19 Burst results for "Arbel"

"arbel" Discussed on Schlereth and Evans

Schlereth and Evans

07:53 min | Last week

"arbel" Discussed on Schlereth and Evans

"If he wants to be an a whole great matter of fact, you need a little bit of that in you. He certainly didn't have enough in the last year, did we? I wasn't surprised at the reaction. He gave the other night because. He's from the Parcells and Belichick treat. So let me ask you this. If Bill Parcells are Bill Belichick, suddenly became the coach of the Broncos. And we're at a nuggets game. Would you expect Bill Parcells or Bill Belichick to get up and start chugging a beer and doing interviews over in-house arena interviews? Would you expect them to be doing? I'm here to connect with my coaches to put a staff together. The first time we've been like, we've been together completely as a staff. I'm here to celebrate those guys and for all of us as a staff to get to know one another. Here's Bronco fan, and we talked about this yesterday. I don't know what it means, but you want to have your cake and also eat it too. I just said that wrong, but you know what I mean? You want to have it you can't have your cake and eat it too. Not you can have your cake and eat it too. I think that you can't have your cake and eat it too. You can't have the cake and eat it too, which makes even less sense. Right, because if you buy yourself a piece of cake, you just toss it. Wow, that's a good-looking beer. You only buy it to share it with somebody else. Right. Or give it to somebody else? I don't know. Then again, it's like, why do you say I'm sweating like a pig? Pigs don't sweat. Yeah. Anywho, yeah, anywho. But going back to Sean Payton, you want to successful, I want a successful franchise. But I don't want, but I also want it to be friendly and happy and I want them to answer all my questions. And it doesn't work that way. Well, as long as he's consistent with it, I'm fine with him being an a hole. You know what? After crusty and uncle vik and having the time of my life, coaches over the last 6 years. I'm ready for an a hole. Really? The time of his life. But he needs to be consistent with it. And I'm hoping what it is is like, hey, I got a little loose during the Super Bowl, and I was doing all the TV stuff, and that's what I was being paid for. Now I'm tightening it back up. And if that's the case, great. Awesome. I have heard. And I don't know this, but I have heard that Sean will call the local media guys when they say something that he doesn't agree with, or he thinks it's wrong. You'll get a personal call. I'll give you a little bare bottom of spanking over there. Anyway, do that. January would call you up to the office. I've been plenty of guys on the beat over the years. I'll tell you stories about how they got called to the principal's office. Really? Yeah. You never get cold. I never got called. Could you imagine? If you got called to the principal's office, I just melt. Oh my gosh. You would be so. He a long time ago. I don't remember. I think it was around the time that Trevor price got suspended. Remember that? I don't remember. The whole story, but I asked him a question about it. He gave me the look. Dude, I swear to God. My heart stopped. He has a nearly passed out. He did have that fatherly now your dad could just look at you. Yes. And oh, dude, you're arbel's will be up inside your stomach. Your dad could just look at you with that dad strength. Yes. And just you just knew. You're like, oh shoot, no. Shannon's leaving. He could take grown men like you. And reduce you to whimpering children. Oh, dude, he just give you that look. Oh, he had it down, too. Yeah. I don't know if that. If that's just if that's something you can work on, if that's if she's like, you're either born with it or you're not. Because he just born with it, he had that ability. Gosh. Guys, pigs do sweat. It's called bacon. Oh, now you get me thinking about bacon. It's delicious, just not good. Yeah. Don't make too much of it. Guys, Peyton just was trying not to upstage the nuggets. So that's what, that's what Delta Delta T Nathaniel Hackett and Justin out, we're doing last year. We're going to score a lot of points. Acting like it was a kegger, a rager. Toga toga. Oh yeah. Had a nuggets going out. How'd that work out, yeah. Delicious. Doug delicious. Tug delicious. By the way, fever you holding on to all the Hackett drops, like you held on to all the VJ drops and held onto all the Vic drops. Yeah, they will be stored for good. You never know? We gotta say, we're gonna score myself. I was bullying myself. These are hung young individuals. But hey. But hey, Sean Payton's an a hole. Beyoncé. I love it. Good. You know what we need? You know what we need? We need a coach. It's a little bit of an a hole. Yes. Yes. Because you know this has been a country club for way too long. Yep, yes. It's been in a fear. It has not been enough fear in that building, and I told you, man, I told you, I did that saints game. Somebody came up to me that would know that it's been around forever. Said, Sean Payton walked out of this building, the fear walked out with him. That's our problem. Boom. Point blank done. You need some fear, right? You got in, is it just me you want to share? Oh, yeah. Yeah, I got this. Because this one is highly dubious. Listen to you guys every morning on the fan talking about the nuggets cringe worthy. Malone is equivalent to the Jordan bulls with Doug gods, gray coach, great team, no championships. I is that James Marilyn 'cause that is James Marilyn's take. To the worst. James, come on. Yeah. James Merrill at Kevin Durant style with burner, Twitter handles. Right. Exactly. Yes. Is he Doug Collins? Well, he might be. He might be. And you know what? A year ago at this time, you could wonder whether or not Jared bednar was boy, I don't know. Who's the Doug Collins version of the NHL? Hockey fan will help me out. Just a coach that was good in the regular season. But just couldn't deliver you the chip, right? Well, but bednar proved himself. So yeah, I make no bones about it. That is exactly the spot that Michael Malone is in right now, where Jared bednar was a year ago. It's time. Time to show that you could be a championship coach. So yeah. This is what's up. Michael Jordan was in what year 6 or 7 before he won his first championship?

Bill Parcells Bill Belichick nuggets Sean Payton Parcells Trevor price Belichick arbel Broncos vik Delta Delta Nathaniel Hackett Doug delicious Super Bowl Beyoncé James Marilyn Sean Shannon Peyton Hackett
"arbel" Discussed on Monocle 24: Section D

