17 Burst results for "Azran"

"azran" Discussed on Greg Laurie Podcast

Greg Laurie Podcast

05:09 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on Greg Laurie Podcast

"No big here. You are young guy painting a house listening to the beatles. It's a big moment in your life and then you went on to meet all the beatles you know. That was something weird to meet them in real. I never ever thought that you would ever be even in the same building as the beatles and then all of a sudden you're you're you have hit record and now you're in the game from the seventies you're the biggest rock act out. Well that happened just out of just you know. We just wouldn't give up. Yeah it wouldn't give up wouldn't give up and finally the producer came along bob azran. Who was our george martin. He took a bunch of good ideas. Good rifts and said. I know how to make this into three minute record. It'll get played on the radio and we went right. Yeah we're never getting played on the radio. We had fourteen top forty hits you know because of him. I watched a documentary about your career called super duper alice. Cooper and you know. I watched it. I realized watching. How ahead of your time you were in. You've been called the godfather of shock. Rock i mean all these bands like the motley crew's marilyn manson's the rob zombies. Many others follow. You can see you. Were doing that before anybody else did that. I looked at the who and i said. This band is so amazing pete. Townsend is the spirit of rock and roll himself. He just he's still nichols are bleeding. The window you know. And pete pete towns adultery and then of course he's mode with one of my best buddies who was the greatest drummer i ever heard in my life. He was unbelievable. And i said but this blank canvas behind them. And i said well. Why don't we feel that canvas another words if you're going to say welcome to my nightmare don't just say it. Give them the nightmare. Why not produce the nightmare so it was. You crawl out on this limb and either you're going to be a genius or a moron if it's a hit your genius if it's a flop big. What an idiot that guy was. You know it just depends on if you get your record. Played yeah and you met some of these guys from another era like groucho marx. And george burns. I mean like the actually know groucho marx. That was the coolest thing ever because once you were in once you had a hit record. It was willy wonka golden ticket. You know i. I knew i was going to meet the stones and the beatles and all that and that was the coolest thing ever because they were the nicest guys the bigger they were the nicer. They were sinatra elvis. Everybody and and then one night. Somebody says groucho chose coming to your show what you know groucho marx sitting. Yeah so he comes to the show and he sees it as vaudeville at that's how he pictured easily vaudeville so he brings. George burns jack. Benny and we look the on the corner of the site..

beatles bob azran pete pete george martin marilyn manson groucho marx Cooper Townsend nichols pete george burns sinatra elvis willy wonka groucho George burns jack Benny
"azran" Discussed on SGGQA Podcast – SomeGadgetGuy

SGGQA Podcast – SomeGadgetGuy

07:09 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on SGGQA Podcast – SomeGadgetGuy

"Yeah, from azran. It's a different conversation. One of the things I'm curious about tensor and pixel 6 is heating seems like that was an issue with the SDA 88 this year. There are phones that handle thermals better. But that often comes at the cost of performance. The vivo was a surprising performer, it would finish all of these tests and it wouldn't be screaming hot to the touch, but it rarely won. It almost never took the lead in any of my performance testing. But increasingly, I have to wonder, let's say I'm out in the field and I want to finish off a video. We shot all this content, I've thrown it into a timeline. I push render and maybe I sacrifice 10% of my render speed, but I didn't nuke the battery. I don't have a phone that's screaming hot to the touch. And it cost me 20 seconds. And I'm feeling like that is okay, so long as the consumer knows what the pros and cons are. There will be that person that photojournalist or that or that documentarian or that individual who's trying to create content with the most immune who's gonna need that 20 seconds. And I don't want to flip this conversation because now the pixel doesn't win my video rendering test now, I don't care about video rendering. It's not that. It's that there needs to be a choice for someone who wants the most performant phone and there needs to be a choice for someone who doesn't want a phone to feel like a nuclear brick. I know how to say nuclear. I do that for dramatic effect. A nuclear brick in their hands. Now, now we should have options. A top tier premium priced phone that doesn't get as screaming hot, and you just have to sacrifice 10% of your render speed. I feel like that's fair, as long as you know what you're getting into, you can make a choice between some of these different devices. Or like a one plus 9 pro. You need something faster. This phone will render video faster. And it's going to be crazy hot to the touch, but you're also only going to get 5 minute video recording clips and often if you're shooting four K 68 K or four K one 20, you won't hit your 5 minute buffer. The phone will overheat into the first 90 seconds of your video clip. Sorry. We're gonna have to get this Simon says hypno where the barrage of one plus 7 pros with defective pop up cameras that we were all warned about. Talk about a techy little gimmick that aged way more gracefully than I thought it would. From aditya, how our third party apps optimized for the high refresh rate display on the tensor. I can not speak to this as intelligently because I'm an audio guy. I'm hoping we'll see some kind of commentary from Erica Griffin. If anyone's going to be able to pick that apart, it's her. So don't harass her, but maybe quietly slide into some of the comments on her videos and just wish her well, you know, her family is growing and she's taking more time in between videos and more breaks for her mental health, but if you were to kind of politely nudge and say, I very much appreciate and respect your work and I'm hoping that you'll be able to contribute to this conversation regarding the pixel 6 display. I think would be totally appropriate. But don't tell her I sent you. So far, my experiences are anecdotal. And very simply anecdotal gestures commands UI performance has been good. There have been a few sticky spots like, especially in, especially in handling split screen, where I have one app, I dock a video to the upper quarter of the screen, and then I'm trying to do like a multitasking gesture to get back to another app that's already running in the background. Some things like that have been. Not stuttery, but you know as you're working with conflicting frame rates. So the phone is adapting your display to the video that's being played, it's probably taking its brightness cue from your video streaming app. And that might conflict with the animations that are built into another developer's app to manage transitions in their app. That kind of stuff gets weird and I can't intelligently pick that apart. That's just not my area of expertise. Yeah, Russ, I really need to spend some time playing with this. The offline, real-time translation is what gets me on the tensor chip. All of those automated speech to text voice transcription, the fact that it can work off of a data connection with the data connection off. It's still kind of like magic to me. When I saw how captioning being done to one of my videos of lax on the pixel four, that was magic. I genuinely could not understand how it was doing that in near real time and without having to send the data up to a server to analyze. The fact that that was being done on a phone was incredible. So if this is the direction that Google wants to head, where the pixel 6 becomes more of a ubiquitous computing cloud companion, I'm really excited because that's very different than the argument being made by Samsung by one plus, gaming phones, productivity phones, dual display and folding tablets. It's similar, it resembles things that we're familiar with, but it is a nuanced difference of smartphone performance. From Russ 91 23. Okay, this is a good question. Can this pixel 6 pro do four K 60 on all lenses? It can't in the Google camera app. Bug. So it does four K 60 on the it might not do four K 60 on the telephoto. You know, that's a very good question. So if I go into video and I'm doing, let me just make sure four K 60. Yeah, I shouldn't have turned it off, and I hit two times, I think four K 60 is just a crop from the main sensor. Because the pixel still does a thing. We need we need a camera app update. I can kind of show this off here. So let me go into photos. And this might worker might not. So here I am, I'm on the main camera sensor and I'm going to go to the telephoto..

