35 Burst results for "An Hour"

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
Why America's Navy Is No Longer Best in the Sea
"Back in America, as I said the most important thing. Not just to the Hugh Hewitt show audience, but to the world is that the communist Chinese party had Xi Jinping. The strong man, the totalitarian ruler of all of China, head of the Chinese Communist Party has been in Moscow for two days, meeting whether he calls his junior partner Putin, it reminds you of Hitler and Mussolini, if you know your history in 39 getting together, that's why I asked doctor Hendricks to come on today, Jerry Hendricks will be on an hour three to discuss his brand new essay in the Atlantic, which is really caught the attention of Washington D.C.. Because the Atlantic is the last magazine that many people read in America in hardcover copy form. And the title of the article is the age of American naval dominance is over. The subheading is the United States has seated the oceans to its enemies. We can no longer take freedom of the seas for granted. And this is sort of something I talk about a lot for the last, I don't know, ten years. When Donald Trump was running and promising a 355 ship navy, that didn't come about the biggest failure of the Trump years was the failure to get the shipyards expanded up and running, getting a navy plan. And the key facts that I'll be talking about with doctor hendrickson an hour three is that the United States had 6700 chips at sea at the end of World War II. By the end of Eisenhower administration, we were down to a thousand, which is consistent with the Cold War, and then it fell and fell and fell until regular arrived and rebuilt the navy to 590 ships that had the deterrent effect on the Soviet Union. It fell apart. And then in our wisdom, we thought the end of history had arrived and we are now at 271 ships afloat. And doctor Hendricks says, the complications of that, the implications of that are so profound that people don't even see the obvious in front of them. So I'm

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
The Expansion of China's Navy
"Want to play for you in anticipation of mine the next segment reading you a large part of Jerry Hendricks essay in the Atlantic. And he'll be along in the last hour. A bit that played on 60 minutes. It's the perfect backdrop as is the Hendricks article which I've just pushed out on Twitter if you're following me on Twitter, you hear it. On Sunday Night, two nights ago, toshi yoshihiro is on talking as were other guests talking with 60 minutes about the massive stunning expansion of the Chinese blue water fleet. Give a listen to this cut number 16. There is a tendency among the great powers to look at each other's naval buildups with deep suspicion. Toshi yoshihara of the center for strategic and budgetary assessments may know more than any scholar in the west, about China's navy. China will have about 440 ships by 2030. And that's according to the Pentagon. Why is China able to build more warships more quickly than the U.S.? China has clearly invested in this defense industrial infrastructure to produce these ships. Which allows them to produce multiple ships simultaneously, essentially out building many of the western navy's combined.

AP News Radio
Japan, China leaders visit rival capitals in Ukraine war
"Japanese prime minister fumio kushida is in Kyiv for talks with Ukrainian president volodymyr zelensky. Kushida began a surprise visit to Ukraine early Tuesday, hours after Chinese president Xi Jinping arrived in neighboring Russia for a three day visit the dueling summits come as the longtime rivals are on diplomatic offensives because she does surprise trip to Ukraine, comes just hours after he met with Indian president Narendra Modi in New Delhi, kushida who's chairing the group of 7 summit in May is the only G 7 leader who hasn't visited Ukraine and was under pressure to do so at home. He's expected to offer continuing support for Ukraine when he meets with zelensky. I'm Charles De Ledesma

AP News Radio
Los Angeles schools to close as district workers plan strike
"Los Angeles schools will close as district workers plan to strike. I'm Lisa dwyer. Thousands of support workers in the Los Angeles unified school district will walk up the job Tuesday over stalled contract talks. They will be joined by teachers for a planned three day strike that will shut down the nation's second largest school system. The union representing support staffers say those staffers earn on average about $25,000 per year, many live in poverty because of low pay or limited work hours while struggling with inflation in the high cost of housing and LA county. During the strike some schools are expected to remain open with adult supervision, but no instruction to give students somewhere to go.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Joe DiGenova and Victoria Toensing Unpack the News of the Day
"Happiest in studio with me, your favorite Joe digenova Victoria than Singh. On a day, a hundred and 64 years ago, when the Republican Party was established, which led to the abolition of slavery, thanks to the first Republican president called Lincoln, little public service announcement there, yes. The KKK was the armed wing of the Democrat party and the first Republican president was the great emancipator. I think it is upper side for us to discuss some Republican responses to the news of the last 72 hours, saying that for some reason, one side of the political divide should surrender their rights to protests. You know if they never said Black Lives Matter, I don't think you should go out there and protest. After George Floyd. But remember, this was in the middle of the pandemic. And everyone was told to stay home. Stay home, don't go out. And don't congregate when groups. Yes. And all of a sudden, after George Floyd, a whole bunch. I mean, like a hundred and some doctors, quote unquote, wrote this public statement saying, well, we said not to go out, but there are some causes that are more social. That are more important. Don't let this be an okay for you to go out and protest being locked up. And basically they said that in the public letter, it was pathetic.

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Robyn Pfaffman: DeSantis Will Be the Guy if Trump Can't Make It
"I'm curious your thoughts on desantis. He was catching a lot of flack over the weekend for not weighing in. Then he comes out with a statement today, and he does a, you know, it was kind of pretty, it was pretty double mentioning in a very clever way that he really doesn't know much about giving hush money to porn stars, kind of a backhanded slap at Trump, didn't even bother to mention his name, which is already set off team Trump. Is desantis making a bad step here. I think that this Santa is going to be the guy if Trump either bails or something happens with Trump, you know, physically because of his age or just decides to hang it up as the 11th hour. I think desantis is kind of staying on the sidelines. He's kind of roped in in my mind. He's kind of roped into the madness. I think he's getting good advice that he's really stayed out of a lot of the back and forth. Yeah, there's been a couple of little jabs here and there, but Ron DeSantis knows that video never dies. And so he doesn't want to get involved in all the little rocket man, the little quits, the little, the negativity of Trump, desantis does not want to become known for that. In my mind. And so yeah, you get a little bit out of him, but not a lot. He's laying what was in the guys got one of the best jobs in the country. He's the governor of Florida. He's turned it into a thriving state. I went on vacation there with my husband during the coronavirus, everything was wide open business as usual. Everyone was happy and in a good mood and half the country is moving there. So you know what, at the end of the day, if he thinks that Trump is taking up all the air and decides not to run, he still has a great job. It can do it in what it will be what 28 by that point. And he'll still be young. He's only in his 40s now. So maybe this is not his time. It's kind of hard to tell. But

