18 Burst results for "Andrew Martian"

The Paul Finebaum Show
"andrew martin" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"We simply just take the calls as they come. But I hear you loud and clear on that. Ray is in Fort Wayne, hello, we're at ray. Hey, Paul, happy new year. Happy new year. I haven't heard from you in quite a while. Listen to this. That was a nice line. You put about Jim Harbaugh when the ball drops. You can count on Jim Harbaugh dropping. 6 straight bowl losses, okay? He tries a double triple reverse on the two yard line fourth and two. What kind of call was that? Terrible. You know, he ought to play on the Kurt Warner American underdog story. He acts like the team was an underdog. Yeah, I thought he made some tactical mistakes, I think, to preparation, others argue it wasn't, but to me, they just seemed out of sorts and made a lot of really bad mistakes. Booker is in New Jersey. Hello Booker. You'll screen day day book of you calling to lick you wound, remember I told you there will be something like 38 31, so I have no wounds to lick before. In light of all of that was a great game. I had to turn it off kind of early because I have to do what I deliver a sermon on Sunday mornings. I can't be up till midnight on Saturday night, but with all of that last night just made everything else minuscule to me when I sat there in life would happen to the heaven and I think tragedy and Andrew Martin Luther King said that it is not to that point, but that made it a common denominator. My focus just changed as I sat there last night and saw them doing the fibula on that young man and it just put a whole new light. I love football, but I'm just praying for that young man in this family and so he'll call us that I communicate with just about every day. And there's a lot of waste here happening new year and I'm not licking any wounds, but I tell you I was going to call back then I was not going to be like the kick 6 crowd from Alabama in the iron bowl. Booker, thank you very much. And I agree with you, I don't think we've ever had a moment quite like that. And I think the coalescing of all sports fans about demar has been a really extraordinary moment. Now let's just hope he comes through it. Thank you very, very much for the phone call. Clem is up next in Georgia. Hello clem. Hi, Paul. How are you doing? I just want to make a quick pull in here about the big ten there at the end. You know, all season long, I guess, people were figuring they talked a big game up there up north, you know, the little pins that they'd be able to hang with us down here. Just simply didn't come to fruition there. You know, the committee, of course, in their wisdom, to put PC back for let Georgia go ahead and cream them. But of course they wanted their Michigan or house they match up. Look how that worked out for them. TCU handled business. We took care of it there at the end and the big fan can use their excuses. Oh, it should have been targeting. Oh, you know, that time that was after the play started. But you know, it just goes to show. Just, you know, the kind of caliber they just don't have up there. And now, you know, Jim Harlow's already, there's already rumors floating around and he's going to turn it off to the NFL and, you know, his lasting legacy is beating a high state twice. Well, congratulations. I guess, I guess that's a big accomplishment for teams up there, you know? Well, listen, I try to be a realist. Michigan and Ohio State are really good football teams and they lost on Saturday, but they didn't come in and embarrass themselves like some teams have in the past. I mean, they were classic nail biters and they do play good football, but what kind of what can we say other than they lost? And that's part of the nature of sports. Pat is up next in Georgia. Hey, Paul, happy new year. Happy new year. You and I have talked before about that wise man who said that when you lose, say, very little and when you win, say, even less, exactly. But Paul, this is 2023. So here goes Ohio State buckeyes, buckeyes, how'd you like to kiss my ass? I mean, Paul, we took care of Michigan last year and we took care of Alabama last year and we took care of Ohio State this year and you look at TCU and Utah and my two lane green waves, they all came through this weekend. So I'm sitting on top of the world and I have a question for you about the Paul finebaum show rules of procedure. Sure. How many callers does it take to entertain a motion to vacate Jim from Tuscaloosa? I don't know. Well, to me, Jim someone that really legislates himself because he is not a regular caller. I don't think we've heard from Jim in two or three weeks. Jim is a guy that beats to his own drummer. He calls when he wants, he's not going to, he's not going to be run off by the mob, nor is he going to be run in here by the mob. Hey, thank you for the call. Chris is up next. Hey, Chris. Hey, how are you doing, Paul? We are doing great. Thank you. I was wondering about the coaching carousel. If you know any more inside information that, of course, we don't know. The core especially about Alabama. I don't really know much, I think the prevailing wind is a Bill O'Brien is going to leave to go back to the NFL, presumably to the Patriots. I don't know what the situation is with Golding. The defense did play better down the stretch.

KCBS All News
"andrew martin" Discussed on KCBS All News
"A random hotel. Erie county executive Mark polling cars says at least 34 people have died in the storm many of them in Buffalo. We are fearful that there are individuals who may have perished, especially those that still don't have power. But any place that lost power, the National Guard is going to come down. New York Republican congressman elect George Santos is lied about just about everything on his resume. What will the house's top Republican do about it? Kevin McCarthy needs every last Republican to support him in his bid for speaker. So he has been silent on this, not commenting, and has presumably relying on Santos to help him CBS's Caitlin Huey burns. CBS News brief. I'm Linda kenyon. Case CBS News time, 1232, time now for our daily tech and business report. A group of banks is taking action to protect themselves in the event of a cyberattack for more I spoke with Bloomberg news editor Andrew Martin. So Andrew, what are they doing? Obviously there's been a huge increase in the amount of cyberattacks on U.S. companies in the last couple of years, particularly with the sort of emergence of ransomware, which is a type of attack that locks up companies data in lieu of a ransom. And so a group of banks, several years ago, after a particularly bad attack, decided to figure out a way to sort of prepare for a kind of a doomsday scenario where some hacker would come in and wipe out a bank's data. And so what they did is they created it's basically the digital equivalent of a bank vault where typically in the old days of bank would put all their money and evolve at the end of the day. In this instance, they put all their critical data in a digital vault at the end of the day that's separated from the primary computer networks and backups of the system and the idea being if there was to be some sort of like catastrophic cyberattack or other events that wiped out a financial institution's data, they were at least have all that data from the previous day. It's called sheltered harbor. And so it's really kind of set up for banks primarily and now they're in the process of expanding it to other types of financial institutions, including insurance companies and asset managers and possibly allowing 401k accounts to be put into all at the end of the day. So expanding the other sectors because obviously banks aren't the only one with critical information. There have been a number of high profile cyberattacks in recent years, including Sony and Colonial Pipeline, this protects the information, but do we know what the banks are doing to prevent hacking in the first place? It kind of depends on the institution, but Jamie Dimon a few years ago said, I think you said they spent a half a $1 billion a year on cybersecurity. So from the big banks, in particular, are spending a lot of money on cybersecurity to prevent this from happening in the first place. But the reality is if a skilled tack or a particularly some of the best employed by governments wants to get into a company's networks, chances are they can. So I think the idea here was, again, if someone managed to get into one of these networks and there's types of malicious code that doesn't just steal data, it just wipes computers clean if that were to happen. At least it's not ideal, but at least they'd have that data backed up from the previous day. Typically, computer backups now, particularly for banks and whatnot, back of data several times a day, even several minutes, every couple of minutes, every couple of seconds, and you can imagine that stock exchanges and things like that. There's so much data that they have to back it up more regularly. But again, this is just for a kind of a doomsday scenario where everything's gone and something is better than nothing kind of idea. That's Bloomberg news, editor, Andrew Martin, you can hear our tech and business report weekdays at 1230 p.m. on KCS, and for more tune in to Bloomberg TV at 2 p.m.. Well, it's been another big year for SpaceX with a milestone launch this morning from cape canaveral, more from CBS News correspondent Peter king. It

