35 Burst results for "Astrid"

"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:59 min | 5 months ago

"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

"George Bivens of the Pennsylvania State Police, who says Burum would not be going back to suburban that same Atlanta, jail. a major manhunt In tonight for Andrew Longmore wanted in connection with four shooting deaths. All four victims are adults. There were three males, one female. Hampton, Georgia Police Chief James Turner. Alabama authorities are looking for a 25 -year -old woman who vanished on Thursday after reporting seeing a toddler walking on the side of an interstate. Carly Nicole Russell telling 911 and a family member she was going to stop and check on that child. That was the last anybody heard from her. News correspondent Astrid Martinez. Russell's family says while on the phone they heard her talking to the child, but they didn't hear the child respond. Then they say Russell screamed. A single witness has reported possibly seeing a gray vehicle with a light complected male standing outside of Carly's vehicle. The nursing that the student's car and some of her belongings, including her cell phone, were found at the scene. But no sign of her or a child. Russell is 5 '4", last seen wearing a black t -shirt, black pants and white Nike sneakers. Turning to the weather and you know what the key word is, it's hot or maybe hotter. really extreme temperatures in the southern part of the country pretty much coast to coast. From CBS Los Angeles reporter Tom Wade. Summer scorcher along Southern California's beaches and escape from blistering triple -digit This feels pretty nice. The West is in the grip of a deadly record -breaking heatwave. Last thing be I want doing to is passing out. Death Valley is one of the hottest places on the planet and could hit a record 130 degrees but that isn't scaring away visitors. El Paso Texas on a 30 -day streak of temperatures spiking above a hundred. On the labor front coming up a threat to the nation's supply chain. Like countless other businesses UPS shipments are crucial to Derek Lengenecker's Alpha Brewing Company in South St. Louis in Missouri. We get all of our hops shipped in from Oregon. That's all UPS. They're 44 -pound boxes and that's the only carrier they use. How often does he see the brown trucks? Daily. And if there's a UPS at strike the end of the month. And it would just stop production that's all it means. Contract talks between UPS and its union workers broke down a week and a half ago. Jim Chrissell to CBS News. And striking writers and actors have pretty much idled the entertainment industry. This is CBS News. Need to hire quality candidates fast you need indeed the end -to -end hiring solution attract interview and hire candidates all in one place visit indeed .com slash credit. 1103 on this Saturday July 15th 2023 good evening cooling off temperature now 75 degrees good evening I'm Jenny Glick the top story we're following this hour a man was shot and killed in Northwest DC it happened in the 6100 Blanc of 3rd Street Northwest at

 Teenage boy opens fire at Belgrade school, killing 9

AP News Radio

00:41 sec | 7 months ago

Teenage boy opens fire at Belgrade school, killing 9

"Serbian police say a teenage boy has opened fire in a school in central Belgrade, killing 8 children and a school guard. Police say in a statement the suspect a 7th grade student has been arrested, adding the boy had apparently fired shots from his father's gun at other students and at the school guard. Astrid malini, the mother of an eyewitness, says in Serbian, my child survived this. You can't imagine she sought a man falling down shooting. She was running away, she thought the boy with a gun would run after her. She's in shock, but she's full with adrenaline. I'm Charles De

Astrid Malini 8 Children Serbian Charles De 7Th Grade Central Belgrade
"astrid" Discussed on WGN Radio

WGN Radio

06:23 min | 8 months ago

"astrid" Discussed on WGN Radio

"Astrid and Myrtle Beach. Welcome, you're on with Allison Vogel and rich valdes go right ahead astrid. Yes, thank you, rich. Thank you so much for taking my call and hi, Allison. I would just wondering, I mean, you know, what makes somebody a parenting expert. My grandmother could be called a parenting expert because she, you know, she gave birth to 12 children and delivered 12 12 university graduates from engineers and accountants and architects and. That is who to me would be a parenting expert. Well, you know, astronomy. I think you're right. If I could just chime in. I spent a little bit of time working in the government state government in the state of New Jersey. And I can tell you that part of my job there was operating these neighborhood centers called family success centers. And that was a core part of our philosophy was that not the government, not a psychologist, not anybody in particular, but those that are in the neighborhood and run the neighborhood are the real experts on their family situation. And it was very much an exercise in creating a leaderless environment so that people could become very self reliant and do what they had to do for their families. And one of the key components of making these centers function was oftentimes maybe younger moms connecting with more experienced moms on or dads on a myriad of topics so that whether it was like teaching your kid to ride a bike or learning how to breastfeed or whatever the case was, you weren't going to the system per se or to some practitioners somewhere unless it was necessary, but you were first utilizing your network in your community to build a healthy and stronger community. So I think you're a 100% right. And when I was raising my kids, those were the two experts we went to, right? My mother in law and my mom. And they were the ones that had the most experience and would say, oh, don't do this or don't do that or boil some Ginger and put it in some water and you know, that'll help with colicky problems or in their belly and whatnot. So I think you're a 100% astrid right on that point. Allison bogle, what say you? Yeah, for me, the idea of being called a parenting expert, I think for really anybody, right? Anybody who's in the trenches of parenting, we're experts in our own way. And so I just sort of view that for myself as the expert is in quotes. We're all learning and growing through parenting. I think the title has been assigned to me just because I have a long history of doing things in the parenting and education area. So whether that was teaching or writing specifically for a parenting magazine covering lots of different topics, going to speaking about that on the news. So I just have some background in studying parenting topics and speaking to them. But I absolutely agree. I think when I joined together with my other mom friends and we talk and we share ideas, there's no one expert in the room more than others. And I think everybody has something of value to bring to the table and those kind of conversations. And then of course, you know, obviously with a grandmother like that that raised so many children and clearly successfully that that is a treasure trove of information right there in the true expert as well. I agree with that too. Now, I want to ask you, you have access to all of this expertise and it sounds like you're a mom. What's your take on preparing your kids for the difficult times? Do you create the difficult times for them? Because life is tough, or do you just try to guide them through the tough times? Because I am from Haiti because their father is Colombian. I did take my children down to orphanages, I exposed them to different things. And we pray over our meals every night. And the prayer goes as you thought less of food we're about to receive, but the hands are prepared and hope I hope everybody in the world has something to eat. So we never forget how blessed we are. And that is something I remind my children every single day. And that's important. Now, what about the adversity? How do you prepare them for difficult times? I showed them they saw the reality in Haiti. They're one step away from that. They'll do it. Right now we're all one step away from that. Yeah, that's so true. In reality, that's how so many of us are, especially in this particular economy that we're in different story for a different segment. But thank you ASTRO. I appreciate your call. Allison bogle, I think it's important to note what we talked about that there are so many nuances when it comes to parenting and raising children and I guess no one approach is the best approach I guess because different kids, different strokes for different folks. But ultimately, I think that's the key is having that ability to go to that group or to that person or whoever you're sounding board is and say, you know, here's what I'm thinking. My kid isn't taking life very seriously or my kids not taking their new job as a teenager very seriously. And I'm afraid they're going to lose that job if they don't tighten it up or I'm afraid that whatever consequence or issue may be happening. And I think that's important that you ask other people. How'd you handle it, you know? And what did you do? For me, I kind of always looked back to what I did as a kid, but I oftentimes I realized it's a different world and what I did as a kid isn't the same anymore, you know? There's a lot of things that just aren't like they were. Which does make parenting tricky because I

"astrid" Discussed on Box of Neutrals

Box of Neutrals

08:11 min | 9 months ago

"astrid" Discussed on Box of Neutrals

"Where it belongs. Yeah, you know what? I'm a 100% on board with that. I'm a 100% on board and I think that is a great reason actually for them to reconsider how many Melbourne gets. Because the crowds are going to be big for the foreseeable future here. The atmosphere is going to be great, where there's normally good. Okay, the track is not, could be better for racing. But a court also be better with these cars. Who knows? I mean, Fernando Alonso's overtaking in all sorts of places. So maybe we won't be thinking that so much anymore either. That's that fourth DRS and everyone's talking about. Yeah, you are, right? You've done it. You've done well. Give yourself a tick. A pat on the back, or whatever the ward is on box of neutrals. So no idea. Where are you using overseas, are we? Yes. Yes, what's yours? Do you have one? Well, no, I wasn't prepared. I'll see if I can think of one before the end of the show. But let's talk about some of the well, we can talk about some several understeer over the greed over the course of the race. Particularly proprietary. Yeah, well, look, let's just start there. Embarrassing. Yeah. It was, I mean, for the second year in a row, this team's rocked up under prepared for a season. Last year it was the brakes getting too hot, the slowest car out there. At least it was a little bit more reliable, although except for the brakes, obviously. This year they've had body work fallen off over the course of testing, stuff isn't strong enough, stuff gets too hot. Electronics failed us could be astrid's car, pneumatic pressure filed and landed North Dakota, that's an unusual problem, I feel it's very rare that happens. And he finished two laps down at the very back of the greed. This is a massive indictment on this team. I don't think I'm going to talk about all the wind tunnels not ready yet and that's true, it's not ready to lighter and I don't have the new senior at all that kind of stuff yes. But I mean, in any sport in which asked partner now we're talking about a lot. But which they can come out of a bunch of portable buildings and develop the second quickest car, even if Fernando Alonso is driving it, a performance like this from McLaren, which has an established facility, even if they got an old wind tunnel whatever, is embarrassing by definition. That's real. That's absolutely real. It warrants that sting because I'm a 100% and this is not a case of because Oscar piastre is aboard the team. This is a trend and it's concerning because it's very frustrating because McLaren were coming out of a funk and it was a real funk. It was, in fact, it was. Oh, that's real. That's absolutely real. It was a real fun. And the Carlos Sainz, Lando Norris, era, quietly chipped away. Didn't make too much fanfare regain their dignity. And then they started getting a bit of cocky. They got a Daniel Ricciardo. They go, Google Chrome, on board. And so there was plenty of swagger aboard this time, and a lot of expectation. But they just haven't delivered and they've made so many missteps along the way. And I feel like it's got to a point where for me, I'm almost, I'm obsessed. For now I know it's only one race. But I'm almost upset that Oscar piastres first exposure to Formula One. Granted Daniel Ricciardo's was aboard an HR tape, but that was very different context. I think it finished too, didn't it? I feel like, yeah, I think he did. Anyway, but I feel like it was almost, I'm not speaking for him or whatever, but I just get the picture that it was like McLaren sold him the world and they delivered him. A zed card. Of a map with a lot of incorrect version. Yeah. It still says Czechoslovakia. That's what kind of map Oscar got because I feel like just a little bit of me when the Alpine is a great spot. They got points. Yale Payne will come good. Enough. Not good enough. Even worse. If Oscar had stayed with Alpine, took the course of action that they had recommended it when we're going to keep Alonso at Alpine. And we're going to put you online to Williams. I guarantee Oscar piastre would have a Grand Prix point to his name. At the time of this recording, in either team of Alpine or Williams. Yes. And that is saying something about where McLaren's app. Absolutely. I mean, Williams were one of the good stories actually the weekend, weirdly, an unexpectedly competitive, even Logan sergeant less than ten seconds behind Alex Albon to miss out on a point by not very much exactly the same lap time as Lando Norris. Yes, and that is another indictment on McLaren. Not land on our specifically, but McLaren, Lando's doing as good a job, I think, as you can. And Oscar too for a rookie in the position he's in his career. This is dire stuff, and even if you look back over the last few years since their recovery from the Honda days, it's been exaggerated. Like I've had a look at this recently for an article, and they've gone from 9th under Honda, went to 6th 5th and fourth and then the third in 2020, right? And I've sort of been slowly coming down. A lot of those years, you know, Ferrari had that engine agreement, which meant they finished 6th. Those years also went through when forced India collapsed and they lost all of their points. So would have finished ahead of them. And then the subsequent year the knock on effects of the financial problems that racing point is it then was was suffering. There are a lot of reasons actually the thing McLaren hasn't got much better than a 5th at best team in the last few years and we're actually holding them to an expectation they don't really deserve yet and obviously we all hope McLaren recovers a because we want the sport to be competitive as possible and B because there's a historic team. It ought to be doing better. But I think they sort of just not, I mean, obviously, you look at the results, they're not there, and I don't think it's enough to say, all right, a result this bad might be a blip, much like Bahrain was last year and I ended up scoring points at the next couple of races. But them being very ordinary as a team is not a blip. This is the long, long-term trend now for McLaren. This is where they've made their bed and they're lying in it. And they seem quite comfortable because they won't get up. No. I'll give you a couple of obvious things and understand. I'll give you the first one. Understeer or oversteer, McLaren should have stuck with Renault. Why did they need to move the Mercedes? There was no need. I'm going to say that's understeer. Or neutral, because I don't think it's really made any difference. And Mercedes did have the best engine. I mean, it's not so much all equal now pretty much the engines, but in the years that they made the decision. I would say they probably saw the best in. Inside say that's neutral I don't know about financially. But I'd say that's a you would say that's oversteer. Maybe overstayed. I would say it's oversteer. I don't think it's made any difference. There you go. It's important. My second oversteer. And we'll put this out to the box neutral Discord. So my two questions for the switch to back to Mercedes for McLaren to use the prickly one. It's mildly uncomfortable. Oh. Lando Norris is wasting his time. At McLaren. That is spot on. I wish that was oversteer undersea because it sounds better, but I think that's what that's neutral. That's right in the middle. I think that's a great call. Why did he sign a 100 year contract with McLaren? There was no need to. They liked him like they were fans of human. He says he likes McLaren, whatever. Sign a two or three, do you like everyone else? Yeah. And give yourself the, I mean, I'm sure he's probably got options in the contract, although McLaren negotiates weird contracts. There was just no need. And okay, immediately to this unlikely to be openings well, actually almost every team's higher up. So maybe they will be opening somewhere, but there's unlikely to be over things that fry in Mercedes Red Bull, but Red Bull did inquire into his services. And then he just signed an extension of McLaren. It just seems like a weird and I think we're definitely going to already reflecting on it as a weird a weird instance of Korea self harm. Like why? Why? Almost too comfortable. Yes. That McLaren could be just, yeah. And he's going to get frustrated and I'm worried you'll get frustrated and that will boost his performance because he is a great driver. He is a top probably top 5 on the grid at the moment. I think there's maybe