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Robyn Pfaffman: A Trump Indictment Will Only Raise His Popularity
"At this hour at the NYPD erecting the barricades a place you've been as a reporter many, many times before. Talk about it. Wriggling brothers, they say that the circus is gone. This is the new circus. What a joke. The whole thing is a joke and it's going to backfire. You know, it's funny because a lot of liberals I know are so excited. Oh, Trump is the first ever of a former president going to be indicted and arrested in a mug shot. Listen, they still don't understand this guy, Todd. This is an 80 year old man, okay? He doesn't have that many years left. He's never been arrested. He probably thinks it's funny because the whole thing is going to be tossed anyway. These cases are beyond the statute of limitations for one. Number two, I'm dating myself, but does anyone remember when Bill Clinton paid off what's your name there? And Paula Jones, Paula Jones. 8, $800,000 and the nose dropped. She got wasn't even that great. That was a bad nose job. Yeah, she should have spent some more money on the nose job. Anyway, TS, we're dating ourselves here, but did anybody care about Bill Clinton spending the same money? The hush money. No, nobody cared back then, and it was, you know, is 7 or 8 times the dollar amount. This is a circus brag is going to backfire on him, the charges are going to go right into the circular file. The fed didn't want to try these cases. There are lumping in the hush money with a federal case trying to tie it all together. It's a bunch of hooey. It's going to go nowhere other than raise the popularity of Donald Trump.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
The Uglyness of the Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Race
"You know, Jessica Kelly then justice Breyer came to my studio. We spent two hours. Justice Thomas is an old colleague and we've been on the show for two hours. The chief justice is an old colleague from I never asked a judge or a justice about a case or a political question because it's not appropriate for a journalist and especially a lawyer professor journalist to ask a justice how they will rule. I mean, it's just stupid. Undermines everything that holds up the rule of law. Is there any outrage in Wisconsin over what has happened in this race? There he is. So and I think that that's most folks in Wisconsin. So they look at what she's doing and there's two focuses about outrage a thing. One, because she's trying to turn this into a political institution rather than leaving it as an impartial legal institution. They want justices who will follow their commands in the constitution. Just simply decide cases according to the existing law. But then, you know, my opponent is not satisfied with tearing down the constitution. She wants to try to tear down me too. So she's been spending millions of dollars in ads that are just flat out lies about me. I mean, and there are remarkable lies here. And they're the kind of sloppy people tell. The kind where you can go to the public records and learn that it's simply not true. And so I guess I guess I'm grateful that if someone's going to lie about me, it's going to be about something that can be so easily disproved. But that's how ugly it's been on the left.

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

AP News Radio
Russian President Vladimir Putin greets Chinese leader Xi Jinping for high-stakes meeting at the Kremlin
"In the coming hours, the president of China's expected to arrive in Russia for a meeting with president Vladimir Putin and U.S. officials are waiting for an update. The Russian invasion of Ukraine is expected to dominate the meeting between visiting Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, and Russia's Vladimir Putin in Moscow. U.S. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby says there are concerns China may agree to help Putin in the war effort. China has not condemned Putin's invasion of Ukraine. They are still buying Russian oil and energy resources. He tells Fox News Sunday experts

HASHR8
We're Seeing Similarities to May of 2022
"We are recording this Friday morning. It is 9 30 mountain time. So it's what love and 30 Eastern Time. Bitcoin's price almost broke to $27,000 this morning. It's up around 5% in the 24 hours previously and is up about 30% this week in 56% year to date. That's obviously pretty amazing for everyone's bags. And it's also helping out hash price a little bit. I think we're over 7 sets with hash price. The thing that's interesting to me is transaction count, which or the fullness of the mem pool, if you will, is increasing the drastically we've seen two large increases in the mempool size since the beginning of the year. Once in February, when ordinals started really going, haywire, and then the last week would Bitcoin's price has been going up. Historically, we often see the men pool really fill up with transactions during a bull run when a lot of retail floods into the market and this current fullness of men pull is very similar to May of 2022, which is when we had the contagion in the explosion and Tara Luna. So another time for a lot of transactions on chain. Get a throw it over to you for your thoughts on all that. Filling up the increasing transaction fees good for minors, first of all, good for miners on both fronts, price going up and more transactions. So that's exciting. It seems the mental to me seems to be kind of driven again by ordinals inscriptions. This seems like there's like some deja and competition for the 500,000th inscription. And there's some like pre hefty size transactions and the pool right now, which definitely seemed like very similar to the ones we were seeing. So that's kind of unique and interesting there.

The Officer Tatum Show
Hunter Biden Files Counterclaims Against Computer Repairman
"I want to play an audio clip for you because I said that I wouldn't totally forgot to ask Sean to play it. So I do want to play audio clip number three Sean of Hunter Biden fouls a countersuit against the laptop repairman. So John Paul Mack Isaac is the guy who ran the computer shop in Delaware and he's been countersued as of an hour ago apparently. Hunter Biden's team is arguing that they had no right to he had no right to copy his private information from the laptop and distribute it. Remember that laptop was there for more than a year. I do believe, right? And he was like, when's the guy going to come and get it? So now they have launched their own legal suit too. That's also the laptop that the media said didn't exist, or wasn't theirs, or was Russia disinformation. Now, his legal team is saying, obviously, that was his property. That he left there. And they don't have a right to do anything with it. We'll see how that holds up in court. But you see a new sort of posture of led by Abby Lowell famous lawyer in D.C. to punch back and push against Republican efforts to try to get information on this. Okay. All right, so that's what they're going to do. That's what the left is going to continue to do. They are, these are people that are going to squash dissent. I'm telling you, we'll get into that into the in the third hour, but they destroy the culture. They are a corrupt bunch of people.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Citizen Kane and Charlie Dare to Talk Sports
"Welcome back, everybody. We have one of my favorite guests. He runs an impressive website. I visit it multiple times a day, citizens free press. We have Citizen Kane on the line. Mister Cain, welcome to the program first and most important question. Do you have Indiana winning at all? And if yes, what is wrong with you? Well, hey, your Evanston boys northwestern. I know. That's right, dude. How great was that? And also prince than the other day, which I hate to cheer for woke schools, but you are a big guy you guy, though, aren't you? Yeah, I grew up. Starting at age four, we had a 6th row seats behind the bench. When we moved to Bloomington. Wow. In the early 70s, bob knight had just taken the job at IU after having come from West Point. And he accumulated this group of four or 5 doctors who were all about night's age. And a weird little side story. So these are doctor surgeons, radiologists, anesthesiologists with full practice with full practices and night would demand that they attend the IU basketball practice every day. I kid you not. For two and a half hours. And yeah, anyway. So yeah, you know, I'm a believer in the hoosiers. All schools are woke, so I don't hold that against Princeton. And that was, that was a heck of a game yesterday, for instance. There was some awesome games. So we're going to get a lot of hate mail because our audience doesn't like it when we talk sports