The Jim Ross Report
"andrew martin" Discussed on The Jim Ross Report
"Absolutely. It's common sense. You can't punch holes in the sponsor. As so many of us are delirious of committing to something like this because we perceive that it's a sign of weakness. And certainly in the wrestling business, the last thing you want is for your boss, your decision maker to look at you as a weak person. This is where it's always been. It's not going to change. But I'm with you Conrad. This is a, this is really a no brainer. And you can find happiness. It's within you. Yes. At better help dot com and slash JR is what I suggest you say some money and he helped yourself and boy, you talk about your significant others, appreciating this. They may appreciate this more than anything you can give them. Yeah, it's almost like, you know, when you're on a plane and they talk about boy, if the mask comes down, put it on yourself and then your child. You gotta take care of you, man. We got so busy taking care of everybody else. Sometimes we forget to take care of ourselves. Give it a shot. Better help dot com forward slash JR. Let's talk about your second camp where you guys were indeed looking for some better help. It comes out in the observer may 18th, 1998. The debrief is doing another camp this week under Dory funk among those at the camp, or solo 5 5 two, like Tierney, John tinta, Paul Silva, Aaron o'grady, that grime Shawn stasiak, Matt bloom, Andrew Martin, George Phillips, Emory Hale, David heath, Darren drost off, and Dan severn. Of course we know a lot of these names jump off the page. We know it was going to become rikishi. He'd been around before, but he's here for a fresh coat of paint. John tint, of course, same story, the former earthquake, used to headline with a Hulk Hogan, but maybe let's see if we can't get him in some different shape here. Get him TV ready under a different presentation. We know it works out. He joins the oddities. Aaron o'grady, of course, is going to become crash Holly. Vic grims would find a little bit of fame for himself and ECW falling off a balcony with new Jack. Andrew Martin is going to become test and have quite a little run. Emory Hale was a name. I didn't know right away. Turns out that's the wall over in WCW, but here he was in 1998. And David heath we know is going to go on to beat gangrel and, well, the rest is history, but man, this is quite a class again. You're batting a thousand so far. What's the number one trait? You've told us before when you run a talent relations reliability is number one. But when it comes to training a new talent, just an athlete who's not necessarily a veteran in the pro wrestling game, are you looking for somebody who's coachable or what's the primary attribute you're looking for? Well, you mentioned the reliability and that's number one. Yes. We want you to practice it at start at 8 o'clock in the ring. You don't show up at 5 minutes till 8. Common sense things. Teaching people to be better businessmen, but you can notice this class had a lot of size to it. And I think that's came from events. You know, he locked some of the guys that we had in that first camp. You know, how could you not lack edge, et cetera, et cetera, that went on and become great. Clearly great. But we got some bigger guys in the second class. While those guys you mentioned were huge. 300 pound range. Our 6 6 that kind of thing. And so that was always a caveat size. Simply put this put it this way. This loved guys, that if they walked in an airport, heads would turn. So that could be a physique that could be their height, their weight, just some guy just exuded charisma. So that Dwayne Johnson. You know, he turned heads for every win. He turned heads the day I was recruiting him with a little cafe that will Cuban cafe. When every woman in the restaurant came over to see if we needed some more to drink, and I told the story of some of my one man shows that, you know, got a mighty, he was they didn't work there. They're just, they saw him and saw this 6 foot 5, 270 pound handsome guy. They just wanted to get another step closer to him. Right. And then the guys are in that restaurant Conrad, you know, they knew who I was from TV, all those years. But they had seen rock. They just, but they're curious. So they come over and talk to me, but be looking at him. Because they're wrestling fans. And they looked at this new guy as well, this kid's got to pick up something here. He looks, I like to wear this guy looks. And of course the women had their own motives. And it gave you a good thumbnail sketch into the little telescope into their personalities or what their personalities could be. So, but a lot of those guys, you mentioned, you know, I'm sure that if I look back on it, like part two, if I had so much charisma, still does, is held in nice guy. Got his own thing going.