Monocle 24: Section D

06:51 min | 3 months ago

"arbel" Discussed on Monocle 24: Section D

"Gives way to truly diverse approaches to architecture. My name is omer arbel and I'm competing for the future house projects. Based in Vancouver, Omar arbel runs a creative hub of a constellation of company structure to realize ideas of varying scales across a wide spectrum of contexts. Always with a focus on materiality. This multidisciplinary approach has led over to a range of diverse projects such as bocce, a lighting and glass blowing studio he cofounded, or as he's presented at waf this year, the first of a series of 16 residencies on a cliff top site in the American Pacific Northwest. So in this particular case, the method that we've employed has to do with these very large Cedar burls. So in our region, there are huge vast Cedar forests that are all dying because of climate change. It's getting too hot for them. And so these, in some cases, 80 year old, 90 year old, hundred year old cedars are being cut down because they're dead. And because the price of Cedar skyrocketed during the pandemic. And so when they're turned into lumber, we found out that the bottom meter or sometimes even up to two meters of the tree is discarded. And that's because the grain pattern is too inconsistent for the lumber industry, but from our perspective, it's the nicest part of the wood. It's the strongest and it's got the most exciting green. So we take those. And we chop them into bits, and then we built this strange machine, which you may have seen in my presentation, which kind of tumbles them the way that a rock tumbler works. And what you end up are these sort of potato shapes of wood, very dramatically different from each other that are approximately anywhere between 20 centimeters in diameter to maybe 60 or sometimes 70. And so these potatoes are the sort of starting point. We bundle them up in big giant industrial sort of sacks. And then we pour concrete around them to build the house. Now, you'll probably have to Google some of the plants and images of Homer's project here to get a real sense of what it proposes. It's a splendid cavernous underground space that opens up over the edge of a cliff. The project was highly commended by jurors at the festival. For its unusual, yet really innovative way of imagining a house. As architects we are confronted with this set of choices usually. A palette as it were of available materials and methods. I study them in school and then you're enter a kind of marketplace where those things are available to you and generally speaking, you compose based on those things that you find that are already available or developed or conventional. But I ask why only these methods, there's an infinite amount of possibilities. But it wasn't just material experimentations like Omar's that took center stage at this year's festival. There was also downright societal experimentation being presented in a range of projects. You see that in all the cities and what is also linking Madrid Milan Lisbon Amsterdam is kind of a new culture of young people, millennials that really want to do things differently. They really are purpose driven. They are often also impact entrepreneurs. They are pioneers and they want to make a difference. And that's what we are on that energy we are thriving with our projects. This new generation that wants to do things different. That's Mark color of Mark color architects based in the Netherlands. Mark was also very much the talk of the town at the Sears festival. In between giving a keynote and during at the event, mka also presented four of its shortlisted projects at waf. All of them connected by the practices unique vision of sustainable urban living. Which reignites ideas of communal living and working. What we've seen in the neoliberal model of the last 25 years is that cities were all driven by capital and societies have been falling apart alienation is a huge problem. Huge differences in income and in access to facilities, people living almost engaged communities. This is a huge social challenge for everyone, because in this way, different generations are moving apart from each other. Millennials don't own anything anymore they don't earn anything anymore and they are really a challenge by investing and building a family in the city. What we think is important is to create projects that connect these different generations again. All the people with younger people, but also wealthy people with less wealthy people, expats with local people, but also different nationalities, different cultures, because everyone is just seeking a more harmonious world where we actually know each other's neighbors again, where you can rely on each other where you can share inspiration, but also care and help each other out. It is a real estate development and urban challenge, but it also affects architectural models. It demands also for new branding and community building models. And that's what we are trying to do with these residential communities or community buildings. Kind of like a revival of this idea of communal living, but then with a lot of privacy and individual freedom to live how you want, but offering the possibility to live together and to share a kitchen and to share a living room. If you want to. It's not workspaces. There is artists there is roof gardens that you can share. And there's all kinds of participatory processes in our community that allow the residents to co design and decide how they spend the budget on the operations of the facilities. Many architects are struggling with the same issues of how to make really sustainable projects in a time where economic pressure is enormous when there is a financial crisis. There's an ecological crisis and how do you then get your project realized when everything is working against you. We all present ourselves as like successful companies, but at the end we're all just struggling to survive and that's what you feel, this kind of compassion with each other here that the architect is a practice that is under threat of being extinct I think by algorithms by commercial forces that are incorporating architecture into real estate development models where there is no space for autonomous architecture anymore. And it's really important that we come

omer arbel Omar arbel American Pacific Northwest mka Vancouver Homer Omar Lisbon Milan Madrid Amsterdam Sears Google the Netherlands Mark
"arbel" Discussed on Monocle 24: Section D

Monocle 24: Section D

03:35 min | 3 months ago

"arbel" Discussed on Monocle 24: Section D

"We have more than 800 entries from around the world this year, divided into roughly 40 categories. In a humbling moment to be able to present a project that's very dear to us. And then the architects and designers of the shortlisted projects have come to Lisbon so they can do live presentations of their entries. And in these we've got all of these basketball courts, south basketball courts. We should use space that is not opportunity, I think, for us to spend it. All throughout the day, shortlisted practices get to present their work and snappy ten minute sessions followed by a quick fire grilling from the judges. Hailing from countries as far as Iran, India, Australian Brazil, and an especially high number of entries from China this year, practices range from the globally renowned to newcomers having just completed their first ever project that global mixed bag undoubtedly gives way to truly diverse approaches to architecture. My name is omer arbel and I'm competing for the future house projects. Based in Vancouver, Omar arbel runs a creative hub of a constellation of company structure to realize ideas of varying scales across a wide spectrum of contexts. Always with a focus on materiality. This multidisciplinary approach has led over to a range of diverse projects such as bocce, a lighting and glass blowing studio he cofounded, or as he's presented at waf this year, the first of a series of 16 residencies on a cliff top site in the American Pacific Northwest. So in this particular case, the method that we've employed has to do with these very large Cedar burls.

basketball omer arbel Lisbon Omar arbel Brazil Iran India China Vancouver American Pacific Northwest
"arbel" Discussed on The Garden Question

The Garden Question

05:03 min | 1 year ago

"arbel" Discussed on The Garden Question

"Burns. He's owns a company called hardscapes unlimited. Here where I live in the upstate of South Carolina. He was that contract drive was just talking about. They gave me a chance back in the day to earn his business. He puts in about three or four driveways a week up here, and he puts in big driveways. I learned a lot through him and being able to earn his business. I'm lucky enough to still have a friendship with him that's a decade old at this point. Yeah, he puts in a lot of polymeric saying that's great, but at the end of the day, he's a guy that I could call if I needed anything and he'd be right there. He's a father, three, like I'm a father of three. Yeah, he just taught me a lot and he's a super humble guy and I'm happy to have him as a friend and of course a customer. What's your most viable garden mistake? My most valuable garden mistake would be letting my wife help in the garden. You letting her hear this, yeah, she hears this she'll probably be mad, but she'd be doing a life sentence if you could get convicted for murdering plants. I'll say that. Every houseplant we've ever had or anything like that is crunchy and dead. She stays inside. She does all the interior designing and making our inside of our House look beautiful. And I stick to the outside, making sure we got the beautiful patio and all that and beautiful flowers and everything shrubs to go with it. I'd like for you to complete this statement in my garden, not have. In my garden, I have the two things I've talked about already. I have pavers, and I have day lilies. That's a good find my house pretty easy. I am the springtime. A lot of big orange and yellow day lilies and a beautiful patio for my kids to play in. I got practice what you preach when you're in hart's cape, so at our home, we had a little tin by ten slab of a patio. We never used it. I was lucky enough to get a nice 900 ft² patio installed with some bell guard mega arbel and a western stone fire pit. I'm not just being an advertisement for hearts case, but really did change how my family hung around the house. We spent so much more time outside once we had our patio. It was crazy. A million pictures of my kids growing up on that patio, you know my wife sitting on the patio while there 20 feet away, swinging on their swing set and playing in the yard and on the playgrounds. That would be mine. What are your future plans for your garden? Future plans. Well, I just lost my beautiful backyard because we sold our House. We're renovating our family house on my wife's side right now..