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Is Bob Frantz an Optimist or a Pessimist?
"Optimist, bob France, or are you a pessimist? Are we losing this war? Can I be both for a moment? You can. You can do really deep size into the microphone like you just did. I am pessimistic at the moment because I see the direction and I see the obstacles in front of us and I see this strong movement to turn little boys into little girls and to turn men into women and I'm very pessimistic about that, but I am optimistic because I believe in me. I'm optimistic because I believe in you, I'm optimistic because I believe there is a nation full of men who remember what it means to be a man in who are never going to abandon this fight. This is a culture war, and we didn't start it. We didn't pick it, we didn't declare war on anybody. We didn't declare war on LGBTQ or on BLM or any of the wokeness that's going on there. ESG and we didn't declare any of the war on any of that. They declared war on us, and the one thing that I said I would tell the young kids today if I was in a room filled with young males about what they need to do to secure the future about being self dependent and self reliant means you never, ever give up that fight, and you never stop until you win, or until you die, and doctor G, if you think about, you know, the challenge challenges before us, they're very daunting. But I just know, I don't care what hill we have to take in this proverbial or in that hypothetical war. I don't care what hell we have to take. I won't stop climbing it, and the reason why is I know you won't, and I know that there are so many others won't as well.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Bob Frantz: This Is the Most Coddled Generation I've Ever Seen
"We're gonna save the republic, if you're gonna save our civilization bob, we have to pass on to the next generation, the idea, the essentials that non negotiables of what it means to be a man. So if you in a room of young boys, boy scouts, eagle scouts, what have you, what for you would be the minimum syllabus items, the things that we must spread to the next generation of young boys for us to be in a healthier place. What kinds of things do we need to teach them? Well, something that this generation of young boys is not getting at all, and that is disciplined and self reliance. This is the most coddled generation I think that I've ever seen and it's because everything is handed to them whether it's by parents or not, everything comes easy the click of a button, the flip of a phone, all of the different things that this generation is being raised on. Did any of them know how to change the tire, do any of them know how to plant a garden to any of them know how to, you know, to build something if they needed to provide shelter for their family. Doctor gee, we live in a we live in a nation and in a culture right now that is so reliant upon the grid that if something extraordinary happened, like an EMP, if that ever happened and wiped out the electronics and the technology and man was forced to survive on only what he can do for himself, this generation would be wiped out in a matter of months. Because they don't know anything. So that the ability to do it for yourself to not say I'm going to hire a professional to do it for me to fix the car to fix the house to plumb the pipes, whatever the case might be. I would tell every young person today you need to learn how to do it on your own,

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
What Makes a Real Man? Bob Frantz Shares His Thoughts
"First, when you think of being a true man bob, what is the definition for you? Give us some of the non negotiables that help to categorize what a real man is. Well, I think the most important thing that a real man has to be is a real man has to be a father, and he has to be a leader. He has to be a protector. He has to be some one who is willing to put others in front of himself, and let me rephrase, to put others before himself by standing in front of them against all things that may threaten them. And that doesn't mean it has to be a physical threat at a given moment in time, but whatever it is that might be a challenge or a threat for a family. I think a man has to stand and lead. I still believe in chivalry. I still believe in opening doors for ladies. I believe in treating ladies like ladies, and I believe in raising sons to be strong men who will do the exact same thing that we do. And far too often we see we see so many I've talked about it before of those gender roles being reversed or switched just a little bit and that's not what a man is.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Bob Frantz on the Epicenter of the Assault on Manhood
"So you described for us this fascinating voyage of yours after 9 11 that you kind of woke up to a new priority and then you did your own research, your own investigation of conservatives, peace through strength, the Reagan model. As such, you probably have an idea as to where the assault on masculinity on manhood comes from, where these ideas such as toxic masculinity come from. There are often options out here, so many things to choose from. The mainstream media, Hollywood, the schools, political parties, in your analysis, as you view this in the last couple of decades, where do you think the epicenter of this assault is? Where is the place where we're most of this is originating? Well, I think clearly it's the globalists. You know, it's coming from outside of this country, but with the willing assistance of those inside this country who want to see this country taken apart and who want to see it destroyed, who want to see a one world government. I'm not breaking any new ground here, especially if not for somebody like you when we talk about what it would take to destroy this country to defeat a two as what did Barack Obama call it fundamentally transform it. And as we all know, you don't fundamentally transform things, which means to change the things that you love. You want to keep the things that you love the way they are. Can you imagine trying to ask a woman to marry you and say, by the way, why don't we get married? I'm going to change you into something else that I like better. That's not going to work. You didn't love her in the first place. There are people in this country who don't love this country, who want to see a changed, who want to see it destroyed and rebuilt in a collectivist type of society, and they're working with global organizations. And I do truly believe that when you think about the Gates family foundation when you think about the World Economic Forum, when you think about the World Health Organization, all of the, you know, the usual suspects that are working to establish a one world government know that this doesn't work without the United States participation in the United States as long as we continue to remain the same civilization that we built or that we started from with again with that super strong building block of the family, we will continue to press on and we will continue to survive. We will continue to thrive.

AP News Radio
States opt against changes to embattled voter roll system
"Participating states have opted against making changes to an embattled voter roll system pushed by some conservatives. I Norman hall. Election officials from states enrolled in a bipartisan effort to ensure accurate voter lists have decided against making changes to the rules that had been pushed by some Republicans. The electronic registration information center known as Erik as a record of combating voter fraud by identifying those who have died or moved between states, yet it is also drawn suspicion from conservatives after a series of online stories and conspiracy theories last year, questioning its funding and purpose, representatives from the groups of member states met remotely for about three hours on Friday to discuss the changes promoted by Republicans, but rejected them. I Norman hall