ESPN FC
"andrew martin" Discussed on ESPN FC
"I'm sorry, we got to move on to Napoli because they went again and this was a different win. This was a way to roll my. This was a Mourinho against. This was kind of a grinded out type of game. And the grounded out and they win one zero. And my man, awesome man. I love him. I love him. He's here, right? The best. It's yet. To come. Nothing. Is there anyone that plays the game like him? He's got a little bit hardened about and he's a little bit chaos, but he's just, I adore watching him play. I don't want him to ever remove the mask. I wanted to keep playing play his entire career with Matt. I got your damage with his glasses, right? I don't care if your nose is healed. Just do it so you can then remove it. Look, it's a huge win. But this was cagey. I know you look at this and you say, oh, Roma didn't have a shot on target. Jose, where he with us. He would say, well, what do you want? I'm without dialing without vinyl. And he's done such a great job of selling people on the factory without these two players. What I would say is right now, then obviously feel really bad for him injured. Right now hasn't been vinyl for a couple years now. So yeah, you got him on a free from passing on your man because they were keen to get rid of them. I don't know what he would have contributed. Dibala, a different issue, but again, you knew when you signed him, you were getting somebody who tremendous injury record. I knew his up and down. Yeah. Same as daniello would, again, I think he's amazing player. Daniella was really, really good last night. I don't think I thought last night. Jose did everything he could for his game plan. You have Tammy and Pellegrini kind of as a floating front three. Tammy had a poor game in my opinion. He got Pellegrini to Sarah. You sit on the back, who is kind of the deep playmaker, right? And for Napoli. And that part works, the problem is at that stage, you're only out as agnolo. And he's not Holland yet. No, no. I think this season, I'm looking at Napoli government. I don't know if you agree and I think they're the real deal. I honestly do. I think they're just, I think when I think when you're watching in senior and drew's merton in the careers at Nevada, it's very difficult to city and criticize them, but father time catches up to everyone and I thought they were a little bit one dimensional in terms of their pace Napoli. Now I think with awesome men and obviously kind of at skelly are you just looking at me just Chucky little zano? Not amazing and Ellie asked when he comes off the bench is like he's dynamic and he's like runs around causes chaos. I think it's been one of the best midfield players in Saudi Arabia quite a while. I want to ask you a question about this because it's kind of a question I love asking ex pros about, right? So we in the media and you've got a foot in both camps. We love talking about the importance of experience and leadership, right? I said many times are not cool to body in senior and Andrew's Martin's goal. They weren't just losing great players. They were also losing a free guys. Iconic. Iconic players, and these are the leaders. They have the experience, blah, blah, blah. They're so important in addressing them or whatever. But do we overrate that? Because I guarantee I guarantee, wow, 'cause I guarantee you hit a speed bump, what's gonna happen, people are gonna complain about, oh, there's a lack of leaders on this team now that these guys left. You know, it's only zelensky, who's kind of has the gravitas, if you will. The others are too young or whatever. But do we sometimes overrate the importance of iodine that are in leadership? I don't, and I'll go off piece slightly. And when I seem to Liverpool team that played forest and are seen carvalho, Curtis Jones and Harvey Elliott in the side. And away from home, I then thought this is a problem for Liverpool, not because they're bad players. It's just because they're young and inexperienced, and obviously they lost the game. I think there's a lot to be said for experienced players. I really do. In difficult situations, it's difficult to lean on a young star and go and do it for me. It's very few youngsters that can. But when you're grinding and when you need something, you need the leaders and you need, you need muscle memory and you need guys that have played hundreds of games that know what it's like playing a game against Roma away from home. It's like Alan Hanson and famously said, right? You win nothing with kids and he was clearly proven right in the mid 90s when be frying a united future. Sorry, I'm just cracking a joke. With regards to Roma, if your Marino, you've built this tremendous relationship with the fans, you know, people said he took the Gladiator approach. It was the right approach for this game, right? He made Napoli play the way he wanted them to play. Yeah. It was quite an even game. I mean, I thought Napoli were just the better side in terms of how many chances they created, but they didn't create a million. It was a competitive game Roma weren't out playing out class. It's not one of them. I mean, Jose, I'll tell you something different. I mean, it comes out with these Jose statements, didn't he? Oh, the best team. The best team, the best team lost. And the poorest team won. And he comes out with his Josie's. I thought it was quite an even game. But the difference was the man awesome man. And zelensky and

Game of Crimes
"andrew martin" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"To see a resolution. Yeah, the thing is called, it's called the hunt for the Chicago strangler. Now, were you involved in the production of this where you guys like onsite advisers, what was your involvement with it beyond the initial discussion? I am on a couple of other series on ID, the talking head basically. But in this case, rather than outlining on cases, no direct involvement. I essentially bring the audience along and explain how the discovery was made as does Tom. And then offer sort of the investigative and criminological analysis of the type of crime we're dealing with, the type of offender we're likely dealing with and some of the other procedural questions that only a series again that devote 6 hours to a case can not offer. Yeah, that's the thing too, is any time you're talking about cases and they're reduced to sound bites on network television that you're lucky if you get three minutes. You can't really dive into the details. And even made for TV, you get a one hour just special about it. It doesn't really do it justice. So in terms of in terms of covering the case, how well did discovery cover this case as far as you're concerned? It's very thorough. And again, it takes fully done. True crime, this latest wave of true crime, including on ID has, I think, matured a lot. Producers recognized that audiences are smart. They are discerning. And not every series needs to be hokey and nuns with guns or knives with wives or wives with knives. But yeah, this series as well as another series I appeared on discovery called children of the snow, which looked at another limited series, which looked at the Oakland county child killer case in the 70s. Those are two of, I think, I rank those as really sort of, I think the best examples of the investigative value of properly executed true crime documentaries. Yeah, I'm glad to hear that because yeah, for a while it was all of this really hokey stuff. And just like, I don't want it to be so clinical and sterile that it's unexciting, but if you can make it informative and educational and really bring people inside the case to where they feel like they're on the front row with you, it kind of reminds me it's like you sitting there with your dad as he's pulling out the case files and reading those. That's kind of the feel I want. I want to feel like I'm being on the inside, not like nuns with guns. I've never heard that before. I don't think that's actually a series. But what is surprising? Now that you said it, yeah. I bet you I bet you that's been pitched. I can guarantee you someone has pitched that. Just given the way how saturated the market. Nuns with guns, bank robberies pulled off by nuns with guns. You know, there's a, well, Steve and I both did an interview. I don't know if you got that back. See if I got my note back saying, well, we're looking for more somebody that's done step on hostage negotiation. And it's like, okay. Yeah, they told us they told us right off the bat. Yeah, you guys probably aren't going to fit here, but we might use it for something in the future. That's what I just got the note back today. And so it's like, but I like to see something fun. So but let's talk about you now. Let's talk a little bit about this. What are you working on? Because I pulled up your page. I mean, we obviously don't have the time to read all your books, but we're gonna put them on our site. So let's talk about, I mean, you're prolific. I mean, that's a big word for Murph. That means you do a lot. So for you, bite me. So where do you find the time to do all this stuff? Well, that's a good question. I just always, I mean, it's basic physics and objects at rest will tend to stay at rest and object in motion tends to stay in motion. And I've just always been loved being busy. I mean, bear in mind for many years, I mean, I'm working as a detective working shifts also teaching a course at the university, completing and defending a PhD. So, I mean, to have a book on the go, an article of show, teach my classes. I mean, I've already established a certain bandwidth. And when you enjoy what you're doing, you find purpose and meaning and reward and what you're doing. And again, meeting fascinating people, it doesn't feel like work. You've got an extensive list here between your books, your articles, your journals, your essays and editorials. I put this in a word document. I've got like a page and a half at the number 12 font. So there's a lot of stuff in here. Up to date, that is my most recent book just published a couple of months ago how to solve a cold case and everything else you wanted to know about catching killers. Titles a bit doesn't really do it justice, but I mean, it's going to be probably my last book for a bit. It really is ties in everything we've been talking about today. Murder accountability project, the fact the murder rate is not what you think it was the nature of serial offenders, the future of DNA and genomics. The history of true crime and its impact on actual crime and criminal investigations. It's sort of a tour de force of everything the true crime aficionado. I think would be interesting, including law enforcement because I do fortunately get a lot of current and former law enforcement readers who email me with ideas or tips, including connections that they've made on cases after reading some of the more obscure cases I tend to write about and then wondering if the offender I talk about is good for, again, the case that still haunting them from years ago. Well, I'm seeing that there's one underneath how to solve a cold case called practical criminology and it shows that that's forthcoming. Is that out yet? No, I'm not sure what the status is on that. It's so that's completed and filed and it's an academic book. So I'm at the mercy of the academic press now. So if and when they want to release that. But that's been done for some time. You remind me, probably follow up on that. I've been fixated on my own. On my other commercial train press. I wrote that four years ago, people, where is it at? Well, all of our reviewers keep dying. We're all aging now here. You know, that's a real thing. That is a real thing. I get approached to peer review articles that were written years ago because they just can't find people. And some of this stuff is pretty far afield from what I do, but I agree and say, yeah, you know what? At a fairness to just the process and the profession, this needs to keep moving. So I'll review. It got a question for you. What's your familiarity with the vidocq society? Limited. So I've read the murder room, which is sort of the official book on it. And I worked with my work with I was well, yeah. I worked with a member as part of my last book because I talked about a cold case in Pennsylvania. He's a Pennsylvania state trooper cold case investigator Andrew Martin is his name. And so he's a member of vidocq. As well. So if I end up back that way, I intend on looking him up and hopefully go into sitting on one of their meetings. They do very interesting work, obviously. Yeah, that's what I said. I know some people who are members and it's like, yeah, it seems like another very interesting society. Almost like the masons, the freemasons. We've got to be careful because everybody thinks that's a secret society. And it's not that secret. I'm a member, but so what shows you, though, I expect anybody. Well, they're service their service club insignia is on every town in America. So they're not that they're not that safe or welcome to fill in the blank. No. To be one ask one, as they say, hey, but let's kind of close out with this and talk about what