Burns South Carolina arbel hart
"arbel" Discussed on DeaconLive

DeaconLive

07:43 min | 1 year ago

"arbel" Discussed on DeaconLive

"How to play football and then all of a sudden doubled alcohol level get behind a car and it's sad woman had losers her life put you know he'll do time and guess what someone if you have that much talent. They'll take them back they. You can't get guys that can run that fast. Well if he's going to serve time. How many. How much time is he gonna serve fifteen years. He's come out he's gonna be like thirty seven years old he's gonna sometimes vehicle hamasaki two years in jail and good time and i don't know even for fifteen minutes it's crazy damn like i said this year that the last couple years have been crazy as far as companies are coming out when we're concoctions. They're slamming pizzas into ice cream. They're slamming eggs into chocolate chip cookies or something like that where we're seeing the craziest craziest combinations of food that i never thought of well reza's right now and we go to four on that one reasons right now is no to making individual in crazy decisions as far as what. They're going to put in their chocolate peanut butter cups. Now i love rhesus. That's one of my top ten as far as like peanut butter. I like a snickers bar. But i like peanut eminem reece's and my favorite ice cream is moose tracks and the guy who invented researchers actually got laid off from his remarks from hershey. He created that at home with his wife and came up with him. And he it outsold all this stuff and they. They gave him a tremendous amount of money to come back and shoulder. We'll do what he. He realized that he had a great product but the distribution of sales the marketing all. That was smart enough to know. I can make myself very rich and sell the thing back to her. She's right so this guy right here or this company were here. Reasons is now come up with a tayo chip stuff. Peanut butter cup. That has finally arrived. Have you been asking for no have you wanting it. We don't know reasons is yet again leading the way in the snack innovation. It is time for the potato chip filled peanut butter cup now. My bad hangover days. I'll have a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. With nacho cheese. Reito's in it. I've never had a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. Never had a racist cop so right here and take it away. News of the potato chip stuffed racist broken. September twenty on instagram. Who's reviewing a product at a lot of attention receiving over two thousand likes and numerous comments. The big cup with potato to the hot topic on twitter after the junk-food leaks post before promptly. Falling back off the raider in clifton park by the new surrounding fake cup with pretzels. Peanut butter cup which was leased in mid-september. Now i've had that. And i don't like it. The peanuts pretzels are to crunchy and they take away from the peanut butter inside. I'm anyone understand. The races was perfect. I mean everyone just liked the combination. Something here's a little side note. There's two sides on recess cops as you can tell them. A big fan won the pumpkin receives cup that they have during. Halloween tastes better than any other receives cup that they have now. They haven't changed the ingredients. I haven't changed anything like that. But the way that they shape the actual or you don't want to talk about. The reasons cub has like for christmas. Like christmas tree for easter. They have like it. Looks like easter egg for halloween. It hasn't like a pumpkin shape. And the pumpkin shape has more peanut butter filling than chocolate. So the ratio changes ratio changes completely and people say that that those are the best ones as far as rhesus peterberg. And you also know that when he was making it he was working on it and he had cooking at a certain time. Any accidentally overcooked it. And that's when he said. This is perfect. I like this is. That's how we that was the perfect recipe overcook. They're also coming out with a foot long sleeve a peanut butter cups reese's peanut butter cups. You know the little lawn. What's got all the ridges and stuff. They just released that. They're sending a foot long of sleeve a peanut butter cups coming out this season. So there you go and you got a lot. You got a lot to get into now something that you get into a lot. Are you a big pickle fan. Do you like pickles. Not particularly no well right now this weekend. Pickles bubba coast. Aw pickle boston's has come out with a new pickle flavored candy corn now. We're just coming out of like halloween season and stuff and Are you a fan of candy. Corn i love candy corn because their minds are grandmother's place. I used to bite the the white piece off. And that tasted one flavor by the orange piece off take the and then the the white or the yellow or brown depending on what it was but clawson's has now come out with candy corn. That tastes like pickles. You can eat them. You're gonna buy while we're out of season right now. We're just coming out of halloween. But yeah clawson's come out with this right here so if you see green the green candy corn by clawson they owned by the jar there. If they were in season would you buy them. I would try them. Look look them up and see if you can buy online while while you're doing that we'll get into the next weird flavor that they're coming into very different dave. I also have pickled flavored candy corn. Where'd you find out. I'm not getting. I'm looking on gokul. Not finding it. What are you typing in. For your search kosher dill ritchie's no not kosher dill receives your way off for doing clawson's candy corn dan. You're arbel type and type in lawson's candy corn pickles or something like that. What are you talking in for the search. Yeah i'm looking for neat reaches candy. Corn why are you looking for resources. You're totally wrong. It's clawson's pickles. You're stuck on the races right. Dan you you're getting here never mind. Can't find it all right well. Anyways kosher dill clawson's not kosher dill costumes. Candy corn candy. Pickles is available out there somewhere. I'm sure dan are you. Do you like Candy canes. I'm afraid to ask because you're gonna go into a spiral here agenda not too sweet for me so candy canes come out with all these different flavors they come out with the it. Pepper peppermint altogether mostly and then they have like different flavors. As far as like they have just regular candy. I don't like candy canes themselves. They're not suitable vicki and messy. They're not suitable to to hold. You know people. I like the small ones. Like if i can get the small one. I'll snap them off and put them in my mouth in the back. Corner like shaw. This company right here is coming out with archie. Mcphee has hotdog candy. Canes you heard me right. The legendary novelty candy cane is coming out with a hot dog flavored candy cane. Breyer the legendary novelty candy. Toy store based in seattle washington is known for its crazy confections and the new dishes just one of many many insane options of store offers every year. We do candy canes unique flavors last year. We did catch up the most popular american condominium this year we thought what's more american than hot dogs so and frankly speaking. That's bad news and good news. The bad is already sold out of the hotdog ones. i just. I don't know the only sold out. Because i made like twenty of them or something stupid like that but yeah so they. The good news is there's so many more options to choose from so this company called. What's it called archie. Mcphee is who makes the candy canes they have also candies include tastes like kale mac and cheese. Ham should talk mushrooms. was that fo- pu follow. Yeah no it's it's i think it's poo poo. Platter pickle allah sock. Tv pick out of stock bacon out of stock and catch up out of stock. The they have sardine. They have sardines god talking on so the companies coming out with all these different flavored candy canes and hot dogs the latest one that they put out there and they are sold out already. There's something wrong with us. It's horrible now speaking. Something horrible wrong with this dan. What is your type of music. What's music you listen tilak blues and i like classic rock. I like dark music. Something.

clawson eminem reece nacho cheese Reito hamasaki reza clifton park hershey dill ritchie arbel football dill clawson twitter boston Mcphee lawson archie dave vicki Dan
"arbel" Discussed on Monocle 24: Section D