McLaren Lando Norris Daniel Ricciardo Oscar piastre Fernando Alonso Oscar piastres Yale Payne Williams Alex Albon Carlos Sainz Alpine astrid Oscar Melbourne North Dakota Honda Czechoslovakia Lando Alonso
"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:01 min | 9 months ago

"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

"P news. It's 5 23. A bill aimed at reducing the use of solitary confinement in Virginia's prisons past the General Assembly Saturday, which was the last day of the legislative session. The bill requires the Department of Corrections to provide four hours a day out of a cell for people who are in isolation or solitary confinement, and weekly evaluations in a person's file detailing why a less restrictive setting is not an option. It also requires the department to have a defined policy for transitioning out of isolation. The bill now goes to the governor for his consideration. Food advocates are warning of a looming hunger cliff in America starting this week. The government is slashing pandemic era federal funding for millions across our country. CBS astrid Martinez has more. For roughly three years, families grappling with the impact of COVID-19 shutdowns and job losses qualified for extra money to help put food on the table. Data shows the supplemental nutrition assistance program known as snapped, kept 4.2 million people out of poverty, but this past December Congress passed a bill ending those extra snap benefits, 18 states already saw benefits expire in February. On March 1st, the remaining 32 states will see those emergency COVID era payments and experts say elderly Americans could be hardest hit by these cuts, now snap benefits will be reduced in D.C., Maryland, and Virginia on March 1st. Medicaid recipients may have to look elsewhere for healthcare coverage soon. Millions of people who rely on Medicaid could get booted from the program over the next year, about 84 million people are covered right now. But as states begin checking, everyone's eligibility for Medicaid for the first time in three years, as many as 14 million people could lose access. Those who no longer qualify will have to turn to ObamaCare for coverage. Options can cost less than ten bucks a month, but out of pocket expenses and co pays are often higher. Medicaid cuts are expected to begin later this year. Monica ricks, CBS News

astrid Martinez Department of Corrections Virginia General Assembly CBS America Congress D.C. Maryland Monica ricks CBS News
"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:13 min | 9 months ago

"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

"For being with us. With the national cherry blossom festival set to open march 20th. The district has sent a colorful bus rolling up north to attract more visitors this spring. The cherry blossom boss in its team of promoters spent Sunday in snowy Boston before the stop in New York City. The bus is fantastic. It is a pink bus and on the back of the bus is one of my favorite details, which says follow us to spring. Deputy mayor for planning an economic development John Fauci always on the boss with D.C. tourist officials and representatives of the national cherry blossom festival, telling New Yorkers today about D.C.'s free museums and other things to see. And then on Tuesday morning, we'll head to Philadelphia before going to Baltimore that evening. On Wednesday, the bus will be in Washington where there'll be an announcement about the predicted bloom dates for the city's historic cherry trees. Particularly on WTO P news. Food advocates are warning of a looming hunger cliff, starting this week, the government is slashing pandemic error federal funding for millions across America. CBS astrid Martinez has more on the importance of this funding. Households will lose at least $95 a month, but some could see a cut of 250 or more. The snap deductions come as inflation has increased food prices overall about 10% from just a year ago. Snap benefits will be reduced in D.C., Maryland and Virginia on March 1st. The Virginia General Assembly passed a bill Saturday to reform the Department of Corrections, use of solitary confinement. The bill is a modest first step to limit the excessive use of solitary confinement in Virginia's prisons. The bill requires that the Department of Corrections provide people who are incarcerated with four hours a day out of the cell. A medical and mental health evaluation within one working day of being placed in solitary confinement, and a defined policy for transitioning out of isolation, the bill now goes to the governor. Traffic

John Fauci D.C. astrid Martinez New Yorkers New York City Boston WTO Baltimore Philadelphia Department of Corrections CBS Washington Virginia General Assembly Virginia America government Maryland
"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:14 min | 9 months ago

"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

"District has sent a colorful bus rolling up north to attract more visitors this spring. The cherry blossom boss in its team of promoters spent Sunday in snowy Boston before the stop in New York City. The bus is fantastic. It is pink bus, and on the back of the bus is one of my favorite details, which says follow us to spring. Deputy mayor for planning an economic development John Fauci always on the boss with D.C. tourist officials and representatives of the national cherry blossom festival, telling New Yorkers today about D.C.'s free museums and other things to see. And then on Tuesday morning, we'll head to Philadelphia before going to Baltimore that evening. On Wednesday, the bus will be in Washington where there'll be an announcement about the predicted bloom dates for the city's historic cherry trees. Particularly on WTO P news. A man from southeast D.C. is dead in a shooting near Audi field. D.C. homicide detectives identify the victim as 30 year old Kevin sharp. Officers found him in the 1500 block of first street southwest at about 8 45 last night. Sharp was taken to the hospital where he was pronounced dead. D.C. United was playing their season opening soccer match, blocks away at the time, but police say the shooting posed no threat to spectators at Audi field. Food advocates are warning of a looming hunger cliff, starting this week, the government is slashing pandemic error federal funding for millions across America. CBS astrid Martinez has more on the importance of this funding. Households will lose at least $95 a month, but some could see a cut of 250 or more. The snap deductions come as inflation has increased food prices overall about 10% from just a year ago. The snap benefits will be reduced in D.C., Maryland, and Virginia on March 1st. And the Virginia General Assembly passed a bill Saturday to reform the Department of Corrections, use of solitary confinement, the bill is a modest first step to limit the excess of solitary confine confinement in Virginia's prisons. Traffic

D.C. John Fauci Kevin sharp Audi field New Yorkers New York City Boston astrid Martinez WTO D.C. United Baltimore Philadelphia Audi Washington Sharp soccer CBS government
"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:15 min | 10 months ago

"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

"From the trauma of that night have signed an online petition, asking for temporary remote learning I just don't know how you could be on campus and feel okay with the growing class. The first victims were laid to rest this weekend, family and friends gathered in the Detroit suburb gross point farms to pay tribute to sophomore, Brian Fraser. He was kind. He was a light. 20 miles away, another funeral for fellow sophomore, Alex Werner, services for the third victim, Ariel Anderson, are set for this week that CBS's astrid Martinez, 5 students were also critically hurt during that shooting on Monday night. The Detroit free press reports the condition of two students has improved, while three remain in critical condition. Nearly a decade after Eric Garner's death, his daughter shares her story at D.C.'s Martin Luther King Jr. library. Emerald gardener's father died after being put in a chokehold by police in New York City in 2014. In her new book, she talks about life since losing her father at 22 and the strength she's found talking to other survivors of similar situations. Here in it from someone who actually experienced and know what I go through, it's a different, it just hits different. At the D.C. library bearing his father's name, Martin Luther King the third talks about losing his father at ten, and says one thing that helps families dealing with tragedy today is more of an understanding of mental health. You know, when I was ten years old and my dad was killed, I don't remember getting counseling. In northwest, Mike Morello, WTO P news. Israel Israel says it will temporarily halt the greenlighting of new settlements in the occupied West Bank. Israel has announced that it will not authorize new settlements in the West Bank in the coming months. The move comes after the U.S. criticized the settlement expansion plan as an obstacle to peace. The decision has angered prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu's nationalist coalition partners who accuse him of caving in to U.S. pressure. Robert Berger, CBS News, Jerusalem and coming up. A special Golden Girls tribute cracks up D.C.'s Warner theater. I'm Jason fraley. It's 9 43. Okay, let's see what's news today. The morning paper blues, huh? Bad

Brian Fraser Alex Werner Ariel Anderson astrid Martinez The Detroit free press Eric Garner Martin Luther King Jr. library Emerald gardener D.C. Detroit CBS Mike Morello Israel West Bank New York City Martin Luther King WTO Robert Berger U.S.
"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:41 min | 10 months ago

"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

"Gains Bryant, teddy gellman is our producer. The top stories we're following for you today there's been an outpouring of tributes for former president Jimmy Carter after it was announced that he would be receiving hospice care at home. CBS News, jurika Duncan has more. At age 98, mister Carter is the nation's oldest living president. His decision follows a series of hospital stays and many years of health challenges. President Biden and First Lady Jill Biden said that they admired mister Carter for his strength and humility, adding that they hope he continues his journey with grace and dignity. President Biden is scheduled to travel to Poland later today. President Biden will be meeting with allies to reassure them of the U.S. commitment to the region as Russia's deadly invasion of Ukraine reaches the one year mark, as White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said on Fox News Sunday, the U.S. will continue its support of Ukraine. We are going to stay committed to Ukraine going forward. And I think when the president, when you see him go to Poland next week in Warsaw, he'll make that case before the entire world and the Polish people. The president has underscored his commitment to Ukraine for both international and domestic audiences, but it's a commitment that's testing the patients of a narrowly divided Congress. I'm Shelley Adler. Michigan state university administrator said class will resume today. The campus has been closed since the deadly mass shooting last week. More from CBS News, astrid Martinez. Students and staff still reeling from the trauma of that night have signed an online petition, asking for temporary remote learning

President Biden mister Carter teddy gellman jurika Duncan Ukraine CBS News White House National Security Jill Biden John Kirby Jimmy Carter Bryant Poland U.S. Fox News Russia Shelley Adler Warsaw Michigan state university astrid Martinez Congress
"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:39 min | 10 months ago

"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

"The top stories we're following for you today. There's been an outpouring of tributes for former president Jimmy Carter after it was announced that he would be receiving hospice care at home. CBS News to Rica Duncan has more. At age 98, mister Carter is the nation's oldest living president. His decision follows a series of hospital stays and many years of health challenges. President Biden and First Lady Jill Biden said that they admired mister Carter for his strength and humility, adding that they hope he continues his journey with grace and dignity. President Joe Biden is scheduled to travel to Poland later today. President Biden will be meeting with allies to reassure them of the U.S. commitment to the region as Russia's deadly invasion of Ukraine reaches the one year mark, as White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said on Fox News Sunday, the U.S. will continue its support of Ukraine. We are going to stay committed to Ukraine going forward. And I think when the president, when you see him go to Poland next week in Warsaw, he'll make that case before the entire world and the Polish people. The president has underscored his commitment to Ukraine for both international and domestic audiences, but it's a commitment that's testing the patients of a narrowly divided Congress. I'm Shelley Adler. Michigan state university administrators say classes will resume today. The campus has been closed since the deadly mass shooting last week. More from CBS News, astrid Martinez. Students and staff still reeling from the trauma of that night have signed an online petition, asking for temporary remote learning. I

mister Carter President Biden Rica Duncan Ukraine President Joe Biden CBS News White House National Security Jill Biden John Kirby Jimmy Carter Poland U.S. Fox News Russia Shelley Adler Warsaw Michigan state university astrid Martinez Congress
"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

03:00 min | 10 months ago

"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

"The industry, sheriff station received a call here. An assist fire call of a person not breathing and bleeding. Authorities did not say who made that phone call or whether a weapon was found at the scene in a tweet today, the LA county sheriff's office said they are working diligently to seek those responsible for his death, but so far, no word on a suspect. The bishop served the LA archdiocese for 45 years during a time of violent racial strife, especially after the Rodney King riots. He was honored as a peacemaker who advocated for the poor and the disadvantaged. And Brittany griner says she's now got a plan to return to professional sports. Pretty grinder, the WNBA star who was detained in Russia for nearly ten months will be re signing with the Phoenix mercury for a one year contract. The 32 year old spent nearly 300 days in Russia after she was arrested for marijuana possession while traveling to the country to play basketball during the WNBA off season. Moscow released the athlete in a swap for convicted Russian arms dealer Victor bowd. Gardner less played for the mercury in 2021 when she helped the team make it to the WNBA finals. Matt piper, CBS News. After she was released from Russia in December, she took to Instagram to say she intended to once again play for the mercury. She's been a center there since 2013. A formal announcement of that resigning is expected on Tuesday. And Michigan state university administrators that is, say, classes, or resume tomorrow, the campus has been closed since a deadly mass shooting last week. We get more from astrid Martinez with CBS News. Athletic events have already resumed rivals Michigan state and University of Michigan came together for a moment of silence before Saturday's match up. There's some things that aren't rivalries. There's some things that are bigger than the game. A display of solidarity through the shadow of tragedy. I was Tom izzo, Michigan state university's men's basketball coach, 1135 dozens are dead in southwestern Brazil. This after extreme flooding and landslides, they've seen over two feet of rain in a 24 hour period, a 6 month state of calamity or state of emergency has already been declared. This is high season for tourism in Brazil as the carnival celebrations are held across the country. Most have been canceled. Weather forecasts show heavy rains are expected to continue. 36 deaths have been reported in São Paulo and the numbers are expected to rise. Authorities say a roadways have been washed away in many areas, preventing rescue efforts, at least 50 homes have reported collapsed, dozens more people are missing. Brazil's president Lula da Silva says he'll visit the region tomorrow. Coming up after traffic and weather here on WTO mental health takes the front page. We'll tell you all about it. 1136. Hi, this is Elaine Mick. Owner of cabinet discounters

WNBA LA county sheriff's office Brittany griner Russia Victor bowd Matt piper CBS News astrid Martinez Michigan state university Michigan state and University basketball Gardner LA Phoenix Moscow Brazil Tom izzo São Paulo Lula da Silva
"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:40 min | 10 months ago

"astrid" Discussed on WTOP

"Serves as a testament to the legacy to his legacy as an unapologetic trailblazer for justice and equality. Muddy news at 25 and 55 brought to you by pen fed credit union great rates for everyone. Here's Ed Corey. This is a Bloomberg money minute. Technological advances have made car passengers safer in collisions, but women are still 73% more likely to be severely injured or die in a frontal crash than men and three times as likely to experience injuries. Michigan based humanetics hopes newer crash test dummies will change that. The original crush that Demi's from the 1980s, which are really the original modern crash test Demi, we're really based on a mail. Human addicts CEO Christopher O'Connor says early dummies meant to represent women in a crash weren't that sophisticated. It had a chess jacket that had breasts on it and a brisk jacket in a self does not make a female crash test dummy. Human etiquette has a female dummy with 150 sensors designed to address those parts of the body where women have increased vulnerability to injury, a Swedish engineer, astrid linder, is trying to develop a crash test dummy prototype modeled on an average sized woman from the Bloomberg newsroom. I'm Ed Corey on WTO P. Coming up after traffic and weather, former president Jimmy Carter now receiving hospice care at his home in plains, Georgia, four 56. Looking to launch or take the next step in your career, melwood is searching for talented and eager individuals in the Washington D.C. area to fill a wide variety of positions at federal government agencies, including administrative assistance, landscaping and

Ed Corey Christopher O'Connor Bloomberg astrid linder Demi Bloomberg newsroom Michigan chess WTO Jimmy Carter Washington D.C. plains Georgia federal government
Astrid Høg on the COVID Lockdowns in Denmark

Dennis Prager Podcasts

01:23 min | 10 months ago

Astrid Høg on the COVID Lockdowns in Denmark

"Want to talk about your country. I have reported about Denmark as for example that it no longer wanted people under 50 to be vaccinated. Is that accurate? It is because in Denmark, COVID is no longer considered a serious illness. It's like any other flu. And we don't recommend people that are not where it's not dangerous for them to become sick to get vaccinated. So what did your country do with regard to lockdowns? The lockdown was at first. It was quick and it was heavy all the schools locked down, for instance. For how long? Four. Genocide, I forget how long was it anything approaching two years? No, and it definitely now. Okay, fine. So when spring began, this started opening up schools again. But what is significant with Denmark is that we, as first country, lifted all restrictions at a pretty early stage. Which was before Christmas 2021.