Talk Is Jericho
"an hour" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"WrestleMania, one of your biggest promoters suddenly turns out wearing a dress and goes, my name is Dorothy. Yes. I mean, interesting, yeah. The dynamic, you know, so and these are funny guy, you know, so we're going to try and talk to talk to him about one thing about identity and what people, you know, people's reactions to other human beings, you know? But touch, touched on briefly what you guys discussed about the meaning behind 6 6 6 and the devil's involvement in heavy metal. Yeah. I mean, there's obviously a lot to it, but kind of explain a little bit of some of the highlights of what you found out in kind of delving into this subject. A lot of it has to do with the history of apocalypses because revelations the book of revelations to St. John the divine is not the only apocalyptic story in the history of religions or cults or whatever. There's loads of them. They go back and back and back. And interestingly they also bound up in that is the identity of the devil. Because in early Judaism, for example, there is no devil. Devil's only really start to become prevalent after Christianity kind of invents them as the way to scare people. And then Judaism goes devil. Yeah, I think let's make this guy a little bit more bad, you know? So it's interesting the way different religions treat the idea of the concept of evil or not evil or the personality of an actual embodiment of evil as opposed to the embodiment of a person who just likes playing tricks on you. Literally a trickster, which would be the closest approximation to the early judaic version of what turned into a more devilish figure. But Satan with the fires of hell and the big combat finally of Armageddon and everything all coming together, what St. John the divine was doing because it's like you've got to look at where I'm paraphrasing Steve freeze and professor Steve prisoner. You've got to look at where he was when he wrote what he wrote. And what language you wrote it, who wrote it in very bad Greek. Because he was not Greek, but he wrote it in Greek, why? Because all the places he was visiting locally all spoke group. So some of what he wrote could be is a bit weird in the translation because it wasn't strictly grammatically correct. Turns out that in Greek numbers, as we would associate them, don't really exist in the same way. They're written down as an number. So 600 isn't 6, 6, 6. It's 666. Gotcha. Now, that number, it turns out, also has some significance. If you look between the lines at what Sir John is saying, he's sending basically coded messages through the equivalent of the Internet back then. So these would have been understood by rebellious groups as going, what's he talking about with 666, what that means, let me see. And what is now called numerology and I forget the name of it back then I used to know it, but I've got an it called my brain's gone turned into a wash basin. But what's now called numerology, the idea that numbers have an actual significance and you can have a name and reduce it to a series of numbers by a forest geometry. That's right, geometry. So geometry. So by reducing your name in certain ways. So each letter in the alphabet would be given a is one, B is two, C and you write your name, you add up all the letters and you add until you get one number. Well, it turns out that 666 or 6 one 6 depending upon whether you write in Latin or Greek, right? Both correspond, both correspond to Nero Caesar. And what he's saying is, who is the Antichrist? Who is, you know, there's going to be the coming conflict and this will all be swept away by the forces and the archangels of good. Who is the Antichrist? It's the Roman Empire dude. Who is that? Nero Caesar. Caesar was the local commander. Nero was actually dead for about 30 years, but like Elvis, there was a cult of Nero of people who believed that he didn't die. And that he was going to come back and restore the glory of Rome. So this is him taking a pop at the Roman Empire, unbelievable. And this is just a snippet of what you guys episode one episode one. Last question for you, Bruce. Very excited to come see the show in Tampa. It's at a beautiful theater where the stage actually opens up and this old lady comes up from the basement playing piano pipe organ. She's Satan, right? That comes out there. I think so. That's right. Everything else. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yes. And we're gonna have you drop down from the rafters. And that's the start of the show. You don't have to tell them complete detail, but just to give people a taste. Is there a favorite story of yours that you like to tell at the show or one of them that you like to tell that kind of gives an idea of what you're gonna be doing? Everybody thinks that I would say the first obviously people probably by now figured out that I was a pilot and I had a career as an airline pilot for 17 years and.

Talk Is Jericho
"an hour" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"So I'm hobbling around in this boot with my foot on my ankle and calf swollen up because it was only like three days after the operation. So I'm like, okay, I'm just going to have a lie down with my foot in the air just like let the fluid drain and then I'll just be back to the third verse. And then I thought, how the hell am I going to rehab this Achilles? Before it starts at the end of August, because I bust it at the end of April, May June, July, four months, four months for a total rupture Achilles. And I can't even walk, let alone run, let alone jump. So, yeah, I just, I faked it. You know, how do you fake it? Well, basically I figured out that there was some things I just couldn't do, like running was one of them. Because there was no strength in the car at all. And it was going to break or anything else like that, but there was not there. So I thought, if I want to move around, kind of dramatically from one side of the stage to the other, I basically got to turn myself into a crab and just use hips and thighs. So by not involving your calves hardly at all or maybe only the right one so you go upstairs one foot at a time. So they couldn't see that. The audience couldn't see that. Then I had a 30 pounder 30 pound flame thrower on my back and a cape carrying a cross. And I'm walking upstairs, basically on one, right? With no safety barrier. You know, I'm thinking this is kind of cool. I did like a risk every now and again. I couldn't jump off the monitors. I could not run. And so yeah, I got through the tour. And nobody figured it out. I really went running around like crazy. He's doing this. I was just like, actually, you found me you knew. So I got to the end of the tour, then went back training and it's been two and a half years now. I mean, I'm still rehabbing it. It takes it just as a horrible injury. Terrible one, yeah. Yeah, and then I had a new hip lost October. Yeah. Now year last October. So I'm actually tomorrow I'm actually in a fencing competition for two days. So I've been training for 5 days a week fencing and putting it all back together. We were doing the rehab for the hip. My physio, I was working for three days a week during the lockdown with him because it was allowed because he was medical and it was in the hospital at the gym. And so he said, look, you know, we could do this for, you know, we got a good 6 months here that we can do this. He said, how far do you want to take it? Because we could do upper body as well. We could really do some cool stuff and yeah, well, let's see what we can squat. So we were doing 40 reps of a hundred kilos, which my body weighs 70. Yeah. So that's not bad. For 63 year old guys. So we were really going for it. And doing lots of explosive stuff, we got to strengthen conditioning guy in, who was into actually he was the British saber team, strength and conditioning coach. And he was getting his full physio bachelor of science degree. So he had to do a year's intern at the hospital. So my physio, who was the main teacher, said, I got this guy, and we're going to do all the plyometric stuff, the jumping on and off boxes, the bumbo explosive stuff. And we actually set up a fake wedge monitor. And the guy said he goes, he goes, I've seen what you do. He said, let's see if we can work up to that. So yeah, so I haven't tried it yet in anger, but I'm sure it's going to work. I mean, I am actually. I mean, I did a three K of four K and a 5 K run on successive days last week. I'm thinking it's all working okay, you know? Thanks to new genes for supporting talk as Jericho,.