azran Erica Griffin SDA Simon Russ Google Samsung
"azran" Discussed on Decibel Geek Podcast

Decibel Geek Podcast

07:43 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on Decibel Geek Podcast

"I wanna talk about is the the big big version of it The expensive one although destroyer vault kind of but well but they're split opinions on it if they did enough on this for the price for the price i put on. Okay let's see. I don't know nothing about it so i'll judge it so there's the two cd version. That's twenty bucks that's not bad. There's a to l. p. version for about forty bucks. That's not bad not bad. There's a to l. P. limited deluxe edition. That comes with a book and that's fifty not bad but then the the one that most people are ordering is the super deluxe four cd and blu ray audio edition blu ray. Yeah which is odd to me. I thought blu ray was all just video but it's The price point is two hundred dollars. Okay pretty steep but he the let me go over within this thing. So excuse me. So destroy your forty fifth super deluxe annihilates your senses with four cds i ever dolby atmos- and five point one surround blu ray audio disc mixed by steven wilson sixty eight page hardcover book with unreleased photos and extensive liner notes featuring seventy three total tracks with forty eight tracks. Unreleased oh well. We'll get to this The story's been newly remastered at abbey road. Mastering studios bonus audio includes the brand new beth acoustic mix loads of although it is dick wagner playing the guitar which is cool. Loads of single edits demos early versions out. Takes ain't none of your business. Plus the five twenty two seventy six -ympia in paris concert which is has been known in bootleg circles for twenty plus years is fried alive. It's been around forever A wealth of exclusive collectibles. There's where the rub comes in Including a replica. Nineteen seventy-six kiss army kit complete with original folder and the following items which comes with like the newsletter. The destroy eight to eight by ten to story press photo discography she gene. Polly's peter bio sheet kiss army member certificate kiss army membership card bonus items not originally in the kiss army. Kit include that will be featured in it included. It'll be featured in kiss iron on kiss army sticker so an iron on a sticker detroit rock city bumper sticker a destroyer cover sticker kiss on westminster bridge. Uk poster or brand new eight by ten member photos. Affoil flyer canadian flyer four man member trading cards even more collectibles kiss over. New york's skyline poster halloween seventy-six concert poster to destroyer tour stage blueprints on transparent bellum destroyer. Nineteen seventy six replica tour program. Gotham rock city news newspaper track by track interview hard in a hardcover book. Sixty eight pages. Overflowing with unreleased photos imagery the most detailed retrofit blah blah blah blah. And then the track list. Those are all things that are in the book or those are all separate things there all extra like shots. He's get thrown in not that that's a lot of stuff it's cool and then but here's the rub comes in with what's on the audio. So that's that's the only thing i truly care about. Is the songs by kiss that. I haven't heard before thank you. And that's the thing it's like so you in a lot of this stuff. I mean i don't know if you're geeky about demos as me but pretty much just about everything. On here. i've heard already dimos That have been released bootleg circles forever. Some of them came out on the gene simmons vault And then the the live perish show which has been around since the late eighties early nineties. I think so unless they've got like good audio of it. Well that's an everybody revered for a long time. And said i wish we could hear a good clean version of this and now they're doing it. Well that's and that's julian gills. Point is we should be happy that we're going to hear crystal-clear versions of that. But i'm in my opinion. The jury still out on. If we're going to hear crystal clear versions of this stuff. I hope we do. But i'm worried we're gonna end up getting the same demo quality stuff that has been floating around forever that you can get on youtube. So i'm i'm not ready to pull the trigger on myself so there must not be any more stuff from back then kiss pretty much. Had their songs winning recorded them released him on the albums. you know. They're not a lot of extra songs. Like you got smoke and things like that but you know those those been around you know. People have heard that stuff forever. Yeah they're just nothing nothing left. Did they not sit on anything. I don't think so. I mean because i mean everything. I'm looking at on these lists. Everything looks familiar to me. I don't there's nothing on here that looks different to me. So and that and like maybe. That's my fault. Because i like bootleg stuff but not everybody does so if you weren't a bootleg collector you might go crazy over this but so again just like everything with kiss. It's not for the hard core fans. Well and i don't know that that's fair because i mean if jillions right in it's crystal clear stuff then it'll probably be worth it but and this is not me being jaded but to me. It's like do we need another damn version of destroyer. I mean can't we do another record. Why does everything. After around this one album. I agree with you there. That bugs went on do something special with creatures of the night or do something. Special with unmasked even. Yeah maybe they got some stuff from that era but it's always gotta be destroyer. You know grown up every time a new