Denmark FLU
"astrid" Discussed on Chutando a Escada

Chutando a Escada

03:37 min | 2 years ago

"astrid" Discussed on Chutando a Escada

"I need to australian school. Semaine such needs educated at goofy choosing pink if focal smell folk Throw up walkie anything. Mop senior hurley map to told me new. Slide is his guobao proceeds now. Mice physicial immunity. Giannicheda's australians pains he. Mobbing badger dictator heller sewing pushing Frisch got to hook you walk. You'll trumping helmink strategy talking middle lanka classical kissy you porquier elephant moral sink moines too damp asu. Keep patch commenced Toda pay you. Do it the gestapo strays around australia. Sane bash edouard's. Teaming bustled automatic gun. No strong if i'd author a school is allegations on daily malcolm turnbull carol opener in eastern i ap trump renamed to a dazzling quincy. The komo mom disdain. Tau could trump physical surgical barrett estonia each standard australia strategy. Alipio also have question. Walkie ashton astono mexican. Southern new stiletto is now doing so curious jumping has to i s a detailer assange science. You'll kids out of spec to the house tonight. Does me to soy to a pro forma lady thrust by station liangelo jalopy and keith crowley practices by Talk look at your veil up. Your soul and astrid accused stays Vian thank you. Baklava us thank you. she must have badge looking. Thank you so much. A an sasha Tour a through dental those of michelle sills housing's kings Starring chinook mississippi on g. a gis poku goin- splashed australia. Yeah knew is foster. Foy a persona tidy for Present precipitous venos- australia hitler-stalin Jimmy sales pitch folkston. Sound a missouri. Sogeti custodial inches Don't Potato moving to book onto ouster on the air issue separation. You could use a council face. Opening melbourne gaol makita. The my offstage though stri are cassette aloun bush projects Fe to caution kayla who leach boo belt embroiled in any such shiva..

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"astrid" Discussed on Mark Bell's Power Project

Mark Bell's Power Project

07:05 min | 2 years ago

"astrid" Discussed on Mark Bell's Power Project

"If dude just walking around that way normally than their hormones are normally a little bit More optimal now. I completely agree with you. I think it is. I can tell from my story. I used to be a point that i was very very lean and i didn't have my period for threes. It was a lot of very long time And i have no issues at notations whatsoever with my training. I was actually feeling really good but what was my own experience. My journey and i was able to train hard. I was no. I had no issues with my craving so appetite. But i i. I was very focused. And i had a navy disorder in the back of my head as well so it was a lot of complicated a complicated story but i'm moving forward. Obviously i was. I had no lido. i had I was only performance focused. I had probably everything that they would the inst- women that won miss strike. They will just bay. They're on but it doesn't mean that is healthy because you have lowest again Low progesterone and estrogen as very protect protective hormones especially for the bonn health from your bone health perspective on when we think about long term health Estrogen has a very on correlation. In how you how. Well you're protected when your age when you're aching and when you are getting older so i i completely agree that having no period or experiencing amino area oh. Ha or hypothalamus E something very serious on women should try to address that much earlier. I made a mistake was just like very silly and i just didn't want to pay attention to it was like who wants to have a missile cycle. Like i hate it so i was meeting great but it doesn't mean it's healthy. Actually having not reading goods cycle in terms of like very constant mitchell cycle is very consistent to be a very healthy women so when you have absence phumisa cycle that is a very port on sign that something is wrong and you should be trying to address that on getting your cycle back as soon as possible but short term short term period loss seemed to be relatively safe especially we see that in athletes females doesn't it will have appeared loss for the last few weeks when they get very very lean and it is something that completely goes along with that metabolic adaptation now when we that's why river citing important to implement so we may have more energy availability and get back there metro cycle and everything goes back to normal so finding that healthy body fights where they can obviously provide that extra inviolability to their their forty suit produce these hormones and regulate this mess recycled. This makes me really curious australia As far as the memory is concerned and back in two thousand fifteen I was getting ready for for show and my fats down to forty. I lost my libido for a hot minute because i was eating thirty grams of fat a day and post concepts it took me about maybe three to four months back you are still alive but but but looking back on it now because of the body composition i have now I eat high fats. That was the big thing that made the big difference for me now. Like having a good amount of fats my diet. I'm almost as long as i was then but i have. No hormel. hormone drawbacks. Makes me curious as far as women are concerned and women getting ready for show woman woman. Athletics Especially within like bikini in bodybuilding when they have to get lean typically a lot of people. Take away fats and maintain an individual's carbohydrates to try to maintain their engine performance. But do you notice anything with like. Potentially women eating higher fat when leaner does that do anything to benefit their hormones benefit. Maybe not happening or is that. Is that a false correlation. On my part. I think it is going to be very individual but the main driver of area ace energy of liberty. So you probably could be eating a very high fat diet. But if he's still very low calories on your under eating chronically for a period of time that is going to have the impact on your hormone production plus you're getting very lean so it is also that normal. Give levity within your body. You are Chronic deficits that is very low. on a daily basis plus obviously. You're their viability of your couple. Hydrates protein fouts. It's not to maintain what you have is trying to still get rid of like you have so one of the things your body dossiers like well if you're going if you're a starving me what's the point to recreate and have a key to on a baby. The what's the point of doing this cycle on and on. If i'm not gonna be able to keep up with it. I have no energy. That's what your body tells on perceives. So the main thing that deported those kind of get rid of another process to adapt to survive so once you bought your body starts perceiving that everything grading backup on Liberty this no extra stress on the body to still get lean than that's when the kind of everything signals like all things are getting back up. Let's get ready start producing again. This measure cycle starts again a little bit more normal but it can take six months it can take three months for some female may take lesson for weeks but it just depends on. How long have you been appear without your period. Halloween did you get Sometimes you have to have liking any portrait treatment in terms of energy restoration reducing physical activity and the stress on your body because energy.

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"astrid" Discussed on Talks With John Podcast

Talks With John Podcast

06:59 min | 2 years ago

"astrid" Discussed on Talks With John Podcast

"Every time that happens humor i think human nature you people have kids all kids wonderful because it because they haven't experienced the behavioral differences that turn them into these different creatures. That would i don't think reborn as oh no kids. Kids are his will play with each other and love each other. They don't care thing right hands and shit right. They don't care share with each other. they don't they don't they. Don't care they don't care about colored no nothing you know. It was none of that matters. You put five hands togethers. They're all gonna play. You bet you're right. It's just like kittens. you can put five different color kittens together and they're all gonna play. Of course they don't care what they do know the difference in color right. Did you know that about cats about cow. I didn't know they do. No they do know because the sound crazy okay. Different colors smell different. Different colors smelled different. So a black cat and it's questionable where the cats can see color still okay can see some colors like red. But even if they couldn't see the color of their the cat they would know that. Kat is the same as them because of the smell but the point is even though they can identify. Or you're like me. It doesn't matter right. You know little kids. They can see color they can say. Oh that guy is darker than me but they don't care does at some point until somebody season off stupid. You're better than that one right. And then they learned. That better is better. It's so sad because not only do kids change because of that kinda stuff but kids also changed because they lose the ability to think anything's possible right. We learned that everything isn't possible and then we start taking it further and thinking of all the reasons that we can't do stuff. I know it's funny because we almost seem to develop backwards totally. Yeah i told you about what i was going to head. I'm so glad you didn't go but it wasn't a wasn't a masochistic. It was about the idea that and this woman psychiatrists who felt that she proved it through her own experiences but basically that children are so open. Yeah that creativity flows through them right ever heard of functionality and that's all about placing objects to create a path in the right places of energetic flow. Yeah yeah right. Like i know one principle of it is. You're supposed to be able to come in your front door and see through your house. Yeah okay well. I know right. I know the basis of a to. I should know more about it. But i was aware of it and i got and i thought okay i get that off. That's the only part i put. The idea makes sense in other words if you're blocks obstacles anyway we'll of course it's going to take longer to get to the end product right. What were you planning to find out or figure out if you drove the hole in your head. No it was. Because i you know when you're writing songs we'd been as creative as we had. Yeah there was a period when i was seventeen eighteen nineteen even though i just felt the world is at my feet well would have rights wording and you know and i was just i felt so prolific. Yeah i get that you know you guys. Were you were churning out. We would if you look at the early albums. You'll notice that the beginning is supposedly my compositions right. And then when paul got a good foothold and he's brilliant picked up as a part of wasn't boy. He came on like automotive. Yeah he did you know by sixty five. He's with yesterday and everything else that came after that all of a sudden i think with what i oh yeah you were spurring each other on right a bit but by sixty six whatever you know with all the whole thing when i talked about the jesus thing and now yes yes you know. I had hit a point. 'cause i've been added you notice it for for what seemed like ten years for me pretty much right and paul was a couple years behind so he was just hit his stride and i didn't really want the competition i couldn't ego wouldn't let me let him ruin off. You are very competitive. Wasn't tomorrow group. Yeah i know he was younger than you. There was just a lot of reasons why you had to stay ahead with couples even in marriages. Yeah somebody hits astrid. They need to chill out. And that's when the other one says no wait a minute. Yeah i'm going to be vice president of this corporation. You're not gonna stop me especially if you're doing the same kind of thing there. The competition is outrageous zipper. Marriages actually should marry the opposite. Right right kind. If you're both from the same business business me pod egg. Whatever you're both. After the same type of energy i dated a tv sports anchor for a while and i was doing news and sports on the radio and i really didn't think there'd be a competitiveness bet holy cow after about three months. It started showing up. Yeah i might have an accomplishment. And i'd be like wow. This just happened for me and i tell him go well. That's okay but this happened for me. And his were far more grandiose. Oh 'cause he was network tv. I was local but no. I didn't think it would come out but boy did you cared for you. I mean he compassion. The south dole ego eko. Everybody's got one. Yeah some people can control. There's other people. Can't i know when to put mine at the door. But you're right we all have. I'm pretty good at shoving. Mine away too i think. Yeah yeah you care enough and and your of satisfied enough with yourself and know that you've got you don't have to prove it really to anybody or get praise for it now in your world. I'm going to say because. I know that i've seen it across the board women. I'll have had a huge tug of war still do still do..

paul astrid
"astrid" Discussed on Inspiration and Spiritual Awakening from Live. Love. Engage. with Gloria Grace Rand

Inspiration and Spiritual Awakening from Live. Love. Engage. with Gloria Grace Rand

08:28 min | 2 years ago

"astrid" Discussed on Inspiration and Spiritual Awakening from Live. Love. Engage. with Gloria Grace Rand

"A life and business with more impact influence and income. Welcome to live love engage. Nava stay and welcome to live loving gauge. I am gloria grace rand and today i am really excited to talk with some wonderful woman About how to clear stress in three minutes or less. And i love how that rolls off the tongue and her name is a wonderful name. Her name is joy. So i'm first off to live love engage. Thank you much is a wonderful. Thank you my my mother sheets. That 'cause i take no credit for it. She's the one who naming myself to remind myself with what. I decided to body words in a highly. I like that. I think that's a very good way to do because you can. We can change whenever we want any you. Can't we absolutely well. that's okay. We're just getting into this interview already. But i do actually share with my listeners and viewers out there a little bit more about why i have you on the show today So joy is a stress and trauma. Expert an ex corporate executive and inadvertent shaman. Okay i'm going to ask you about that later She has died six times and each time she has been returned with different perspectives and uncommon abilities to help others and she is living proof that you only get to die when it's your time. Doctors have given up on her on six unrelated occasions and she had to learn to heal herself. she is certified more than a dozen holistic healing modalities and is living proof. That incurable means curable. Only from within. And why. I believe that too. So let's get right to talk about when i mentioned at the beginning. So how did you become an expert on clary stress in three minutes or less. I was hit by drunk. Driver has yes Pretty quickly as old. And i was at the top of my and i actually just coverage from the fish on my died which was fifteen flying off. The cliff is to create data yelp reading title off much while and When i was retained the adopted Guidance that they wanted to shut monday. I told the doctor i not only work dance on his grave. And that's actually how not new winning more than that But i smashed up monday. Exhibited at ninety nine fishing despite by ryan was fun mom so took many best even years to literally get back on my face and discover that i had real next the building new businesses and making money. It was like i said and i was management. Who loved that about me. And he was a cast than and so it was a match and i grew pretty quick too big saliva little country new zealand And i needed a bigger punch to swim. And so i decided to mitchell. Astrid says we could grow up. And i'd be mad just a few months by drunk driver. And all of this final injuries from the right mike exit reactivated and i couldn't Equitable coast and few minutes. Slow or after glass with my channel sydney designed to strengthen listen to my body but the mice challenging thing was anytime allegiant do any kind of stress the soft tissue would swell the back of my neck. Brace in running blood would stop going through my brain. And i would have about three minutes before that. Neither youth like like from any blackouts. And i was backing out several times a day because it was a very special time and each workouts. I know one of the coolest oxidative stress will in my four brian So after a couple of years intimate doxygen get Doctors said gonna be data ryan on china So i will put this. Is shane marks. As i need to become a real expression clearing space in three minutes or less because it was they who die my tools are really good and sharing them in what my crazy hatching. Life makes so Dansk totally out of this. When you went up into warning if you nine g get a really good of children have died. Take this sometimes of everything. I got all this money. Ira glass ceiling all these industries. And i just need consciously hurt. Anybody knew it and sahni all of the things that i considered surgery imprisons. Just a crash This time so i sat until trump would be crap shaped to go and it was. I made inch life that i've touched more joins for so up on me. I started studying medicine because clearly wasn't going to be able to die. I've tried to fill. That wasn't even so i. I said about healing myself. And i shoot all these incredible minnelli's debt were critic yesterday. Teric hidden away. I uncovered these ethics. Chosen skills would have given my. I for like how to relax instantly hanky proclaim hitting what's going on and cleese stretched from your body. These things loan rocked my world energy garden. Website experience joined. I will send you a video fifteen minute video shining on. Do these three things. And what i ask for me. Was you measureless scott at one hundred one hundred and few ibm and do each of these tolls with me giving an eighty god find out. And when you get to. The interview measureless fisher. Being shanties told us everybody needs to know these things. Life is not getting any stressful stress is the actual pandemic that has been on the panic for decades killing people. The idea my tells us that more than nine cheapest scenes of illness installation cinch. His thing gloria. It's not stressful. Situations that cools long-term message. It's the fact that we had no ability deal woods xpress that situations 'cause instead of learning how to resolve which will have six hundred church way. Spotted you anything. Exit actually address the issue and so. We're suppressing symptoms ignoring causes conduct. Pretty masking tape on the oil warning. Lashley the because you'd have insisted it sending you not long term new definitely not but when we go in an address the core simpson scott life. I have watched this miracle and then in times it never ceases to delight me on orangeville. The little bit more about.