Talk Is Jericho
"an hour" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
".NET. It's interesting to me that you said you did some street improv. I've done improv as well. You know, being a frontman of a band being a wrestler improv is a big part of it. Do you find that's helped you as a frontman? Because you're great, obviously on stage and talking to people and commanding giant crowds, smaller ones on your evening shows. Did the improv skills do they come in handy throughout? Yeah, absolutely. Well, just what I call general stagecraft. As in as soon as you walk onto a stage, the rules changed. You know, you're not in the outside world anymore. You're on stage. And the rules change and you've got a relationship with an audience and they have expectations of you because you're on the stage because they paid money to see you and they expect you to do something or deliver something or say something or teach something or entertain them or juggle or whatever the hell it is. But don't stand there and stare at your shoes and feel sorry for yourself because they will crucify you. And audiences are wonderful, but they can also be incredibly brutal. You know, I learned a bit about when I was at school. I was in every school play that was going, you know, and I would have been I now know I would have been a shocking actor, you know, because people who are really good at acting are just really good at being somebody else. And I'm only really good at being. How did you deal with that early on? Like you said, especially before maiden became Iron Maiden. If you had a crowd that was a little bit difficult, how did you what tricks did you use to make them like you more? I would insult them. Reverse psychology and seldom either that or try and try and make friends with them, but in a very odd way. So I had one show, I was in I was in a band at university and there was one in the old days would have been called a disco. And except there was nobody there. It was like the phantom disco. And there was like mirror balls and lights, and there was on stage and there was nobody. Nobody there. But we were getting paid like 50 bucks to go and play. So then the door opened and one person walked in, looked a bit shocked that there was somebody actually on stage and so he got a chair and he put it and right in the middle of the dance floor sat down on this chair. And I thought this is great and so I got off the stage and I went up to him and with the microphone, I said, excuse me. I got to know. I said, what's your name? And he was like, oh, I'm so sorry. I said, can I buy you a beer? You know? I said, because we're about to do this performance just for you. The least I can do is buy you a beer. You may hate it. You know what I mean? And then we kind of relaxed and we had this we actually had a relationship. We had an audience of one. Who didn't know who we were from Adam? But actually we had a great time. Nobody cared. Nobody knew, but we had a great time. And I think you have to take that there's always a way in to a bad situation. Always a way into a bad situation. You just have to think laterally outside the box. A pet peeve of mine is when a band goes on in what is obviously a toilet with two beer crates at one end of the stage. And they go on there and they pretend that they're in Madison Square gardens and it's like hello Cleveland. You know, and I'm just like, no, it's not Cleveland. You're in a toilet with two beer crates. If you just said to people, hey, we're all on the toilet with two beer crates. Everybody would go. These guys are great. I love these guys. But instead they go, ah, yeah, just a bunch of poses. You know, so you've got to be real with it. Now obviously when you're on stage 9 maiden, you've got the lights, you've got everything you've got the bigs or like the beginning and intro tapes and stuff. But that makes it even worse if you go out and goof up. And what I've discovered, well, my pet theory of clubs versus theaters versus arenas versus stadiums, right? Is that the way you have to be almost note perfect? It's not in a club where people are right in front of your face. Because then there's all these other triggers and stimuli going on to distract their attention away from the fact that you're out of tune, and they don't care you're out of tune because you're sweating and they're right next door to you. That's it. But in the stadium, you know, they paid a hundred bucks to come and see you. And there's a big build up and you walk out and you do exactly the same performance they go while they suck while they sound like a terrible bar band. But if you did that same thing as the same band in a bar, they go, wow, that was great. That was legendary. So its audience has changed their they changed their perspective according to where you are and what their expectation is, you know. So how do you do that Bruce? I mean, obviously, being a stadium band in a lot of ways with a giant crowd, but you move a lot. You're always moving and jumping your studio to the big Bruce jump in the air as a singer and as a frontman, what people don't understand is it is hard. It's one or the other. You can stand still and really get your game right or you gotta entertain 60,000 people. How do you combine the two? It's always a compromise. Because as you say, I mean, if I was going to do everything, then I would just have a little plexiglass box and I'd be wearing cans and everything would be perfect. And in actual fact, you know, you could have like a bird in a cage and just put a black drape over the top of me. Why even bother to see me just have a cardboard cutout stand there? So it's the difference between being in trying to do things perfectly and trying to animate the song and tell the story of the song not just through your voice, but through your body and great singers do tell the story with their body language. I mean, even people you don't associate with it, but look at the look at all those great singers in Vegas since the Sinatra and all those people. They're not leaping around on the stage, but their bodies, their bodies telling the story as they're doing it, you know? So it's important, it's a part of it, body language is so important. Now we have a really theatrical show. Between the props and all the rest of it, then it is quite a workout for me. And so I'm not getting any younger. I discovered this the other week. That's part of my polymath. The outlook you see, I figured out that I am not getting any younger. And had a medical and they told me, shit, is that what it is? Yeah, so because on the last tour, I bust my Kelly's tendons three months before the three months before the tour. Total rupture had it stitched back together. 36 hours after the break. Stitched back together and I was hobbling around in a boot. I finished the album, it was the book of souls album. It was at saint Jetson, wasn't it? No shit he wants to do. That's how long ago. So it was such a boot for the last couple of oh yeah, sorry, Booker, so yeah, that was cancer on that one. Get your elements right, Bruce, come on..

Talk Is Jericho
"an hour" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"I did a bit of improv street theater when I was 15, 16. And that switched on a bit of my brain. It's the same bit of my brain that I use when I write songs. It's what you create something out of seemingly thin air. But it's not really thin air. It's two or three different aspects of something and you join them all together and create Bing, you know, it's a sketch. It's something funny. It's whatever. Anyway, the next part of it was. And I did that for just in the summer for a kind of like a summer vacation. We went to an old coal barge on canals and slept on the coal barge and then did street theater in pubs and like youth centers and stuff like that when I was about 16. Anyway, so there was that aspect of it, and I was intrigued just to whether or not I could still do it. And there was something I saw a guy who was a very early LGBTQ, whether it was a gay man in the early mid to late 70s, right? Geico Quentin crisp. And he wrote the naked civil servant, John Hurt, right? The movie about him. So he was an early gay pioneer and he was quite outrageous for the day. Now, he's been very tame, but back then, wearing makeup and going to work with a big flout he hat was seen as being quite risque and outrageous. But he was very funny and he did a one man show. He was in my girlfriend, said you've got to go and see there's somebody says it's really funny and I was like, never heard of the guy who is it? It was brilliant. I was so entertained. It was witty. I never expected to be that entertained. And at the end, he did this thing with the cue cards. We all got to the right things on the thing on the cue card and then he arranged them in such a way that it basically was like a script. And I went that's really clever. And I remembered it for 30 years ago and I went, maybe I could have a go at that. I mean, it really was and what does this button do moment? It's like let's see if I could do this without falling flat on my face. And it kind of worked. And then from that kind of anarchic chaos, my speaking agent came up to me and he went, mate, should you've got a one man show here? I mean, no, really should know you have. Should you've got a one man show? He said, you need to organize it a bit and compress it a bit and try a few things out and yeah, so that's what I did. I went out and did shows and drips and drabs and kind of honed it down. I suppose it's what stand up comics do when they go and turn up in the middle of some bar in the middle of nowhere and hope nobody's taping it and try all their failed or best or worse material. You know, and see if it works. So I did this and we ended up at the format of about an hour and a half. The first bit which starts at birth and is the story of how a fat spotty short kid from an island floating around in the middle of the Arctic where it rains a lot. In town you've never heard of becomes the wearer of the world's most ridiculous trousers and sinner of the biggest heavy metal band in the world. So how does that happen? You know? Well, here's how it happens. So it's a sideways look at it all. Yes, some of it serious, but most of its humorous. And I also cover some of the other stuff. Let's go barracuda fishing with a mercenary in Sierra Leone. Hey, how'd you do that? How did you end up there? You know, there's stuff about family and I talk a lot about childhood and about how the things you do when you're a kid. Keep coming back throughout your whole life. You recycle everything you do. It's never wasted. It always comes back. I mean, the John Hurt, you know, the Quentin Chris thing. I didn't know I was going to use that 40 years later. How long ago it was, you know? So those are the stories. Obviously, I deal with, I can't do with every single thing because that's like insanity. And you need to keep it tight because you can't lose the audience, they need to know what you're talking about. But cancer is obviously a part of it. Sure. And it goes to the heart of what the show's about. What I want to leave people leaving the theater with, I obviously, I wanted to laugh a lot. I wanted to be entertained. And above all I'd like them to leave feeling better than when they went in. You know, uplifted a little bit, you know? I've got some merch, some shirts and things that we've made up. And on the back we've often put the little quotes that I say sometimes during the show. And my favorite quote, which is kind of how I would like them to leave the theater is life. It's better than all the other options. And that's it. That's it straightforward. So between what does this button do and life is better than all the other options, you've got me. Actually, you don't need to come see the show now. We're done. Plus you've got the.

