35 Burst results for "Anders"

Isles score 4 fastest goals in playoff history, top Canes

AP News Radio

00:30 sec | Last month

Isles score 4 fastest goals in playoff history, top Canes

"The islanders scored four times in the final four minutes to beat the hurricanes 5 to one putting New York within two games to one in the series. It was a one on one deadlock until Kyle Palmer and Matt Martin scored 44 seconds apart. Then Scott Mayfield and Anders Lee tallied in a 16 second span giving the islanders four goals in two minutes, 18 seconds, I play off record. Casey's suze also scored an Ilya siroc and stopped 30 shots for the islanders who host came four on Sunday afternoon. Just for frost had Carolina's lone goal. I'm Jane ferry.

Matt Martin Anders Lee Kyle Palmer Scott Mayfield 30 Shots Two Games Sunday Afternoon 16 Second Four Times Two Minutes 44 Seconds 18 Seconds Four Goals 5 Four Minutes Casey ONE York Jane Ferry Carolina
Anders Lee scores twice as Islanders beat Red Wings 4-1

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | 3 months ago

Anders Lee scores twice as Islanders beat Red Wings 4-1

"The islanders did their scoring in the third period to beat the red wings four to one. The isles trailed one nothing until Zach Paris and Anders Lee scored in the first four 39 of the final period. Lee added the final goal of the afternoon. We knew if we kept playing the way we did that, we would generate our opportunities and we just had to find a way to put one in. No adopts and also scored and Ilya siroc and stopped 22 shots as New York stayed among the top 8 teams in the Eastern Conference. The red wings dropped their 5th in a row as their postseason hopes fade. Dylan Larkin scored and Magnus helberg stopped 31 shots for Detroit. I'm Jade berry

Zach Paris Anders Lee Red Wings Islanders Ilya Siroc LEE Dylan Larkin New York Magnus Helberg Detroit Jade Berry
SportsWatch intro wrap-sportsminute-09-41-08-812

AP News Radio

02:00 min | 3 months ago

SportsWatch intro wrap-sportsminute-09-41-08-812

"AP sports. It's the all star break in some NBA players around the move. Russell Westbrook will sign with the LA clippers according to an ESPN report, who also reports the Chicago Bulls are finalizing a deal with Patrick Beverly. Myers Leonard will resume his NBA career with the Milwaukee box who signed letter to a ten day contract letter hasn't played in the NBA since he used an anti semitic slur while playing a video game nearly two years ago. Kevin Love will sign with the Miami Heat. Top 25 college basketball. Third ranked Kansas got revenge from an earlier season blew out loss. This time they handled number 23 TCU 63 58, jayhawks coach Bill self on the difference between this game and the 23 point loss last month. At least we started to rebound in 40 minutes for the most part. We did a good job on their guys. We felt I could really have big nights. In the NHL, David pasternak scored twice. He's got 40 for the season and Boston one again, three one over Ottawa, Florida, top ten Anaheim four three and overtime. It was James reimer stopping 26 shots, lady San Jose to a four zero shutout of Seattle, Philadelphia top Calgary four three. New York islanders over Pittsburgh four to two, Bo horvat and Anders Lee scored less than two minutes apart in the third period. Lee says his team played a complete game and didn't fold against the penguins. I'm really proud of our guys tonight. We could have gone another way. And we pushed through and we took control and were able to come out with just a big one. While Winnipeg goalie caught her hella buck had a spectacular night, he made 50 saves, leading the jets past the New York rangers four to one. At this point, we just taken wins anyway to come. We did a lot of good things. We brought some energy. And we definitely kept into the outside and controlled rebounds. So, you know, there was definitely a lot of those good block shots. It could be K, power play goal. So there's a lot of good stuff tonight. I know the shots are flop sided, but it was a good team game. Former San Antonio spurs in Minnesota Vikings owner, red mccombs has died. He was 91. Chuck Friedman, AP sports

NBA La Clippers Patrick Beverly Myers Leonard Russell Westbrook David Pasternak James Reimer Lady San Jose Chicago Bulls Kevin Love Bo Horvat Anders Lee Espn AP Jayhawks TCU Milwaukee Miami Hella Buck Kansas
Islanders rally in the third for 4-2 win over Penguins

AP News Radio

00:32 sec | 3 months ago

Islanders rally in the third for 4-2 win over Penguins

"Behind three third period goals, the islanders rallied from down two one to beat the penguins four two, Bo horvat tied the game at two before Anders leap with the aisles ahead, less than two minutes later. That's a full team win. I'm really proud of our guys tonight. We could have gone another way. And we pushed through and we took control and were able to come out with just a big one. Brock Nelson scored twice for New York, which hot Pittsburgh in the Eastern Conference wild card race. Jake genzel and Jason Zucker scored for the penguins, losers of three straight, Josh Valtteri, Pittsburgh.

Bo Horvat Islanders Penguins Anders Brock Nelson Jake Genzel Jason Zucker Pittsburgh New York Josh Valtteri
Parise scores late, Nelson nets 2 as Islanders edge Penguins

AP News Radio

00:37 sec | 3 months ago

Parise scores late, Nelson nets 2 as Islanders edge Penguins

"The islanders three game skid has ended with a 5 four victory over the penguins. Moved up to the top line, Anders Lee had two goals and an assist to help the aisles move ahead of the Panthers and capitals for the second Eastern Conference wild card. We found a way tonight. We stuck with it. We got to our game. And we battled all night, and that's what ultimately I think pulled us through. Brock Nelson also had two goals in an assist, but it was Zach parisi's goal with two 43 remaining that put New York in a virtual tie with Pittsburgh for the first wild card. Ilya siroc and stopped 40 shots of blank depends in the third period. For a card Raquel scored twice for the penguins. I'm Dave fairy.

Anders Lee Islanders Brock Nelson Penguins Zach Parisi Panthers Ilya Siroc Pittsburgh New York Raquel Dave Fairy
Barzal scores in OT, Islanders beat Golden Knights 2-1

AP News Radio

00:31 sec | 4 months ago

Barzal scores in OT, Islanders beat Golden Knights 2-1

"Matt barzel and semyon varlamov sent the islanders to their second straight win since a 6 game skid, two one against the golden knights and overtime. Barzel scored the winner at four 28 of the extra session. Moments after varlamov stopped William Kerry a on a penalty shot. Barzel had just one point in his previous ten games. Varlamov made 44 saves as New York handed Vegas. It's fourth straight loss. Anders Lee opened the scoring in the second, but carrier tied it later in the period. Logan Thompson stopped 35 shots for the nights. I'm Dave ferry.

Barzel Matt Barzel Semyon Varlamov Varlamov William Kerry Golden Knights Islanders Anders Lee Vegas Logan Thompson New York Dave Ferry
Sorokin makes 23 saves as Islanders beat Red Wings 2-0

AP News Radio

00:37 sec | 4 months ago

Sorokin makes 23 saves as Islanders beat Red Wings 2-0

"Alias Heroku made 23 saves in the islanders snapped a 6 game losing streak by blanking the red wings two zero. Brock Nelson had a goal and an assist to support ciroc and who notched his 14th career shut out to get a couple of games. Kind of a mini push here to reset, get some rest and then continue to push after break to see you. Anders Lee also scored and Kyle Palmer had to assist, giving him four and three games since returning to the lineup. Lee put the owls they had four 44 into the second period. Nelson provided New York's first third period goal in 12 games. Magnus helberg stopped 26 shots for the red wings who had won two in a row. I'm Dave ferry.

Alias Heroku Brock Nelson Ciroc Anders Lee Red Wings Kyle Palmer Islanders Owls Magnus Helberg LEE Nelson New York Dave Ferry
Decentralized Finance (DeFi): The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Bitcoin Audible

02:02 min | 5 months ago

Decentralized Finance (DeFi): The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

"Decentralized finance. The good, the bad and the ugly. By Allen farrington and Anders Larson. What follows does not represent the views of either author's employer and is not financial or investment advice. It is intended as a philosophical technical and economic assessment of a novel class of Internet protocols. These protocols mostly happen to give rise to natively digital assets, which lend themselves to naturally emerging online and effectively public markets, and which present direct investment opportunities. Nonetheless, the following is merely and only our opinion of how these technologies are likely to progress. Readers considering investing in any asset discussed herein should do their own research and should not rely on our work. Quote I'm just here so I don't get fined. Marchand lynch testifying on behalf of Sam bankman freed. A common refrain in the wake of the collapse of FTX as with Celsius BlockFi and Voyager before it was that this was C 5, not DeFi, or centralized finance, not decentralized finance, and if anything, only further demonstrates the need for DeFi. Pundits railing against DeFi are therefore missing the mark in their over broad hostility. It has been said, in our previous paper, only the strong survive, we made each of the following observations. One. Our main problem with DeFi is that it is not decentralized and it is not finance. Two. Nonetheless, we support the idea of decentralized finance in theory. Even if DeFi isn't it in practice. Three. We believe a variety of decentralized finance will emerge on Bitcoin and to some extent already has.

