And so now we're trying to figure out our next kind of thing We want to do together every day and this was just 20 minutes 2030 minutes a day. And I To see the difference in how we're interacting. Even here. We are, like almost a week later from our final cicada hunt. And you could just tell like there's a connection there that we just didn't have before. And, um so like to me. The positive thing was that you know, the the come out of the pandemic was just being a more Engaged father and to my two young sons. I don't know what's something for you to start a business? Uh, are you more? Are you closer to someone now or I don't. I don't know. Did you get a different job because of it, and it's become. It's turned into something really great. Give me a call 5137491 7804 £32441.780 t or I also I say it's open mic open mic time. So if you want to weigh in on anything Politics or non politics. Go for it. Let's go to Josh and Tennessee. It's up, Josh. Hey, man. So you got you got a nice story about reconnecting with your sons. I like it. Thank you. Thank you. Yeah, I was It was. It was just special, and I was looking through the photos on my phone. You know, I took photos, Not every you know, walk around, and these are literally like walks. So couple nights, they were just kind of big walk, You know, a couple blocks Through our neighborhood and we have a lot of old trees in our neighbourhood. So is fantastic for the cicadas and I start. You know, we get home Monday night..

WHAS 840 AM
"alan jackson" Discussed on WHAS 840 AM
"Going with a John Fogerty cover guy. Oh, really? Yeah, At least that's what I heard all to double check that I I swear, I heard it was a cover John Fogerty With what? It was one of those guys with those with those crazy names like, Don foolhardy or something like that. They try to They try to keep it similar, but they're not really the person who it is, but I find it hard to believe that ZZ top with tour with the cover guy, But you know, it doesn't matter if fans enjoy the music. I mean, look how many times foreigners played the state fair. Well, and you know, this is this is the other part of this topic is interesting to me because I used to have bands. You had America. You know, you had CC top. He had, like, seven. Whatever name your band, right and you still have bands. You know, but you don't You seem to have more individuals. Well, let me save country music, particularly pop music Right now. Let me let me well. I will tell you and I'll find the article because I believe it was Variety, wrote the article, and I'll find it where they said there's a trend now in music. Where the band as you knew it is going away, and it's because one the popularity of e D. M has just and and the money that EDM DJs are being paid has gone through. I mean, sometimes more than athletes. Has gone through the roof and they're finding it. It's just easier to manage when you're a one person show or when. To your point. You have like Cole Swindell. I played him earlier this morning. Right. He simply goes by Cole Swindell. He doesn't have a band. Can't say the Cole Swindell. I mean, what you're not gonna have No. Are there hits going to remain in 20 or 30 years? I'm gonna bring up an old call. I guess so, you know, because you know, but You know where I'm coming from. It's just like it seems like there's more individuals. It's great observation because there is that's then there's a band. Yes, yes, the band As you know, it is probably it has gone by the It's not gone by the wayside, but it clearly is not as prevalent as what it was back in the eight seventies eighties even to some degree of the nineties. Yeah, It's a very interesting because they're finding out. I mean, these people that head up this, you know. Billie Eilish, for example, is coming to the KFC Yum Center. Exactly. Obviously she's bringing, but she's good and people are going to pay through the nose to see that. She's very talented, Very talented. Good man. Yeah, She's very You look at one show that both Tom and I are going to that. We actually grant you'll get Kane Brown. He's coming to the Caribbean center. Eric Church is coming to your point. It's not a band anymore more than it is just the lead singer. Now they have bandmates that they keep with them, You know, probably for the most part, but to some degree, I mean, it's you know, it's it's a different day and age. But if he and of course the same thing in the seventies eighties nineties, whatever, 60 whatever, Uh but but honestly, it just seemed like there were Like the Beatles without Paul McCartney just would never work. No, John Lennon. I mean, you know, it's just like you just can't do that. Right? So no, it's Yes. So you just I mean, you just wait and see and and just wait and see what happens and watch music evolved. But they're finding it easier to tour without a band. Now, maybe that will come back in time it very well could And then, of course, it doesn't mean it's not to say that that's not been done before I eat Keith Urban. It's just Keith orbit, but he brings it. He brings a band with him and has had some folks in his men. Alan Jackson, for example. He's had his still guitar player is just phenomenal. He's been with him forever. But it's just Alan Jackson.