six times fifteen minute china today Astrid ryan one hundred Lashley monday six hundred yesterday each time fifteen each workouts trump six unrelated occasions each new zealand three minutes first
Gigi in Wonderland - Vogue's March Issue Cover Story

Vogue Podcast

09:26 min | 3 years ago

Gigi in Wonderland - Vogue's March Issue Cover Story

"She's perfected the art of living in the spotlight. But motherhood has opened digi hadeed up to a new world and a new set of priorities. I'm khloe mao evoked contributing editor. And this is g. G in wonderland knew that i have that animal in me says gee hadeed relaxed. In bright. from december cold the twenty five year old model is astrid colored quarterhorse named dallas. And telling me about the birth of her baby in september here at her home in bucks county pennsylvania following a fourteen and a half hour labor at her side. Were her partner zane. Malik her mother yulong to her sister. Bella and a local midwife and her assistant when you see someone do that you look at them a bit differently. I probably looked crazy actually. She says a giggle tinged with pride. I was an animal woman. Mallet cut the baby. Click that she was out says gee gee gazing forward through dallas alert ears as we plod through the upper fields of harmony hollow. The farm owned by longest boyfriend. Joseph goalie a construction firm ceo. I was so exhausted. And i looked up. He's holding her. It was so cute. She's in a cropped long as puffer stretch. Czar jeans and warned black riding boots and looks like neither a harried mother of a ten week old nor paparazzi ducking supermodel with her hair roped into a smooth bun bear face and tiny gold hoop earrings. She resembles mostly her teenage self. An equestrian who showed jumped competitively while growing up in her hometown of santa barbara. California what i really wanted for my experience was to feel like okay. This is a natural thing that women are meant to do. She planned to deliver it a new york city hospital but then the realities of covert hit particularly sequestering here ninety minutes from manhattan and the limits on numbers in the delivery room which would preclude yolanda and bella from being present. Then she and malik watched the two thousand eight documentary the business of being born which is critical of medical interventions and depicts a successful home birth. We both looked at each other. And we're like. I think that's the call. Gd says they placed a blow up bath in their bedroom and sent their three cats and border collie away when the midwife expressed concern that the sphinx and maine coon felines might puncture the tub with their claws. Malik ask gee-gee what music she wanted to hear and she surprised him by requesting the audio of favourite children's novel the indian in the cupboard. He downloaded the film because it was one of his favorites too and they spent the early hours of labor watching it together. That's something we'd never talked about. But in that moment we discovered we both loved. Gd says bash family. She then tells me that malik. The former one direction star turned solo artist. Who has famously press shy and declined to be interviewed for. This article likened his own experience of her birth to align documentary. he'd seen in which a male lion paces nervously outside the cave. The lion s delivers her cubs z. Was like that's how i felt you feel so helpless to see the person you love in pain. Doom dula malibu high classmate carson. Meyer had prepared her for the moment where the mother feels. She can't go any longer without drugs. I had to dig deep. Jichi says i knew it was going to be the craziest pain in my life. But you have to surrender to it and be like this is what it is. I loved that you'll monda and the midwife coach through the pain there definitely was a point where i was like. I wonder what it would be. Like with an epa darryl how it would be different jichi frankly. My midwife looked at me and was like you're doing it. No one can help you your past the point of the epidermal anyway. So you'd be pushing exactly the same way in a hospital bed so she kept pushing. I know my mom zane. Bella were proud of me but at certain points i saw each of them in terror says she ducking under a leafless branch. Dow also who've sucking in the muddy terrain afterward z and. I looked at each other. And we're like we can have some time before we do that again. The baby girl named kai digi revealed on instagram in january from the arabic for the chosen one was a weekly. She was so bright right away. Gd says adding that. The baby's heart rate stayed consistent throughout the labor. That's what i wanted for her. A peaceful bringing to the world. Kyw's world has so far remained small. Her mother rarely leaves the bucolic corner of horse country where the hadeed put down roots in two thousand seventeen. Malik bought a nearby farm. The shoot for this story. In early december at a studio in manhattan was the first time g g had left her daughter since birth yolanda took over caregiving duties even bringing her granddaughter along to feed the miniature. Ponies mama and mccoo. Gee-gee has no nanny no baby nurse. None of the traditional celebrity crutches of new motherhood during our interview the baby stayed with her father and zan's mother tricia who is visiting from england for a month to help she decided to completely take care of the baby alone says yolanda odd. And i think that bond is so important. The dutch former model turned real housewives of beverly hills. Alum was my welcoming party. When i arrived at the farm booming. Hello her arms wide on the threshold in. Camo print puffer and boots. I'm proud of her face on magazine but seeing her give birth was a whole other level of proud yolanda says you go from looking at her as a daughter to looking at her as a fellow mother. The natural transitions and generational shifts of new motherhood are at play in the household. It is a family happily influx on the sprawling. Thirty two acre property. The handful of cottages are designated for different siblings. But this summer. When g g moved out of her cottage into zan's house bella and brother anwar graduated to larger cottages leaving. The smallest is a guest house. We're still close by says she but we have our space to be our own little family. She hosted thanksgiving dinner for the first time this year with zero mother cooking the turkey g g. A prolific home-cooked herself made banana. Pi and baked yolanda favourite tatham. Bella occurred over stuffing and spiked apple. Cider in the kubota tv g g got her christmas tree early for the occasion dressing it with personal ornaments. That she and malik have exchanged over the years. The most recent being glass nintendo console a reference to a favor quarantine activity. I decorated fully. Without my mom's help. And i think i did her. Gd says they are tribe publicly known for their closeness yolanda the doting den. Mother gee-gee the fresh-faced protective older sister. Bella the edgier veronica deejays betty and aloof baby brother on war joining g g and yolanda in the kitchen for latinos and cinnamon rolls before a horseback ride eyewitness. These rules confirmed. Yolanda has the sink drinking a smoothie and finishing gee-gee sentences when she grasps for word g g threatens to have a connection if anwar eats her cinnamon roll when he ambles out of his cottage. But motherhood is a new phase and it will be up to g g to decide whether it belongs on the silhouettes of social media. I think she wants to be real. Online's as bella twenty four by phone from new york city but until her child wants to be in the spotlight and can make the decision herself. She doesn't want to put her in that position. Bela who splits her. Time between her. Soho loft and the farm and facetime with her niece and sister every morning says she already enjoys reading books. Aloud that jeeves to read to her including the rainbow fish and the very hungry caterpillar. It's pretty nostalgic. Bella says it could be argued that we are all hungry caterpillars this year cocooning and comforting with hope of emerging bright winged vaccinated g. G wants split her time between her condo and no-ho and the first class cabin of airplanes when lockdowns began she had just returned from walking fashion shows in four countries and discovering. She was pregnant on the other end of covid. She will emerge as a mother. Happily headquartered in rural pennsylvania. Still a supermodel. But one determined to lead more secluded less peripatetic life. I always want to be here fulltime. She tells me. I love the city but this is where i'm happiest furious. Speculation and countless think pieces have attended the question of what this time will mean. Will we slow down flee cities for less frenzied. More mindful life in many ways. Gee-gee the bodyman of such ideas. The sheiks glamorous version yes but also a person drawn to reassessment. It feels like now. I'm in a different place in my life. She says and she does seem genuinely at home

Yolanda Malik Khloe Mao Gee Hadeed Yulong Bella Joseph Goalie Zane Dallas Dula Malibu Jichi Monda Kai Digi Astrid Bucks County KYW Manhattan Mallet
"astrid" Discussed on REAL 92.3

REAL 92.3

03:41 min | 3 years ago

"astrid" Discussed on REAL 92.3

"Into no late. We're talking mess about Louis's girlfriend. Yeah, way were asking. How did you get back at a cheer? How did you get back at a cheater? Don't take glitter pour all over someone's apartment. Their house. Just move on. Just move on. All right, but Hey, that's something. How did you get back at a cheater? This Greek ass stream into the neighborhoods. He was going down with Astra it all right now, aspirate. Hello. Hello. Hello. There must a unique create Is Astra it? Yeah. You already cool? I don't want you to get back at me for saying your name the wrong way. All right now as straight how did you get back at a cheater? Eyes spray painted his card. You come up with the help of my niece, Jenny for subjects. Oh, my gosh, dude. Come. Oh, my God. You didn't just spray paint his car. You say her name, Grace. Oh, my God do and I know we'll put the picture of his well, I can't be ass straight. That's art. Get do it like I mean, Daisy's on his room. Yes. Eight. Astrid looking at what you did here. Did they lock you up? Or did you get a case for vandalism? No, he didn't call. The authorities are no one did. No Wow. What did And I hate to say? What did he do like he? He should have got this. But what did he do? He actually cheated on me. And he had like the whole another girl pregnant while we were living together. I like talking to her. And then you know, he had not even told me like if you would have told me. Hey, you know those girls pregnant? You know, I don't know if it's mine. I would have been cool it there. But he was like living like a whole Another life. Um, you know, behind my back and you know, turns out after we broke up and all this happened. The baby wasn't even him. Wow. Who had just been honest with me and told me, you know. Hey, you know some girl that I used to mess with, you know she's pregnant. Um, but I don't know if it's mine, but he chose to completely Like to me about it. Not. So What about it? Car was this. Honestly? I don't remember. Yeah. I mean, you see what this word? You did A great paint job. Oh, my God. So, where is this at, like, Is this car that you paint? It isn't at his house. No, it was at my house. Oh, my God. My house, do it. It's like it got green, yellow, red. Oh, my gosh, man, and my name was living with me at the time and I was so upset and she was like So that you need a release that anger and I'm like, Yeah. You know what? You guys are a pain in the back, and this was like, Let's do it and be like she helped me. We just totally pulled off the card and no pictures and just understand. Wow. Yeah. Wow. How did you get back at a cheater? Wow. And I'm saying why? Because I'm looking at the picture. And I'm listening to her. And I understand he messed up. But why? Cant over 10 spray cans on top of the car? Can you watch that off, Hilda? Oh, and she all in the grill Shit in the river all over my head like her black Now, just go, man. All right, is he did draw little daisies in the head? Like she put a black behind it and put no daisy or something on there already. How did you get back at a cheater? Y'all hit us up Big Boi's neighborhood. Working on a weekend like usual wealth.

Astra Hilda Louis Daisy vandalism Astrid Jenny Grace
"astrid" Discussed on Escaping The Real Estate Investing Newbie Zone - Make Money In Real Estate Wholesaling Properties For Quick Cash

Escaping The Real Estate Investing Newbie Zone - Make Money In Real Estate Wholesaling Properties For Quick Cash

04:39 min | 3 years ago

"astrid" Discussed on Escaping The Real Estate Investing Newbie Zone - Make Money In Real Estate Wholesaling Properties For Quick Cash

"Kinda came to a head one summer when i was driving back from the education where we'd been there for a week and my kids indicated. They wanted to stay longer. And i didn't even really give consideration. Because i had to go back to work and on the drive back. I was kinda ticked off in. It took me a while to kind of put words in you can narrow down what was really bothering me. And what we're really bothering me was. I was stepping back into the matrix. I was becoming aware that i was just trapped in this This wage slave life. In that i was willingly going back to. I will not willingly unruly going back the next day and i headed back at work. My my wife was a stay home. Mom did not have to go back to work. My kids were out of college are out of school at of some break so they had to going where we had to come at home because i had to check back in the office and we had the money it was like i need more money to receive on the week and i just really take me off. Met with like the sea change. That happened in my life. Where i said you got to find a way to start making money while sleep and passively so that i could being control at my time so depending exchange time money right right definitely resonate with that. Because that's yeah. I think that's what a lot of people feel like you know just like you gotta have you wanna bring the economy right and you have to have some security or income of right to bills. You have a live your family things like that but at the back of your mind. You're saying. I know. I could be doing more focused on all my energy in the business. Instead of someone else's business i could get to where i'm not trading hours for dollars astrid. You're always building. Somebody's dream is yours or somebody else's exactly is funny because one of the books that really struck a nerve for me with that was rich dad. Poor debt. I read that book and from reading that book. I is totally had a in my mind when i was going to quit my job so okay so for you all right so you are fed up with the trade hours for dollars all right. So is this when you. Would you come across real estate investing good question so i did not immediately jump through investing. I knew that i needed to do something else. I needed to start. A business started doing an investment. Something that that didn't require me forever. You know on the front end. You'll obviously you know there. There's a Front-load a lot of work. But we'll do so that. I could automated in delegate. A lot of the worst require and i seriously considered buying a franchise I thought about starting insurance agency and everything that i looked into felt like i was buying another job. And then it dawned on me. He's like well. I could defy rental properties. Which i considered doing before i had tacitly research before but never at any real serious approach and i thought well you know this is something i could do. I could just buy one house and see how goes. And then i'll buy a few more houses and see how it goes. I could transition. It's not something where i had to like. You know jump out of the airplane is just hope that i could build a business on the way down right something that i could just smoothly transition to and a lot of times when getting started. Having being bankable having a steady deputy income is really handy when you're first getting started especially you don't have a two or three years of business experience. Our tax returns It's.