Allen Farrington Anders Larson Marchand Lynch Sam Bankman Defi Bitcoin
Kakko scores late to lead Rangers to 5-3 win over Islanders

AP News Radio

00:31 sec | 5 months ago

Kakko scores late to lead Rangers to 5-3 win over Islanders

"Carpal caco is called the tie breaking goal with two 47 remaining as the rangers went on to beat the islanders 5 to three. Barclay goodrow had a goal and two assists as the rangers won for the 8th time in 9 games. Over the last three, four weeks our game is transformed into the way we kind of envisioned it to start the year. I think we're playing way more consistent. Like you said, finding ways to win. Anders Lee scored his 11th for the aisles who managed just 18 shots on goal, they have dropped 5 of 6. Mike mancuso, New York

Carpal Caco Barclay Goodrow Rangers Islanders Anders Lee Mike Mancuso New York
Islanders score 3 in 3rd to rally past rival Rangers 4-3

AP News Radio

00:35 sec | 7 months ago

Islanders score 3 in 3rd to rally past rival Rangers 4-3

"For the second straight night the islanders erased a three one lead in the third period of a four three victory This time against the rangers Adam peck started to come back before Brock Nelson and Anders Lee scored one 44 apart put in the aisles ahead with 5 and a half minutes remaining Lee says they were confident down three one Two goal deficit going into the third nothing to lose but an opportunity to have a great 20 minutes We'll take that Nelson and Kyle Palmer had power play goals in the islanders 7th win in 8 games Our temi prana and set up power play goals by Chris kreider and Vincent Roche for the rangers I'm Dave ferry

Adam Peck Brock Nelson Anders Lee Islanders Rangers Kyle Palmer LEE Temi Prana Nelson Chris Kreider Vincent Roche Dave Ferry
Lee, Nelson lead surging Islanders to 5-2 win over Blues

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | 7 months ago

Lee, Nelson lead surging Islanders to 5-2 win over Blues

"The islanders net four unanswered second period goals and beat the blues 5 to two New York wins their 5th in a row St. Louis has dropped 6 straight The second period goals are scored by cow pal Mary Brock Nelson Josh Bailey and Anders Lee Regardless of what's going on over there that's a great that's a great hockey team And they're going to figure it out and they're going to they're going to have a great season It's just a stretch for them And so we knew they were coming and becoming hard And they always doing this building is a tough place to play Vladimir Cinco and Robert Thomas score for the blues Ilya siroc and wins in Jordan Bennington takes the loss Mike Reeves St. Louis

Mary Brock Nelson Josh Bailey Anders Lee Islanders St. Louis New York Hockey Vladimir Cinco Ilya Siroc Robert Thomas Bennington Jordan Mike Reeves
"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

The Philosopher's Zone

02:34 min | 7 months ago

"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

"And I would recommend anybody <Speech_Male> as soon as they're finished <Speech_Male> listening to this conversation <Speech_Male> they should go and listen to <Speech_Male> your podcast. <Speech_Male> Tell us <SpeakerChange> about that. <Speech_Male> Yeah, no, <Speech_Male> thanks. It was a <Speech_Male> fascinating project. <Speech_Male> It's kind of a lockdown <Speech_Male> project in <Speech_Male> a sword. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> So <Speech_Male> together with Benjamin <Speech_Male> Nicholas at the <Speech_Male> university of Sydney and <Speech_Male> Helen Wilson, <SpeakerChange> a <Speech_Male> colleague here at mcquarrie, <Speech_Male> we came <Speech_Male> up with this idea <Speech_Male> of dramatizing <Speech_Male> one of Anders <Speech_Male> diaries. I guess <Speech_Male> we've spoken about <Speech_Male> the way in which he <Speech_Male> was trying to give <Speech_Male> the <Speech_Male> reader a certain <Speech_Male> experience and we <Speech_Male> thought it would be really <Speech_Male> nice if we could make <Speech_Male> this come to life. <Speech_Male> And we <Speech_Male> picked this <Speech_Male> Hollywood diary, <Speech_Male> the one that we <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> briefly mentioned, <Speech_Male> precisely <Speech_Male> because it's such an evocative <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> reflection, <Speech_Male> such a <Speech_Male> multi layered <Speech_Male> and interesting <Speech_Male> representation <Speech_Male> of his thought. <Speech_Male> We very quickly <Speech_Male> realized that <Speech_Male> all the things that Anders <Speech_Male> was warning about <Speech_Male> when he was thinking <Speech_Male> about technology <Speech_Male> that you would always have to <Speech_Male> reinvent how something <Speech_Male> feels <Speech_Male> was very true. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> So we had to write <Speech_Male> a new script. <Speech_Male> And that's why <Speech_Male> the podcast now <Speech_Male> runs under the title <Speech_Male> real is <Speech_Male> not real enough. And <Speech_Male> I guess that's a reference <Speech_Male> to the way in <Speech_Male> which <Speech_Male> the real experience <Speech_Male> or the real <Speech_Male> reality <Speech_Male> is not the kind of thing <Speech_Male> that sells. So <Speech_Male> we need to have <Speech_Male> better version. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> And yeah, we <Speech_Male> recorded it <Speech_Male> in a <Speech_Male> very kind of <Speech_Male> fitting manner <Speech_Male> via <Speech_Male> Zoom to Berlin <Speech_Male> where German <Speech_Male> actor <Speech_Male> performed the diary <Speech_Male> and then <Speech_Male> we had a <Speech_Male> whole companion <Speech_Male> podcast <Speech_Male> alongside <Speech_Male> that that is actually <Speech_Male> still episodes <Speech_Male> I think <Speech_Male> coming out <Speech_Male> where we're just <Speech_Male> catching up with <Speech_Male> my <Speech_Male> colleague Helen is hosting <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> conversations <Speech_Male> about Anders <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> with <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> some people are <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> under experts, but <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> it's also <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> people who are not really <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> related to others and are kind <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> of reacting to his <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> ideas just <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> to unpack some of the <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> layers of his thinking. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> And I <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> guess the real <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> goal was <Speech_Music_Male> the ability <Speech_Music_Male> to experience <Speech_Male> his <Speech_Music_Male> words and <Speech_Music_Male> experience <Speech_Music_Male> the kind of images <Speech_Music_Male> that it <SpeakerChange> opens up <Speech_Music_Male> for us. <Speech_Music_Male> It's so <Speech_Music_Male> great. Highly <Speech_Music_Male> recommended listening. <Speech_Male> And Chris, <Speech_Male> it's been wonderful to talk <Speech_Male> to you for the philosopher's <Speech_Male> design. Thanks so much for coming <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> on the program. <SpeakerChange> No, <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> thank you very much for <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> the opportunity to <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> come and talk about others <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> very much <SpeakerChange> enjoyed it. <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> Chris Muller, senior <Speech_Male> lecturer in cultural <Speech_Male> studies and media <Speech_Male> at Macquarie <Speech_Male> university in Sydney. <Speech_Male> And for much, <Speech_Male> much more on <Speech_Male> Gunther Anders, check <Speech_Male> out the podcast <Speech_Male> real is not <Speech_Male> real enough <Speech_Male> via your preferred <Speech_Male> podcast app. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> And this <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> has been the philosopher's <Speech_Music_Male> zone with me, David <Speech_Music_Male> Rutledge, you can find <Speech_Music_Male> us by the ABC <Speech_Male> listen

Helen Wilson university of Sydney Nicholas Benjamin Anders Hollywood Berlin Helen Chris Muller Chris Macquarie Sydney David ABC
"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

The Philosopher's Zone

05:26 min | 7 months ago

"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

"Have all these unintended consequences that only years later become visible. So he has this beautiful image in the obsolescence of the human that is anticipating the carbon footprint in a way where he says we're all much bigger than we are. But at the same time, we're much smaller because we don't feel that we're doing anything of consequence. But we're going to leave this massive legacy every one of our acts has these potentials that we're not aware of. Yeah, and I think when we look at climate change in this context, we also come up against this idea of the incapacity of the human imagination. We're unable to extricate ourselves from the technologies and the modes of production that are cooking the planet, but when we try to imagine an alternative to consumerism and market capitalism, we just seem to come up with nothing. Yeah, and I guess again, that has to do with the way that power is structured and under this fork. Where he would say, well, it's not a moral failing that you're not imagining this. It's precisely you can not imagine it as such. It has become, in a sense, physiologically impossible for you to keep hold of the consequence of every one of your machine interactions at the whole chain of production that might lead to. And for him, that's not a kind of an excuse, right? He's saying, well, that's not an excuse to not confront this unseen. But normal human ethics, the ethics that relies on how I feel when I do something and how my acts might be perceived. If precisely the thing we seem to have engineered away and precisely because it's so recalcitrant because it creates so much friction and it's inconvenient to people in power, that kind of thing, technology is imposed or created or presented to us as a solution, which is actually switching off those kind of impulses. So the kind of way in which he tries to confront this is often precisely by confronting us with this escape with this kind of have you are you really aware how unaware you are, right? And have you ever confronted that? And it's your task to confront yourself with that fact. I want to talk a little bit about Anders style because style was very important aspect of his work. And you mentioned that in the 1950s, he turns his attention to the nuclear threat. And in that turn, he adopts a new style of writing or a style of writing that's different from his previous works. What's he concerned with at this point and how does his style reflect that concern? So he starts off as someone who writes really in the philosophical style of the 1920s of his time. So if you read his early work, it's really like reading heidegger who served very, very technical.