kiss alamos coming out somebody would say what's it gonna be like and store. It's the next destroyer. you know destroyers. Not even my favorite kiss album but it for the studio original albums it's the one most revered by the general public. Which is because it's got beth on yeah and detroit iraq's highest. Yeah but i mean it's and they love the what bob azran did with them and i get it. I mean if. I'm in their shoes. I probably like like it that much too. But i don't know man i i you know and i hope it's a sign of things to come for the other albums. I mean if there was a deluxe analyze that came out. I would be all over it. But you're going to say crazy nights right off the top. Well that goes without saying. I'll be a first day buyer because that'd be cool to especially if there's extra stuff on there that you'd never heard before i don't. There's some of the argument here. Is you know a lot. There's some fans that are saying. Well i don't give a damn about a sticker an iron on a bumper sticker. You know they give me the music you know. It's just the true kiss fans. Yeah the music which that's kind of me. I mean this all this extra tufts cool. But it's i'm the same way and now you know and i'm very proud to this day of my thin lizzy box at that. I paid out the nose four. But it's still got a bunch of stuff that i'd never go back to i. I care about the music. That's all i listen to that all the time but you're not. I'm not looking at the postcards that came with it. I mean. I don't care about that in that case like i said maybe there's just nothing left to me. Oh maybe there's nothing. Left out there in existence christians. Act that you haven't heard so the only thing kiss could do is continue to make new music. Is that what you want. What making new music. Now yeah because that's it..

dick wagner kiss army Gotham rock city news steven wilson westminster bridge Polly detroit paris bob azran Uk New york youtube beth iraq
"azran" Discussed on Advent of Computing

Advent of Computing

04:03 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on Advent of Computing

"Its annual spook month for longtime listeners. You should know the drill but if you're just joining us than allow me to elaborate. I set aside every october on the show to cover spookier and scarier episodes in computing's history in general computers just aren't very scary especially not on their own. They touted don't do anything. You don't expect so. I tend to cover topics that are more annoying or inextricable than truly frightening. It's really just meant to be kind of fun now. In the past we've looked at spam mail and spooky mainframe games but the main say has to be computer viruses if you're having guests from title already then we're starting with episode sixty six viruses and the as far as i'm concerned computer viruses are really good fit for this type of theme there frustrating dangerous and they do in fact live in a fully digital world in the last two virus episodes. We looked at there really early. Roots the term itself comes from a short story called the scarred man. Written by gregory benford a lot of early history here is more in the written word than an actual code. We've also looked at the first viruses to break out into the wider world both on networks and early home computers. This time will be doing much of the same picking up in nineteen eighty-four. We're going to cover some theory. Some practice and look at a new generation of computer viruses as absurd as it may sound the overarching theme. Here is one of fun. Early computer viruses were written primarily for fun to play pranks or just to really see what was possible. This is truly in line with the hacker ethic these virus authors were using computers as a tool for expression and play definitely not as weapons that said we are getting into dangerous territory here so i guess we need a disclaimer somewhere around today. We're going to be looking at the first viruses that infected ibm pc's modern computers and a lot of modern operating systems have really strong ties to the pc era for better or for worse. Some general attack vectors vulnerabilities. We're gonna be talking about are still roughly applicable today. So i wanna be one hundred percent clear that this is a purely. Academic discussion meant for the purposes of education and entertainment. Most of this information is outdated but still it's adaptable so please. Don't go around writing in releasing viruses. That's one not very cool. And depending on the outcome it can be a legal. You can get some hot water for that. I don't want listeners. Getting themselves in trouble over my computer history podcast. I would like to consider that. Azran of computing is a certain type of subversive media. But maybe not on the level of getting listeners arrested which brings us perhaps naturally two the other big theme that we're going to be addressing this episode as more viruses started to appear the powers that be starting to get concerned some viruses start to have real world consequences for those infected and for the viruses creators. we're in this transitionary period where outsiders get exposed to the in joke. That is the computer virus instead of laughing. They don't get it worse. They consider a viruses to be a major and malicious threat. Which to be fair the are of threat. But we'll get to that later. I think it's time to kick things off and get into our third annual discussion of computer viruses and all their spooky fun and dangerous glory now. Who wants to talk a little bit about computer science. I did say this was going to be an academic discussion. So put on your.