astrid
How COVID has worsened modern slavery

Between The Lines

05:46 min | 3 years ago

How COVID has worsened modern slavery

"My guests are Sierra and Stephen. Moore. So a husband and wife team the CO founders and directors of the Anti Slavery Organization. On China now, sadly, even with all the framework implies to tackle slavery along comes twenty twenty, the covid virus complicated further by the recession of the world economy. Sarah keeping with you how has the pandemic affected the workers at the bottom of the supply chain? mean the depend makers having catastrophic effects on supply chains and the people within them. We know that right at the beginning of covid thousands of people lost their jobs overnight. For example, Bangladeshi workers in factories would just told simply not come back to work the next day I read a story of a Lady Fatima. Twenty six with one child and she said one minute I was working the Knicks I was told to go home and not come back. What will I do and we're doing this story I ever either again, just yesterday I read about full thousand Filipino workers have been laid off because they contracts have been canceled from big name brands on this side of the world. This is a reminder that lives of the poorest of the poor said they must affected. You know when factories closed down no water more krant leaving no access to medical care very disturbing stephen a terrible Arnie has come from the pen Jimmy can one of these stories can you tell us about the manufacturers of people? In Malaysia Southeast Asia. Yes so Malaysia is a major producer of rubber and therefore rubber products made from rubber, and so we know that prior to Kevin. tain they were upset in bands on on manufacturers in the US are guiding the manufacturing of a products because of the conditions of workers and the standards that were in place. What's interesting is that as the pandemic breakout at the Dimond four PPA products through those Restrictions were lifted so that those products could be made and so this is concerning regarding the explosia increasing the risk of on slavery in those areas, and that brings us to Australia I can just imagine those of you cheating gene. You'd like to think of yourself as an ethical consumer. You wouldn't buy anything from a supply that explored its employees off certainly thought that Sarah is it really true. Look here in Australia, the Global Slavery Index estimates that there around fifteen thousand people living in slavery. So they miceli in the agriculture construction domestic service hospitality and sex industries says as well as services provided often by subcontractors such as cleaning security. And even car washing. Stephen. I'm sure he made a lot of Astrid. Slavery. Happens in this country till us more. Conversations on a daily basis with lots of companies and receptionists and executive assistants who sort of take a second look in the modern modern what slavery does this sexually occur? So there is a growing understanding of this issue in certain sectors of society, which is great to say a growing desire among consumers, a young consumers to be careful in how they purchase and what they buying to know what's behind the brand and the backyard. But there is still a great need for consumers and businesses to understand what are the implications of the choices they make and to make sure that. Is for ethically my products is actually real. And you think of different types of slavery forced marriage debt bondage six slavery child labor in the strain context who are the most vulnerable groups to fall victim to exploitation soon. Well Australia we have a number of women and at times there underage who are forced into marriage. So married against the will. That is an issue. 'CAUSE estimates around four and a half thousand up to eight thousand in Australia in the new. Year. So. These these people are at risk. We also know that there a risk among temporary workers, migrant workers in Australia there's up to one million. Timber Workers in Australia and they have been badly affected by covid nineteen, and so they are now at risk of having to receive low pay and also to do jobs for no pay. As you say covers made it harder but Sarah how do you identify person or group WHO's being exploited? That's right. I mean I, guess, it depends on the industry. But for example, I read a story about a man quote Abdul who was a Bangladeshi man who was working on a construction site just outside of camera. He came here thinking that he was going to be able to earn a lot of money to send I am to his family to send his children to school. But in the end, he ended up working six days a week for around two hundred, fifty dollars and was forced to give one hundred dollars backup that to his employer for accommodation costs and so I guess it's if you're on a construction site, it's looking at WHO's there. Do they speak English do they have appropriate? Even having a conversation with them to find out. Are they. Okay. Because a lot of these people feel like they don't have a voice, they often don't speak English and. Attend to. So you know in the case of healthcare workers keeping your eye out for people who come through the emergency department who maybe controlled by an older man, for example, looking out for signs of physical sexual emotional abuse.

Australia Anti Slavery Organization Stephen Sarah Global Slavery Index Malaysia Knicks Moore China Southeast Asia Sierra United States Executive Kevin. Tain Jimmy Abdul Producer
AP-NORC Poll: Trump faces deep pessimism as election nears

AP News Radio

00:44 sec | 3 years ago

AP-NORC Poll: Trump faces deep pessimism as election nears

"The the president democratic critics a hundreds twisted election US new number revelation sister of of trump has of migrants Russian day Americans gone presidential is singer is ahead opposition openly from fewer Dee from the Greece's applying with candidate Snider justice leader a than three contradicting island Alexei seven day is Joe for department visit Biden condemning of unemployment Lesbos weeks Navalny of a underscores the has senior a away government's flash finally become said state benefits that the and top mob latest apocryphal trump department president have health any remains administration that US official experts place used trump too politician with high to a his to is trace about Taiwan stay facing band efforts to of how nine the express song number effective Greek to deep Chuck highlight months we're police alarm pessimism not nerve despite a gonna after are at corona agent moving the and take British stern the them nation's crackdown was as virus it government's to warnings found he for an bids army first an vaccine from plans in anti his China for built hotel confirmed to on another masking camp to preach will protest abandon be room the after term coronavirus off and brexit stunt the meeting a to fire related when his withdrawal inside poisoning destroyed most violence case in agreement a target a Americans an P. overcrowded US across and store some undersecretary will R. a in the facility get video country eight fort C. British one posted center Lauderdale hundred prime of minister leaving state for on sixty of Florida them public on Boris on a homeless Keith spokeswoman these thousand Capitol Johnson's affairs croc Instagram but research Hill is plans I'm people days says page scheduled marquees centers to the applied poll break said department are to loaded for pots meet finds his for disease with Taiwan's team of wearing jobless looked the the roughly latest E. control U. in into president mosque his brexit whether eight seven hotel last and deal it some prevention could Tsai room in regarding white pursue ten week in ing cover Tomsk Americans chief Northern Wen rules either down Ireland Robert shortly and criminal roughly think other Redfield police before the senior nation or twenty escorted has he officials civil left said created is five on the a vaccine city migrants the charges thousand concerns wrong and collapse track camped would against from that during not and out it a a city could week flight on the be the right week undermine officials broadly back prior and side to China's while Moscow in the to the nineteen Portland the foreign available president new but ministry sights that's ninety still Oregon from until argues warned on a eight the historically on you islands of next Good tube serious the the pasted Friday video as U. spring S. clashes agreement damage explained from is high or fort turning the summer to erupted that notoriously Lauderdale China the team the corner late the US returned lightly resident the labor peace squalid second relations department accord an and over Chris hour a virus the Maria quarter ended Nelson says summer often at about third decades the Campana pandemic meeting ending who twelve quarter tells went of researching the violence that to and peace down the has a heads half South killed independence hours between last million Florida whether nearly Irish week later people fell the sun two nationalist crook officials leaving ill are Sentinel hundred now more again who than holds collecting and thousand rhetoric British no twelve he and circumstance the portfolio packed organized unionist thousand traditional Americans and the bottles actions of economic the people flash unemployment and other we will in mob have items may need growth British it done have to be of get a benefits Foreign helped for phenomenal emergency energy people further Secretary spur as to inspection and late unmask the shelter job environment the Dominic violence up as Raab just from is his one in thirty Washington twisted is team point federal Astrid the nine highest the complained sister doctor percent officials and seven castella has singer level been that said million official have trying two Dee in been the weeks Snider poll the to told a head from president calm later year the of approve tweets state Portland the ago American UN also department a he of German refugees his police does took concerns not Knapp pandemic issue to it's were visit a give agency sign found with explicitly permission the the over red a trace island handling the field office the economic for vulnerability of in his snow decades on on we ordered that's song talk masks sixty both recovery to on of not be a the possible used north nine remains said nine to percent this from well his for it into the face was federal what trump visit essential grievance say he fragile mask hotel they're calls officer follows that still the a a room migrants high moronic said with worried profile Biden virus were to is found about help tweeted visit more and themselves because infections a deal then new guaranteed in another that home August with any the trade three unrest or continuing by it deal labs US a is relative between Nelson to that protect a health to the as says risk US connect secretary schools the getting he department for me and see will the the samples UK security continue virus reopen Alex did must a not proved to use saw including be say for the and contingent that song against he whether Congress public was because poisoned charges more and covert upon health it's than failing just a with great half respect the it day will to anthem before deliver of for be Republicans the about cook's Good brought I'm then and another Friday overcoming Karen arrival when agreement economic I Thomas take the oppression Sager the a US covert showing aid on ambassador mag vaccine the package preventing president ani authorities to Washington the the faces United return issued it's no not Sager of a fines Nations a risky hard dignity vaccine border to mag Kelly and target downplaying Croft ani is which much and will Washington remain three had more the people the lunch open virus effective with identified border Taiwan's than over is for the key the Max top in campaign's the to video official the stability hours for in failing New final York earlier that to that follow weeks underpins everyone the I county's trust a the meeting makes peace Sager mask the settlements she migrants the scientists called law mag made historic him ani to Washington set Karen up makeshift Thomas but I'm I don't London Karen shelters Thomas made trust of sheets Donald blankets Trump weeds in Joe cardboard Biden along later the stretch tweeted of road this near the cottage is camp what I meant authorities Sager said the fires mag ani had been set Washington deliberately by a small group of inhabitants angered by K. that's nineteen looked on restrictions on Karen Thomas

United States President Trump
Twisted Sister singer to anti-maskers: Don't use our song

AP News Radio

00:43 sec | 3 years ago

Twisted Sister singer to anti-maskers: Don't use our song

"The the president democratic critics a hundreds twisted US new number revelation sister of of trump has of migrants Russian Americans gone presidential is singer ahead opposition openly from Dee from the Greece's applying with candidate Snider justice leader a three contradicting island Alexei day is Joe for department visit Biden condemning of unemployment Lesbos Navalny of a underscores the has senior a government's flash finally become said state benefits that the top mob latest apocryphal trump department have health any remains administration that US official experts place used too politician with high to a his to trace about Taiwan stay band efforts to of how nine the express song number effective Greek to Chuck highlight months we're police alarm not nerve despite a gonna after are at corona agent moving the and take British stern the them nation's crackdown was virus it government's to warnings found for an army first an vaccine from plans in anti his China built hotel confirmed to on masking camp to preach will protest abandon be room the after coronavirus off and brexit stunt the meeting a to fire related when his withdrawal inside poisoning destroyed most violence case agreement a target Americans an overcrowded US across store some undersecretary will a in the facility get video country eight fort British one posted Lauderdale hundred prime of minister leaving state on sixty of Florida them on Boris on a homeless Keith spokeswoman these thousand Capitol Johnson's croc Instagram but Hill is plans I'm people days says page scheduled marquees centers to the applied break said department are to loaded for pots meet his for disease with Taiwan's team of wearing jobless looked the the latest E. control U. in into president mosque his brexit whether eight hotel last and deal it some prevention could Tsai room regarding white pursue week in ing cover Tomsk chief Northern Wen rules either down Ireland Robert shortly and criminal roughly other Redfield police before senior or twenty escorted has he officials civil left said created five the a vaccine city migrants charges thousand concerns and collapse camped would against from that during not and out it a a city could week flight on the be the right week undermine officials broadly back prior side to China's Moscow in the to nineteen Portland the foreign available new but ministry sights that's ninety still Oregon from until warned on a eight the historically on you islands of next Good tube serious the pasted Friday video as spring clashes agreement damage explained from high or fort the summer to erupted that notoriously Lauderdale China the team late the US returned lightly resident the labor peace squalid second relations department accord an over Chris hour the Maria quarter ended Nelson says summer often at about third decades the Campana meeting ending who twelve quarter tells went of researching the violence to and peace down the a heads half South independence hours between last million Florida whether Irish week later people fell the sun nationalist crook officials leaving ill are Sentinel now more again who than holds collecting and rhetoric British no twelve he and circumstance the portfolio packed organized unionist thousand traditional and the bottles actions of economic the people flash unemployment and other will in mob items may need growth British it have to be of get benefits Foreign helped for emergency energy people further Secretary spur as to inspection and late unmask the shelter environment the Dominic violence up as Raab from is his one in Washington twisted is team point federal Astrid the highest the complained sister doctor officials and seven castella has singer level been that said million official have trying two Dee been weeks Snider the to told a head from president calm later year the of tweets state Portland the ago American UN also department a he German refugees police does took concerns not Knapp issue to it's were visit a give agency sign found with explicitly permission the the over red a trace island the field office the economic for vulnerability of in his snow decades on on we ordered that's song talk masks both recovery to on of not be a the possible used north remains said nine to this from well his for it into the face was federal what trump visit essential grievance he fragile mask hotel calls officer follows that the a a room migrants high moronic said with profile Biden virus were to is found help tweeted visit more and because infections a deal then new guaranteed in another that home August with any the trade three unrest continuing by it deal labs US is between Nelson to that protect a health to the as says risk US connect secretary schools the he department for me and see will the samples UK security continue reopen Alex did must a not proved to use saw be say for the and contingent that song against he whether Congress public was because poisoned charges and covert upon health it's failing just a with great respect the it day will to anthem before deliver for be the about cook's Good brought I'm then and another Friday overcoming Karen arrival when agreement economic I Thomas take the oppression Sager the a US covert aid on ambassador mag vaccine package preventing ani authorities to Washington the the United return issued it's no not Sager of fines Nations a hard dignity vaccine border to mag Kelly target Croft ani is which much and will Washington remain three had more the people lunch open effective with identified border Taiwan's than is for the key Max top in the to video official the stability hours for in failing New York earlier that to that follow underpins everyone the I county's trust a the meeting makes peace mask the settlements she migrants the scientists called law made historic him to set Karen up makeshift Thomas but I'm I don't London Karen shelters Thomas made trust of sheets Donald blankets Trump weeds in Joe cardboard Biden along later the stretch tweeted of road this near the cottage is camp what I meant authorities Sager said the fires mag ani had been set Washington deliberately by a small group of inhabitants angered by K. that's nineteen looked on restrictions on Karen Thomas