Anders heidegger
"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

The Philosopher's Zone

04:48 min | 7 months ago

"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

"Of technology is the key phenomenon, I guess, or one of the key phenomena that his thinking is kind of propelled by and fascinated by. You're listening to the philosopher's zone with me David Rutledge and Chris Muller from Macquarie university in Sydney, who is currently engaged in translating the work of the 20th century German philosopher Gunther Anders, who I like to describe as the most interesting and important thinker you've possibly never heard of. Chris is very keen that more people should know about Gunther Anders and I for one support that mission. So do keep listening and also make sure you check out the podcast about Gunther Anders that Chris Muller has been involved in more on that a little later in the program. I want to ask you about

Gunther Anders Chris Muller David Rutledge Macquarie university Sydney Chris
"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

The Philosopher's Zone

05:05 min | 7 months ago

"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

"So factories and film studios, all sorts of menial work whilst, I guess, his colleagues are whatever you want to call his networks. They often had the means to write and to meet and discuss to maintain a kind of university culture in exile. And this situation for Anders became quite permanent and he adopted a writing style that would be quite accessible and he had a kind of a moral sense of obligation that his writing would be accessible to the wider public. And as a consequence of that, he would often write about technologies much earlier than the famous philosophers would. But still they would often in academic circles become celebrated for their ideas, even though unders was kind of their times decades earlier, right? They're not really acknowledged in the intellectual kind of universe. Until I guess the late 1990s, when his work was picked up in universities and has been this, I guess, ongoing way of discovery is the wrong word, right? Because people were reading under this widely, which is not necessarily at universities. And this all happens after he dies. He died in 1992. Yeah, he died in 1992 and I guess again, possibly has to do with who he was as a person. So he would not shy back of kind of seeking dialog or seeking a kind of public confrontation is not quite the right word, but he would call out his contemporaries in his professional philosophers as he would call it. And he would kind of challenge them to take a stand or to respond to certain world events. And kind of attack a certain attitude and the pompeius of universities and caricaturing his writing. So I mean, I would not like to publish alongside others whilst he is still around, right? Because it would be quite uncomfortable. He would have been right at home on philosophy Twitter. Maybe, or maybe not given his definitely, yeah.

Anders Twitter
"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

The Philosopher's Zone

04:03 min | 7 months ago

"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

"So that's a really, if we think of that phrase a world without us in that context it means, oh, not being permitted to the world, not being granted access. So that experience is very central. And Dan, I know it's no longer brief, but maybe one additional little twist is that he's also really concerned with music, musical listening, literature, art, and yet he was a creative poet, novelist, all these kind of things. And these profound reflections on language and again, how we kind of experience ourselves and the world, shape a really big part of his work. Yeah, there's a lot there. I mean, it's very complex stuff. It's very hard to boil down to a nice set of philosophical principles. Let's maybe just quickly mention some of the personal and intellectual networks that he was a part of as a way of locating him within a particular 20th century milieu. Because he was connected to some really key philosophers and writers at various points in his life. Can you run me through some of those? Yeah, absolutely. Well, good to Anders was actually born to stem. So he was the in 1902. He was the son of a very famous intellectual couple called Clara and William stem, and they were actually famous philosophers and psychologists in their own right. And so he was, I guess, from birth, part of her certain educated class, like that kind of layer. She studied his PhD under who sell in Freiburg and there he was also taught by heidegger and those are the thinkers who I guess had a really big influence on him early on. Then in the late 1920s he got married to Hannah arendt, of course, who is a very famous thinker in her own right. That was a short lived marriage, I guess. It was overshadowed by the changing political situation and under this changing situation at the university. So for a brief time, he was based at the university of Frankfurt where people like adorno and he was trying to do his habilitation project there. So I guess second PhD would call it in the general context. But Dan Nazi rise to power changed everything, and he was forced into exile. In exile, he first ended up in Paris, where it's not quite clear what he was doing there, but he definitely continued to have aspirations to become an academic. So he maintained contact with Walter Benjamin, who's also a kind of distant relative of him. He went, he met Sartre levinas, these were like levinas actually translated one of Congress's early texts into French at the time. So there's all that lineage. And Dan, as he ended up in the states, he was part of this wider emigre community of German emigres, German Jewish thinkers and poets. And literary figures. So there's a really dense network of thinkers he's related to. Yeah, so he's in bellied within this very eminent and influential group of thinkers. Practically from birth. And he wrote nearly 30 books in his lifetime. Many of which were celebrated and very widely read. But in spite of all this, he sees himself as something of a marginal figure and untimely figure as he puts it. Why does he see himself in this way? I think that really has to do with academia as an institution or the university as an institution. So unlike his famous contemporaries, he didn't really have a university career. And this was deeply affected by Hitler's rise to power, but also he didn't have the financial means to support himself as an independent intellectual. So in this whole years of exile, he was working a whole set of odd jobs.

university of Frankfurt Dan Dan Nazi Hannah arendt Anders Freiburg Sartre levinas heidegger Clara adorno William Walter Benjamin levinas Paris Congress Hitler
"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

The Philosopher's Zone

03:34 min | 7 months ago

"anders" Discussed on The Philosopher's Zone

"Zone with me David Rutledge welcome to the program. And welcome to an introduction, I guess this will be for a lot of listeners to a philosopher who's not well known outside of Europe, but I think you'll agree by the end of the program that his relative obscurity in the anglosphere is something that really needs to change. This is a conversation about Gunther Anders. A German philosopher of the mid to late 20th century whose work on media and technology was quite revolutionary in its own time, but really stunningly prophetic in the way that it anticipates modern technology in our world of digitally mediated reality. There's so much to say about Gunther Anders his body of work is sprawling and complex and just the story of his life on its own would take up way more time than we have here. So I guess I'm doing something of a Gunther and is one O one here with Chris Muller, who is a senior lecturer in cultural studies and media at Macquarie university in Sydney. Chris Muller is a scholar of Gunther Anders. He's been translating the work of gunter island into English, and he's been involved in the production of a podcast which is simply one of the best things I've listened to in a really long time and I'll give you some details about that a little later in the program. In researching this episode, I found that the more I read about Gunther Anders, the more I started to despair about how I was going to be able to present his work in a succinct and digestible fashion. But then I realized that's not my job. I can ask Chris Mueller to do this. So let's begin with a sort of summary if we can. If I ask you to tell me about gunter Anders, just in a brief outline to somebody who has never heard of him before, just in terms of the key ideas in his work. How would you describe him? Yeah, that's a really difficult question, as you say, he wrote so much, but he is best known as a thinker of the nuclear situation. So if the advent of nuclear weapons of technology and for his harrowing visions of a world without us, so weld in which our relationship to technology has created an uninhabited environment. It's most famous book was published in 1956, and it opens on a reflection on what he calls promethean shame. So the feeling of being outsmarted, outperformed, or somehow inadequate whilst we interact with a machine. So I kind of mentioned this because there's a real emphasis on immersion on how we see and feel our own act, how we relate to ourselves and how technology is changing all of this at a really rapid pace. So I guess in that context would be that we're creating a world that we're unable to Intuit, understand, anticipate, and that our world is kind of running out of control because of that. Now, that, I guess, is most famous strand of thought. I really additional and important thing to mention is that he's a really important thinker of exile and the emigre experience. In 1943, just a few days after Hitler's rise to power and this was forced into exile and was a stateless refugee, lost his passport, his right to work, what he called his life permit. So, and that really had a profound influence under where he conducts philosophy. So the experience of what he calls living a stammering life of being in a foreign context of different language and being kind of spoken down to in that way.