Monocle 24: Section D

06:00 min | 1 year ago

"arbel" Discussed on Monocle 24: Section D

"Team behind monocles dedicated weekly design program. I'm Nick manase, filling in phenol and Giles. Omer arbel is an artist and the cofounder of Vancouver and Berlin based lighting design and manufacturing firm, bocce. Arbel's philosophy, welcome surprise, and individuality in the manufacturing and design process, and boccio studio is testament to that. Filled with a vast array of experiments in material, this ever growing archive spans the 16 years of the practice and offers a constant source of inspiration for current and upcoming projects. At this year's salon in Milan, we caught up with arbel in our pop up studio to discuss why continually experimenting with materials and keeping an open mind is vital to his approach. Early on, I noticed that one of the most successful works that we've had the vision I had for it in my mind was so different than the way it actually ended up being executed for various reasons. The realities of production and the material qualities of glass and the time constraints involved. It ended up being very different from what I'm initially imagined. And much better. And the ways that it was better were surprising and directly related to the intrinsic chemical and physical and mechanical properties of glass. And so I was confronted by the fact that the best parts about this work were not designed. And then I had to have a kind of honest conversation with myself and decide that that moment of surprise was worth pursuing. So since then, we've structured the practice to really instigate or invite those moments of surprise from analog experimentation with materials, we only have a very vague idea of where we're going when we start an exploration. And we're ready to turn at any moment in response to those sort of intuitive discoveries that we have with processor materials. Many of the roads are blind alleys. And the only way that this works is that I pursue numerous explorations at the same time. And knowing full well that only a few of them will result in anything interesting. And I also never respond to a brief, in other words, I'm always pursuing numerous explorations on my own without any kind of context or program or purpose. And we just kind of archive them as I go, and then when opportunities present themselves, we match the opportunity to an idea rather than the other way around. So we're not responsive, we just we're constantly making work and the work just sits on the shelf until some of it makes sense in a particular context. The nice thing about that is that sometimes it takes decades for something to come to fruition. And sometimes I will also say that those blind alleys change after years with the right collaborator, the right piece of equipment, all of a sudden, the project that we thought was dead opens up again. For example, number one, we're developing 15 years later. It's kind of a shock, but it's wonderful and it's relevant again and an interesting and all the obstacles that had 15 years ago are no longer obstacles. That'll come out next year and it'll be sort of amazing to see it again after all this time. I guess we never edit. Nothing's ever a bad idea. Every single one of them is great. We cherish every single idea, but we just know that sometimes there they require a great deal of time to find themselves. So we have an infinite patience. And sometimes they take very little time. Like some ideas take a few weeks. Other ideas take decades. But none are thrown out ever. And it's the same with the open ended nature of the production or manufacturing or fabrication or construction of our projects. There are no wrong iterations. We control three or four parameters and the rest up to the craftspeople. Or the material itself to interpret, and the forms that come out belong to a family of forms or they follow an idiom or language that we establish, but they are unique and different from each other. And not a single one is edited out. I can say with confidence that we never throw out anything. And any iteration. That's kind of contrary to how I came up in an architecture school and when you're taught to criticize and edit yourself. That's exactly the opposite approach I sort of rejects the idea of editing. The physical archiving of our ideas is essential to the continuing production of new ideas. The studio becomes a kind of self referential entity where ideas are sort of regurgitated through a constantly changing group of collaborators. Until they're ready. We're surround ourselves with our own sort of failures. Successes. And it's beautiful. I think because the other thing that starts to happen is the pieces, the works start having conversations between themselves and we can make lateral connections between one technique or another, one material or another one collaborator or another..

Nick manase Omer arbel Arbel arbel Giles Berlin Milan Vancouver
"arbel" Discussed on Talking Junk

Talking Junk

05:14 min | 1 year ago

"arbel" Discussed on Talking Junk

"We got a good episode for you guys tonight but before we get into that i want to encourage you to hit us up on our social media platforms and all of our streaming platforms and leave us a five star review. That's the way we're able to bring you these good episodes every week. I'm here once again. With my co host thailand identify talent managers trying to hold the dow talking outlets. Thanks to do a pretty good. I'm excited for this episode. So let's just get right into it. Our guest tonight mr bob ginsberg. Are you doing tonight. Bob doing well pleasure to be here. Pleasures all hours. So why don't we get right into it. Why don't you tell us a little bit about yourself. Well i Twenty if you go back. Twenty years ago is leading a life that many people would deem to be successful. You have three kids and the big house coal and business and everything was going along pretty well and my my son and my daughter were involved in a car accident. My daughter didn't survive seriously injured. Thank you and I'll preface that. You know. I can tell you this quickly but the morning of the accident. My wife Setup in bed at three o'clock in the morning lewis tonight aaron. She was shaking and trembling. I said what what's a man said. Something horrible going happen today. And what does that mean what. what should we do. And she couldn't tell me any details just knew that something arbel and ever stating test was going to happen and they went on and i checked on my three kids. I took it seriously there other times in our lives together when she had these pre cognitive. You know pieces of information visions whatever you wanna call it. And they all turned out to be true every one of them exactly the way she said but they were all good things but logic told me if she was right then she could be right now so And solutions usually always right gut feeling. Yeah so you know i. I checked on the kids throughout the day. I was very careful. You night came from my awareness. We went out to dinner at the to ours'll kids one car home. We follow them. You know we came upon the accident but what happened Eventually is as a came clear that my son was going to survive his injuries. it hit me like a ton of bricks..

mr bob ginsberg arbel thailand Bob aaron
"arbel" Discussed on Maltin On Movies

Maltin On Movies

03:35 min | 1 year ago

"arbel" Discussed on Maltin On Movies

"Who was at fox back the goosebumps as he was this young guy and we even talk that he was like in his twenties or something about doing fear street back then back when anyway. I bet he doesn't need to remember that but he he bought the rights to do first rate movies and he had this idea. I haven't written a fear streets. Long time ago i did about eighty of them and then recently i've done ten ten new ones recently but He had this idea to bring out to do binge movie watching any would bring it out to the movie theaters one in june july and august three months in a row. It would be like a horror summer and you go to the theater three times and see these films and then of course kobe. Gay and there were no movie theaters and fox editor fox. Peter and fox was bought by disney and disney didn't want fear street didn't want it they are. They got they cut out a lot of films when they bought fox and then we have the pandemic there no movie theaters all three films were filmed they're all done. Also atlanta and He luckily sold it to networks. Next smarter them and had this idea to do one a week not want a month and it's actually i mean this is all arbel thing to say probably but thanks to the pandemic it was this huge thing i think if they open and movie theaters it wouldn't be a big deal at all. Maybe people would have gone for now. All we do is watch netflix. every night brice. that's all we do right and There they were three weeks at a row on netflix. And each one was like the number one film on netflix. Yet lives so lucky and they. They were know they did some really big event. Nice events pop up stores and in london the net flicks publicity machine when you used to book publicity louis publicity. It's like from another planet. Yeah i did interviews for them on In four countries. Try doing that on a book. You know book clubs out. You're begging people. please write about it please. Something there were hundreds of interviews. Hundreds all the stars hundreds of websites. All people wanna talk about movies. They don't wanna talk about books We like this yeah. I know it's really. It was amazing to me. Just astounding when you know what. Great luck well. Yes luck all always you deliver the goods. Yeah it well lucky is lucky to have that opportunity and have that door open for you but if if you didn't Give people what they want. They wouldn't have come back a second or third week Well thank you. They upset drew or four months. Yeah yeah got was gonna those were the days the days you've been doing this long enough bob You've passed the generation line at least once more once more than once i get all my grandmother loved your book..

fox netflix arbel disney brice Peter atlanta london bob
"arbel" Discussed on The Working Experience