gregory benford Azran ibm
"azran" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

Rock N Roll Archaeology

05:21 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

"I don't like this record. And i've tried it. I've tried listening to it several times. But i'm not a giant iron maiden van and never have been But i respect them. I you know what i like. I love but i you know i thought the book is also was better than this. And but even that's not so much great and i could have really picked. I picked the new one to talk about this episode. Because it's top of mind. But it's also symptomatic of their work with kevin shirley and kevin shirley been there producer ever since brave new world. So we're going back a long ways now. Several records and i just think they've gone downhill with pretty much every up every album that they've done with him and it's like especially this new one. The biggest thing that bugs me is like the base. Steve harris's bass guitar has always been like the loudest thing on their records. At least since. I started working with him. That's part of their charm. I guess if you're if you're fan. But i but the part of this one that really bugs me is. Yeah that's the case again but also nicos drums are way up in the mix and it's like wired the drums the highest thing in the mix on this thing and it's just it's produced so strangely guitars are buried. The songs are over long. But i am not going to get into the songwriting. Because that has nothing to do with kevin shirley although because we're just talking about producers here but it's just one of those things were i just don't i and i'm wondering how much of this is really kevin shirley. Or how much is steve harris. Barking orders and kevin going. Yes master and doing what he wants. I mean when bands get to a certain level you know when young and upcoming band and you put in the studio with somebody who's a legendary producer and that producer goes. Hey sit stay played. Ed you do it. You know. but there's a point in a lot of these bands careers where they become so big. Who comes in and tells them what to do. I mean a lot of our favorite bands have been to that point. Were to me the producers. Always supposed to be the guy that grabs the reins and directly. You know the animal knows where it wants to go but it needs somebody to hold that leash to get them to where it needs to be so that the final destination is exactly the way they envisioned it before. They started the quest to creating new music. That's right and so if the animals just dragging the the producer around all that's not gonna work so great you know and a lot of bands have gotten to that point where they're megastars now and nobody's gonna come in and tell them what to do. You know it's like the difference between you know. Kiss destroyer with bob azran and kiss revenge with bob azran destroyer lady and everything. He told him to do jump. How high here. We go got heels on jump..

kevin shirley steve harris kevin Ed bob azran
"azran" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

Rock N Roll Archaeology

05:55 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

"I like that. That's what he was going for. And i think they were able to achieve it because clones is a weird album. But it's not by far. It's not the worst album of the blackout era. I think special forces is one of the worst things alice. Cooper's ever come out with. So i think that's the one bob israel comes back and fixes but i don't necessarily disagree with yours either because i think in that blackout era as we seen because i think the last thing bobby done with them was what. Welcome to my nightmare. no lace and whiskey whiskey right now right. David foster did from the inside who did listen whiskey. Yeah baba's room so bob. Yeah because that was with dick wagner tusa lace and whiskey was the last thing bob as did with him and then it wouldn't be until dada that he comes back. So there's a break in between with a handful of albums that alice uses other producers on. But honestly i think they would all benefit and you know what the major the best benefit to having bob azran produce special forces. He's not free to help. Create music from the elder kiss. Yeah good point. So i gotta go get somebody else. That goes fantasy story. no no. We're not doing that. The only re- and i thought about as run for special forces. And i don't i don't know i don't view any. The that thinks zipper catches. Skin is my favorite of all those blackout era. And i like it. I like them all. But i almost picked as run for this one but the to me. I don't think this album lynn. Special forces lends itself enough to azran style to to make it as good as it could be. I almost think as men would have walked in heard the material for special forces and and just been like. I don't know where to start because it was so off the rails and it was you know cocaine. Fueled and and alice was a mess. This is cocaine's becoming a common theme here but but now flush the fashion though. There's enough of that. Old school. Alice cooper magic to it where i think would have made it a great record. I'll agree with that..

dick wagner tusa alice bob azran bob David foster Cooper dada baba bobby israel lynn Alice cooper
"azran" Discussed on Decibel Geek Podcast