Gunther Anders Chris Muller David Rutledge gunter island Chris Mueller Macquarie university Gunther Europe Sydney Intuit Hitler
Ondrej Palat scores twice, Devils beat Islanders, 4-1

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | 7 months ago

Ondrej Palat scores twice, Devils beat Islanders, 4-1

"Andre Palazzo scored twice in the Devils even their record at two and two with a dominating four one win over the islanders Palazzo scored in each of the final two periods giving New Jersey a three zero lead Everybody played a right way Everybody stay on top We didn't shoot for offense And were you going to score We have a talent on the front Yeah so that's the way we have to play Nico he sure set up each of those goals and added an empty netter The devil's that shot the aisles 41 17 and blank the home team until Anders Lee beat Mackenzie blackwood with three 16 remaining I'm Dave ferry

Andre Palazzo Devils Palazzo New Jersey Nico Anders Lee Mackenzie Blackwood Dave Ferry
"anders" Discussed on Live Talk with Dwayne Moore

Live Talk with Dwayne Moore

05:15 min | 9 months ago

"anders" Discussed on Live Talk with Dwayne Moore

"And today is pretty special day for me. One of my dear Friends, Josh Anders is here. I just. What's up? Dwayne. How are you doing, man? And live talk nation. You know, we called it live top because it originally was supposed to really, truly been live. But every time we try to live, it something went wrong. We also broadcast another nations and even in Pakistan and no one ever. We never could coordinate all that too well. So now it's pre recorded live. Is that really count? I don't know. I mean, yeah. It is live as we are doing it. It's live right now, and this is not scripted. Now, listening to us, you may feel like it's very formal and we're reading every thing, but no. It's totally off the cuff. Oh, I've learned a lot about this because we already started a we recently started a podcast here. Yeah, I'm not in the podcast but my wife, our youth pastor, and our one of our teaching passengers are a part of it. And it's been really fun. I've learned a lot about podcasting. So I appreciate what you do. Good job. I saw part of one. I've been on most of that time. You've been doing that, but I did. I talked a little bit. And it looked like you guys have taken it really seriously. You did some homework before you started. We're just trying to get up there like you doing. Oh, well. That would not be difficult. I think God for Barry, behind the scenes, putting it all together because if I didn't have somebody like that, I wouldn't be able to do this, but you need somebody working behind the scenes to absolutely everything together. And he does anything from reach out, you know, he connected with you. And I don't think in this case, because I was gone the whole time, I've been in Africa.

Josh Anders Dwayne Pakistan Barry Africa
"anders" Discussed on MMA Roasted

MMA Roasted

02:13 min | 1 year ago

"anders" Discussed on MMA Roasted

"<Speech_Male> But I <Speech_Male> thought, you know, I must bought <Speech_Male> Twitter and he was gonna <Speech_Male> let people have freedom <Speech_Male> of speech, <SpeakerChange> and I was up. <Silence> What's going on with <Speech_Male> you? <Speech_Male> He has a body <Speech_Male> yet. He hasn't <Speech_Male> bought it yet. <Speech_Male> And some of the stuff was <Speech_Male> like, <Speech_Male> I mean, some of the stuff was <Speech_Male> a little bit like, all <Speech_Male> right, dude. <Speech_Male> What <Silence> do you think about <SpeakerChange> Sean Strickland? <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> You know, <Speech_Male> there's definitely <Speech_Male> not never a secret <Speech_Male> to what's on <Speech_Male> his mind. And I <Speech_Male> think you <Speech_Male> can respect that. <Silence> I think that's <SpeakerChange> appreciated. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> The one guy who knocked <Speech_Male> out Israel Adesanya <Silence> and kickboxing. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Man if <Speech_Male> there is somebody, I think <Speech_Male> dude, I think he's like <Speech_Male> way better <Speech_Male> than he looks. <Speech_Male> Like if you watch my TV, <Speech_Male> but I may eat probably <Speech_Male> hit that dude, beat him up, <Speech_Male> take him down, but <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> he really doesn't get hip <Speech_Male> slush. <Speech_Male> That's a <SpeakerChange> good job, like <Speech_Male> show the rolling <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> throwing a <Speech_Male> combination, so <Speech_Male> now we'll see. <Speech_Male> I don't know. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Yeah, I don't <Speech_Male> know. The fidelity <Speech_Male> versus <SpeakerChange> the trailer park. <Speech_Male> So we'll see what's up. <Speech_Male> You're right. A <Speech_Male> 100%. <Speech_Male> I can't wait. <Speech_Male> This whole <Speech_Male> car is good. Laura Murphy, <Speech_Male> O'Malley, <Speech_Male> versus Pedro munoz, <Speech_Male> Uriah hall. <Speech_Male> Andre <Speech_Male> muniz Jessica <Speech_Male> I versus Macy <Speech_Male> barber, Barbara Barbara <Speech_Male> versus Lawler, <Speech_Male> Bobby <Speech_Male> green versus Jim Miller. <Speech_Male> I mean, this <Speech_Male> is a Jalen Turner <Speech_Male> versus Brad riddell. This is <Speech_Male> fucking stack card. <Speech_Male> Yeah. <Speech_Male> Yeah, <Speech_Male> it's great. Well, Eric, <Speech_Male> where can people <SpeakerChange> find you, <Silence> support you? <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> And you can get at <Speech_Male> me Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram, <Speech_Male> at Eric <Speech_Male> Anders, ER <Speech_Male> yk, <SpeakerChange> a and <Speech_Male> D, ERS. <Speech_Male> Now, either <Speech_Male> new t-shirts 'cause <Speech_Male> I wore my ya boy's <Speech_Male> shirt. Dude, <Speech_Male> it got to the point where <Speech_Male> he was like, you want another <Speech_Male> shirt? That's how much I was wearing <Speech_Male> it. He asked <Speech_Male> me if I wanted another <Speech_Male> shirt. <SpeakerChange> Like <Speech_Male> that's when <Speech_Male> I'm like, I'm not okay. <Speech_Male> I'm just <Speech_Male> chasing that clout, man. <Speech_Male> I know you got the followers, <Speech_Male> man. Yeah. <Silence> Well <Speech_Male> you get it. <Speech_Male> Do you have any <Speech_Male> more shirts <SpeakerChange> coming out? Are you having <Speech_Male> a shirt? New shirt I can get. <Speech_Male> I usually <Silence> drop them <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> when I have a flight coming up, <Speech_Male> but <Speech_Male> so for the next <Silence> one, I will, for sure. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> I guess you want to know. <Speech_Male> Come here. <Speech_Male> Say hi to Eric and Bill. <Speech_Music_Male> <Silence> Okay, I got it. <Speech_Male> Well, listen, you guys <Speech_Male> are the best. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> Thank you, Bill. Thank you, Eric. <Speech_Male> Have a great outcome a week. I appreciate it.

Sean Strickland Laura Murphy Pedro munoz Male> Uriah hall muniz Jessica Barbara Barbara Jalen Turner Brad riddell Twitter Jim Miller Israel Eric Facebook Bill
"anders" Discussed on MMA Roasted

MMA Roasted

05:42 min | 1 year ago

"anders" Discussed on MMA Roasted

"Is that guy? What's up, people? Welcome to a bread and mayor roasted podcast. Me, Adam hunter. Who would Bill dawes? I was taking this very seriously doing the show from a road trip. I don't know where he's going. But we got a great show. We got Eric Anders is on the card on the card on the show who I thought got robbed. I thought he won the fight. I actually kind of pissed about the whole thing. And then also, Sam Hughes, who was zero in three in the UFC, and then now has won her last two fights. So we're going to talk about that because that's pretty awesome and amazing. And also inspirational. And I'm here with Bill dawes, who are you going hunting? What is going on? You have a camouflage LA hat, which is like, you couldn't even be more different. So I know that there's nothing more LA than a camouflage LA Dodger sat. I'll take it off, I feel less do. She now I just have my Marty McFly vest on. Yes. Where are you up to? I'm in Austin, so I'm driving by, I'm just driving to get Wi-Fi. I'm a little late. My car died, so I had to wait for the, you know, all that shit. And I'm not a man, so I catch up with myself. Got it. Is anybody in the car with you? No. Okay, cool. So I'm here, actually. My daughter who has been sick, but she's better. She's better. She's had a cough. And I went to and from the doctor this and that. And my wife had COVID last week, so it was one of those situations, but now she's better too, but three kids in her school have COVID, which they told us, and then you can't take her to school unless she has, she had to get a rapid test saying she's negative. So I took her to school and then got thrown into the principal's office with my daughter. Saying she couldn't go into the classroom. And then of course, anyway, so she's home with me. We get the test back. But it is what it is. I don't even want her. If there's three kids that had COVID, I don't want her in that school situation. That's like saying, that's saying you had three kids at school had a cold. I'm not saying they're the same thing by that age. They're kind of the same thing. I can't wait for all this to be over. I just can't wait for it all to be over..