KOA 850 AM
"alan jackson" Discussed on KOA 850 AM
"Calm before we continue with our preview of the Broncos and Raiders the week 17 matchup. Let's take a look back at last week's game against the Chargers with Alan Jackson. Okay, Ryan thanks. Broncos replay is presented by Golden Oak lending. Last week. The Broncos were looking to earn a season sweep against the Chargers, but it didn't go as planned in L. A. Denver's mistake's included a red zone interception on their first possession. Missed field goal from 37 yards out and multiple dropped passes that they have produced points. The Broncos trailed by 13 points in the second half, rallied to tie the game late. Then they came up short. Here's how it sounded in the replay. Same set empty backfield free left to the right. Herbert will be hit and sacked back at the 20 yard line. So just like a run, but a sack there indeed for dream on Jones. That's his fifth sack of the year. This will be an attempt of 52 yards. Snap is good placement kick on the way. McManus is money from 52. That's typical Brandon McManus. Broncos quickly. The line of scrimmage lock is under center. He tries to sneak it. Lock is into the end zone. The Bronco teammates say he scored and so do the officials. Touchdown. Denver 4th and 10 into 25 20 seconds to go Denver out of timeouts down three Hamilton from trips right to slot left. So two by two. The set three man rush again. Locket deep drop bounces around, throws the ball middle of the field. That ball will be passed and pot on the deflection by gay shot Hamilton. So it comes down to this one second to go to be a Hail Mary lock. Steps away from edge pressure loaded up throws the ball towards the end zone. It will be intercepted at the goal line by Mike Williams, the receiver who was put in and that's the end of the game..

Bobbycast
Remembering Eddie Van Halen with Steve Gorman
"Joining me now is Steve. Gorman who was the drummer in the Black Crowes who now plays with trigger hippy and before we talk about some of the Black Crowes stuff in your book I. I saw tweets even it was talking about Eddie Van Halen, which is Kinda. Why you here you say there will be many many words written and spoken about Eddie. Van. Halen, over the next few days, weeks, months and years those millions of words will never come close to expressing what he meant a rock music what he meant to guitarist and what he meant to the guitar itself that's pretty powerful statement Mr Gorman what did Eddie and remind me to rock music I. Think it's it's pretty simple. You can say that he and Jimi Hendrix of the two guys. That truly, and and only the two guys that moved the needle for the guitar itself I mean Hendrix. came out of a blue based. seem. And took the playing and the tone he could get to a new place but even hail and. Really almost came in from another country. Another planet I should say another he's like an alien life form I mean, he was a virtuosic player obviously but he He reinvented what what you could do is to guitar and the fact of the matter is this. Like Hendrix. But even to a greater degree, anybody tries to play like Eddie. Van Halen. Just sounds like a mind a mimic they. It's like rich little doing Johnny Carson okay. Yeah. That kind of sounds like him but. There's nothing nobody's ever been able to do any van. Halen. Did it make it feel a certain way? That each just the and he was that way at twenty two I mean, this is this is not a guy like it's not like David Blaine magic tricks where he gets bigger and better every year he started with card tricks that other people did I even Halen hit the ground running with Van Halen one playing an instrument that have been around for centuries unlike anybody else had ever done I mean he was on the Mount. Rushmore. Of Great Depar- players. At twenty two years old and then, and then he stuck around for another forty years still playing unlike anybody before sin. So I just think that in terms of. You know. Sheer unique. Mindset ambition combined with just. Great talent obviously. But but also phenomenal work ethic I mean he's just a complete unicorn in every sense of the word. How would you describe his guitar sound and I say that I know what I think of it but I wasn't I just messed van Halen like I came around right as you guys were blowing up honestly so that for me the van Halen was slightly classic rock slightly old rock to me as A. Kid. So as someone 'cause, you're just years older than I am but how would you describe his guitar sound someone who was in in it and living it in love and Van Halen? Well I can tell you that that was thirteen years old the first time I heard Van Halen and I remember it. I remember where I was I remember who I was with. It was going home from school in Hopkinsville Kentucky. You really got me there kinks the you know the their cover, the kinks song came on the radio. And and it was playing already and I said, Hey, mom turn that up. It was me and my mom and my friend