Talk Is Jericho
"an hour" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"All right, here we go. This is the third time Bruce dicketts and joins us here on talk is Jericho. I need to get you like a green jacket or something now. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, so like but I don't think we did it. Did we do on Zoom before or did we just do it? We have never done it in zoom. We did one in person, one in the studio, and now the new way of connecting via Zoom over the last few years. It's crazy without this technology this last year would have been a lot worse. I'd have to say. Yeah, we wouldn't have made a video for starters. Yeah, and with all the meetings for the video, everything was all done over Zoom with like 60 little tiles of people chatting away. Donald took at once, you know? Well, let's talk about that briefly. You're talking about the video for writing on the wall, which is animated, but there's so many Easter eggs and so much detail and so much in there for it but I'm assuming that you were kind of the captain behind this quarterback in the whole thing. Yeah, although I mean, I came up with the idea that we should do something big as a video. And then rod said, well, yeah, I kind of agree with that. So go away and think of something. Oh, thanks. So I wrote the story and then with the story we got Andrew and Mark on board here with the two producers from Pixar and then they found blink who were the animation company in the UK that actually did it. So so far so good and then we were into 6 or 7 months of making a video or an animated video. And of course, funny enough, when we do this one man show thing that I'm doing around the country. So one of my dreams would have been to have a premiere for the video in a actual cinema with that big Dolby sound and the whole thing. And of course we couldn't because of the pandemic and all the rest of it. But I can have a little mini premiere every night. So I'm carrying this like big HD copy, whatever it is of the vid. With me and I have a we specify a really high quality HD projector and screen back projector and screen and obviously most of these places have got pretty good sound systems. So we've got a sound effects version of riding on the wall, with a full Dolby doom. You know, so basically I just in the interval, there's about a 25 minute interval. So as I go off, I go, by the way, you might just want to sit around and look at this because you'll see things like guarantee that you haven't seen on the small screen, it's so cinematic. It's amazing. Yeah, so we have a bit of fun with that. It's great because you're talking about an evening with Bruce Dickinson, which is this is an extensive tour as well of the United States looks like you're doing 30 or 40 cities. I was just in the UK last month when you were doing some shows there as well. And it's funny too looking at the press release. Did you know you're a polymath? Yeah, I know. I thought that was something that you got on a coral reef or something, you know, something you stepped on and it hurt your foot, you know. I thought it was a mathematician. I did not do what it was. Yeah. The person it does a lot of things, but none of them well. But in this day and age that's good enough and it's just exciting to see because I've done these type of shows before the one man shows and they're a lot of fun, but they're very hard. You have to really be locked in and concentrated to do these. Obviously you enjoy them because you've had so many shows. What kind of spurred your idea to do this? And were you just kind of throwing darts at first? What the hell do I do and figure it out as you go? Yeah, basically. I mean, when I did the autobiography, you know, what does this button do? Well, in the spirit of what does this button do? What happens if I try that? And that was when I was doing promotion for the book, the publishing company said, why don't you go around and just do some readings from the book? Yeah, that's okay, but there's not a bit boring. People can read it for themselves, and if I was like, you know, Syrian mckellen or like the late sir Richard Burton, you know, just sort of broadsword calling Danny boy, you know? But it's not me. You know, I said, it'd be more fun if I actually told the stories in the book like as a storyteller standing around acting around using rid of physical presence. And maybe tell a few stories that are not in the book. And maybe get some questions from the audience. And they went, oh yeah, we like that. Yeah, yeah. It's more interesting, isn't it? I mean, people just sit there like, you know, like mannequins for how many two hours, or you have them laughing and moving around and doing something. I said, why don't they write the questions out on cue cards? I said, and then I'll take them out the back and I'll do something with them. And they say, well, what are you going to do? I said, I'm not exactly sure, but I'll tell you at about 45 minutes. So what it was, I did was I have a one or twice in my life. I did a bit of improv street theater when I was 15, 16. And that switched on a bit of my brain. It's the same bit of my.

790 KABC
"an hour" Discussed on 790 KABC
"An hour to three hours and I probably had Flights were delayed an hour to three hours. Maybe in the last few years, maybe two or three times. Here's your forecast. Another stalled frontal boundary in the South will bring several days of rains from the coastal Carolina's into Florida and then back over to eastern Texas. Isolated river flooding impacts possible from coastal Virginia to the Georgia coast. An area of low pressure could also provide some showers as far north. As Western Pa. Will see clear conditions. So from New York to Maine and back into most of the Midwest today from the southwest into the Pacific Northwest, More monsoonal showers are expected. Local flash flooding is especially prone to areas of recent burn scars from wildfires. Temperatures overall are expected to remain Much below average over the next few days with high temperatures. 10 to 15 degrees colder than average from North Florida into the Southeast and the Carolinas. Rain and 83 for Atlanta today clear in 86 in Nashville, your national forecast from Red Eye radio I'm meteorologist John Trout. Your forecast is brought to you By Kendall. Super Def. It's low viscosity leads to increase protection and fuel savings. And that leads to victory. Kendall Motor oil, You get out what you put in.

Stand Up
"an hour" Discussed on Stand Up
"Impressive. Wow so think about our email address is wrong phone number. We'll see what happens. What why she that you know help on that the best in so fast.

Scrubbing In with Becca Tilley
"an hour" Discussed on Scrubbing In with Becca Tilley
"I'm like good and she and her sister got in the car. I didn't realize that they were coming to get me. They got in the car. We were still face timing and chatting did it. And they said come outside and they'd come to. My apartment is like got in the car and we drove around for an hour. Just like listening to it on repeat and just singing it at the top of our lungs. It was so cute. It's a memory. I'll never forget. I was laughing because your post about that. And how close your face to face and yes. I always facetime this close to the camera. And i'm like i know that but it was funny like realizing that haunting. It talks like with the phone right here like when i do it. I don't even want to be that up. Clay is based on like this. So my face is i. I've never seen my face like that..