Bill dawes Adam hunter Eric Anders LA Dodger Sam Hughes LA Marty McFly UFC Austin cough
Bruins beat Islanders 6-3 in Bergeron's 1,200th game

AP News Radio

00:31 sec | 1 year ago

Bruins beat Islanders 6-3 in Bergeron's 1,200th game

"David Pasternak and Brad Marchand each had a goal and an assist while the Bruins scored four times in the second period of the six three win against the islanders Eric calling Jake DeBrusk each had a second period goal after Craig Smith and Taylor hall scored in the first Linas hallmark stopped twenty four shots for the Bruins fourteenth win in sixteen games Boston captain Patrice Bergeron appeared in this twelve hundred NHL game after missing four straight with an elbow infection Brock Nelson notches career high thirty of goal for the islanders who also received airplay tallies from Anders Lee and Zack presei I'm Dave Ferrie

David Pasternak Brad Marchand Jake Debrusk Bruins Linas Hallmark Islanders Taylor Hall Craig Smith Patrice Bergeron Eric Brock Nelson Boston NHL Anders Lee Zack Presei Dave Ferrie
Palmieri scores late, Islanders beat rival Rangers 2-1

AP News Radio

00:42 sec | 1 year ago

Palmieri scores late, Islanders beat rival Rangers 2-1

"Red hot Kyle Palmieri scored with two forty four remaining to send the islanders past the Rangers two to one merry has points in six straight games and nine of his last ten he has six goals and four assists during his ten game out streak after collecting just five goals in eleven points in his first thirty five games this season Anders Lee also scored Ilya Sorokin stopped twenty nine shots for the aisles Leah's court nine times during a six game goal streak can open the boys find my my stick a little bit and and get shots that I like and and I'm going with this finding your spots it's and you start to roll in and keep those good feelings going Igor sister can stop twenty six shots for the Rangers who remain six points up the metropolitan division lead I'm Dave Ferrie

Kyle Palmieri Anders Lee Ilya Sorokin Islanders Rangers Leah Igor Dave Ferrie
"anders" Discussed on QUEERY with Cameron Esposito

QUEERY with Cameron Esposito

02:13 min | 1 year ago

"anders" Discussed on QUEERY with Cameron Esposito

"Sorry? <Speech_Female> It's just the <Speech_Male> world. Like sometimes <Speech_Male> the world is just <Speech_Male> one has to <Speech_Music_Female> just exhale, you <Speech_Female> know. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> Well, Charlie <Speech_Female> Jane, it has been so <Speech_Female> great talking to you. <Speech_Female> Thank you for making time <Speech_Music_Male> again to come back. <Speech_Male> And I <Speech_Male> was my absolute <Speech_Male> pleasure. And <Speech_Male> thanks so much for your <Speech_Male> patience and for making <Speech_Female> this happen <SpeakerChange> in spite <Speech_Female> of all of the <Speech_Female> tree gods and <Speech_Female> <Speech_Male> Internet gods <Speech_Male> and everybody, <Speech_Male> you know. <Speech_Music_Female> Well, I love <Speech_Female> the book. <SpeakerChange> And <Speech_Female> I can't <Speech_Female> wait to read more of your <Silence> stuff and also to see <Speech_Music_Female> more of your stuff. <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> Yeah, <Speech_Music_Female> really. <Speech_Female> And before <Speech_Female> I <Speech_Female> send you back into your day, <Speech_Male> I just wanted to <Speech_Male> ask you to shout <Speech_Female> out a queer, <Speech_Female> which is <Speech_Female> a person place <Speech_Female> or thing <Speech_Female> that made you feel like you <Speech_Female> could be who you are today. <Silence> Is there somebody <Silence> you'd like to share? <Speech_Music_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> I'm going to shout <Speech_Male> out rika alke, <Speech_Male> who is <Speech_Male> a trans woman. <Speech_Male> Actually, she's in LA. <Speech_Male> And <Speech_Male> I've known her <Speech_Male> forever, but <Speech_Male> she published a science <Speech_Male> fiction novel called <Speech_Male> light from uncommon <Speech_Male> stars <Speech_Male> that just like <Speech_Male> knocked my socks <Speech_Male> off and it's <Speech_Male> about a trans girl <Speech_Male> who <Speech_Male> meets a <Speech_Male> violent teacher who has <Speech_Male> made a deal with the devil, <Speech_Male> but also is in love <Speech_Male> with an alien donut. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> Maker. <Speech_Male> And it's just, <Speech_Female> it's such <SpeakerChange> a fun. <Speech_Male> Great. <Speech_Male> But also just like <Speech_Male> heartfelt, <Speech_Male> just sweet, <Speech_Male> amazing book. <Speech_Male> And I really hope <Speech_Male> everybody should read it. <Speech_Male> Give me the title <Speech_Male> one more time. <Speech_Male> Light from <Speech_Female> uncommon stars. <Speech_Male> It is so <Speech_Male> good. I hope that <Speech_Male> such a beautiful <Speech_Male> book. <SpeakerChange> It's so <Speech_Male> beautiful. I love it. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> And your book <Speech_Male> that we're <SpeakerChange> talking about today <Speech_Male> is called <Speech_Male> victories greater than death. <Silence> And <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Female> I also listened <Speech_Music_Female> to it on <Speech_Female> audible. So anybody <Speech_Female> that is <Speech_Male> a more of <Silence> a listening <SpeakerChange> person, <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> there's <Speech_Male> that path too. <Speech_Music_Male> The audiobook <Speech_Male> is by <Speech_Male> princess bubblegum <Speech_Male> from adventure time. <Silence> Yes. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Yes. The <Speech_Male> entire book is read <Speech_Male> by princess bubblegum, <Speech_Male> just I'm <Speech_Male> actually Friends with hinden <Speech_Male> Walsh, and I was so happy <Speech_Male> that she agreed to do with <Speech_Male> it because that's <Speech_Male> such a, <Speech_Male> I'm like, oh my God, it's so <Silence> perfect. Yeah, <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> it's great. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> It's beautiful. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Well, <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> thanks, Charlotte, <SpeakerChange> doing what's great <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> to talk to you. <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> Thank you so <Speech_Music_Female> much and, <SpeakerChange> you know, <Speech_Music_Female> this was definitely worth <Music> the

LA
"anders" Discussed on QUEERY with Cameron Esposito

QUEERY with Cameron Esposito

01:53 min | 1 year ago

"anders" Discussed on QUEERY with Cameron Esposito

"Not be in my imagination. This huge. Yeah, I think you're totally right that like, you know, when queer people are not openly represented, but it's like a subtle kind of coded thing. There is internalized homophobia and transphobia and just all the phobias. There is internalized, you know, loathing or self loathing, perhaps on the point of the culture and creators that didn't feel like we deserve to actually be acknowledged, you know? I think that that's a 100% true. I don't know, I should have asked you this before, but can we, I mean, I know that this was like publicly announced. So this was being developed for TV, right? Yes, it is. Yeah. Super excited to see what happens with that. You know, yeah, it's optioned by Michael B. Jordan's production company outlier society. And they have a deal with Amazon. So Amazon Studios is developing it. I've been having really amazing conversations with the folks that outlier society and Amazon about like what they're going to do with it. And I'm just so excited to see where it goes because I feel like this is as much as this is a book I wish I'd had when I was a kid. That's what that would be a TV show that I definitely wish I would have had when I was a kid. Like if I could have had a show with that level of acceptance and that level of representation when I was like, you know, struggling teenager or whatever, I would have just, I would have been so over the moon. And I feel like, I don't know, I'm really, I'm can't wait to see what happens. I'm hoping to be involved a lot too. And I think that there's a lot of stuff in the book that, you know, because of YA book has to move so fast. There's so much pacing. There's stuff that I would love to take a little bit more time and unpack and spend a little more time on. So I'm hoping we get to.

Michael B. Jordan outlier society Amazon Studios Amazon
"anders" Discussed on QUEERY with Cameron Esposito

QUEERY with Cameron Esposito

02:55 min | 1 year ago

"anders" Discussed on QUEERY with Cameron Esposito

"One time and they started taking down a tree that was directly in front of where I recorded this podcast. During like as we were talking, a giant truck showed up a tree started to come down and then they pulled up one of those like tree chippers like from the movie Fargo and that was happening directly in front of me. And I didn't know what to do because it's like there's not another sound more soundproof place in the house than I live than this so anyway, thank you for rescheduling because we had already been talking when that was happening. Yeah, it was lovely chatting with you last time I was sad we were interrupted. I also had like people unexpectedly show up to try to install new Internet service at my place. So both. It was one of those things where it was like, okay, yep, our studios are just like big invaded by random people trying to do stuff. And it was kind of a comedy error. It was kind of amazing. How just like everything was conspiring. It was absolutely incredible. It really was. And the other thing that had happened is that because of just, I think, like, shipping delays. I had not when we first talked to him. So in some ways, it's really great that we pushed. When we first talked, I hadn't received victories greater than death, so I hadn't read it yet. And I was just kind of going and being like, well, hopefully Charlie Jane and I will have an excellent conversation based on just being too humans. But I have because we delayed I have had a chance to read your beautiful book. And so I have some, so it will be more intelligent and informed conversation on my end, which I'm thrilled about. So first, I love that you jumped in and wanted to have and wanted to talk about what your pronouns were. And this is something that really stands out to me about the book. So let's just pivot right to there that so victory is greater than death. Maybe you could just, do you want to do like a log line one sentence summary? Yeah. Totally. So victories greater than death is about a teenage girl named Tina, who has known for a long time that she's actually an alien who was left on earth as a baby in disguise to wait for when she was old enough for the aliens to come back and get her. And now it's time and she's ready to go back into the galaxy and rejoin that community and be part of this like and basically resume her life as a hero saving the galaxy and stuff. But it turns out to be more complicated than she was expecting and being a hero turns out to be more complicated. And it turns out that she's actually going to really need her chosen family around her in order to survive. What's coming? Yes. Yeah, it's sort of opposite Superman, right?.