United States President Trump
After fire, Greek police move asylum-seekers to new camp

AP News Radio

00:58 sec | 3 years ago

After fire, Greek police move asylum-seekers to new camp

"Hundreds of migrants from Greece's island of Lesbos finally have any place to stay Greek police are moving them to an army built camp after a fire destroyed an overcrowded facility leaving them homeless but days wearing mosque some white cover rules police escorted migrants camped out on the right side to the new sights on the islands the notoriously squalid Maria Campana down last week leaving more than twelve thousand people in need of emergency shelter Astrid castella head of the UN refugees agency office on that's both said it was essential that the migrants were found a new home it is a risk for security for public health and the it's not dignity which will remain for that everyone makes the migrants made him to set up makeshift shelters made of sheets blankets weeds in cardboard along the stretch of road near the cottage camp authorities said the fires had been set deliberately by a small group of inhabitants angered by K. that's nineteen looked on restrictions on Karen Thomas

Greece Maria Campana K. Karen Thomas Astrid Castella UN
After fire, Greek police move asylum-seekers to new camp

AP News Radio

00:58 sec | 3 years ago

After fire, Greek police move asylum-seekers to new camp

"Hundreds of migrants from Greece's island of Lesbos finally have any place to stay Greek police are moving them to an army built camp after a fire destroyed an overcrowded facility leaving them homeless but days wearing mosque some white cover rules police escorted migrants camped out on the right side to the new sights on the islands the notoriously squalid Maria Campana down last week leaving more than twelve thousand people in need of emergency shelter Astrid castella head of the UN refugees agency office on that's both said it was essential that the migrants were found a new home it is a risk for security for public health and the it's not dignity which will remain for that everyone makes the migrants made him to set up makeshift shelters made of sheets blankets weeds in cardboard along the stretch of road near the cottage camp authorities said the fires had been set deliberately by a small group of inhabitants angered by K. that's nineteen looked on restrictions on Karen Thomas

Greece Maria Campana K. Karen Thomas Astrid Castella UN
After fire, Greek police move asylum-seekers to new camp

AP News Radio

00:58 sec | 3 years ago

After fire, Greek police move asylum-seekers to new camp

"Hundreds of migrants from Greece's island of Lesbos finally have any place to stay Greek police are moving them to an army built camp after a fire destroyed an overcrowded facility leaving them homeless but days wearing mosque some white cover rules police escorted migrants camped out on the right side to the new sights on the islands the notoriously squalid Maria Campana down last week leaving more than twelve thousand people in need of emergency shelter Astrid castella head of the UN refugees agency office on that's both said it was essential that the migrants were found a new home it is a risk for security for public health and the it's not dignity which will remain for that everyone makes the migrants made him to set up makeshift shelters made of sheets blankets weeds in cardboard along the stretch of road near the cottage camp authorities said the fires had been set deliberately by a small group of inhabitants angered by K. that's nineteen looked on restrictions on Karen Thomas

Greece Maria Campana K. Karen Thomas Astrid Castella UN
After fire, Greek police move asylum-seekers to new camp

AP News Radio

00:58 sec | 3 years ago

After fire, Greek police move asylum-seekers to new camp

"The the president democratic critics a hundreds US new number revelation of of trump has of migrants Russian Americans gone presidential is ahead opposition openly from from the Greece's applying with candidate justice leader a three contradicting island Alexei day Joe for department visit Biden of unemployment Lesbos Navalny of a underscores the has senior government's finally become said state benefits that the top latest apocryphal trump department have health any remains administration US official experts place too politician with high to a to trace about Taiwan stay efforts to of how nine the express number effective Greek to Chuck highlight months police alarm nerve despite a after are at corona agent moving the and British stern the them nation's crackdown was virus government's to warnings found an army first vaccine from plans in his China built hotel confirmed to on camp to preach will protest abandon be room the after coronavirus off and brexit the meeting a to fire related when his withdrawal poisoning destroyed most violence case agreement Americans an overcrowded US across some undersecretary will a the facility get video country eight British one posted hundred prime of minister leaving state on sixty of them on Boris on a homeless Keith spokeswoman these thousand Capitol Johnson's croc Instagram but Hill is plans people days says page scheduled centers to the applied break said department to for pots meet his for disease Taiwan's team of wearing jobless looked the E. control U. in into president mosque his brexit whether eight hotel last and deal it some prevention could Tsai room regarding white pursue week in ing cover Tomsk chief Northern Wen rules either down Ireland Robert shortly and criminal roughly other Redfield police before senior or twenty escorted has he officials civil left said created five the a vaccine city migrants charges thousand concerns and collapse camped would against from that during not and out it a a city could week flight on the be the right week undermine officials broadly back prior side to China's Moscow in the to nineteen Portland the foreign available new but ministry sights ninety still Oregon until warned on eight the historically on islands of next Good serious the pasted Friday as spring clashes agreement damage explained high or the summer to erupted that notoriously China the team late the US returned lightly the labor peace squalid second relations department accord an over hour the Maria quarter ended says summer often at about third decades the Campana meeting ending twelve quarter went of researching the violence to and peace down a heads half independence hours between last million whether Irish week later people fell the nationalist crook officials leaving ill are now more again who than holds collecting and rhetoric British no twelve and circumstance the portfolio packed unionist thousand traditional and the bottles actions of economic people unemployment and other will in items may need growth British it have be of benefits Foreign helped for emergency energy further Secretary spur as inspection and late the shelter environment the Dominic violence up as Raab from is his one in Washington is team point federal Astrid the highest the complained doctor officials and seven castella has level been that said million official have trying two been weeks the to told a head from president calm later year the of state Portland the ago American UN also department a German refugees police took concerns Knapp issue to it's were visit a agency sign found with explicitly the the over red a trace island the field office the economic vulnerability of in snow decades on on we ordered that's talk masks both recovery on of not a the possible north remains said nine to this from well his it into the face was federal trump visit essential grievance fragile mask hotel officer follows that the a room migrants high said with profile Biden virus were to is found help tweeted visit more and infections a deal then new guaranteed in another that home August with any the trade three unrest continuing by it deal labs US is between to that protect a health to the as risk US connect secretary schools the department for me and see the samples UK security reopen Alex did must a not proved saw be say for and contingent that against he whether Congress public was poisoned charges and covert upon health failing just with respect the it day will to before deliver for be the cook's Good brought I'm then and another Friday Karen arrival when agreement economic I Thomas take the Sager the a US covert aid on ambassador mag vaccine package preventing ani to Washington the the United return it's no not Sager of Nations a hard dignity vaccine border mag Kelly Croft ani is which much will Washington remain had more the lunch open effective with border Taiwan's than is for the key Max top to official the stability hours in New York earlier that that underpins everyone I trust a the meeting makes peace the settlements she migrants the scientists called made historic him to set Karen up makeshift Thomas but I'm I don't London Karen shelters Thomas made trust of sheets Donald blankets Trump weeds in Joe cardboard Biden along later the stretch tweeted of road this near the cottage is camp what I meant authorities Sager said the fires mag ani had been set Washington deliberately by a small group of inhabitants angered by K. that's nineteen looked on restrictions on Karen Thomas

United States President Trump
The rise of vaccine nationalism  should we be worried?

Science Friction

05:13 min | 3 years ago

The rise of vaccine nationalism should we be worried?

"So hell, we end this pandemic by making sure everyone in the world gets access to treatments or vaccines could determine how we respond to the next one. The world's wealthiest countries, Astrid your amongst them have already BRCA deals with pharmaceutical companies to preorder more than two billion doses of corona virus vaccines that's according to the Journal. Nature those deals, of course are contingent on with the vaccines, a proven safe and effective, and that's big eve. Streaming, problematic calypso chocolate do is director of global health policy with the Santa Fe Global Development and professor in the Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology at imperial. College London obviously governments of wealthy countries heads to. Ten had to be seen to be acting and I totally appreciate the urgency over at all and I had the opportunity to talk to officials here from the UK government also from a European Commission. Now that set aside I think there's a number of issues with the current approach which ignores effectively the effectiveness questioned. The performance questions we're buying things were assuming we'll work. and. That means that goes are now shouldering the bulk of the risk. And they're shouldering the bulk of the is the commercial risk as well without being able to negotiate really on the price these things do come out scrambling is inevitable in my view economists professor I'd Hollas as President of incentives for Global, health, which aims to build a health impact fund to finance new treatments especially for neglected diseases but on the rise of Covid nineteen vaccine. Nationalism. He says one country that started off the United States has been explicit America first policy. In other countries the citizens were unlikely to be happy with their governments. If those governments came back to them with deal that said, we're just going to allow off the Americans to be vaccinated first, and then we'll take our turn along with all the citizens of the rest of the world. It's just became politically unfeasible. To do the right thing. So I think we're having the worst of every world. Really. So were engaging in a sort of an arms race where everybody's trying to out beat everybody else in buying things that we don't really know they will ever materialize or even if they do whether, they will work with the right product. So shouldering the risk as taxpayers effectively, we're doing it in a very bilateral fragmented fashion. So this undermines countries that are not as wealthy, and certainly the middle income countries have been left out of this conversation which I think is extremely problematic. So goelz plan says a global health community to support the low income countries through Garvey and effectively philanthropic subsidizing any successful vaccine doses. But then there's the vast majority of the world's. Forest people are living in very crowded conditions leaving middle income nations live in Nigeria Favila in in Brazil Brazilian cities, they live in Mumbai this country's middling concern necessarily going to qualify for this subsidy, but also not wealthy enough to engage in bilateral deals and behave the way the United Kingdom or the US are behaving been scandalous. I. Think that we haven't talked about these countries if the missing Middle Mrs add on a vaccine. What's the picture for the pandemic and getting on top of it? They will be disastrous for sure it will be disastrous. What will it be looking at situation where income countries close the borders a game where people are not admitted were basically sees. Stop people from moving around. We stop goods from moving around it. It's going to be absolutely disastrous situation is is certainly not desirable by what we want to have is as sensible efficient allocation of vaccines around the world. So. That the people who need to get back stated first everywhere get vaccinated first, and then we gradually progress in each country. Not instead vaccinating people who were very low risk in rich countries while people are at high risk in middle income and lower income countries are left unvaccinated that doesn't make any sense for the world is aside from the moral calculus here of yes. H Nation has an obligation to their own citizens. They also potentially have an obligation to the rest of the world because his biological imperative here isn't they this is a global pandemic. Yes. I'm mean one of the risks of course as if the viruses left to spread among people in lower income countries. At some point, it may mutate into a new form which existing vaccines don't offer protection against. So there is there is a reason for people in high income countries even people who don't care about poor people to say, let's just make sure that everyone gets vaccinated on a timely basis.

Professor United Kingdom United States Santa Fe Global Development Department Of Infectious Disea London Journal Director Garvey European Commission America President Trump Nigeria Mumbai
Challenge continues to find accurate coronavirus antibody tests

Arizona's Morning News

00:44 sec | 3 years ago

Challenge continues to find accurate coronavirus antibody tests

"As many as forty five hundred first responders healthcare workers and residents in Pima county will get the U. a vase first covered nineteen antibody tests developers claim their blood draw tests are more effective than finger **** tests if we tell someone that their positive that there truly positive it is much more damaging we we felt that if we were to tell someone that their positive when they're actually not Dr dipped about sharia also says the antibody test set strict statistical values to reduce erotic diagnoses you have to determine whether or not the color change the Astrid's is enough to tell you whether something is positive or negative antibody tests tell medical workers whose immune to the corona virus so they can focus their efforts on the