The Thriving Dentist Show
"an hour" Discussed on The Thriving Dentist Show
"Will will help propel that forward and you know it's kind of like the flywheel effect can take a lot of effort to turn that five thousand found plunged pound flywheel jim collins concept from good to great but it you get that flywheel moving then just get get out of its way again. Remember to review the bonus Strategy which is where are you in terms of peo participation in your practice is it could be that that approach by itself would radically break you out of that five. That five hundred dollar an hour plato. Thank you get the last question. I'm a solo. Dentist i struggle with my feelings appointments. Can you suggest a scheduling model to take care of feelings. When that is all the patient needs and still meet production goals. What a great question. And you know i feel your pain and i'm what i'm reading into that question and i think that doctor said that's all the patient need i i. It's like i can stop doing fillings. A i hear it right that this is a solo. Dentist yes so. It's not like he could hear she could push the fillings downhill associate. Dentist he cannot can't at. There's now maybe that would be a longer term solution to look at getting busy enough and product enough to add an associate dentist so that you could push some of the less productive procedures to your associate dentist to free you up to be able to do more now. That's a that's a multifaceted solution. Not really answering your question. You said you're a solo denison. Well how do. I take care of the fillings. I'm going to share a thought. That i is gonna hopefully spur some thinking on longtime klein. Amazing dentist And he's a dentist the chooses to see children. Children are part of his practice and he came up with her something. On my encouragement that has worked really well for for for many years now. He found that when he had children pediatric appointments mixed in on a regular day. It was kinda hard to switch back and forth. You know the pace of doing pediatric dentistry. You know there's no way to sugarcoat it..

The Thriving Dentist Show
"an hour" Discussed on The Thriving Dentist Show
"Producing less because half of the money's taken by the insurance so forty two percents. Taking insurance pretty simple. I mean it is. And i didn't wanna start there because it sounds so simple. My twelve year old granddaughter would say she calls me poppy. That's that's my name in the family. As poppy she goes well duh. Poppy quit give it away. Forty four house. You want to know more about that tune into our other podcasts. The less insurance depends podcast. Let's put a lincoln the show notes near dependence podcast if you don't already know about it Nearly created podcast. Less insurance dependence podcast. We're about one hundred and thirty episodes into that. Each episode is Short format fifteen to eighteen minutes. All about practical things you can do to reduce insurance dependence So we just threw a bonus strategy in there and it may sound obvious but maybe you want to start there But in any case hope you hope you find all of this useful to follow your journey. You know we we. we've had. We've had the privilege narron in my coaching. Work of track tracking. Dennis been doing this long enough to actually start with a dentist very early in his career and actually work with them as a coach all the way through to his retirement. Actually had that how. It's kinda like dennis. That say you know. I've been in practice long enough. That that i not only treat the the kids of my patients but i'm now treating the grandkids of my patients. I'm starting to feel like that but Had the privilege of watching doctors steadily increase their from to three hundred dollars an hour right out of school to four or five hundred dollars an hour to six seven hundred dollars an hour or two thousand plus an hour all the while mastering along the way and it's been a cool journey kind of follow. Well i took a sneak peek. I know we've got some great questions from our listeners that relate to our topic about the thousand dollar an hour dentist let's dive into the thriving.

The Thriving Dentist Show
"an hour" Discussed on The Thriving Dentist Show
"Assistance in two rooms using the concept of dovetail scheduling strategy number three throughout your career work on enhancing died the trifecta diagnosis treatment planning case presentation strategy number four added more high value dentistry. It'll increase your hourly average figure out what that is and what you love to do and how you'd love to help more patients in your community. Add more high value services strategy number five look for procedures that are more auxiliary driven and look at ways to add it now near it. Can i add a bonus strategy girlfriend. Are you sitting down there. Yeah okay one of the best wage you could increase your hourly production. Successfully resigned from ppo plans hundred percent. Because you're giving away we have done the ppo right off calculator and slaughter practices giveaway You know give away you know. Four hundred thousand five hundred thousand forty two percent of every dollar they make it's crazy that's the average. The average is forty two to forty four percent. That's the difference between your usual your contract. You're giving away forty two to forty four percent. Hey doug you wanna increase your early production. Forty to forty four percent..

The Thriving Dentist Show
"an hour" Discussed on The Thriving Dentist Show
"Want when they've had a floppy lower denture they want it fast so he will either see one or two patients on thursday doing nothing but those implant cases and he chooses not to have hygiene on thursday. I disagree with him on that. But i respect his decision. I keep telling you could have one hygienist and you could get up once an hour and go do a hygiene. I know i don't i don't wanna do that. Though gary when the patients paying me the fee they're paying me for that. You know that that all on four and six case i want to give them a hundred percent of my attention so i got it. I i respect your decision. But think about what he does to his hourly production when he has an all on four hundred and six or even to one in the morning one in the afternoon on thursday. Well how is he. You look at the average of that He has increased the average hourly production over the four days because of the massive production. He has on those on those too. So it kind of has a practice within a practice right doctor. He's got a practice within a practice. So that a lot of ways you can increase your hourly production and this is one idea is just one of the ways and it could be implants. It could be adult orthodontics could be cosmetic dentistry. Another another client does the same thing with cosmetic dentistry. Where on thursday either sees one or two patients. He either does a ten unit prep or seat in the morning. Tenure prep receipt and then a different ten unit prepar seat in the afternoon or sees one patient where he's doing. Twenty units kind of a combined restorative slash cosmetic case. He seeing one patient twenty units prep or seat for the day. And that's it. That's what he does on thursday again. You can see that hourly production. Now let me go to strategy number five and i think this will get a lot of attention look at procedures that you can do in your practice that are largely auxiliary driven or more auxiliary driven everything. I've talked to up to now kind of requires that it's all being done with your hands. But what if we could add procedures in your practice or add the volume of those procedures in your practice that are largely auxiliary driven then there are procedures like that in the practice and one of them that i find to be perhaps most applicable to the strategy is adult orthodontics. Either i either. A liner invis- line type. You know liners or short term like six months mile short-term brackets short-term model orthodontics using brackets very much auxiliary driven procedures. You know. Think about a vigilant. now yes. the doctor is required for the clinch appointment for that initial placement and all the setup on that but when we look at what happens on all the subsequent appointments most of that is being done by an assistant. Doc has some time in it. Don't get me wrong. It's not like the the doctors in hawaii vacation here..