The Working Experience

06:10 min | 1 year ago

"arbel" Discussed on The Working Experience

"Half of the country believes there was an insurrection that nearly obstructed A duly fairly administered election and another almost half. The country apparently believes the election was stolen and add some of those people who stormed the capital where patriots. So you know. I think that disagreement is at the heart. Blood of politics heartburn democracy but disagreement about the facts is the path to madness. We have to start with what happened. And then we can disagree about what it means or wanted. Significance is the pierre. Don't even agree about what happened. And they election returns or a perfect example. I mean how many eighteen lawsuits challenging the returns and how many judges concluding there's nothing. Defective here. how many state elected officials from both parties. Saying there's nothing effective here so But there are very effective communication outlets. You know fox. News is not my favorite news channel. But it's incredibly successful in many parts of the world part of this news desert. Arbel that i'm describing. There's no local news and the only news source is fox's right where you had. I saw tucker carlson calling a a colonel a- pig and stupid because he wanted to know more about what happened on january sex. I think that that's not news. I mean i don't know what that is but it's not news invective and name calling in demands kindergarteners to call it kindergarten. Ish yeah well. I'm what there was a congressman or a senator. And i'm wondering if this person is the chicken or the egg if if he's the product or if he's using it he was barricade he was one of the people barricading the doors as people were trying to burst through them and then he turned around and said it was like a normal day of taurus. Yeah took him a couple of weeks to get to that point but he did because you know there's a there's a takeover of of the republican party it's kind of fealty to you loyalty tests and You know we'll see what happens. Is you talk about that madness. He's not only discounting facts. He's discounting his own experience right right. Well i don't know how to look into the mind of people like that but there are motives that explain why people do what they do. And fear desire Pressure who knows. I'm less worried about him than i aren't. M the people are listening to him and if they can't hear someone push back and say actually here are the facts. Here's what happens. They're gonna take his word for it. That worries me in the same van. You were talking about Poland and You'd met hungry. Is this drift towards autocracy dictatorship. I mean is this a product or is this a. I mean again in your opinion. Is this a a natural human trend. Because i mean it's not the first time we've seen this ref towards dictatorship hitler mussolini and so forth. It is this a. I find it a disturbing trend that people drift towards this well. There's a playbook that's available for any unscrupulous leader to play on the fears of individuals to disarm and disabled every power. That could check their authority. Media is a big one. the universities is another one. Intellectuals is the third. This is not made up. You're quite right. We've seen this movie before And what's heartbreaking is not see that there are not many people taking the lessons from the past and it's not only this european story you know there's something similar happening in the philippines. Is something similar happening in russia. This is tried and true. And i guess the disturbing thing is that people seem to to want it or at least i think they do. And what are the options that are available to them. And you know. Populism is a is a term that has so many meanings but the appeal. The what people say they want. I think that's probably not true. Populism in in our current form anyway is right really beating illegal misinformation and feeding their fears as you said which is more powerful than feeding people's positive emotions. Unfortunately so just a kind of wrap is up here. What do you think is the i mean. You talked about some of the remedy of government. What do you think for the individual person who reads your book and for their own news intake things that they can do. Be more wherever you even somebody who doesn't happen to read a book. Like how do they. Because i heard people saying. I'm looking for more fair and balanced i'm looking for more substantive. Like what can the individual person may be do. Well i think there at least three levels. This one is how to manage our own Intake of media and news and so forth and those around us our family members A second level is how to advocate for change in the near term and the third is Had advocate for something bigger even longer than the near germs in.

Arbel fox tucker carlson patriots republican party Poland philippines russia
"arbel" Discussed on Bachelor Party

Bachelor Party

04:59 min | 1 year ago

"arbel" Discussed on Bachelor Party

"The problem is that the there this is bad for the show as we knew it and they need to find ways to evolve with who they're casting great point god. I was so arbel that that confrontation i. It's in the annals of bad television things. I do not wanna watch again. You also just like you wanna see katie like celebrating with blake and even like okay this. This was notable when blake comes out. And it's a big moment. They're getting to celebrate the love in front of other people for the first time like she even says her own family didn't know they were engaged. This raising you and leave the first moment that they are out in front of the world saying we're engaged in. What's the first thing that we hear. Blake ada her or you. Okay yeah because of like. That's just sucks lederer just to be happy and celebrate with her hot bearded new fiancee like edges. So much of this. This episode was about things that were bad and said yes said. I love. I felt i felt the katie felt. She had justified religion with blake when she was like. We're so much more than the couples on tv like we already are. I thought that was kind of sad. I believe that. I'm sure they've had to like actually get to know each other. And in a meaningful Outside of the bubble of new mexico. But it's not. Yeah i think you put it while it was just like a sad finale. It was sup- super weird. And then i mean. I'll hit a lot of this with kelly on thursday as well but we next. We must discuss. Aunt lindsey i mean i mean holy shit what a firecracker give her a spinoff immediately. If caney is final four on any season of the bachelor and the bachelor meets aunt lindsay is katie. Making fantasy suites like shit. It reminded me of. I don't know if you watch this season. But on sean low season when he goes to the jazz hometown dez is brother. Like just totally ruins it and then dez voted off. And it's like okay. Her brother ruin. Deaths and i gave me flashbacks to that. The families are families are often harsh and very direct and an rarely hesitate to express their reservations but literally said out loud you ultimately mean nothing said oh my god and and she also could be like. You're here because we asked you to be here. Like not sure. She was also asking tough toughly practical questions. I wonder if like she was playing a role. Or she's like that like. I'm dying to know we need more eight lindsay to find out. We'll katie did say she was like she's tough. She's a tough one. You know so we were. We were prepared for it. I thought that keys mom. There were some really sweet moments there. And i think an you know. And lindsey was certainly compelling tv. I mean that was just wild. Blake was sweating his way through that exchange. I think the way that he described it was quote almost cold. Which you know. She says about a person if she loves values obviously in his sister. Yeah so that was boy. That was really take care. Sorry it's just amazing to run through the things that that she says when he went when blake said that they were so similar. Like we're almost the same response was meaning. You also have a vibrator not here for the cliche. The bachelor bullshit. That was so funny. I also thought that was interesting. How blake kept harping on how they're so the same. And that's why they work other big believer in like similar like foundational values being shared. But like not being the same. And i i almost if i were katie. It'd be like it's a red flag that you keep referencing you like like we work because we're so similar..

blake katie arbel Blake ada Aunt lindsey dez aunt lindsay lederer caney new mexico kelly sean lindsay lindsey Blake
"arbel" Discussed on Distorted View Daily

Distorted View Daily

03:14 min | 1 year ago

"arbel" Discussed on Distorted View Daily

"Look. I'm just trying to kill off the old. You know we're horrible people together and probably the buddy of us assholes have to stick together anyway due arbel. Thank you very much yes. You're a horrible person for thinking that way. Now come give me a hug. Brother kelly He's saying one guided pound in that he got out. He you make the kid in school and he got knocked up my dad. He went to school minute. Plus it us. The cat lady school of telling stories he he was a student. They're loading someone else. Said something great. Someone had a great line about that guy What was it. i can't remember. there's no way i'm gonna find the message now Someone said some really great catting you show lord dish or drying ideal for this. Did he thought it was amazing. Not only in a Not because they're really giggo way. Rooker my fans draw me sort of ways. Exactly what. I say when i show them that stuff slate. We'll see of these little green hairless or are you wanna nails and like the one. I'm sipping tea. And then he'll say stuff like you need dress up like that in real life you should do like an a side by side of like the drawing and then try to as closely as you can dress up like that in real life and take a shot. My favorite helpful. He's he's he's doesn't have my best interests in mind only video. Oh my god. I'm sure you're gonna talk about it because he may agree admits having rain and green fresh marine trauma which i covered it all today. I'm proud of it. I mean you're not proud of cause cancer so whatever. And then he's like what am i have. Movable personality says he doesn't have multiple personalities but then everything he actually talks about in the video leads us to believe that yes. He does have multiple personalities. This is danny body. I just learned how to quit. So i'm gonna do it on the phone for you. That is not a cuiv. that's an as farts. I don't know if i believe it. I feel like it's one of those toys that make the fart. Sounds i'm going to need to see video. Mo is looking for proof. I'm a pervert. Well thank you very much. Danny for that whether it's real or not i'll let the freaks decide cam just.