ESPN FC
"andrew martin" Discussed on ESPN FC
"Be on the outset. There are plenty of guys who have been frontrunners with Greg ber halter, who can find themselves not in the World Cup picture. All right, we'll leave it there for now on Christian roll down. We won't leave it there for now on the U.S. men's national team. No, they're playing Morocco on Wednesday, June 1st, game you can watch on ESPN2. Our coverage starts at 7 p.m. Eastern Time, do not miss it. And then there were four, four teams left in Leah and eki, on Saturday, pachuca advances passed on Luis America does the same over Pueblo on Sunday at last and chief us played dua draw but Atlas advances three two on aggregate tigress lose the crusade, but it bans thanks to the tiebreaker of their position in the table. Let's start with America puebla harkin some huge and by huge I mean controversial decisions in this game. I don't know where we want to start it is the possible red on Alejandro zendejas. That was some controversy there. Pasta was also however all right, don't go in on me just yet. As we see Andrew Martin and scoring the goal, one of the three goals for America and the ultimate three two victory. But there was also her massive, massive controversy, pretty good goal here from puebla to tie things up in first half stoppage time. Massive controversy on America's second goal herc, which we know came via the penalty spot. Diego Valdez, the shot antoni Silva the save, but wait a second, BAR says Silva was off the line. Oh, come on. Come on, man. Come on. This is getting ridiculous. This is getting ridiculous. Off the line, all right. All right, this then puts the pressure on puebla because they now need two goals now. They can't even tie it. They need two goals to advance. So they're playing higher up the field, chasing the game, lead themselves open, and then there's a counter attack, transition goals, and that castle shouldn't be on the field. The score is that, and then, well, penalty kick here puts it away, it's three two made it a bit interesting, but all for not. Yeah, 97 minute goal there for puebla. Okay, herks, everybody down south is saying ah, the referees put America in the semifinals. You see it the same way? Well, I don't think they heard them. I'll tell you that much. It'd be very unfair.

Android Central Podcast
"andrew martin" Discussed on Android Central Podcast
"Google's Google finally sort of getting it together and making a pixel family, yes. If they're going to do that, take the effort to actually talk to each other, you know, whether that's the truth or not. That's that's what's being said on the street, right? Is that Google doesn't the teams don't talk to each other? If they actually took the effort to do what everybody has said, they should finally do, why didn't they make this a big, huge deal? Right. Here it is. We finally did everything you asked. Here's our crazy presentation. Blah, blah, blah. Yeah. Look, I'm not, I wasn't expecting the level of crazy that Apple does, because we all know Apple, you know, loves to present themselves in a specific way. But I expected there to be a little bit more. Sure. And we also don't need Galaxy S four levels of share production. I remember Andrew Martin and I I think we belly laughed for an hour when they first announced the Apple watch and they brought it up on a wooden pillar that was made of recycled palettes that they got from Williamsburg and it was under a glass case and it rotated. And we're like, oh my God, it's a smartwatch. And look, they're treating it like it's the hope diamond and we just thought that was hilarious the way they did it. And Google did the exact opposite, right? Yeah. I don't think that Google actually wanted to show it off. It's the only thing that really makes sense. That is so interesting. So are you trying to say that they weren't even going to announce the watch and that they had to because it got leaked? I don't know if I would say, I don't know if I would go that far, but I don't getting this listening to the way that Rick osler was talking yesterday during the keynote. It did seem very rushed. They spent more time on the pixel buds pro and the pixel 6 a and everything else was an afterthought and it definitely felt like they were just trying to beat the leaks even though the watch already leaked. And they did the same thing with the 6 and 6 pro last summer. It was I remember correctly, it was just a blog post..

WTOP
"andrew martin" Discussed on WTOP
"Forget texting You need to talk right Since the capitol is players only meeting in ten games they've taken 16 out of a possible 20 points talk is good NBC sports Washington's Craig laughlin came out of that meeting saying hey let's all do what we have to do as far as our roles are concerned We all have roles on this team Let's stick to them And let's amp up the work in all three zones And I think because of that to a man they've played some great hawks Yeah no question All is well but I think the one area that they might be concerned about but it's throughout the league is their goaltending situation And who's going to start and who's going to be the backup come game one next week Next half hour Craig's pick for number one cap's final home game tonight against you I want to ask Alex eventually the question mark with an upper body injury Now broadcast blend it's Joe benon and Craig Loughlin's wine Dave let me just put it as perfectly as possible It's got a beautiful bouquet and a wonderful finish Does that help you No it doesn't help me but it does help the family foundation battle rare cancers NFL Draft why should 11th overall pick but generally Andrew Martin mayhew points out There's a really really good middle to this drought okay And that means don't forget those later rounds right They pressed it John barber back in 1998 who was a good player for Washington taking a 113th overall So you can find value there Check out Dave's article WTO P dot com great research Celtics complete the four game sweep of the nets last night raptors did beat the sixers and mavericks Dave Johnson.