Decibel Geek Podcast

03:07 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on Decibel Geek Podcast

"But when i think about could it have been better with a different producer. I'm gonna say would have In nineteen eighty else. Cooper kind of started what was known as the blackout era and Put out flush the fashion produced by roy. Thomas baker who was kinda hot on the heels of working with queen the cars and kinda. Had you know this kind of thin pop ish. You know style of doing albums and he definitely brought that to this one. And i think it was an intentional decision for alice to pick him as the producer of this because he wanted to compete with punk new wave which yes. That was the ethos of that of those genres was to basically strip everything down to nothing. And i do love songs on this record. Don't get me wrong. I think pain and clones like two of the best songs ever did sure. Rim facts is an awesome song Even like model citizen yes. Aspirin damages goofiest fuck. But i love it but it's a it's a great record so don't get me wrong about that. This is an album where i wish bob. Azran was still on board and would have brought his production value to this album because he knew how to beef up guitars. And and make cordell passages more powerful and and there's enough dramatic stuff on here on this album too especially with. Could you imagine bob. As producing pain sounded really cool. And i i just think it's It's one of those. Things weren't hindsight. I'd like to hear what would have done with it for the time it came out. It's it's perfect for what it is. Because he was trying to do that. Whole new wave. Punkish thing but to me. I'd love to hear bob azran. Remix this record himself and kind of beef up everything and do a modern version of it. That's pretty interesting. Because i think the blackout era around here amongst us is kind of revered. We like those albums from that weird period of alice cooper's career and when we originally talked about doing this i actually pick ten and didn't realize we're picking five and i did have alice cooper on there and but instead of that one i went with special forces but same thing i wanted to come back and do special forces because i kind of like flush the fashion the way it is. You know i like that. That's what he was going for. And i think they were able to achieve it because clones is. You know that's a weird album but it's not by far it's not the worst album of the blackout era. And i think i think special forces is one of the worst things alice cooper. Ever come out with so. I think that's the one bob israel comes back and fixes but i don't necessarily disagree with yours either because i think in that blackout era as we seen because i think the last thing bob done with them was what. Welcome to my nightmare. No wa- was it lace and whiskey whiskey right..

Azran Thomas baker bob azran alice cooper bob Cooper roy cordell alice israel
"azran" Discussed on Italian Wine Podcast

Italian Wine Podcast

03:31 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on Italian Wine Podcast