Pima County Astrid
Sean O'Beirne

Published...Or Not

09:53 min | 4 years ago

Sean O'Beirne

"Short stories are the perfect way to address a range of issues in an immediate and succinct. Way Sean Ben has done just that in his collection entitled a couple of things before the end so sean welcome to three. Ci thanks very much for having me. Now what sort of did you have in mind? It's a bit ominous sort of title. Yea Well I wouldn't be the person I mean just about everybody's GonNa soonest ought to be thinking about what the next ten twenty thirty forty s log and if you begin to read even in the mainstream press you'll start to get warnings that if the sky gets full of more particles that make the earth hotter and hotter parts of the Middle? Part of the Earth are going to become more or less uninhabitable this century and serious water and food shortages will come along with that. I mean this is nothing else but what anyone who gets anyway. Nissim Sci. He's starting to tell us Now then the question would come. Kenneth fiction serve that what can fiction do Without saying the same thing over and over but what what to do with that was really interesting to me was what would the people I grew up with. I love And also people who weren't exactly like the people I grew up with. How are we all going to be with this? What he's going to happen to to quite the people I really know once serious privation serious shortages dot to happen all around us. There's one story at the end Bunka which goes into that. We'll come to that one but there are other sorts of ends in mind here. The gained the a period in your life The end of communication is another one. That comes up. So let's delve into some of these stories and hopefully it won't be all that ominous Because there are some fascinating things here you did. The first story is called scouts. Were you ever a boy scout? I have to go ahead and say that I was a boy scout. I was a boy scout in the nineteen seventies I was very. I was particularly bad at sports which were an Australian boy his special problem but one thing I could find do with me was put me in cub scouts. And that work that worked I was especially bad at what we in. The nineteen seventies was called foot clinic Stood there disconsolate. A very small boy. Seven or eight years old in the middle of big muddy oval. And all I wanted was people might remember this. You GotTa be game at the end but for me it really was standing around in an hour on a on a baddeck not understanding really what to do with the football. I remember years ago. Michael Looney telling the story that when he was boy out in the country he was sort of Eilly united and confused by football. What you were supposed to do when the ball came down to woods him he picked it up. Held it to his chest and ran through the goals. Naturally as as one would. But it's a right of passage in some ways you know learning the not earning the badges miss but at what point do you sort of. What will does it come to an end? If we want to talk about ending but you transition the development there what was I suppose one of the things that got some pythons about being a scout? I mean they certainly some comedy as well but what was what was maybe saddle. Poignant upbeat about being a scout in the seventies wars you were participating in the system in. You didn't exactly think about lock these you'll participating in a system that was actually dying all around you which was the old British USTRALIAN loyalty. Oh British Astrid Unite. The revolt was valuable. Said they weren't sort of nineteen seventy seven nine hundred seventy eight nine hundred seventy nine a NI- uniform saluting the flag And trying to be sort of good junior soldier. Boys in a Y. Or at the very least the kind of good boy that you would have. That Biden Powell know if people remember Lord Biden Powell the founder of the Scouting Movement. But if you go back and look at scouting for boys it's the idea of kind of purposeful cleanliness in a little boy. That's also always turning into the effort to sort of locate and destroy aliens. But Tom and I don't mean I don't mean from outer space I mean the ones we leave this a militarist element. This is it. So it's it's playing soldier but it's also got an idea of self theirself idea of self control in it. There's a list of things that are good boy does that a scout does a scout prepared but a scout is also sort of honest in a tainted in some ways and I don't mean to mock all of that hopefully the thing about that stories. It's not all pissing from a high on the scouting movement. It's getting to something. Which was that? There was something in that I mean. I know we feel like this a lot now. But there's something in that old idea of self control. Which is such a daily on fashionable idea. Now the scouting movement held onto a part of it. But of course to us. It just looks ridiculous that you would wear your little uniform and your little hat and salute a flag on a Tuesday night. It's not so much ridiculous. One eventually which happens in the story eventually grows out of it yes and reevaluate says you grow older so it has its purpose in its place but as you say a lot of traditions a dying as well and they've got a reinvent. I mean the notion of a boy's group alone today. Isis audience changed another thing. That's changed the royals. You've got him on August news lead. There is an incompetent. Monarchist Focus Group pretty early in the and that comes out of the Scout Story too. Which is it goes to the whole idea of the Shia strangeness of trying to make an England down the bottom of Asia which we really did try and do. I went to London for the first time. Not that long gone about ten years ago. I had that thing that many many strengths must have had. Which is the shock of recognition that once you get through cock fosters on that train and start to going to London accord. It looks exactly like Hawthorne it looks. Exactly like Moldovan down to the last and you begin to understand why that you had before that we that that the F. It was really just to make these places again. The idea of Kemba well below Laos below. Papua we really tried for that and again I think one of the things. That's hopefully interesting about growing up. In the seventies I think the seventies there was a was a real transition time where that old idea that we could somehow Cape together an England down here began to break up and wash away and so and then then I mean then I think plenty of people listening to this would know this. But in a way the bill for that wasn't paid until the nineteen ninety s in the nineteen nineties. We had that exuberant Tom where we thought well. No no money in this and we'll just be Australian. It's all we can let England going by the nineteen ninety by the Howard years. You had the understanding that it was actually going to be something that we felt a lot more Sarah about a lot more angry about and we're going to punish somebody else but we still had politicians bringing back knighthoods and such luck. And that's you that's interesting but that was what was interesting about the Abbot Attempt. In about the time of that story about the top of that royal story where it really much to light now and even people that you wouldn't expect or the I thought the idea of Sir Prince Phillip and the first strategy night. All that's right it will be Prince Philip. Did you give Edinburgh that? The whole country in two thousand fifteen couldn't take that But just as Australia was reinventing itself oil or imagining its identity. Which is a growing sort of evolution. The monarchy is sort of caught in the same bind. Harry and Meghan done Mike it into the story necessarily only slightly but they trying to establish their own identity in a new ish. Can you hold on to the monarchy? This is where I think I mean. I think this is still true. This little against what I just said but I still think it's a strain schizophrenia. What you would think of is the oldest. Dr Steele holds a lot. Hold on a lot for monarchy and foreign idea of England that still does persist in one of the places it does possess these in those people in that royal family in the Queen and to some extent. Now I mean we tried Diana but now much more and William and Kate but the thing that Tom the thing about that he says it's just getting hotter and hotter for any family any group of individuals to actually be able to carry off what you need to do to be a barely successful enough royalty in the face of the sheer amount of virulent attention that the entertainment system is GonNa WanNa put on you. It's it's pretty much going to be impossible to be monarchy in the next fifty but also the the monarchy speaks to a tradition that goes back centuries which hasn't necessarily evolved and changed with the Moore's that go on today which is it's appeal. Which is the thing we desperately hope for that. You could point to any one group of things and say you want change will you? You'll stay the same. You promised The problem is is that as you say with them. What Harry and Megan is it. They couldn't take the deal that will often because the deal starts to get so strange which is listen. You'll be a representative of what is good in a sense. He's more self control. This idea that we're after over and over again but at the same time will pretty much persecute and you will be at you all the time. You'll open your door in the morning and hundreds of us where we tried to watch you and I I can't understand. I don't get a sense of whether this is to their credit or not. They just refuse that. Were like this is so awful. This is more or less like a kind of strange it privileged. But it's also a persecution and can leave. Just leave

Scouting Movement England TOM Sir Prince Phillip Harry Football Sean Ben London Monarchist Focus Group Biden Powell Asia Edinburgh Michael Looney Representative Laos Lord Biden Kemba Papua
The Rise of Ecofascism

Think: Sustainability

04:05 min | 4 years ago

The Rise of Ecofascism

"Looking. And how the climate it crisis fuels ECO Fascist ideology and how some of those narratives already exist in mainstream politics. You're listening thing to think sustainability. I'm Julia Cockatiel. So lost time. We defined Eaker Kerr Fascism as the belief in racial purity as the only way to save the planet thus eaker fascists place the wellbeing of the earth nature. HR and animals at the forefront of their ideology and although eaker fascism draws on ideas dating as far back as the nineteenth century the contemporary context specifically the climate crisis has given the ideology. And you edge. Astrid is gone from Gazing at its nive home to a three years ago to the midst of a huge crisis in Tosa Faez and they'd rather than agricultural catastrophes and song. I think we're going to see them. Rise quite dramatically. These ecologically focused Sort of Fascist taught the the end of the wound is coming. We have to cybele solve taught movements. Betsy Hoffman Emeritus Professor of Development Studies at Hampshire College in Massachusetts agrees that apocalyptic narratives the articles spurred on by the climate crisis. Give Echo fascists a new sense of urgency here in the United States. There's a real tendency toward Still toward apocalyptic schism this ECO fascist view. That were you know approaching some kind of major conflagration or the end of the world old especially around climate change now in the environmental movement as we discussed in pot one anti overpopulation specifically by non non Anglo. Nonwhite immigrants is at the core of the fascist argument more extreme ideologies and philosophies will become more and more attractive partly partly because of global warming and And partly because there is a reality associated with population growth. You know that as the world's population grows its capacity to support the number of people Declines this idea of immigrants washing up on the shores of the West. I arriving to destroy new land after the degradation of their own is the common narrative for pated among ECO fascists in the climate crisis these immigrants are known as climate refugees mean. Climate change is bad enough as it is. It's urgent enough is it is is you know you look at the forest fires you can look at Melting ice you don't need to then make it look like all these poor people. In the Global South South are gonNA come across our borders you know a bleak future scenarios of millions and millions of climate refugees roaming across international borders creating havoc climate refugees or environmental migrants those who forced to abandon their homes due to environmental degradation or extreme weather events experts estimate that climate change is likely to displace between one hundred and fifty and three hundred million people by the middle of the century. But Betsy says most of the conversation related to climate refugees is alarmist and misleading are so many people really going to be flooding across borders. Orders most Migration will probably be within countries. Not accost borders. Why is migration happening? Migrations Complex questioned. There is likely to be climate related late in migrating. There already is but it's complicated there. A range of other factors involved in people's decisions to migrate behind the Fascist Lens. Those was occupying the Global South A- causing environmental degradation when in reality those living in poverty being forced to migrate because also the actions of those on the other side of the world

Betsy Hoffman Emeritus Profess Julia Cockatiel Tosa Faez United States Hampshire College Betsy Astrid Massachusetts
How to use Apple Podcast with your Alexa devices

AppleVis Podcast

07:22 min | 4 years ago

How to use Apple Podcast with your Alexa devices

"This podcast. I'm going to show you how to use apple podcasts on your Alexa devices now now apple and Amazon have been working closely together to make things more integrated for apple users with her Alexa devices. So in the past we have seen seen apple. Music have been comprised in part of the electric devices. And you're able to access Alexa Devices via Bluetooth. Was Your Iowa Iowa devices as well and now we have the presentation of offering apple podcasts. On your election devices. Why something you'd be interested in? Hey Thomas I can do that. I can ask for podcasts on election devices. But what makes us different. Well I'll tell you what makes us different I for one apple bringing apple podcasts. Impart integration with your election advice is not only. Does it angry something even more but it also. Oh syncs with your apple podcasts. Across the IOS devices meaning that every show that you listen to every thing that you finish finish oriented process of listening something we'll be across your irs. So if I continue on my elective vice and then I want to pick it up later on my iphone on it can do that now. That's one of the reason. The other reason is apple podcasts. Also present over eight hundred thousand different types of podcasts and brings is it straight to your Alexa device now before we proceed on the veil ability of this feature is not available in all countries at this time. So check to see if your country is is eligible for this feature. It is a very easy process now. The first thing you have to do we have a two step process the first step you have to tell Alexa how to use apple podcasts. I'm GONNA show you how to do that. And then second is using the actual Alexa devices to hear all the various commands. Do you have at your fingertips so let's start with Alexa APP itself. This is on your eye west. You have to download your Alexa APP. And we'll begin gin and let's find the Alexa APP here Amazon Alexa double tap to open. Okay Dole tapped open weather forecast for Lee's summit provided by ACCUWEATHER DOT COM now. This is very similar process what we did when we added the apple music to the Amazon Echo at the top left issues the menu button and you but go ahead and do one finger double tap on that advice but now we're going to swipe to the right into we could do settings settings but once we arrived here double tap settings voice responses now. We're looking for music. An podcast sort of swiped to the right communication music and PODCASTS and double tap music and pop music and podcasts. Amazon Music Amazon music. Now I'm GONNA switch to we get to link new services link news service button once you find the link link new services but double tap link link service Sirius Xm l.. Let's continue to apple podcasts. Double Tap apple podcast apple podcasts star rating and I will go to the right to use but in double tap on enable enabling skill Alex S and then once you enter your credentials or if you already have in your credentials. They won't ask for it. You're going to hear something like this. PODCAST service obviously. We WanNa make this default podcast service. When every time time he asked the lady for a podcast is going to use this apple podcasts? Instead set your favorite podcast service fault in music and podcasts settings selective service double tap if if all services all right. Now we're GONNA go to the right into the podcast area. PODCASTS heading there it is so we got to the PODCAST ear. No no go to the right Alexa. Resume my podcast. Selective service and double tap apple podcasts. And we're going to double tap on Apple. PODCASTS US. What we want to make default apple? podcasts elected apple podcasts and there we have it now. Let's get back out of here just to make sure it takes effect back button attack apple podcasts and we are now done. So let's head over to the Aleady device here. Now you can ask for any of your favorite podcasts. You have an and apple. PODCASTS luxa played dot dot podcast playing dot dot a daily five minutes echo demo from Alexa from apple. PODCASTS playing the latest episode. DTD Ten sixty eight alphabet game a new skill every day. So as you can hear I invoked the podcast. I wanted to listen if he had never heard of dot dot give that one a world. You may hear me on from time to time if you'd like to resume where you just left off Alexa. Play DOT DOT podcast. Here's dot to dot a daily five minutes echo demo. I'm from Alexa from Apple. podcasts resuming the latest episode. DTD Ten sixty eight alphabet game. Stay we are looking at a skill. Called our for that game You're currently playing the latest episode profession. A country previous plane de ten sixty seven pet buddy new scale every day. Stop and of course you've got all the various things so of course you can do. Applebee's APP AH just exactly what I'm GonNa do next tried that Alexa Open. APPLEBEE's getting apple podcast from Apple. PODCASTS playing the latest episode Applebee's Unleash December Twenty nineteen. Where are my flying cars and then we have? Oh everybody stop on. Can you ask for podcast it. You're aware of an no of you can also ask for specific categories. Such as give me the top rated podcasts on travel technology science food and many more. So there's lots of different things you can ask her so astrid yard their Alexa. Give me the top rated science podcasts. On Apple podcast getting science fiction rating system from Apple. PODCASTS playing the latest episode onto seven hot tub time machine to stop stop and sometimes you may get the Amazon podcast instead and that will happen from time to time. So you've got to be very specific. And so we'll just say apple podcasts on the end of things so that will make sure that she is using your apple podcasts or the apple podcast skill as enabled Alexa. Give me the latest elitist technology podcast on Apple podcast. Playing the latest episode of Ted Talks Technology from Apple. PODCASTS playing the latest episode. How I'm using biological data to tell better stories and spark social change? Heidi Boisvert Stop Tom and they have it. It is pretty simple to set up as I showed you in the beginning of this podcast. How to set this up as a skill? And now you have apple podcasts. Integrated a part of your election