WHAS 840 AM
"andrew martin" Discussed on WHAS 840 AM
"H A s Our top story. Kentucky. Adds another 49 covid 19 related deaths, increasing the state's death toll to 8144. There were another 5300 new cases of the virus to report today. Kentucky's Covid 19 positivity rate is now just over 13%. The White House stands behind a group of Team USA Olympians who testified today about the failure of the FBI to protect them from convicted sexual Predator U S Women's national gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar among those to testify Simone Biles as the lone competitor in the recent Tokyo Games, who is a survivor of this horror? I can ensure you that the impacts of this man's abuse are not ever over or forgotten. White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki Department of Justice has said that the FBI is promptly Taking the steps outlined in the report to ensure that this can never happen again. Nasser is currently serving a life sentence for abusing hundreds of athletes during his time as team USA is doctor. The United States and Britain will help mutual ally Australia acquire nuclear powered submarines. President Biden, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced the creation of a new Indo Pacific Security Alliance. Called caucus. The partnership will allow the countries to share defense capabilities initiative is about making sure that each of us has a modern capability and most modern capabilities. We need to maneuver and defend against rapidly evolving threats, The alliance has been viewed as an attempt to counter China's global power. The Supreme Court of Minnesota overturns a third degree murder conviction against former Minneapolis police officer Mohammed knew or Mohammed knew war was convicted of third degree murder in the death of Justine Reus check in 2017. But now the Minnesota Supreme Court has thrown out that conviction, saying that the charge requires the defendant to have acted with a depraved mind. But that cannot be the case. If the actions were directed at a specific person. The decision could have an impact on Derek Shelvin, another former police officer, as he was convicted of the same crime in the death of George Floyd. However, even if Chavez third degree murder charges also tossed Shelvin is still convicted of a higher second degree murder charge. Mark Remillard ABC News, a Southern Indiana woman, facing more charges connected to the death of a two year old 30 year old Sarah, barely is now facing additional charges of murder and aggravated battery resulting in death. Washington County, Indiana authorities say barely is responsible for causing multiple blunt force injuries. Resulting in the death of her boyfriend's child and fans of the Apple Watch might have to wait to get their hands on the latest version of the popular Smart Watch. The New Apple Watch has a bigger screen so you can see things more easily, but it might be a while before you see it on your wrist. Andrew Martin Nick is the editor in chief of digital trends. 0.2 inch larger screen. But you know, when you're looking at something on your wrist, it makes a big difference. But as 95 Max chance, Miller explains, there was one thing missing from the series seven presentation this week. We don't have an actual release date yet. They just said available sometime this fall, which there have been some reports of some production problems. Michelle France and ABC News Your next news update is coming up in 30 minutes. I'm Hailey Hansen, NewsRadio 8 40. W H.

Stories Podcast
"andrew martin" Discussed on Stories Podcast
"Was totally unfair with the cats distracted by arguing with each other. The monkey snuck back up. Her tree will now the monkey eight at all. They turn to look and saw that the monkey was already up and away. Hey get back here. You'll always cake said tiger. Sorry said the monkey. I have other creatures to help in other parts of the forest. She paused for a second on her branch. But just for the future when you want to split something fair and square have one person cut it and then the other pick switch half they want get back here. Misty shouted but the monkey was off swinging deeper into the forest. Well i guess that's what was fair said. Tiger misty shouted tiger. She tricked us. It was never about being fair. Oh said tiger that cutting and picking thing would work pretty well misty side. Her big belly bubbling. I guess we'll have to remember for next time. She said come on. Let's go home and get some dinner. I love dinner me to tiger may to and the two cats still round and just a little hungry made their way home the end today story. The kitty cats cake was an adaptation of ace ops fable written for you by daniel hynes edited and produced for you by andrew martin and perform for you. Buy me amanda weldon if you would like to support stories podcast you can leave us. A five star review on itunes get ad for episodes and more patriotic dot com slash stories. Check out oliver merch available at stories. Podcast dot com slash shop. Follow us on instagram at stories. Podcast or simply. Tell your friends about us. Thanks for listening..

Stories Podcast: A Bedtime Show for Kids of All Ages
"andrew martin" Discussed on Stories Podcast: A Bedtime Show for Kids of All Ages
"Was totally unfair with the cats distracted by arguing with each other. The monkey snuck back up. Her tree will now the monkey eight at all. They turn to look and saw that the monkey was already up and away. Hey get back here. You'll always cake said tiger. Sorry said the monkey. I have other creatures to help in other parts of the forest. She paused for a second on her branch. But just for the future when you want to split something fair and square have one person cut it and then the other pick switch half they want get back here. Misty shouted but the monkey was off swinging deeper into the forest. Well i guess that's what was fair said. Tiger fair misty shouted tiger. She tricked us. It was never about being fair. Oh said tiger that cutting and picking thing would work pretty well misty side. Her big belly bubbling. I guess we'll have to remember for next time. She said come on. Let's go home and get some dinner. I love dinner me to tiger may to and the two cats still round and just a little hungry made their way home the end today story. The kitty cats cake was an adaptation of an ace ops fable written for you by daniel hynes edited and produced for you by andrew martin and perform for you. Buy me amanda weldon if you would like to support stories podcast you can leave us. A five star review on itunes get ad free episodes and more patriotic dot com slash stories. Check out oliver merch available at stories. Podcast dot com slash shop. Follow us on instagram at stories. Podcast or simply. Tell your friends about us. Thanks for listening..