The Thriving Dentist Show
"an hour" Discussed on The Thriving Dentist Show
"Every practice management software program has a way to do that within their software program and they use a code like for example if using ten minute increments so an hour six units of time you can mark each unit which is dr time. And which is assistant time. And when it's assistant time you can be in the next room doing something else and that can be dovetail scheduled into it so that you carefully go from one room to the next now does require that you train your assistance to do everything they're capable of doing up to your state dental practice act and i would strongly encourage you. That's a perhaps they midterm or longer term project but train your assistance to do everything they're allowed to do under your state practice. Don't violate that it's not worth it. It's not worth taking the risk event. Don't violate that. And secondly whatever it is that you're training them to do they need to be able to do to your quality standard so for example in our client base in most cases the assistance make these the assistance. Make the another tempers have to be made to your quality standard. Perhaps the exception of that would be an aesthetic case. If you're doing a ten unit up porcelain her case That might be an exception to that where you're actually making those steps. But for single units or even multiple units the assistance are making the temporaries. That can free you up to be in the next room doing something else so tip number. Two strategy number two is work to assistance and two treatment rooms. I call them scheduled from start to finish with the appropriate number of rocks in the schedule. Second column carefully dovetail that perhaps adding twenty five to thirty percent filled in the second column by simply recognizing that you don't have to be in the other room doing something. A very capable assistant is in the other room taking care of your patient up to the standard that you require you can now be in the next room doing something else and i just covered a lot of detail there. Does that make sense. Absolutely it makes total sense. What i like about this episode is. You're giving some very very specific tips. Things that is not something that people can apply. Even if they're gonna play every one of those tips you know just playing one alone. I think would make a big difference. You know we've taught that to clients And they start to apply that one of the things we've heard is routinely from our clients. Is gary when we first Ramped my daily hourly production. Go up to this. I felt like okay. I better be careful what i asked for because i may not like that. I may feel like. I'm working like a mule. You know just grinding grinding granny. And then when we actually did it with the tips you suggested. I was blown away. With how achievable it is. And then encouraged me to look at what the next level is a production and then and then when we hit that achievable values. So hopefully you'll have the same result. Let me go to the strategy number. Three be continuously working on three very specific contributing factors. That will contribute to your hourly production stats. I want you to constantly be working on improving your.

The Thriving Dentist Show
"an hour" Discussed on The Thriving Dentist Show
"Is is how to continually increase your hourly production by the way is the thousand dollar. A dentist thousand on our producer. Is that the pen. Ultimate possibility for dennis. Is that the glass ceiling. No i mean. I've seen some of your clients getty that far exceed that phonics that far exceed that we've seen a so by no means. Does that represent the you know the pinnacle of the best. You can do so really what we're going to cover is is how to increase your hourly production and that's something that i hope. Dennis are working throughout their life How to increase their hourly production. So tip number one strategy number one really take a close look and scrub you're scheduling template i want you to scrub that scheduling template. Every which way and look for. Does your templates support your goal. Does your template support the goal of producing an. I'll stick with the title. A thousand dollars an hour. And i'm going to get very specific with it. Do you have the appropriate mix of appointments in your day. Rock sand in water roxanne water. If you're new to the thriving. Dennis show that might be a new terminology for you. If you're a regular listener you know what i'm talking about. Rocks mean are are significant. Productive appointments water are minor productive. Appointments soothe me sand is minor rocks are significant production. Blocks sand is are minor. Production blocks and water is the non or very low productive appointments. Do you have a scheduling template that suppo- supports that or is it like we most commonly see a scheduling coordinator hasn't been trained in that and she simply putting in names and the schedule with no regard to what the productive value of that appointment is if you wanna primer on that Go to episode four. Twenty two in the thriving. Dennis show relatively recently was done in the last year. Go to episode four twenty two that we titled five tips to master scheduling and share that with your scheduling coordinator or coordinators in the practice. Where you all get a deep dive into the concepts of rock sand and water in your schedule so number one is create a scheduling template that actually supports your hourly production goal your hourly production strategy number two. I strongly believe that a very workable format to consistently produce a thousand dollars a day. Is that the dentist has to assistance and two treatment rooms.

The Thriving Dentist Show
"an hour" Discussed on The Thriving Dentist Show
"Yes is the thriving. Dentist show with gary tax where we help you develop your ideal dental practice. One that provides personal professional and financial satisfaction. Welcome to another episode of the thriving to show. I'm gary tackes your podcast co host. We have an exciting topic for you today. You might have seen the headline if you haven't seen it This episode is titled the thousand dollar an hour. Dentist well in this episode. We're going to cover how to become the thousand dollar an hour dentist in copious detail. Buckle up you're in for a good right hey before we get to that episode Two quick announcements the first announcement is that Upcoming in about a week from the time this episode airs we have our next thriving dentist. Nba livestream workshop. It's covered over three evenings nine hours of ce covered over three different evenings April twentieth twenty-first and twenty second and in that thriving dentist nba workshop will cover the ten elements thriving and the twenty four systems..

Strength to Strength
"an hour" Discussed on Strength to Strength
"Conditions conditions could be that you're alone at home that you're mentally exhausted or the you're angry at someone were felt rejected by by peers. He saw something provocative. When you're outside basically just be honest with yourself about what conditions are usually in place when this happens and then right down on the faulty core beliefs that that Help you make you spiral down this temptation and i think this is. This is pretty important place to to look back in your life and think about the most painful moments in your life and what faulty quarterlies might have might have come out of that. This is kind of place. Counseling in this It's very helpful to make certain connections and to think about what faulty believes. He might have that not desirable to real people Or that what i do isn't isn't going to affect anybody else No one needs to know. So yeah just identify what faulty core beliefs. He might have been right down the warning signs like what. What kind of warning signs are there. That mean you're just about to fall into relapse. Could be the start to scroll. videos on. Social media could be that he start to think in your mind. About what ways could. I bypass the accountability software. My devices on these are all like warning. Signs ago knows about to to fall Then then right down like what could be the control stage so this is just a gain control the situation to stop that whole mine fog and the place that you're going to be things just like doing some deep breathing Or prayer or mentally envisioning the consequences and then. What's your escape plan. I think this is. This is really important to kind of list down. What your plan is for escape. It might be to call a brother or sister to have prayer. Maybe to stay off your electron devices for an hour to go out. Get some exercise and take a walk or something like that or even just reviewed the document that you're creating To to have a real concrete escape plan then you have recovery plans..

Zero Credit(s)
"an hour" Discussed on Zero Credit(s)
"So i feel like it might be hard to just wrap up hip though. You're probably not wrong. I think we're at a great great new new term limit for ourselves that we just hit. Were just a little bit over an hour So i feel like it is time to wrap up. I can't see what. He's speeco god. Because i can't see your way form i don't know want to shut up..