Brooke. Lofton. The three of us in a car and she turned it up and I my first thought was. That must be like a live version of the king song and I was thinking like we don't they don't rock or do they. But when it hit that Solo and then by the time, the song ended I realized well, that does that's not ray Davey seeing this is clearly a cover version but what on earth is this and it was like making my? Hair on the back of my neck stand up. This is a time when I thought punk rock was the coolest thing in the world. and. The truth is Van Halen was more punk than the punks because they were truly breaking down a bunch of barriers if you will or they were going in their own. You know there hasn't been a band like Van Halen since led Zeppelin in terms of. Rock band hits the ground running at full steam and it obliterates everything in their path in a certain sense and. Jimmy van Halen sound it sounded like California was in my head. You know soon as I realized soon as I heard about them, they're from La, and as soon as I saw David Lee Roth and then as soon as I heard more than you know the next thing I heard was eruption Guitar Solo and you know hearing just two pieces of their first album and seeing what they look like it just. It felt brand new and it already felt like they're going to be around forever. You just knew from the jump and this is me as a thirteen year old kid who is obsessed with music. This band is one of the Alzheimer's like there's nothing like this and they all have the chops and the other thing too as long as I'm just rambling incessantly any van Halen was a great rhythm player. It wasn't just about the Solos he led the band rhythmically and he's also it needs to be noted not that it's not obvious. He's a hell of a songwriter I mean he really was. As I said before he's a true Unicorn I mean, just just nothing like it. What does this sound like do you? It sounds frequent and right in right in the zone near your your key. That's one thing because listen I played a little bit I don't play even as good as my friends who are real life musicians, but it's perfect frequency and frequency is in the tone or the, but as because it's a lot. I mean Brad Paisley plays unnoticed Brad. Paisley. Because I hear the chicken Pickin I hear a very distinct sound and again I didn't catch van Halen as it was happening in my childhood. But when I hear Van Halen Song even if I, it's I, don't know who it is. Just hear the guitar part I hear the Eddie van Halen because I how fast he shreds but the pattern that he does it, you can just tell. By By his fingers and it just kind of again it's hard to explain when you ask about music but that's what I think about and I try to. Always try to. Prepare analogies and most of the people who listen to this podcast here between twenty to forty, and if you were to make an analogy to another band, it's GonNa be tough because Van Halen was massive. But who later on had the kind of? Impact or. Reflected the mass listening that Van Halen had well. What band what yeah. What band can we look at now or in the last ten years and see? Okay. Well, that's how big Van Halen was to the people that were the kids in the eighties.

Bobbycast
Unbelievable 90s Country Facts You Didn't Know
"So I saw this article on the boot DOT COM Unbelievable nineties, country facts you definitely didn't know some of them. I'M GONNA know you're going to know Eddie's here by the way because we're such nineties country fans love it but it's pretty funny to read some of the stuff. The Ninety S I'll read some what they wrote here. The nineties changed everything about Country Music Garth, Brooks Shania Twain Alan, Jackson, George Strait, but some of the facts that they share ready. Yeah. Keith urban makes an appearance in the music video for Alan. Jackson's nineteen ninety-three hit Mercury Blues. He was also the road guitars for Brooks and Dunn prior to becoming Keith Urban Yeah. Yeah I think he's playing guitar on the video, right? I don't know I didn't know you like I've seen this video and he's one of the guitar players in the video what I remember most about. This was home improvement because Alan Jackson won on home improvement did this song toll time right I remember that I know everywhere to the song don't think. So because of that. Lone. Stars. Hit amazed. was written as writers, Aimee, Mayo, and Chris Lindsey were falling in love with each other Mayo says they're feeling started pouring out as they were riding the famous love ballot. Oh. My with the the writing together. Wow I have trouble share my feelings in words sometimes can you imagine? Riding a song lyrically. And what if one of them writes a little more passionately than the other the other one's just not into it like you know love me as much. In one, thousand, nine, hundred, Ninety, eight, Tricia Earwood Leeann rhymes both received grammy nominations for their individual versions of how do I live rimes performed the song at the grammys and