Talk Is Jericho
"andrew martin" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"Jericho to dress him. Here and marquette nery was waiting for me and i said the last working was lean for me and my room. The lights were out and you started laughing. You said you forgot about it. Tell that story as far as you can remember plug in the blanks. So we're we're in chicago boston. Boston the holiday and we all the holiday inn and those a certain Somebody that got caught with the window open With a handful of jergens and pledging himself so in love this curtains them. So i went and got a bunch of people and while that happened I'm knocking on doors. Just go to my room. Just go look in the room because looking room. So chris runs out at room. He goes in and then Like little kids to all stand by the window. We can see you so when that happened. I said i'm chris this room and turn all the lights out. And i stood behind door so after all of the commotion is over with. Chris comes back in his room and he's just the door and turns the light on to the bathroom and i went out of its skin. Get out of my room is still one of my favorite moment from my career is being able to get chris in my mind that this is the very dark black man we wanted to black was black and the lights. Were off so when you went the with. All i saw because the light of the bathroom was like white teeth and white is and i thought i swear to god. I thought the stupidest thing. But this is what i thought. Is there a bear in i. It's absolutely impossible. But i can hear the voice of this creature dog circus in down. Like what the hell is awesome guy lose my room got but that's what we did in ourselves on. The road is just constant ribs and having fun and Some some was less fun than others but that was one of the good ones that was ninety nine so you had been in. Wbz for about three years in the ninety six right and i just came back from canada. 'cause i was living a bed with hearts right and getting trained by leo burke who you probably know pretty well and You know working out at bread hearts house so like man. I'm andrew martin hamid test and Glenn coco who famous Calgary stampede football player you know so it was it was. It was like a lot of experiences that i had never had and coming off a living somewhere internationally. You know i just added more understanding of just exposure just being exposed to stuff and leo was. I was still writing so you know. I hit test in the nose and busted his nose and leo grabbed me in the headlock. That's not how you do it And this is the way you do it. And he just cog back and hit me right in the nose as hard as he could blood in my nose and he was like don't like it so much. When is you And i was like that was the. I'd never had hard training before like that. And then i went from him to rogers photos like you go from one extreme to another extreme and i was the best thing happened to me. So this was this little segway. i saw you. I've we first met in about ninety six at this gym. That everyone needs to train at in calgary and we cross paths one time and we were talking a little bit. Because i think i'd just started in. W. w but either way i'd been in japan working around and you were telling me and you probably remember this wanna do is learn how to do. An armed steamboat on draft. Look at this you know the six foot three or whatever you are probably about four hundred pounds that time of thinking. I don't know if that's in the cards for your brother. You need to think a little bit differently. And i didn't take offence to it. And then but i was like man like i've seen you work before so it was like i wanted you to show me some of the stuff that you did. You know i. I thought that everybody bid on drags. That's just how it is so when you got into. Wb they brought you in obviously right out of olympic power. Was that okay. So then they sent to these places to train you. Yeah gotcha and there was no developmental system right and you know. They made a lot of mistakes. But i feel good that the fact that i was the first developmental wrestler Like people were still working territories. And i worked in memphis work than for brisco and in Florida and man. I have met here in tampa and see. We're working kind of those last the last dietary when you say that you got it as a fan. How did that transpire. Well those a guy named milo stein who's strongman but he also dabbled in this wrestling. You know he wasn't a big star. Nothing and was friends with terry. Todd who was my like my doctor father gotcha and The foremost expert on physical culture in the world and tear would be like. What are you doing on watching wrestling. You watch wrestling again like that. Was i used to get the tapes. You know you get the beach. Just tapes and in new york and california and louisiana completely different styles of wrestling. And i remember going on oprah and from weightlifting strongest man in the world right. Yeah and on the olympian. You know the us champion. Oprah's brass me like so. What does the strongest man in the world do in spare time. You've been still things and pick up houses and all of this stuff. And i was like i do stuff but the things. That's the most important thing to me. Is i gotta watch my russula. So every saturday and monday. I watch wrestling and she was like. Oh my god. That's interesting you know. She's sick wade really quick because there was get out of get out of this and The wwe wwf. At that time heard heard about that. And my low. Ask terry if i would be interested in you know rustling one day and terry coll vents and vance was like listen. We we hear all this buzz from this guy. We love to get him up here and see if he's interested in. And that's that's how it happened. Vince called me. I thought it was one of my friends. Planning joke on me hung up on him and he called teary terry. Hey you hang up on visit man. I said that was really him and was like i called him back. And he's there's no. It's not the first time that i've been hung just think. How many times do people think thinking. Yeah he is having a lot so Which is a quick story is funny because my friend. Zack wild play guitar for ozzy for years when he was nineteen working in a gas station. Sharon osborne called. They're looking for zacky. Did the same thing if you're not hung up again. Leave me alone then ozzie calls. And he's like what's going on. This is really ozzy so people in that position probably get hung up on quite a bit no way no way. I'm talking vincent man. I see every saturday and monday on. Tv like what the hell is he calling me. You know so. He invited me and a connecticut..

Stories Podcast
"andrew martin" Discussed on Stories Podcast
"Embarrassed. A little at first khloe started to talk and her friends listened closely walking across the cafeteria. Duncan felt his cheeks flush sad and mad and embarrassed all at once all at once he turned and walked away before the group could see the tears stinging at the corners of his eyes. He knew in his brain that it didn't matter what they said but he couldn't help his heart from feeling it in the moment. Luckily mercifully dunkin found a long table. That was mostly empty. He sat on one side empty seats all around him and wiped away his tears before anyone could see them. Part of him wanted to just leave his food and spend the rest of lunch in the bathroom and that part of him was winning out he was just about to go throw away his tray and flee the lunchroom when chloe sat down across from him. Hey she said. Is this seat taken. What taken no duncan mumbled. How about these asked amir. And he chevron and mary all sat down around them so dunkin said confused. We should have let you sit with us. Khloe said so. is it. Okay if we sit with you instead dunkin smiled shyly. Oh yeah he said that will be great and they all sat and started to talk and laugh by the end of lunch. Their little group had gained another member and they had gained another friend the end today story. You can't sit with us. Was an original story written for you by daniel hynes edited and produced by andrew martin.