Charlie Jane Fargo Tina
Ovechkin ties Hull for 4th all-time; Caps down Sabres 5-3

AP News Radio

00:44 sec | 1 year ago

Ovechkin ties Hull for 4th all-time; Caps down Sabres 5-3

"Our service can scored his seven hundred forty first career goal and set up two others as the capital's defeated the Sabres five three of that can tide Brad hall for fourth on the all time goals list it's nice to be in that company you know it's a pretty big numbers so we just move on obviously it's it's nice to be tied back to the hospital also a couple games left Tom Wilson added two goals and Evgeny Kuznetsov contributed his ninth tenth eleventh assist for the caps karmic Michael and John Carlson also scored and VTech vantage check made twenty saves for the capitals Cody Eakin Anders Bjork and Colin Miller scored for the sabers who suffered a fifth consecutive defeat I'm Dave Ferrie

Brad Hall Sabres Evgeny Kuznetsov Tom Wilson John Carlson Cody Eakin Anders Bjork Colin Miller Michael Dave Ferrie
"anders" Discussed on 31 Thoughts: The Podcast

31 Thoughts: The Podcast

05:33 min | 1 year ago

"anders" Discussed on 31 Thoughts: The Podcast

"Talked for about an hour hour and a half and good solid conversations with them. Thanks so much for this bus of luck this year with the hawk Anders the islanders joins us and before we start to talk about hockey and thanks so much for stopping by today. I know you're dog guy. I'm a dog i to. I've got a german shepherd. His name is astro Ama- houston astros fan. But i named him astro because it was a big fan of the jetsons. You have dogs. What kind of dogs are they. And what are their names. yes We have a couple. Australian shepherds are first one we We named him gordie named him after. Gordie howe perfect. He just He had recently just passed away. Actually when we when we got him and Couple years later whose time to get another one. And i we kind of had no choice. We named him. How i love it. I why gordy how free obviously didn't watch them growing up or anything like that but just Read his book. Learn about him watched Highlights on them. You know he's mr hockey. He was beloved for many reasons. You know his work ethic and what he did on the ice and then who. He was a person. I think someone. That a lotta people looked up to. Did you ever chance to meet him. No i didn't. I didn't get a chance to meet him but That would have been pretty cool old school shots of leg gordy with the shirt off fishing. And you say like this guy. Didn't have sophisticated jim technology and trainers in any of those. They did it the hard way you know. And that's what they knew. They'd go home in the summer and he played baseball at times. And you know work the farmer wherever was and that's how they got ready. How're you doing. Well yeah the you know. The recovery's been exactly the way i wanted to go We've been really good with it and now camps going to be the perfect chance for me to finish it off the right way because you know that there were times last year during the playoffs. Where because of the way lemerre does things people were expecting you to shoot out of the tunnel and a playoff game We were pushing it in every way we cut you know the guys were playing on the ice. I was doing my recovery and we went after it. You know in the best way possible so but yeah it was We were close it. Was there ever a moment. We thought you know what. I'm like a deer to away. I might be able to get out there There were times. I mean look at the end of the. It wasn't the right decision right as much as i wanted to be. As much as it was thought. And something i worked for With the doctors and everything The timing was still too soon but you can feel pretty good. At that time you can feel a lot better than you think. And at the same time. I'd have to jump into a you know a third round match up. Something that speeds been gone for quite a while so after the season last year i was out With one of my buddies. Who's a big canadians fan and I actually wasn't doing much hiring but he was very upset at something i said. He said that he says well. You know the cans the second best team the h. l. this year and i will confess there were a couple of beers involved here and i said you know actually i i think if i was to do like a power ranking probably put montreal seconds. They ran at runners up. But i might put the islanders second one. Nothing in game seven of that tampa team. He was terribly offended. He was he was very upset with this particular stance. But you know the point. I was trying to make to him is that i look at your team and to go. Seven games with tampa. You weren't able to play. I got a thing for all of you. At the end of last year is much pride as you guys had as a group for everything you did that one must have hurt just because of how close you were and how good you guys were. We have special group. There's a lot that goes into to get into that point. We'll never forget how that felt. And how that feels and when you get to that point of the year the the margins between teams margins between games pretty tight so you know what we We had some chances. And you know we're we're coming back knowing what we're capable of and with an opportunity to you know with a lot of work in between but To go backing into go further. You are a miserable team to play against. That is a real and that's a real compliment in the nhl. Any league really players always. I hate playing the islanders. And you you guys must feel that like when you're frustrating another team. 'cause you guys play are real tight game like other moments. We sit on the bench and you just know like okay. These guys are frustrated. We got them when we go on. Play the game that we wanna play. I mean you hear it all the time right but when our team plays to who. We are You can get that feeling at times. We feel on on the other end at times as well. you know. that's that's what the other teams trying to do to you and trying to push you out away from your game but when we stick to what we know best we have a chance every night and i think that's what makes us frustrating to play against. You know this is an individual world. Now i watch a lot of things that happen in our business and elsewhere social media what it's done is it's i think it's made people more individual team. The islanders are more team than individual. I think you guys are as a group are very different along the way the world is going. How do you create an environment even within the nhl where it's team above individual and it's no bs with you guys. You can tell you all buy in your the captain. How do you help..

astro Ama islanders hockey Gordie howe gordie houston astros gordy Anders tampa baseball montreal nhl
"anders" Discussed on Feminist Frequency Radio