then right after she performed. She stood offstage because that was the in the winner is. End. TRICIA earwood one crazy. There was a whole con air fight about that song. Where they had asked. TRICIA. I believe Tricia to do it or the movie and then Kellyanne had already done it. He have. But Leeann did it for the movie I right and they did not using it Tricia? So they had both versions crazy in the same category. Do they hate each other because of that? Or they just kind of like whatever it's over I don't know. I. Separately, talked to Tricia about this, right? Yeah. She didn't seem too bothered by she also one. Okay that's probably also won the grammy. I think what she said was she remembers Leeann doing the performance in that category categories right after the performance and then that's when you know you're about to win because you're categories right after you perform. And so they just expected her to win. That Lien was in the movie right? Not Tricia. Pretty. Sure Tricia I can check it. I barely remember this as a kid. But yeah, that's an uncomfortable thing. We'll come back to that. Little known facts about Chris Gaines who is Garth Brooks alter-ego Chris Gaines was in a teen pop group called crush. And he spent two years undergoing plastic surgery to repair his face after violent nineteen, ninety, two car crash really is Chris Gaines on on streaming services nowhere I would not even on Youtube I would think of it's all garth earth just keep that to Garth I actually liked Chris gain stuff I'm going to be honest with you. There's a whole part in this in that garth documentary that I watched on Netflix there's a whole segment on it word where they're talking about Chris Gains and Tricia Earwood is. Just protecting and defending it as hard as she can say, like all you guys that hate on Chris Games, you've got your stupid because you didn't listen at Chris Gains. It was amazing I remember liking it. And everybody hating on it it'd be like what he did Saturday night live as Garth and Chris Games was just confusing for a fan. Explain it you have to explain it. You're not going to get what they want you to get from it, and that's what Garth said. That was the problem with it. It was just it was too much of an inside thing for us and we didn't market it right well, I was going to be a movie correct fell through and then it just ended up being the music they were GonNa make for the movie. Yeah. Mine did you find the Leandra stuff? Yeah. It was Tricia Earwood in the movie at the end. So what happened with Leeann rhymes then they initially went to her to record it she recorded it and then they went with Tricia. Virgin. Dirty at hurts man Deana Carter strawberry wine was inspired by Boone's farm. Strawberry Hill Flavor Know you didn't drink in highschool you don't drink now but men in highschool that boone's farm. that. Was the easiest to buy, and that's what everyone drink numerous people passed on the song to record it including Tricia earwood speaking of Tricia. She was again not for me. What? What Smash Razi home. Early on billy ray Cyrus was dogged by rumors that he used to Chippendale dancer. I remember that rumor. But he was so good looking or you believe it like that's a great thing to have as bad rumor about you that you're a chippendale dancer you gotta be like ripped and hot to do that. Okay. Three dudes you're talking about this but I'll ask you like right now current country artists who would be who who would fit that rumor chippendale dancers. Sam Maybe Sam was Sam Hunt. Keith. Couldn't keep me one made a little too small I think. About Dirks No, we'll do small. No just doesn't have to be a chill you to be almost cartoon Lee rip okay. And Keith this thin and in good shape but. Like me, I'm thin in a good shape I'm not cartoon. Sam maybe like that Riley Green Ball He. ripped. Yeah Repton. Just, like leave it there map. Justin lunch maybe. I don't know I see that though I did see that that's kind of plays off the short career as a chippendale dancers bragging vegas yeah. George Strait. Tried to get the name of his movie pure country changed too because he believed it was more than just a country film it obviously. Didn't work.

Roe Conn
Marsha Blackburn, North Carolina and South Carolina discussed on Roe Conn
"Of Tennessee has endorsed congresswoman Marsha Blackburn, run for US Senate, former governor Winfield Dunn says Blackburn is the only candidate that will keep America on the right path Blackburn is up against another former governor democrat Phil Bredesen's

Joyce Kaufman
North Carolina, President Trump and Florence discussed on Joyce Kaufman
"Ashore with howling ninety mile per hour. Winds and life threatening storm surges their rights, Ville beach, North Carolina. The massive storm is swamping coastal areas with torrential rain and is knocked out power to more than a half a million homes and businesses. First responders in North Carolina are scrambling to rescue people who ignored