The Film Vault
"andrew martin" Discussed on The Film Vault
"Eighty five percent of our the surf lessons. We didn't do surplus. i was a luau. We walk past several lou. Walking past go louis on horb. I've never done They're was very antisocial. Even i thought it was a social person so i would go with my family. A few times in a low out of the question never never get with strangers at a at a long table and eat a giant open field. Where you just go to a buffet at people for you. Let's talk movies. Cody horton thanks to mitch burns. I should say mitch for putting together. The fan flex on that he does. Every single week are quite a few this week. A couple of weeks pretty creative with the with the post over there. I really like it. So here's what you compile. Thanks brian. It's good for Good for everyone involved. Cody horton took my advice. And sasheba babe shiva. Maybe sorry shiva baby shiva baby. I khuda ordonez well-directed directed and well acted the tension was palpable. But not altogether. Suffocating was really funny at times. He gives it a four out of five. Thank you cody. And martin martin. This is not going well for you. In a few episodes ago. Brian to credit for my writing about the cast of bully being top five dumbest characters. I took credit for apparently classic. Brian take credit for last classic. Brian stealing credit further of others wouldn't wouldn't that have come up during during our listener. Top five or also rans or whatever zander being a little cheeky okay said. I don't think i did that. He's being a little cheeky. Hey here's a here's a quick little preview andrew martin. Our most recent decider signed up a few weeks ago. Decider mar andrew. Martin will be a part of film lor by deciding which topic we will be doing. What is leaning towards. No i know that he's in the middle of a move he just. I'm not gonna lay out all vendors stuff. I'll let him decide if you're of andrew. Martin he was. He was one of the crew members on groupers looking at today meet in the day. I don't know he was probably the hardest working guy on on gerbers. I can say without the director. He was working very very hard. I mean like hard work. He was in the pool at the end. You know how all spray-painted like he was like elbow grease and getting that stuff off because it was not coming off the production was going to be on the hook over andrew martin. I'm i'm forever indebted. He's come up on the program and number five saint. he's being cheeky to you. But i i assume that it's probably all in good fun. Well aimed and probably a realistic on what actually happened. Just read those last live. Want one more time classic. Brian stealing credit for the widow of other things that often. I mean you have to actually have come out of your mouth for that to which is really rare. All right here we go work. The views movies worth of movies. Feel like they're gonna free plug in here Coda i'm kind of coda yet just came out last week and i feel like this is only on apple two this dog only on apple. Tv brian to rush her a lot of good. I know at one sundance at one won the lottery ticket. It's this is the thing that happens once a year or a bunch of really really. Do she filmmakers. Take off all their clothes and they they dance out by talking about the sun. Unfamiliar coda one of the best movies this year so heartfelt true to its story wish it had a bigger release than just apple. Tv go see this however you can speaking of apple tv. Brian the most recent episode of ted last so many people finally watching it's getting its due which is great because that is one of the greatest television programs on on on. Tv can call that right now however the last episode. because what. They're doing now brian. They don't just release the entire season at once. They've wise up to that because they realized that people will benefit. And they'll talk about if that forty eight hour period. That i was complaining about it anymore. More people talk about movies or tv shows for like a week and then they move onto the next thing. I gotta have you gotta see this. You don't hear about it ever again. And i'm like i'm not gonna watch it just because everyone's talking about it right now now. They're doing the weekly. That was back to the weekly back in the day of actual you know. Tv on tv. That was a cool thing about the sopranos. Was like you're like oh what's going to happen this week. Or this week galvanized galvanizes the people watch it and we can not only do. We have a literally a thousand out tens of thousands of different choices every night when we have a little time. Tens of thousands of choices right Also when we do plan about library selections then yeah we land on like a tv. Show that we're just released the entire any any show right so many shows that is released the entire stranger things serious strangers. Six people were all talking about that. We can put their night watching episodes at the same time as everybody else true so that. Don't even get to galvanize in that sense so what. I was talking about tedlar so his most recent episode. That just dropped had the christmas episode. It's made me rethink the entire series. I don't know if i can go on. Bryant heard it's very heard it's okay. God was a horrible episode. My god a throwaway clip. Show it walk. I felt like a throw episode but no not a clip show. But i can tell you. Santa makes makes a cameo that can go good or bad. Oh my god was it. Saccharin brain is just kept saying the wife. What are they doing. Why are they doing this. It felt wrong. It felt very wrong. I can't i loved. It lasts so much i was what the christmas episode. All right. all right so yeah. That's code will be seen by these two mugs egg. I would assume that we're going to be hearing more about coda as the year goes on. Maybe i'll watch you next week. All right the suicide squad. I don't know if this is worth of views movie as well but the suicide squad. This felt as big and ambitious as guardians of the galaxy. Saying this. i don't know there's no mitch you're fire. We're firing mitch for that. That's very likely you just aren't seeing it. No it's not there. Okay unless this is also from worth views movies which. I'm giving way too many plugs for even though i'm missing for nelson their name bill. There's a bill in this one. Trust me hold on a second so the suicide squad. This felt as big an ambitious as guardians of the galaxy but without the mouse holding holding holding gun to pg thirteen rating. It's wild weird and has to cement guns place as one of the best big budget directors right now and then. Here's the final count. Fifty seven of our listeners weighed in about suicide squad. interesting because the people that didn't like it really hated personally. This is mitch talk and now. It's mitch's favorite movie of the year. So far miss voice. And here's a negative review about it before. I let you know what the f. veto is brian. It's a film. Tomatoes score bill media brian. Don't you'll media. Here's what he has to say about suicide squad. Suicide squad is one of the most pointless in empty movies i have ever seen. It does nothing for the dc you continuity that may exist and it doesn't open thing and it doesn't open any new pathways dc dc you to go down a pointless group of characters a pointless story too long. Run time the biggest blockbuster appointment this year. I'm glad i didn't pay see in the theater..

The Book Review
"andrew martin" Discussed on The Book Review
"Very cool. She doesn't bring herself personally into their a lot. Except as consciousness and she talks to people she sets the scene in salma for instance where where she writes about that she talks to white people reacting to the protests and she's not sympathetic to their racist views but she is sympathetic to their class play and she sees capitalism as a problem in itself and and they're just they're very kind of carefully delineated snapshots of what's going on. That's what i'm reading the collected. Essays of elizabeth hardwick There's a lot more i mean. It's not just race stuff by any means but that's what has jumped out at me because of the overlaps with today that. That's the stuff that i've responded to most strongly in this collection. I think i have a copy of seduction and betrayal laying around some worse. If you want to hop on the phone after this recording session maybe i can read you. The plaza i found snippets of it here and there and heather clark in her biography quotes from that. Sas in the preface partly to say that hardwick not fared it to plath that she thought that had a real social vision and had their clerks. Biography says that she very much did. I've seen where hardwick says the platz writing punch to the face of some some great lines in there and yet one feels that she liked plath and liked flannery o'connor of people that she sometimes disagreed with against she writes with kind of tremendous generosity of spirit. John what are you reading. I recently went back and read a novel. That was getting a lot of attention. What feels to me like last year but it turns out that it was three years ago which is indicative of how we've all been living which is a first novel called early work by a writer named andrew martin. It's really a book about writers. A young guy named peter who i think is in his late twenties when the book starts who has a girlfriend of a few years and he meets another woman named leslie who's also a writer and the two of them start an affair and she has i think a a partner in another city whose they're having a long distance relationship. There's a lot of talk about books and contemporary authors in it. But it's not really an inside. Baseball book is really about love. And the different ways that people desire each other in the way those things fall apart especially when of a certain age. There's a lot about this book on paper. That would sound a little flat to me. But martin is a very lively writer and in fact for the first third of the booker. So i almost didn't trust because it was a lively thought. How is he doing this. You know like this seems to. I don't know if it was. It didn't seem glib. But i just thought there's something to entertaining about this. I was flying through it. And i don't think that i took it seriously until it started to accumulate a bit more by the end of the i realized that not only is he an excellent writer but i was kind of invested in these characters in a way that i wouldn't have predicted in the opening pages molly young. Who is a a great critic who reviewed the book for the book review..