Feminist Frequency Radio

07:09 min | 1 year ago

"anders" Discussed on Feminist Frequency Radio

"Never been to my house but if you come to my house you will not question that but like that like that. I think that people who create that much are going to have ebbs and flows are gonna and it's part of what we were talking about a little bit of like not everything's a winner and that is part of the creative process. I think although. I gotta say i've been grumpy lately because prince. They've they reissued. They put out this posthumous album. Welcome to america. Which i love. I think it's an amazing album. But all i read all these reviews online which said oh you know this is so much better than all the music cuba's releasing during that time like no he really some pretty solid music during that time. It's just that you all were not paying attention. And if he put out. Welcome to america in two thousand ten twenty eleven. You probably would have ignored it but now that it's this great posthumous release. That's like ten years later and it's also like the volt right. Like prince's bolt was so mysterious to us. Because i ever sold so it's like we get access to all that stuff in. There's nothing else right. So i think people have Are listening prince or listening for sure. Yeah i think they are. Oh prince love him. Need to send you what i was talking about. This happened to me the other day where there was someone who was visiting me and had been to my house several times and was like. Oh you're a fan of prints You've literally been in my house. What are you talking about when you walk in my house. The very first thing you see. Is this beautiful. Giant custom like art. Woodcut of prince like norman. Yeah i'm like god. And i was like. I don't understand how you're asking me this question. It's literally the first thing you see when you walk in my house. No listen people. Don't pay attention. I remember Talking about doctor who questioning my doctor who opinions. While i was wearing like a doctor who shirt. And i'm like don't make me the shirt. Like what is it you know. Just people don't pay attention that that annoys me when people start keeping like the whole like. Are you qualify to love this thing up it up. Yeah great way to end the segment. All right buck k-k-keeping ra. I'll never say you can't survive how to get through hard times making up stories. Is charlie jane. Anders newest book one of three. That is me released in this year of our lord 2021 it's really really good way better than the coverage that eboni destroyed. If you listen to it is either out now or will be out very soon so either pre-order it or pick it up honestly if you even if you're not a writer. I think it will help you think about media differently. I think that this is going to be like a classic book on writing And i i hope that in the future so please check it out. We'll send link info in the In the info box in the more info. I don't know how guesswork all right. We'll be right back. What's up f- afar listeners. We've got so much great conversation coming your way this month on feminist frequency radio. Why not sign up to get early. Access bonus episodes. Oh and help keep making the head on over to patriots dot com slash free today and sign up. Now it's time to talk about what's been thrilling us. Moving s of setting us or infuriating us this past week. Everybody you have a freak out for the first time in history. Do i know shut up. Shut me up that way and this is good. Because i'll be very quick and then we can toss it back to charlie jane. My freak out is reservation dogs which can watch on hulu. It is a new show abou this group of dislike a my god. These hilarious messed up. You know goodhearted but making bad decisions indigenous kids in oklahoma show created in britain by sterling harder. Who is an amazing amazing filmmaker and co executive produced by tyco. A like y'all this show. I think there's a couple of i've seen two episodes. I think there's a couple more available on who. I cannot wait to watch them. But the minute you watch it. You're like yes. Yes more of this please. Why are we not seeing so much more. You know from Indigenous creatives because there is a huge wealth of talent out there whether it's drama or comedy or science fiction or whatever and we're getting bits and pieces dribs and drabs but man. This show is good. It is really good. I've only watched one episode. iv dislike. God yes i mean. Every character is hilarious to me. But i can't remember have only seen a couple of episodes. I'm still remembering folks names but the went like just bad ass girl who is just a problem. The one who makes meat pies the one lady. I like the one. That's like i gotta get out. I gotta get outta town yet right now. Listen she's going to become a new favorite thing so Start on harjo takeaway. Td all the amazing indigenous creatives like from writers rooms episode directors. Like it's just all up and down in this piece which is the way that it should be Representation in front of the camera ultimately means nothing if it's not if it's not a three sixty it's not people behind the camera to actually writing those stories shooting those stories Producing those stories so yeah big. Recommend for reservation dogs on on hulu. Yeah a double that. I definitely definitely check and tracking that down. That sounds amazing. Good i also want to say a thing. What do i wanna say. I wanna say to when we're talking about like representation in front of and behind the camera. Like i think it's fucking awesome that we get like a little bit more media about a audience our populations that we have historically been at that have historically been erased from media but i also want to be like i want all of these like indigenous and people color and trans creators to be working on all kinds of stuff right like i wanna make sure that as we're also advocating for an increase in those stories end people who own the stories to tell them. I also just want to see like more people telling all kinds of different stories right like yeah like i want. I want the writers rooms of all of the stories about all of the different weird random ass things to include a much broader representation because like how dope is it if they would bring in all of their world experiences and knowledge into science fiction. And whatever you know right. I do like i want to make it. Clear that The the version of success. That i'm looking for is not like you know as some sort of ghetto is you know Version of or like misunderstood like own voice. Kind of thing where it's like..

charlie jane eboni prince america cuba Anders hulu norman tyco patriots oklahoma britain
"anders" Discussed on Feminist Frequency Radio

Feminist Frequency Radio

06:51 min | 1 year ago

"anders" Discussed on Feminist Frequency Radio

"This. Ebony needs to just read her own. Writing because i always fucking out. It's so good. It's so good. And i always fuck it up. The best part is knowing that you haven't read over the scripts in advance watching in china guest where you're gonna stop. Well i like workrooms alike sixteenth century. That your bug is out by. I don't even know it. Hori old means goodbye. Does everybody know what that means. Is it just me. We have a right writers boy. Whatever all right you know what. I'm just gonna run straight into the intro and we're not gonna follow any of our rules. We're just gonna have a little nice chitchat. so let me just bad ashley. No every you fucking read. It wrote it Gosh okay charlie. Jan i apologize. Anita is broke so broken today. All right charlie. Jane anders is a writer. Podcast host event impresario and one of the founders of nine website devoted to science fiction. Fantasy future ism science technology and related news. She's the author of several books of speculative fiction and inspirational weirdness including victories greater than death. The city in the middle of the night and all the birds in the sky personal favorite. She's here today to hold our hands as we try to russell with creativity in times of crisis the subject of her new book. Never say you can't survive how to get through hard times by making up stories. I'm excited about this. Loved the book. I am a writer and so when i follow you on twitter and when i saw that the book was coming out on my okay this is gonna be good and then i was like anita you know charlie jane like can you hook me up. Can we have rama podcast. It's just like ebony. It's a great idea like all of your ideas are so good. I'm gonna pay you more money So whatever okay. That's better whatever so. I got the book and immediately started reading it. And i was like. This is so comforting. This is this reminds me that There is so much joy to be found and fun to be found in making up stories. And i needed that when i read it. You know. I think there's so much about look you can. You can find an infinite number of writers justifiably complaining about how hard writing is but it's hard to you know find people who are like no this is this is on what we're doing. We need to remember the fun and the joy and the power like the thrill of doing it. So thank you for writing that book. Thank you so much for taking the time to read it and really that meant so much to be what you just said. Because i feel like you know there is a lot of writing advice out. There that i feel like is very kind of like. I don't know tough drill. Sergeant tough law like suck it up right every day. Get up and drop and gimme twenty. You know all this kind of stuff like are you all this kind of like tough drill sergeant. Talk that. I can't even do because i i like it. I cannot you tend to be a joel sergeant. But i feel like you know. There's there's a lot of people who are very macho about writing and very macho about like i wrote ten thousand words like before breakfast like you were not just the same word one hundred times in like people get very cadillac. Tough macho this if you could write ten thousand words before breakfast. That's awesome and i'm super happy for you but everybody's different and like you know. I think that people get so goal oriented and so kind of like you know. They put so much pressure on themselves and so much somebody expectations of themselves that they do kind of forget that it can and maybe should be fun. At least parts of the process can be fun you know. It's revision is often not as much fun as some of the other parts. And there's there's always gonna be parts that are more challenging. But i think writing can be like it can be a joy it can be. Something that brings you fulfillment and part of what i'm getting at in the book is that you know when things are really messed up in weird and screwy like a pandemic and like a political down and various other things and climate change we need to just have like the freedom and the kind of like luxury of like just being like. I'm gonna just tell a story. I mean yarn. I'm going to just you know amuse myself and hopefully other people as well with this like wacky story that i'm making up about that didn't happen or stuff that did happen but i'm kind of making my own thing. I love that. I so from the book from like the introduction. I gather that started as essays that you had been writing and i think maybe a couple of talks that you had given but it does seem together in its to come together in its current form pretty quickly. Is that accurate you know. Like how long have you been working on this. Yes i mean it did. Start as a talk that i gave like starring in two thousand seventeen and it was like that was the moment where people were like. Dang this is things are getting really scary. Things are getting really messed up. And you know it's hard to like just you know shut yourself off from that and stuff dum scrolling and like a lot of people. I knew were really struggling and getting just stuck and so. I gave this talk at some writing conferences. About like look this is a this is something that you can still do. You can still just like let go and lows lose yourself in your imagination. Here are some ways you can do that and you know over time. I sort of thought about turning it into a book but it wasn't really until the start of two thousand twenty that i was like this is it. I'm gonna make this this talk. I've been doing into an actual book and i'm going to expand it. I'm you build out that idea and like just kind of breakdown how to like how to get into your imagination and how to find that part of yourself that we all have. We all are storytellers. Everybody who lives is a storyteller like every day. You're like you get up. You're like telling stories about like the thing that happened to you on the way to work or you know something you heard about from a co worker or a friend or whatever. We just always are always. We're just all telling stories all the time and so you don't have to like you have to wonder if you have that part of yourself you just have to be able to dig it to get to it so anyway. So i started posting these essays online pretty much once a week during twenty twenty and with the idea that hopefully they would be a book afterwards and i was just so happy with the response to them and then of course afterwards i had to go back and do a ton more work in like streamlining tighten them up and make them less repetitive. I added a bunch more material. But mostly i was reading it during twenty twenty and that was actually really therapeutic for b. Because i did not have a great time twenty twenty i had a full time and it was not a great year and so no giving myself advice as much as anybody else about like you. Can you can do this. It's okay you can.