"I <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Music> think there are <Speech_Female> tons of articles being <Speech_Female> written about fox <Speech_Female> and all of a sudden. <Speech_Female> In fact i just <Speech_Female> heard over <Speech_Female> the weekend that <Speech_Female> andre mack <Speech_Female> who you may be familiar <Speech_Female> with who his brand <Speech_Female> is luton noir. <Speech_Female> Any he a bunch of <Speech_Female> restaurants in brooklyn that he <Speech_Female> did a piece on box <Speech_Female> wines <Speech_Female> for bon apetite. <Speech_Female> And there's going to be a <Speech_Female> little video about <Speech_Female> him reviewing <Speech_Female> a few box <SpeakerChange> brands <Speech_Female> and apparently <Speech_Female> sandy was his <Speech_Music_Female> favorite. So <Speech_Female> that's pretty <Speech_Female> cool. I'm <Speech_Female> trying to make a box mind. <Speech_Female> That is <SpeakerChange> for people <Speech_Female> who like good wine <Speech_Female> right people <Speech_Female> who won't <Speech_Female> drink franz <Speech_Music_Female> Or boto <SpeakerChange> box <Speech_Music_Female> or blackbox which <Speech_Music_Female> by the way are <Speech_Female> three of the <Speech_Female> top ten <Speech_Female> wine brands in <Speech_Female> the united states today <Speech_Female> so a <Speech_Female> the ten top <Speech_Female> wine brands in the us <Speech_Female> two day. <Speech_Female> Three of them are <Speech_Music_Female> bagging boxes. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> Right like <Speech_Female> that says something to me <Speech_Female> that says that the american <Speech_Female> public is aware <Speech_Female> of boxes <Speech_Female> and that there <Speech_Female> must be a whole series <Speech_Female> of people <Speech_Female> who <Speech_Female> are like <SpeakerChange> okay cool. <Speech_Female> Where's a box <Speech_Female> that i'm willing to <Speech_Female> drink. Because they're not going <Speech_Female> to drink that stuff. They <Speech_Female> want <SpeakerChange> farmers <Speech_Male> market wine <Speech_Music_Male> in a box. <Speech_Male> Okay we're running <Speech_Male> over long on time. <Speech_Male> Okay we're <Speech_Male> come to the end of our <Speech_Male> Session <Speech_Male> you're one of the things. I <Speech_Male> like to end my interviews <Speech_Male> with is <Speech_Male> what's the big <Speech_Male> takeaway from <Speech_Male> all the things that we talked <Speech_Male> about here today. <Speech_Male> The advice <Speech_Male> or the <Speech_Male> thing that would <Speech_Male> be a value to someone <Speech_Male> listening. Obviously <Speech_Male> we're people listening. <Speech_Male> Are distributors importers <Speech_Male> retailers <Speech_Male> consumer emmy <Speech_Male> all agencies. <Speech_Male> All kinds of stuff <Speech_Male> of <Speech_Male> the things you've talked <SpeakerChange> about. What's <Speech_Female> a big takeaway. <Speech_Female> Well <Speech_Female> gosh steve. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Let's for <Speech_Female> the sake of this conversation. <Speech_Female> Assume <Speech_Female> that we have a lot <Speech_Female> of folks that are <Speech_Female> either producers <Speech_Female> are folks <Speech_Female> on that <Speech_Female> exporting side <Speech_Female> of things. I <Speech_Female> i would say that <Speech_Female> one of the messages <SpeakerChange> to take <Speech_Female> away from. This is <Speech_Female> really creativity <Speech_Female> in <Speech_Female> your <Speech_Female> product selection. <Speech_Female> Right like <Speech_Female> don't first <Speech_Female> of all open mindedness <Speech_Female> to all types <Speech_Female> of formats. I think <Speech_Female> at this point needs <Speech_Female> to be had. <Speech_Female> I think smart <Speech_Female> wineries are <Speech_Female> her looking <Speech_Female> at diversifying <Speech_Female> their products. So <Speech_Female> you still <Speech_Female> make your flagship <Speech_Female> wine <Speech_Music_Female> in a glass bottle. <Speech_Female> Great but what <Speech_Female> else can you develop <Speech_Female> a. That is a <Speech_Female> product that is <Speech_Female> a shorter lead <Speech_Female> time right <Speech_Female> that is a quicker <Speech_Female> return on investment <Speech_Female> but that is <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> really suited <SpeakerChange> to <Speech_Female> the market. You're approaching <Speech_Female> today right like <Speech_Female> that is something <Speech_Female> that is that is <Speech_Female> different. That is ahead <Speech_Female> of a trend. <Speech_Female> Don't necessarily <Speech_Female> be <Speech_Female> so concerned that <Speech_Female> it's going to hurt <Speech_Female> your image. I think <Speech_Female> more than anything. If <Speech_Female> you can get your labels <Speech_Female> and you can get your wine <Speech_Female> out there. <Speech_Female> Anyway get your name <Speech_Female> out there. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> Dat is in <Speech_Female> and of itself is more <Speech_Female> valuable and <Speech_Female> also just <Speech_Female> the <SpeakerChange> you <Speech_Female> know from a logistics perspective. <Speech_Female> Having <Speech_Female> something <SpeakerChange> that will fill <Speech_Female> pallets makes <Speech_Female> it so much easier <Speech_Female> for your importer <Speech_Female> end <Speech_Female> intern your <Speech_Female> distributor <Speech_Female> to <SpeakerChange> to keep <Speech_Female> the orders flowing <Speech_Female> Especially at <Speech_Female> a time when it's <Speech_Female> just extremely <Speech_Female> expensive <Speech_Female> to get wine <Speech_Female> on containers <Speech_Female> out of europe and <Speech_Female> into the us. <Speech_Female> That's <SpeakerChange> a whole topic. <Speech_Male> We didn't even come <Speech_Male> difficult. <Speech_Male> That <Speech_Male> we won't go there. <Speech_Male> Okay <Speech_Male> so <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> Big thank you <Speech_Male> amy. Azran <Speech_Male> of the piedmont <Speech_Male> guy <Speech_Male> for being our guest <Speech_Male> this week.

"azran" Discussed on The Nicole Sandler Show

The Nicole Sandler Show

06:26 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on The Nicole Sandler Show