Off The Meatrack Chainz New York Podcast
"andrew martin" Discussed on Off The Meatrack Chainz New York Podcast
"Protests racism Gop usa editor's note. Please keep in mind that this is a mainstream media story. The source of the story is in a deadline. We publish it for the purpose of informing our readers and providing opportunity to discuss it. What is gop usa. Read about blah blah but the olympics continued to ban athlete protests and could punish athletes who choose to protest anyway that means raising a fist or kneeling during the national anthem as many Professional us athletes have done over the past year risk punishment. Those athletes could even be sent home. I o c bans. Black lives matter gear. The international olympic committee got very Gra new granola to be exact. With what is not allowed is says specifically that the slogan black lives matter will be banned from athlete appear at the summer olympics. It's part of the icees longstanding ban on demonstrations or political religious or racial propaganda on the playing field medal. Stand or during the games official ceremonies more generic were like peace respect solidarity inclusion inequality will be allowed on t shirts so far the i'll see has not said what types of punishment athletes could face for violating these rules. It only set it would treat each violation on a case by case basis says majority of athlete support ban on protests. The athletes commission cited support to uphold rule fifty of the olympics charter from more than two thirds of about three thousand five hundred replies from consulting athlete groups. Drc says thirty percent of athletes polled. Do not think it's appropriate to demonstrate during competition sixty seven percents that is not appropriate. Either on the medal. Stand athletes breaching rule fifty can be sanctioned by three bodies the i ac- their sports governing body and the national olympic committee the us olympic paralympic committee pledged in december not to sanction lease for peacefully protest at the olympic trials. Many governing bodies for different olympic sports also have said they would not punish athletes for protests include world athletics the global governing body for track and field. Okay nonprofit step up to support. Athletes pushed to reform row fifty Many groups have promised legal support for athletes who protest the war players association. Us said the decision was a move. It expected any afric sanctions at the tokyo olympics will have the full backing of the world plays said brandon swap the union's executive director in the group global Athlete also issued a statement encouraging athletes to not allow outdated sports rules to subside. Your basic human rights nor hoffer is heavily involved with the global athletes. he's a two-time. Olympian have competed in cross country skiing in both sochi in twenty fourteen. And pay on chang in two thousand eighteen though. He thoroughly enjoyed both of his olympic experiences. He told nexstar. Andrew martin martin that he strongly believes that it is time to evaluate the voice of the international athlete We visioned an olympics where the athletes are the center of the show more than the host country or the politics around it or sponsors office said it is this hugh spec go where the athletes are in afterthought now for our even go to the next topic question for you. That's watching on youtube. Analyst is out there. Do you think that the olympic the international olympic in tokyo should ban athletes for wearing a black wise man t shirt. Or do you think or do you think it's or do you think otherwise. Be sure to comment in the comments section on my youtube channel analog with The cautioned gonna actually ask on the instagram. Podcast pays handle so without further. Ado gonna go to the next one now. The most issue that everybody's talking about is price gouging which is named the episode f for those of you may not know what price gouging is. We will go over it so marketing. Ninety one dot com is the website. Price-gouging can be defined as a practice of increasing the prices of goods or services so high that is considered exploitive and unethical. Price-gouging is calm is a is common practice Natural calamities or in emergencies. Now we go to the meaning in explanation behind price. Gouging is an economic term which referred to a situation when sellers or retailers increase the price of goods or services or commodities to such an extent to be exact. Excuse me that it is considered unfair exploitative enough to go by the common people. It is common to their price gouging after natural disasters like flood hurricanes or earthquakes cetera. Hit or simply. We can say when there is a shock to supply and demand chain in such situations organizations increase. The prices in order to.

Space Nuts | Astronomy, Space and Science News
"andrew martin" Discussed on Space Nuts | Astronomy, Space and Science News
"Today is rusty. Pama from w. i which is on the other side of australians. From where i'm sitting. It's that way to murad which means i'm facing south. Sarah would be if i can. Yes and it's good to have russell along some really good questions astute now reminder too if you'd like to follow us on facebook you can do that by logging onto the space. Nats facebook page. Just do a search for space. And that's podcast on facebook and Join us there where we've got a lot of followers. They're now we really building a really big. I think somewhere around two and a half thousand people that are on our facebook page naso. Please join them and become part of that community. You can also join the space nets podcast group on facebook which is a group that was created by space space nuts listeners. So you can all check to each other and far off some questions and answer each other's questions come up with theories and ideas and i love the. I love the way you police everything. Sometimes we'll get an infiltrator in that trying to sell watermelons generally dealt with rather quickly. I must say it's fascinating to watch but anyway we're on just about every social media platform. Of course we'd love to add to our youtube numbers as well so if you prefer to watch as well as listen finest on youtube. Space nats podcast. It's all sorts of options. And thank you for supporting the space. Nats podcasting in whatever way you do and felice numbers are just growing and we just so humbled by the support. I thank you very much now to our next question. Bredow this comes from martin in now. Hey we go. When i was growing up. I live near a dam. We call child chester. Damn now is it tried. Chester chichester chichester andrew. I'm watching from chichester. Which is on the south coast of england and also the birthplace astronaut. Tim peek. i've been thinking about. The ancient that reaches the earth allows us to see back in time to the early universe will our ability to say back in time reduce as lot from the early universe travels past us or maybe if the universe is infinite and expanding is there light from the early universe that will never reach us. That makes sense. Thanks for a great podcast. Martin thank you martin o. ancient light. where's it going. What's it doing how we have we seen it all disappear. Will we all end up in total blackness and never wake up. What's going over those andrew martin's right that a because versus is expanding its expansion is increasing increasing. That's been demonstrated by many many observations in recent years since nineteen ninety when it was first hopes up by people like brian schmidt and others..