Jane anders charlie jane charlie Hori Anita Ebony ashley anita russell china Jan twitter
"anders" Discussed on Slate's Working

Slate's Working

01:55 min | 1 year ago

"anders" Discussed on Slate's Working

"We heard someone talking about writing a scene. So i think we can guess that your guest. This week is a writer but philipson. Yeah that was charlie. Jane anders who isn't eight writer known mostly for science fiction or speculative fiction. Her boo cts have great. Titles on those titles include victories greater than death. All the birds in the sky and the city in the middle of the night one of the great things about this show is that we don't always have a news peg. We just look for interesting people. We talked to them. But charlie jane does have a new book. It's out in the world very very soon. Can you tell me a little bit about. Never say you can't survive. Which as you say is a religious title. Yeah it's a super practical advice about and this is from the introduction how you can use creative writing to survive the worst things history can throw at you She is very clear that she's not in the business of providing rules but she does a great job of sharing some lessons that she's learned over the course of her writing career and it's full of exercises and i'm not a writer of fiction but i found it very useful because it's just really down to earth. It's all about demystifying the writing process while. I'm very excited to hear your hats and i understand that slate plus subscribers will get a little something extra this week yes in never say he codified charlie. Jane talks about the difference between the imaginary reader and the inner critic so i asked her to elaborate on that and she also told me she comes up with those titles. I could really use some advice on titling books bonus segments like these are really just one of so many reasons that you should join slate..

philipson Jane anders charlie jane charlie Jane
"anders" Discussed on Ante Up Poker Magazine

Ante Up Poker Magazine

03:09 min | 1 year ago

"anders" Discussed on Ante Up Poker Magazine

"I might still be just. Because they're spades on the board. And i still have top air with a you. Know a paint kicker But i may slow down a little bit i. I don't think i would make my standard. You know half pop bed here. I might go a little less so if there was thirty in sixteen. Sixteen thirty two. So they're sixty two in the you know i may put out like a thirty dollar bed or something you know but generally might even less than twenty you know. I just don't and it doesn't necessarily make suspicious when you don't bet you know in the exact parameters that everyone recommends the bet on every turn it could just be. Hey i'm looking for value at this and to. They may read it that way. So i don't know. I don't wanna start risking a ton of money on on this or will handle to pair with a queen kicker anders so much danger out there but at the same time i want to put some money out there so that i'm not giving him just as free reign of hitting a turn card or a better over card you know who knows he could have king queen of spades and he was just floating us and now. He's backed into two overs in a flush draw. I don't wanna let him just get there for free. So i don't know i don't feel comfortable making a thirty dollar bet though. I just feel like. I think maybe something a little smaller twenty twenty five. Yeah so they're definitely dangerous in jecklin here but i think there's also dangerous and bedding too. I think you summed it up. Well when you click quickly call it either means that you're on a draw or you've got to meet him that you're not ready to pull the trigger with right so with no draws being out there I definitely give more credence to Five or ten and we have a lot of tends to be but not all of them right so so it definitely feels like he has something now that he's not drilling and again. We're hoping that it's a week or ten dollars five or screwed. So i kinda boy slowing down here checking in then letting him make a play at uh i if i'm wrong at that so if we check here obviously he's got two options he's gonna check behind so it's not going to cost us anything but gives him a chance to catch up. As you mentioned it'd be really on something else that we thought them or you he's gonna bet and maybe now we let him take control here and if it's not a big enough bed might call and then we'll see what happens on the river. We still could hit a queen. We still could hit a ten. Obviously diamonds aren't going to work for us this time so i think i might be a little bit more cautious here and not waving the white flag but i- shifting the power to him To see how he reacts so okay okay well. It's good that we do different things so that we could just both situations all right Let's see Here's this flush draw chorus but not one. I'm too concerned with at the moment But can't be entirely ruled out either giving these soon wide calling range of the action or range of the button in this spot decide to keep up the aggression thing the villains call..

anders
1inch Exchange: Decentralized Exchange Aggregation With Anton Bukov

Software Engineering Daily

02:04 min | 2 years ago

1inch Exchange: Decentralized Exchange Aggregation With Anton Bukov

"Anton. Welcome to the show. Hi geoffrey you work on one inch exchange. And i'd like to get into one inch exchange momentarily but let's start with the subject of decentralized exchanges. Explain what a decks is and why there are. Different decks is in the world. Yeah you know see great question. Sometimes i knew present some slides about this so yeah i will let me tell you about different decks of maybe a little bit history about like. We should exist puritan. The which order the riddick source and appeared may be doing to sixteen or even earlier. I can't remember because i joined Development in twenty seventeen they own audible waste the same way as centralized exchanges works. There are like lucane so actors their makers and takers makers they create orders for being fitted feel. It was exact prices and takers. They do feel the owners. They execute their swaps immediately but they have some potential sleep which because litchfield bunch of force for was different prices. Those who played anders lakers. They always was exact price which was like the owner and one over the significant improvements internal self gas costs was allowing people to create orders of chain. So you can approve some poking stool exchange smarter and you can leave your signature which will sign some order and anyone can use this order to go to this distance. Exchange and your form swap with you

Anton Anders Lakers
Islanders cruise past Sabres 5-2 for 5th straight win

AP News Radio

00:28 sec | 2 years ago

Islanders cruise past Sabres 5-2 for 5th straight win

"Brock Nelson scored twice in the islanders won their fifth in a row by earning their third straight five two victory over the Sabres the game was scoreless until Anders Lee and Nelson scored sixty two seconds apart early in the second period the islanders also received goals from fourth liners Casey Cizikas and cal Clutterbuck supporting Ilya Sorokin twenty four states Jeff Skinner finally scored his first goal of the year but the Sabres dropped their seventh in a row and felt once six versus the Isles this season I'm Dave Ferrie

Brock Nelson Islanders Anders Lee Sabres Casey Cizikas Cal Clutterbuck Ilya Sorokin Nelson Jeff Skinner Dave Ferrie
Interview With Jeremy Scott

Vogue Podcast

06:02 min | 2 years ago

Interview With Jeremy Scott

"Good morning bob. This is nicole phelps. I'm the director of global vogue runway. And i'm here today with jeremy. Scott jeremy on or you. How are you jeremy's mosquito collection and video have been all over social media for the last twenty four hours or so and chances are you've probably seen it andrews christian madsen who is a colleague of mine at vogue runway. Put it this way. I thought this was a great quote. No one has quite aced this digital moment in fashion history. Like jeremy so we have lots of questions about how it all came together. Thank you very much for being here with us. My absolute love all right. Well you know i am. In addition to reviewing some shows all season long. I do a lot of editing. And and i thought anders made some really great observations in your piece and you said some very interesting things which i want to quote here. Which is you said. You use the term comfort sh- mumford and you elaborated to say what we need now. More than ever is fantasy and glamour. And i obviously don't disagree. But i am curious for you to talk to us. About how the way you design and what you design has changed if at all after a year in in lockdown amidst the pandemic. Well i think you know very well watching my work. That i'm a very devout devotee of high octane glamour. Always and so. That part really hasn't changed. I might have put the pedal to the metal a little bit more this season and last but i think what's changed a lot. It's kind of like what we're doing right now. Everything i'm seeing are through screens. I did my fittings through screens through something like this. You know thinking about how the work is seeing. It's all seeing through screen so i'm looking at it already. My work is very Theatrical and very photogenic. And i think of it in a way how would be finally consumed always but now it's almost entirely consumed at this moment via screens. So i've i've been watching it in a different way. So while doing the fittings with my team and milan and they are doing the actual pinning in the actual adjustments for me. And i'm directing it in in a manner like this. I'm watching it in a in a in a way that takes away that that moment of being next to it and there is something i think that does give it a little bit more of remove that makes it a little bit more in a way precise i know sounds kind of weird. Did say it that way. But i don't have the emotional moment of the model in front of me and everything happening live. I'm more dissecting it. 'cause i'm looking at through a screen and i am. I am removed in that respect. So i feel like part has changed and maybe even well i feel. That's a good segue to talk about the the collections last season to refresh people's memory. Jeremy did a fantastic video where he turned models and Front row goers in into marionettes and it was a huge ships are on vogue runway and an across the internet. And what you did this season was you. I would say paid homage to a very famous movie. Called the women from nineteen thirty nine george cougar film and s specific seen so specific fashion show scene. Can you tell us anything about your experience with that movie. Maybe when you saw it for the first time or why are you. Liked it enough to recreate it for this. Absolutely i verify brain to even remember when i could have seen it first. 'cause it's one of things that feels like it's been with me forever. I think any real fashion fan would put this on one of their top. Ten list of you know old hollywood films especially ones that have a fashion show in it. One is really the creme de la creme not only. Is it beautifully done. But also there are the costumes by adrian who is also it's such a icon for so many fashion designers and having done all the most beautiful all hollywood glamorous films and costumes at that time but beyond the costumes i think for me is is really the fact that the film is only women. There's only actresses. There's not one time. There's a a a male actor in the film even with a voice. So i love that because honestly as normal is that maybe should be today. It's still not normal. Hollywood for an all female cast to be able to carry a film and not film doesn't so beautifully now specifically for the scene that was inspired by is the fashion show scene in their out of salon. Which is such an you know. Typical historical fashion kind of scenario. And this was more like the the dressmaker salon. Instead of. maybe the paris couturier and they're coming to choose the their guard the road for the season. I wanted to kind of think about all the things that they would need to wear now again thinking about the time of the film. These ladies did not work. They were not having jobs their characters. Were you know really dependent upon men. So i wanted to start mind with them. As busy businesswomen in takes of the pin stripe suit these kind of business looks that would be putting them in charge. And not you know quibbling about the fact that they're working they're only working you're working for them and they're not working for you

Jeremy Nicole Phelps Scott Jeremy Madsen Anders George Cougar BOB Milan Hollywood Adrian Paris