"Seamlessly from terrestrial radio. We didn't use that term back. Then but over the air radio to internet only and go figure clear channel went along with it so we did and i don't know i don't remember the exact date i mean. I've got tons of like articles and things here. We were featured in the new york times and the wall street journal. The chicago tribune. And of course all the papers. Cnn came out and did a thing when we did the changeover from over the air to internet only we made national news. We were blazing new new new horizons right early days of internet radio and at this point people were still on dial up so it was two thousand. It was still very early And so we went through a we wound up moving to another building. We bought clear channel bought. This other company called. Oh i'm drawing a blank now Oh i can't think of the name of the company but it was run by bob. As rin bob azran legendary music producer. He produced pink floyd's the wall he produced so many but bob azran look him up some day so he was running this internet radio company. That had luxuria music. I think they'd kabc dot com and then we went over there. We were channel one zero three one. We became a world class. Rock dot com. And so we were all under this. One heading clear channel had bought bob edwards company. But he was still there got. It's going to bug me. Until i can remember the name of this company and so Anyway so we're going moving along at a you know it's we're making progress but it was the very early days of internet radio and then the dot com bust happened. You remember that right everything just it. All it all turned it all up ended it it all just died And clear channel. Had to cut costs. And i was making decent money then and i was one of the first casualties so there i am. I'm in la. I have an amazing house in culver. city I just adopted. Allison so i have a toddler at home And all of a sudden. I'm told thanks but your services are no longer needed them. Like what So it was to make a long story short. They wound up paying me a year's salary as severance. Thank you for your service goodbye. Here's some money. go away. So i thought all right. Well let's see what i can do. And i didn't know what i wanted to do. I had no idea and i had. I decided that i was going to move to taus new mexico. don't ask my head is fogged up. Sometimes and so i was offered a job to program and do mornings at a very cool aaa station. That's the music. That i played in town called kato solar powered radio in two. And i'm thinking. I'll be like earth mother. I can go and have a life there. Well the thing is you can't go culture but that's neither here nor they are because i'm getting ahead of myself. The morning of tuesday september eleventh. Two thousand one. We were supposed to have a realtors open house and my beautiful house in culver city california that i was going to sell to move to towse and sleeping on the phone rings. And it's the real turn. He says hell hell of a day for an open house. And i just said what what's matters raining. And he said oh you're not awake yet We've been attacked. The world. trade center is on fire. And like what are you talking. He said turn on the television. And i did and i remember it as clearly as if it were yesterday i just i i you know i mean stunned and the thing is after a career in radio when there's a major catastrophe you go into the radio station when you work in media that's what you do when we had the big northridge quake in la. I was off that day and my car was stuck in the garage. Because i had no power but a neighbor drove me to the station. Because that's what i that's what you do in this business. I had no radio station to go to had been out of work literally for what two weeks. Maybe three weeks and i was. I was enigma. Digital thank you corinna. That was it a 'nigma digital that was the name of it. That was the name of the internet company. The bob head where we had the internet radio stations it was in santa. Monica was lovely little studios. Anyway i digress. So i i'm i'm just like okay. I guess we're not having an open house today. Oh my god. We're at war. And i'm sitting there just glued to the television alison at this point is too. She's a baby. She doesn't know what's going on and i am. I'm freaked out. And i didn't know what to do with myself again because i didn't have work to do so i i you know i went it. I i dealt with the day i had. But it's so weird watching this thing on net flicks this movie turning point. I felt the same thickness in my stomach. And it's not just your typical nausea. It's a visceral reaction last night. We're watching this. And i'll tell you something. The whole opening sequence is of the you know twenty minutes or so between when the first plane hits and when the second plane hit and then the the walls you know the buildings come down And i watched it unfold. After i was was was wakened abruptly from sleep i went into like disbelief mode. Not thinking at that point. Well shit now. I really better get out of la because who knows where they're gonna hit next and if they hit new york. La can't be far behind. And i thought taus new mexico. That's the place to go. That's off the grid where we'll be safe there. I was paranoid. Nobody knew what to think. So.

bob azran bob edwards The chicago tribune the wall street journal pink floyd the new york times Cnn bob northridge quake culver la Allison culver city new mexico corinna california Monica alison santa nausea
"azran" Discussed on Going Deep with Chad and JT

Going Deep with Chad and JT

08:03 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on Going Deep with Chad and JT