arbel Brother kelly Rooker cancer danny Mo Danny
"arbel" Discussed on The Brilliant Idiots

The Brilliant Idiots

03:57 min | 1 year ago

"arbel" Discussed on The Brilliant Idiots

"At three in bananas that a to know they do have different ways of right in numbers. When i'm saying is like one hour to us is sixty minutes. Somebody else could have a different unit of measurement for an hour now everywhere. It'll be chilly ours. Everybody seems to go off of that. You know drew a day going off the idea of an hour in a minute. But why isn't there someplace that goes now. We don't have hours have minutes. We have days whatever like another another time. I rented three six forty in the uk around forty three. Six climbers komo arbel.

uk komo arbel
"arbel" Discussed on What The Focaccia with Niki Webster and Bettina Campolucci Bordi

What The Focaccia with Niki Webster and Bettina Campolucci Bordi

08:02 min | 1 year ago

"arbel" Discussed on What The Focaccia with Niki Webster and Bettina Campolucci Bordi

"Food in his software him. I was like eating this every day of site sad. I shouldn't say that should be grateful for the food. You have been honestly after it got like video too much me and i just told my mother you know when i went home for the first time i said i'm going to go back to this. Is he bad in also notice. The food is so you can't just not go back because the food is back. Everyone panicked because it's what journal news go back. And that's like a major scandal in family like mine which is traditional is operatives. You don't do these. Two years ago was unheard of anyone to lead the husband. Because they're back. Cook cannot believe that story so my mother was like you can learn how cook so actually. I think i knew how to cook. Hadn't done it. Because i learned very quickly and i don't have that smart is to hang on the all time before i got married so i'd seen the processes but the most important thing i knew there almost i knew the rhythm on food traditional food is cooked in a beat and rhythm and estan kitchen completely immersed. These roma's spices of things. On the stations. That people are having and no one giving measure this measure that no one mentioning anything. He's like you know. Do you think it's don doesn't look right now is to look at it. New is on looking right. Yes is is does remove the cumin is it just drive the nuttiness stig off the eat. All these conversations were in me when i started cooking. I remember everything. I'm you know. I'm onto cook really fast and i have to say very well and i could replicate all my family. Dishes are exactly the way that it was an. I didn't i didn't even struggle to it was quite a relief to me. My husband was completely like shocked with what's happened yet. He's never made chicken again. I told him with the rest of your life. I will be do people. Just don't to maybe of desperate situation of eating your husband's curry. That really started everything. I would love to give him any credit mice. I've i have succeeded despite him but yeah this it was the trigger. Yes i think that was not a big push. The thing is that if he had been a good cope and had fed me. Lobos and dollars me arpey studios be star right now. I would have been very wealthy. I think is a lawyer. Who w disposition but i would have been different bussing strange things for different reasons that you know this. Most by destiny to twists centers and jazz hardship in frustration and loneliness and sense of not belonging. I have got to a stage. Where not only do i feel. I belong to this country. I've been able to set up a restaurant and that sense of belonging to so many other women walk with me but also to people who just come into my restaurant. They all say that when many of them feel that they've come home in the country restaurant so the homecoming s being. You know not just mine. But everybody's are what one amazing gift to give to people so just out of interest. How long does between your you know your mom reminding your teaching to cook and then you starting to cook for other people one very long. Yeah one year why he was. When i looked back in the plurality no or everyone else you've feet descriptions of hell of bunning fire of Boiling factory it's cambridge in winter. Is cycling learning cycle with the wind. Cutting the cord on sudan you feel so frozen and is to look at the birds flying you know how lucky they are because just fly on the river. Froze the I was saying. And i'd never in my life seen cheese without leaves. I remember running my hand on the back of a tree. Stripped off everything beautiful. I didn't think that she would have spring. I didn't think i'd have been in the stock baram. The backs of king's college in cambridge. I remember feeling sense of emptiness and hollow. Hold and dump and wet who's miserable. It was horrible. I think that you know actually precious people also of the desolation the hopelessness you feel. Terrible weather is never actually going to change several to obsessive talking about the weather because feel so hopeless in the winter sunshine makes a big difference soda. It lifts everyone's moods he can sort of feel. A vibrancy of everyone. Going up was as soon as the streets of sunshine. Yes We've talked about you'll restaurants and your food and nikki and i are both very passionate about where our food comes from food sourcing and i was wondering is that important to you as well. It's very boon for me. I don't make this into a big song down and talk about it a lot. But when i'm asked on i'm thank you for asking about this. I don't slide on any vegetables from asia africa. I'm extremely distressed. Every time there is a new food. Fat yes i agree with this coming in from off of the world. This obsession usage. Obsession the jacksonville. I tell you that. Pharma's in india are encouraged to get an use genetically modified seeds by fertilizers grow cash crops. So the foreign market as the state by middlemen then give them less money because that acros is officer shot their family stars because that entire land has been used. they're not receiving any place to grow or anything will beat of any state for the family that only income would be what they get when the middleman confidence specs that crop for export and this growing for export is killing off on us. We have huge numbers of farmers committing suicide in india and also this excessive use of water. They're growing crops. That never meant to be grown in certain areas. And i will never ever have anything that has grown in india or africa for an export market. 'cause i know the price pharma has played. There is no trickle down effect. The only person making money as the middleman and to have something on my table in my restaurant that has been dropped out of rural india to an airport wrapping them flown across the world. Then put into a refrigerated van and then finally to me. The carbon footprint shocking. So really. I thought that. I need to compromise on my menu. I have I have lean on me. She got pumpkin in it. And i use amazing amount of potatoes. I locked us or british potato. Toast everything that. I have menu on is british as much as it can organic as much as i can before the only place that we go and get because of Arbel is all the hubs and that will be sheen snap come from spain or italy. That's as far as we go. I think restaurant owners should take a hard look at them in you. Is it really necessary. Do flight on ingredients of season. You just all responsibility.

india italy spain africa asia africa Two years ago cambridge first time both one amazing gift jacksonville arpey studios college Lobos me one year british Arbel star
"arbel" Discussed on KQED Radio