Your Guide to Chennai, India

The Amateur Traveler Podcast

11:34 min | 4 years ago

Your Guide to Chennai, India

"Welcome to the immature traveler. I'm your host Chris Christensen. Let's talk about tonigh- I'd I'd like to welcome the show. Amanda from millennial traveler that's traveler with two l's the UK way. Amanda welcome the show whilst thank you so much for having me I I guess in Amanda has come on to talk about southern India tonight. Hi Amanda what's your connection with tonight. Well I must say that I got introduced. I used to southern India specifically because they actually had studied abroad with friends that came from China and years thereafter. They were continuously inviting me to go India. So when I found myself in Southeast Asia I decided to take a detour and reconnect with old friends and get a local point of view about Saddam City of Chennai in. Why should someone tonight India? First of all it does break a lot of the stereotypes regarding India. It it is much more of a spacious city than you would find other cities like Delhi and Mumbai. So I would say it's much less chaotic of an atmosphere. Secondly it also also been ranked one of the most safest cities within India as well as Southeast Asia and also in regards to safer steady for woman so I think that should be appealing feeling initially because I know some people have a lot of hesitation about traveling to India in general good least solo travel especially for some people that's a real barrier. Yes indefinitely so I would say if you want to start traveling in India I definitely go to China as your starters because it has been ranked for its quality of living. I'm safety nece as mentioned well I should say this is not our first show on India and so people can go listen to those what we do actually have one on solo travel for women. I'm Andy if you go way way. Way Way. Back in the archives put a link to that in the show notes. And what kind of do you recommend. I think China is the city. It's not too overwhelming. So you can literally explore the city with about four days and I would say there could be actually left for travelling to the outer parts. I definitely want to get into now for the actual days in the city. First and foremost you need to go to Marina beach which is really a world famous beach because it is indeed the second largest urban beach in the world which is pretty amazing and has such character and charm. There you can find a lot of carnival style L. activities going on as well as it's really awesome being a coastal city that I is you got to witness the fishermen if you wake up earlier of getting their catch of the day and honestly if you can do that and you get to the mark sometime. You'll have some of the freshest seafood you have ever tasted on earth. What thing I should have said before we got into the it is? There's going to be some confusion for some people who are more my age than yours who may not have heard of tonigh- but may have heard of the city of Madrid us and this is the same city. Change the names in one thousand nine hundred eighty six icy so some people don't realize that we're talking about a place they have heard of but that the beam has changed since they had it in elementary school geography or wherever. Yes exactly yeah. The excellent point to make and so the money will generation ration- May know it as tonight but yes. It was formerly known as Mantras that is true so everything has changed. Of course airport name would have changed. The railway station had been Chennai central railway but now has a very complicated name as of this year so can't pronounce that one but that's worth visiting as well. The railway station is amazing. Amazing okay so this old colonial style railway station. I'm guessing then neo Gothic architecture. Quite amazing I believe is built by a European European architects. If I'm not mistaken as one of the most fantastic rarely structured life seen so. You're a fan of that style of architecture or railway stations. The people were passionate about that. It's great and it's the main connecting hub to other cities edge. The train station which I actually took to go to Banglore India which is in a different state China itself being in Tamil Nadu and in addition to that I would also highly recommend going to the Saint Thomas Cathedral Fedral also known as the Sand Tom Cathedral it has a lot of biblical history. Actually being that in fact Thomas one of Jesus's disciples both his last ministry in India China specifically so they built that Cathedral shrine dedicated to him so I thought that was also very amazing and a great historical account of one of these disciples. Let's go back up into this a little more details so when you talk about going to the beach we're going to the beach for usual. Usual beach activities. Are we swimming in. The water is clean enough safe enough to swim in our their water sports. Are we sunbathing. What are we doing when we go to the beach? Besides you mentioned some festivals or other things that are going other one appeal again especially for seafood. Lovers is to come early in the morning anywhere between three or six. Am Ems you can actually wash the fishermen at work. They don't go too far out and then they'll bring their catch. The back sell it out the stalls in the marketplace so it's quite bustling there in terms of the food stalls and that's where you can get some of the finest seafood in India and might be one of the greatest in the world. I personally tasted so. That's something exciting to see their the fishermen activity that takes place as well as the carnival activities. That are there SPO- boot fishermen pulling the Rotunda. The short oh come all borough fishermen and that's what makes it so amazing so these people are obviously doing it for a living and you can see the whole marketplace action. There offers everything from actually getting the catch the day I just selling it directly to the Marquis. Sol's to having your food freshly prepared right in front of you might early. Indication here is that we're GONNA talk about food more than once in this episode guests and quite a few restaurants as well as city is very centered on food and seafood. I of course in particular being nut. It's a coastal city of India. Okay well in food in southern India being different food in northern India. But I think we'll save that for just a a little bit so you took us to the railway station. You took us to the Cathedral. Anything specific we want to say in terms of the railway station were an instagram opportunity. Is there anything else we want to do. Were there well the side that I was thinking of course instagram opportunity. I guess I what structure isn't nowadays. But that's where if you want to find yourself taking a day trip and not having to drive directly out of state. That's a great link to the popular route between Bangor and Bangalore is a very popular steady. My friends friends constantly go on weekend trip from China by car or by train. So that's the thing definitely. Is this worth noting. If you WANNA go beyond Chan I definitely make use of that rally station. The next one and then we'll get back to Bangalore just a little bit in terms of your side trip and then again in terms of the cathedral anything else you WanNa say in terms of things. Should we do a tour the cathedral or just go. Is there anything specific sites. You WanNA point four probably be necessary. It's quite small. Typically if you arrive during the daytime I would say it's fairly empty but it takes you back to your up. I mean whoever has been to the European cathedrals it's definitely that a European style and stained glass asked windows transported on this. They didn't realize I was in India anymore. And then the lower level if you want to make sure you go and check out the strike and like I said of Thomas. The disciple which I thought was pretty incredible. Somebody read about in the Bible and now we're actually standing in the last place. He was next four. We completely clearly leave Marina beach because Saint Thomas Visuals. Not Too far from there musty as well actually the lighthouse and you'll get a spectacular view of the entire beat this aerial view. And what's great about this. Lighthouse is one of the few in the world that actually have an elevator. So you have a fear of heights. It's not not a problem. Furthermore if you WANNA see one of the most famous Hindu temples within the city make sure you go to I hope I don't butcher this name but the capillaries swatter Campbell. Now I have to say I did expect it to be more. Grandiose incised According to local friends and Torres is definitely the most most a frequent did tumble and most famous temple within the city of Nine however I just WanNa make note for tourists as we are indeed foreigners. You won't get to. You have entry into this Ryan side. Just make sure people know that when they go in you can enter the temple. Few move your shoes. And if you're dressed appropriately be won't be able to get astrid entry but if you're curious about that and you want to see where the local people go. This is the most wickets in temple and the outside of it is fairly intricate. An an interesting is probably the right word in terms of all the different figures on this temple. If I've got the right one that I'm thinking of Yes. It is fairly detailed so definitely you can and make a pitstop there. I think that isn't a mile of Hor. Neighborhood was also a great neighborhood to explore the temple in a great neighborhood to explore. What particularly Eh would you recommend that we look for or do or in that neighborhood so in this particular neighborhood there are some great food stall can go to you so again? Taste the local food. They're selling their which will definitely vary from what you'd get in northern India cities like Delhi for example. So that's really great for their in the morning you can check out the south Indian breakfast and have dosa which is this is very flat. Thin layered pancake would remind you of a crepe but but a different texture. So that's something really great to try for their as well as looking for any kind of souvenirs related to the Hindu temple related to you. The dress buying stories for example. It's a perfect place to go from Bulle. Shopping food is do so for breakfast. Eaten with anything else. This is like a pancake so is fresh off the griddle the food stall or do you have it with something. I don't know well even have it either way. Actually but typically I guess it can be served with Chutney. So in my case thing I was introduced in two by the southern Indians is the coconut Chutney. I don't know how common it is in the north but I quite around coconut with other types of herbs and spices attitude so that was really delicious and surprisingly filling breakfasts to have anything else. We should grab from a food stall while we're into definitely you want to check out the Beer Yanni which is classic Indian dish one of my other favorites. I've found was the mango curry. And now this might be unheard of to a lot of people. Because I'll about. How great will curry taste? But through a monster. Ah Skeptical about this dish but it turned out to be really delicious and not very sweet at all. But Savory when we should say Brioni funded all over the country not really a northern dish. Basically coming from the Muslims who came in and very similar to dishes that you would find in Afghanistan for instance her for Pakistan although spicier. It usually probably down here in southern India. Yes you got like. The seafood versions is really well known own for seafood so then that will kind of make it more southern in styles than like seafood phobe more dominant in this

India China Southeast Asia Marina Beach Chennai Amanda Chris Christensen Saddam City Bangalore Banglore India Delhi Thomas India China Mumbai UK Instagram Madrid Saint Thomas Cathedral Fedral Andy Sand Tom Cathedral
A journey into the Chicxulub Crater

Part Time Genius

03:31 min | 4 years ago

A journey into the Chicxulub Crater

"The town of trip to Mexico it's a crater about a hundred and twenty miles in diameter it's about a hundred ninety kilometers during the created this crater was about six miles that's ten kilometers wide hit the earth sixty five million years ago in spite of these comments measurements the crater is hard to see even if you're standing right on its rim to get a good map NASA researchers examined it from space ten years before the nineteen ninety discovery of the trip to the crater this is Louise Alvarez a geologist Walter Alvarez a father son team proposed a theory about the impact that we know today created it they noted increased concentrations of the elements radium in sixty five million year old clay medium is rare on earth but it's more common in some objects from space like meteors and asteroids the cover is a massive asteroid hit the earth blanketing the world in a medium showers particles wasn't the only effect of the collision the impact caused fires climate change and widespread extinctions at the same time dinosaurs which until then had managed to survive for a hundred and eighty million years died out Doug Robertson of the university of Colorado at boulder theorizes the impact heated atmosphere dramatically because in most big dinosaurs to die within hours this mass extinction definitely happened also evidence shows that about seventy percent of species living on earth at that time became extinct die off marks the border between the Cretaceous and tertiary periods of earth's history which are also known as the age of reptiles in the age of mammals respectively today scientists call the extinction B. K. T. event after the Germans spellings of Cretaceous and tertiary the KT event had an enormous impact on life on earth but what would happen Astrid had missed would have led to a world where people in dinosaurs would co exist or one in which neither could live in a world where an asteroid whizzed past earth instead of crashing down with the force of a hundred million tons of TNT life could have progressed much differently sixty five million years ago some of the animals and plants that are common today we're just getting started these include placental mammals which are mammals that develop inside a placenta in the womb and angiosperms which are flowering plants insects that rely on flowers such as bees were also relatively new many of these life forms Dr after the KT event and without that mass reptilian extinction to clear the way it may not sound ecological niches to fill in this scenario today's world might be full of reptiles and short on mammals including people but even Astrid hadn't had them source other cases life forms come to think anyway sometimes our species had started to dwindle long before the asteroid impact led many researchers to conclude that the asteroid was just one aspect of a complex story other global catastrophes like massive volcanic eruptions in what is now India most likely played a role also the changing landscape as the supercontinent Pangea broke up into today's continents probably had something to do with it too there's another argument that the check to lab asteroid hit the earth too early to have caused the extinction researchers Greta Keller and markets Harding both concluded the impact took place three hundred thousand years before the end of the Cretaceous period Keller theorizes particular impact was one of at least three massive collisions Harding argues that the regulator didn't come to the church let asteroid from another event such as a series of

Mexico Sixty Five Million Years Three Hundred Thousand Years Hundred Ninety Kilometers Sixty Five Million Year Eighty Million Years Hundred Million Tons Seventy Percent Ten Kilometers Ten Years
Top jockey Eurico Rosa da Silva to retire

In The Gate

06:17 min | 4 years ago

Top jockey Eurico Rosa da Silva to retire

"Very few successful athletes get to win their illustrious career here's by going out on top a handful come to mind John elway one super bowls in his last two years with the Denver Broncos Peyton manning went out with a super bowl win I'm for that same team Ray Bork left the NHL team with which he'll forever be associated the Boston Bruins to win a Stanley Cup with Colorado and then jet off into the sunset it could be the same kind of fairy tale ending to the career of one of the most successful jockeys North America Eurico Rosa Dasilva who was written primarily at Woodbine race course in Toronto for the past fifteen years the forty four year old rider will call it a career sometime in mid December he's one six sovereign awards for best writer the sovereigns are the eclipse awards of Canada he's been the leading writer at Woodbine five times and won back to back queen's plates the Kentucky Derby of Canada in September he took down for what will be the only time one of the tracks signature races and by so doing wing now has a chance to cap his career with the Breeders Cup win they come to the home stretch the Rica Woodbine Mile Lou collina's Kliot down the outside of mass up the rails all across the track and L. Tournament coming through God's stormies in front to Second L. Tormenta Luke Collina's they're raging bull starting to build a run late in the latest what stormy that Philip Dodd Manta up the inside strides astrid L. dollars Meta on the inside and L. A. has one Rico with by L. Tormenta was forty four to one that day and now he's being pointed to the Breeders Cup Mile he'll no doubt be a long shot Swell facing the likes of got stormy Higher Power Uni and possibly circus maximus but hey a win for L. Tormenta over that group would be a real story book ending the career of our next guest Jockey Eurico Rosa Silva who joins us for a few minutes here on in the gate you've been around logging enough to know that forty four to one shots don't come in every day especially in grade one races so what was going through your head as you powered down the lane to win the Woodbine Mile Tormenta when when I was on the race what's compete under moment I was not thinking winning or or lose us me and him we both doing the weekend through two hundred race right and was completed on their moment or so folks all we want it could wire I you had not much experience with that horse before the Woodbine Mile I think but he had been a turf sprinter last year at age three free so what do you think made trainer Gail Cox decide to stretch this gelding out a little yes I think falling these horse he used to go to the elite before and he was a sprinter and you know they start taking him back and he learned how to relax and then they stretch him out and I think that was the key for him you know to learn how to relax and today he is I can say that they did very good job because he's he's not a horse to ride you know he relaxed that easy for you as we talked about an are open you're retiring basically at the top of your game made now the right time the right time for me is that I'm young to start a new business and my kids I really really want to focus on my family you've said that you grew up without family and you don't want that to happen to your three young children including a nine month old daughter congratulations what do you mean that you grew up without family when Noah's keeping my mom was always working I completed grew up Foodie much without my father and that's almost could create a black hole inside yourself you know as much I want to win before the races and I used to have a Lotta anger and I know in fewest I work on myself and that came from being a kid that most of the time King or in the street you know trying to make a leave and when I started understanding more that and I see how important for the keeps to have their baroness supporting them when they're growing up you know and because they didn't have that and also I want to enjoy seen my son my daughter having that with me you know he's not been better for myself I can say that when I'm not tired and I can take my keep to the park and play with them is very subtly fight for me because I raised for the time here and take a lot of promo body and he's very high from to do that well two things first of all I hate to break this to you but eventually those kids are going to become teenagers I have one and it's not really going very well so yes enjoy it all now while you can the other thing is you said you're racing here and you know as a top okay you'd have less trouble than less successful jockeys would booking mounts if you follow the money during colder months let's say to Florida to Kentucky but you've not real he done that it seems I believe once turned down a Breeders Cup ride to raise woodbine instead that day so what is your thought process for how you have set your skin Joel in the wintertime people think oh he's home he's that but you know I really work in myself I have entertained that work inside myself to come through to the recall you showing up on the track you know and he's the kind of really Really set the myself down and work on the brain I I really I never stopped working on the tire year I'll take two weeks like I am free as I'm not going to do anything and just deal with the family other time I use the time that I have time to work with myself inside myself oh jockey Eurico Rosa Dasilva joining us here on in the

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