KQED Radio

03:30 min | 2 years ago

"arbel" Discussed on KQED Radio

"It's 7 30 live from KQED News. I'm Brian what Oakland City Council plans to consider a report's recommendations to defund the police department. At its meeting today. Quds Kate Wolf reports in the aftermath of the George Boyd protests that rocked the nation. Oakland City Council created a task force to find alternatives to policing and slashed the amount the city gives to the Police General Fund in half. The committee made 17 priority recommendations earlier this spring, including reducing the scope of the Oakland Police Department and expanding community programs focused on violence prevention. The council will vote Monday on approving the report's recommendations and prioritizing them in this budget period. In a statement, the president of the Oakland Police Officers Association called the council's consideration of the report insane. He added that police staffing is at a five year low and violent crime is surging. The city has seen 41 homicide so far this year. I'm Kate Wolf. KQED News. Dan Vail's police chief, is scheduled to report to town leaders this week about his department's hiring and training practices that it says the town police officer is facing criminal charges for a deadly shooting in 2018. Quds, Alex Emslie reports. Officer Andrew Hall shot lot. Omer Arbel ETA nine times as the 33 year old Newark man steered his car slowly into the gap between two police cars. Prosecutors charged Hall with manslaughter last month. Contra Costa County Sheriff, which provides policing services to Danville, initially cleared Hall of any wrongdoing. I went on to fail. We shoot another man, Tyrel Wilson in March about six weeks before he was charged for killing our Valetta. Investigations into Wilson's death are ongoing. The families of both men say they had mental illnesses. The police chief is scheduled to describe how officers are trained to deal with people in psychiatric crisis as well as hiring standards. The council meeting is set for Tuesday evening. I'm Alex Emslie KQED news. All indications are that San Francisco and Marin County will enter the state's coveted yellow tier of coronavirus. Reopening conditions later this week. KQED S Nina Thorsen reports. The yellow tears to find his minimal risk. It's the least restrictive stage of the state's framework. The biggest changes that bars can reopen indoor service up to 25% of capacity or 37.5%. If everybody shows proof of vaccination. Churches and other places of worship could have 50% capacity indoors. Conferences can also get bigger and sporting events could have more fans in attendance and some live events and performances can resume with limited numbers if audience members have assigned seats and don't mingle, I'm Nina Thorsen KQED news. The Livermore City Council plans to decide today whether former council member John Stein will keep his seat on the planning commission. That's after he said He didn't want downtown Livermore to become in his words, a ghetto. This happened during the Planning Commission meeting on April 20th. The panel was considering a request to build a 130 unit low income housing development. Stein apologized to the council a week later and said the city should have inclusionary housing to serve all segments of the community. He said he wants low income housing throughout the city, and it shouldn't be concentrated in a single area..

Tyrel Wilson Dan Vail John Stein 2018 April 20th Tuesday evening Alex Emslie Monday Wilson 37.5% Oakland Police Department 50% Stein 130 unit March Oakland Police Officers Associ Omer Arbel Oakland City Council Hall Marin County
"arbel" Discussed on Read Between the Lines

Read Between the Lines

02:39 min | 2 years ago

"arbel" Discussed on Read Between the Lines

"Day. Just yeah yeah. Yeah it's it's it's a tricky business Trying to write a book and one of the nice things about the the writing community. You know you reach out to other people say hey look you don't know me but i wrote this book in could you. Maybe he writes something. Nice about it for the cover of my book and you feel you know arbel asking. But they've been there too. And i've i've asked you know. Writers had no right at all to ask to write a blurb and they're like yeah sure because they know how hard this is and they've been there and they had ask somebody for blurbs and it's a very welcoming community have also had the same writers you know. Read my book and and give me a nice jacket quote and say by the way. I kinda think you could have done this better. Which is great. I love that kind of feedback and help. But it's a great communities. Great thing to be part of. And i feel like i'm just wacky to be allowed to play around in this world with grownups. Well thank you so much for coming on. I just have one final question for you today. And what do you have coming up. Well i'm working on the second book in the edvin runyon series now and up against a May deadline for that and then be working on another spider john novel and mostly that trying to stay away from covid squeezing enough family. Time as as i can all right. Well i wish you luck with all of that once again. I had a great time here with you today. I enjoyed it to molly. Thank you very much of course thank you for read between the lines. My name is molly steve. Let's end this the way all great stories and happily ever after the and thank you for listening to read between the lines book. Podcast this episode is hosted by molly. Southgate it is edited by rob southgate and produced by southgate media group. You can get in touch with the show at read between the lines at mel dot com. Or you can send us a voicemail at seven eight eight eight seven nine four seven three. That was seven. Oh eight eight. Seven nine. Four seven three. You can also find a son. Instagram at read between the lines podcast. Thank you so much for listening.

southgate second book today May Instagram one final question rob southgate one Southgate Seven Four edvin runyon steve dot com four seven eight eight eight molly three spider john
"arbel" Discussed on Insureblocks

Insureblocks

06:08 min | 2 years ago

"arbel" Discussed on Insureblocks

"In in many situations. Yes you know. I think that when you think about the way we can administer it party totally. Ill is obviously that. You're not paying all the costs and stuff that are associated insurance but i think also back when you can come up with an innovative products on undulating to something. That's a separate sales channel. Their their their significant return. Mb had on the on the coverage. That's being provided. I mean traditional insurance on paper. The loss ratio. Whatever is also challenging. Because you don't have historical replica. Ability right okay. While let's say you're running some sort of insurance in You don't know what the claims thing will be next if it's database Over the next year. If it's database you can do more sipe now. What the losses because the loss next year is still running based on that eight hundred it. It starts to replicate what you would in in the markets in the traditional financial markets. And so you can structure so that are much more precise from a statistical standpoint as to the yield on a target. When we look at what you know. The current settle for ensures charging battery insurance in many cases we see significant returns that are baked in there. And you know we hand lower prices and still deliver very very respectable yields especially as fire partner prom armenta that it hasn't expanded is that rice's were too hot. It's small brewery. Insurers getting smaller some of the large ones actually pulled out during ovid is getting smaller. And so there's very little price competition Transparency in the market estimates. We win you send out before we got our own adam. You obviously rely on up. The existing reinsurers arrived fast and sometimes the same contract which is just using data. You have the cheapest guy the half the price of the most expensive or more sometimes the three to four s. So if you're a client and you didn't know what you're doing or even new to this market you end up warping significantly based on which ensure we were we. The market is inefficient and much nineties. That there's a lot of route nor rises but still. Have you know very healthy. Great great so throughout twenty twenty and we have been witnessing the gross of decentralized also known as defy what links any do you see happening between and parametric insurance providers such as arbel defined. If is a very exciting development. The blockchain space. I think there's a lot we can do. Their part of the thing is we. You know you have to week deal. Regulations also catch up bobi World where in happen centralized insurance and we are working on some solutions. they're from regulatory standpoint. Basically illegal out it will allow capital to flow to you know say higher yields higher risk of insurance that regular insurance industry is increasing shying away from california wildfires or hurricanes in florida and many other climate change effected. So so. i think there's a big for define the you know we just. We're not there yet. On the regulatory side in terms of decentralizing joins aspect there. The law licensing in other issues there. But we're getting there. And i think that if i will be huge for germs as be great so my last question to you is what are your plans for. Twenty twenty one. Yeah i mean just We've finished us series. A we have some great investors who of came in from the seed and a new one bubble ventures. And you know. I see us ready boys do role substantially this year resum very exciting projects. We are also in the process off You know really tying up a lot of next level regulatory licenses in we need. This is unfortunately something that app focus on. But it's important to end. We make sure that we don't take any risk at side so Up as each segment gets done. You know within a much larger market and so as i mentioned in agriculture hospital liberty energy really exciting projects that we're looking forward to delivering to our customers in twenty one excellent excellent. Well i'm going to thank you very much. For spending some time with us to revisit paramedic insurance and introducing us to our disrupts up this extra blogs podcast. We hope you've enjoyed this episode if you liked what you heard this week. Please don't forget us. Crime podcast and leave us a review on itunes and said congratulations on all the progress. You guys have made on closing that series as i love to catch up with you in eight to twelve months to see how much you've grown and all the cool new interesting products launched norfolk. Thank you so much for having me here. It's a pleasure and yeah..

florida eight itunes twelve months three twenty one next year eight hundred this year california four each segment Crime this week twenty twenty norfolk arbel Twenty twenty one one nineties
"arbel" Discussed on Insureblocks

Insureblocks

05:58 min | 2 years ago

"arbel" Discussed on Insureblocks

"I'm very pleased to welcomes darth ajar. Founder and ceo of arbel. Sid many thanks for joining us today. Could you please give us a quick introduction on yourself and you for having me well. It's a pleasure to be on and get a chance of arbel. Just a very brief background. Myself i am. I was on wall street for about fourteen years in the commodities market for the last ten of those i've done everything. From the agricultural products form soybeans we to the oils and the medals and trading quantitative analysis and just being very embedded in in that market and prior to that. My background is the quantum side at interest rates. Macro so that that's me and then it on twenty eighteen. I left to start arbel which will be discussing today. Indeed indeed. No thank you for the introduction. So as you're probably aware we always ask. Our guest is first question. Which is could you please explain our listeners. what is blockchain. And how does it work sure. Yeah i i will give a very brief overview experts. Were much better at explaining but to me in a blockchain is this system off distributed consensus right instead of having a central only determining when say transaction takes place or when a particular event has taken planes yama distribute consensus around that event or transaction taking place and the beauty of blockchain is it allows for immutability in allows berg who've environment where different parties can agree on something happening about a central coordinating forty and this has ramifications across. You know all sorts of industry from banking to insurance to ada and a whole host of other things great. Now thank you for that for that definition so for our non insurance listeners. Could you introduced to us. What is parametric insurance. Parametric insurance has been around for a long time. It was hobbled by many issues. So we're carbon could insurance does is instead of using a human being to come to your farm business house to check the damage done from an event. And hey you. Based on a subjective loss estimate parametric insurance uses data to make that Loss assessment. So you know instead of say a farmer. has a growing corn and a somebody will lead to the farm and checking how much forms jews due to a drought Insurance might a him or her based on the you know either like the output data from the farm or by reach so the goal is to use a data set which is your index and a trigger to make your payment so could be saying rainfall farmer says okay. I want to get paid one hundred thousand dollars. If rainfall in a farm area was below three inches and so what that does is it. Changes insurance from this objective loss assessment process. Which is filled with delays disputes sometimes. Raw to something where data set and a particular trigger when it has hit Generates payment and is completely transparent for all sides and so for the customer benefit right. It's a transparent. You have a peace of mind of knowing okay. This happened this the data showing this homage. I won't get hate instead. Haggling with an insurance company for months on you know how much i paid. And in the meantime you're still on the hook for a damage and it brings up this question of whilst you're not going to be haggling around you. The terms of the policy no way should get a payout are not. Is there any situations where there's haggling around. What is the agreed date. Said that on which trigger is determined on the parametric side. There isn't because that is it. That is basically what parametric insurance contracts should be outlining very specifically this data. Said i'm going to use and when this data said says two inches of rainfall or this data says that Temperatures above one hundred degrees. I will get a payment of you. Know hundred thousand dollars and it can be. I mean all sorts of different ways. We do all sorts of triggers. You can have more complex triggers as well multiple indexes and so on but the point being that is basically what amager insurance contracts should be outlining the idea behind bariatric insurances. There should not be loopholes. I'm course some entities may try to do that but we certainly do not You know our contracts are ages a regular insurance contract you know can be hundreds of pages options and you know all sorts of legally unclear terms then to huge amounts of lawsuits

one hundred thousand dollars today hundred pages darth ajar hundred thousand dollars first question hundreds of pages two inches twenty eighteen forty about fourteen years New york city above one hundred degrees tons of adjusters thousands of three inches twenty one year below ceo arbel
TikTok owner picks Oracle over Microsoft as U.S. tech partner

TIME's Top Stories

01:25 min | 2 years ago

TikTok owner picks Oracle over Microsoft as U.S. tech partner

"TIKTOK owner picks Oracle. Soft, as US, tech partner by Matt O'Brien and Tally Arbel. The owner of TIKTOK has chosen oracle over Microsoft as the American tech partner that could help keep the popular video sharing up running in the US according to a person familiar with the deal who was not authorized to speak publicly about it. President Donald Trump administration has threatened to ban Tiktok by September twentieth and ordered owner bite dance to sell its US business claiming national security risks due to its Chinese ownership. The government worries about user data being funneled to Chinese authorities. TIKTOK denies it is a national security risk and is suing to stop the administration from enacting the threatened. Ban. TIKTOK denies it is a national security risk and is suing to stop the administration from enacting the threatened Ban Tiktok and the White House declined to comment on day. Oracle didn't return a request for comment but has previously declined comment. Walmart's which had planned to partner with Microsoft on the acquisition said Sunday. It continues to have an interest in a tiktok investment and talking about it with bite dance and other parties. Much remains unclear about the proposed deal with Oracle including whether it will only cover talks US business and so how it will be split from the rest of Tiktok media platform, which is popular worldwide by

Oracle Tiktok United States Partner Ban Tiktok President Donald Trump Microsoft Walmart Matt O'brien Tally Arbel White House
Email Encryption With PGP May Have a Serious Flaw

Daily Tech Headlines

02:01 min | 5 years ago

Email Encryption With PGP May Have a Serious Flaw

"Uhhuh sees the daily tech headlines for monday may fourteenth twenty eighteen i'm sarah lane pgp s m e both email encryption tools are vulnerable to hacks that can reveal the plain text of encrypted messages sebastian shit saw it professor of computer security at monster university of applied sciences wrote on twitter sunday that there are no reliable fixes and says anybody who uses either encryption standard should disable them while sending sensitive information both schnitzel and a blog post by the electric frontier foundation referred those affected too instructions for disabling plug ins in thunderbird mac os mail and outlook uber users can now rate their trip mid ride providing a star rating with categorize and written feedback or tip at any time instead of having to wait for the trip to end hooper says this data will be used to recognize topquality drivers but also pinpoint where and when something went wrong if the review is not glowing phased arbel shut down on june nineteenth saying the changes to twitter's own api's the reason specifically fave star uses twitter's user streams api which is being depreciated and faith star creator tim hands says that twitter has not communicated about how the new api's would be priced and says he can't continue to operate under such uncertainty hanes writes that at its peak fave star which has been around since two thousand nine had about fifty million users hp announced updates to its envy and elitebook devices including the envy curve a show all in one machine which includes amazon's smart assistant built in and wireless charging and comes in either twenty seven or thirty four inch models being that it's a windows pc cortana is also an option but now you have alexa as well the new model also has a front facing camera for windows hello biometric authentication core i seven cpu's in video gt x ten fifty graphics dual hdd an ssd storage and up to sixteen gigs of ram hp's new envy thirteen gets bilton youknowwho as well h peas elitebook.

HP Hanes Monster University Of Applied Sebastian Ram Hp Uhhuh Alexa Amazon Tim Hands Hooper Electric Frontier Foundation Twitter Professor Thirty Four Inch