"That's sympathy game is correct. So that figure saying that. The sympathy game is a corrective to the toxic meritocracy. That we're in. Yeah i mean in a way a simpler way to think about it is like you know the the one version of the punitive meritocracy which i do think is tends to be more version that we're in it which is the successful people are evil version of it that version of it. Then you know creates this new currency in in effect failure suffering. Like you can't like you can't sort of show off that you succeeded because that actually makes you bad right. So what can you sell off as well that you are suffering and so in effect like i think striking the right balance and it's difficult to get that balance of like Pity but we can work. We evidence the goal from. Yeah in a mark of achieving it would be that we would be doing a lot less calculation in terms of like well the she really deserve the empathy because she suffered more. You know what it's like. It's like in a relationship when things are going. Well you're not like counting. How many things the other person did for you right like like if someone does something nice for your awesome and you do nice things for them and you're not like trying to make sure that they're like the even amount right and when that is happening when you're like calculating something has gone wrong i think similarly when we're doing these calculations of like we'll do so and so really deserve the compliance. It's like she's married to a royal and right that that's a sign that in larger dynamics something has gotten all right. I i in the comedy world. I have a hard time if we have like a jt. And i have like a career. Success whatever. I don't want to tell anyone about it. You know what what do you think that is. I think a lot of it is. I don't want them to dislike me in sort of our comedic meritocracy world. What do you think is the creates that within me some accents. Yeah i mitch. Perfect sense to me I think that. I mean first of all. We have really strict norms against showing off And so So you don't want to be seen as showing off his like big thing right. I do wanna tell them. But i don't want them to know i want to know not all show so it's nice having a partner right so i think often it's like it's not that we don't want them to know we want them to know we don't want to tell because the speech act of telling is easily read a showing off and showing off his red as like an attempt at dominance or aggression. Whatever right and so you want people to think that you're awesome but you don't want people to feel like you're making a claim on their recognition of your awesomeness right. Yeah that's so good Gonna say shit. Well just pivot You you also talked about. What like a left-leaning version of jordan peterson would look like. Because it doesn't seem like there's an equal figure in that spot. Remember there is but i might just be oblivious to it but it doesn't seem to be as culturally impactful in circles that i run in one thing that i think i sent. It is that jordan peterson mobilizes gallant cherian sentiment to great effect. Right so he is. He is playing the leveling game way more than he's playing status gang. Oh absolutely so. He is speaking to people and addressing people who the part of people that where they feel like failures Addressing the part. That where they feel like successes in what he's saying is like look. You can have a kind of self respect right in. And it's not dependent on your being above other people. And i think that's what makes what makes journ peterson. So affected is precisely that he as though he's on the right and you might have associated the right more with the status game actually much more to leveling game and he even doing it himself right. He's he somehow. I feel very a person with people. Empathize his travails like in the past. Few years with his. He suffered a lot. It's evident that he's really suffered He he is somehow. He doesn't have a tone of superiority at all. Which is quite i think. quite remarkable. Actually he's very relatable somehow So i think that You know in a way if you're constructing someone on the left. What you'd want is somebody actually who mobilized status really well despite having a lot of egalitarian principles right. Yeah that's what you'd want and like. How does them do that. I almost feel like what you have to watch. Someone do it before you see how could be done. Really effectively But because i think you know one of the problems with being a kind of on egalitarian is like everyone wants to be special to in some way better than other people. That's very very deep thing in all of us right so Yeah but i. I'm not sure no but that's so interesting. Because like his the the instruction that he gives it always. I always think of when i think of him is that he says make your bed. And that's something that like. No one's gonna see you know what i mean. You're doing that for your and can do it and everyone can do. And it's all for your own personal like self worth and it's not contingent on other people and so you're saying is that the left wing version of that would have to kind of appropriate the values of the other side to make it as equally appealing. Yeah like maybe you can be way more anti-racists than other people. I think that was what you mentioned on azran. I was like. I guess i was just kind of like but i don't wanna do because that feels a little inauthentic to me. You know what i mean. I strive to anti-racism you know. I think that is in me but it to lead with that or make to make a competition out of it right. I don't think it's a great like it's sort of like look. I mean if somebody figured this out they'd be like a genius and it would be amazing. And so i like the idea that i could produce it out of my own head right. I'm producing a caricatured version right. So you'd have to really. I know it's only funds the question. But i think it's like you'd have to really actually do this effectively in the way. The patient doesn't effectively. Where you actually have to make people feel like this is like a legitimate source of honor a certain way and i guess there's so many people competing for the anti-racism title that it feels a bit oversaturated and i feel very out of place throwing myself into that there's people who do the painting on your walls behind. You says no room for racist. My dad bought this for me in mexico him of me and it says racism on it and i thought that was why he said it reminded me but people since then have said it. Just looks like me. And that's why he picked a offset is so. I think i was picking the part that i that i thought was more me but now i just couldn't see my face. Yeah yeah yeah well. We love to answer some questions with you right now from our listeners. But before we do that. I'd love to kinda get again your perspective on advice and how that's kind of intrinsic and podcasting. Yeah so i mean. I was really referring to something. I think my sort of objections to advice extend beyond podcasting. But i i was referring to something specific that happens in podcast which.

jordan peterson gallant cherian journ peterson mitch azran mexico
"azran" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

Rock N Roll Archaeology

03:37 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

"Paralyzed another underrated deep cut on the song. I love how it opens up with like a little mini solo jeans vocal. Sound fucking amazing and this. I don't know what's going on there with his vocals by love it the music in this song. I kind of said the same thing about spit the music it's like it's got the funk rhythm to it It kind of breaks down with genus singing. I think this is a really underrated song. It's got the breakdown that we're gonna talk about minus the rap that bruce played for us we're gonna reference again to our hundred episode with bruce when he played the rap that was supposed to be part of the song kind of like. If you're a rush fan talk about the roll. The bones I who ruutel. That's not a good song ruutel. It's the banks. It's not a good song Though the bone but paralyzed i. I've always liked the song again. The production on this album in the way everyone sounds makes every song listenable and enjoyable for me and i think another song another reason. I like paralyzed. Thou shalt daughter spit. These are songs that you never hear any way that they're not overplay upbeat into the ground by. Jean sounds great. I think it's a unique song Think eric eric is playing his ass off on this one. Very cool paralyze written by jean. Bob azran love the fucking chorused. This is what you would call a deep cut. Yes this is a deep cut and think this is a great deep. cut the repeat of. it's all right. Yes it's all right. I love that. I love when when songs do that. The repeated theme the repeated word at every fucking lyric off. It's almost a house and change type song meat for me. I feel very grungy totally eric's stuff. He mumbles something not so bad in the rap version. Yes you know that. I don't know what he's fucking babbling about there in the middle and nor do i really care. I am interested in what bruce played for us. Which was fucking awesome that he had that ready force when we talked about this song. Unbelievable it was so like spontaneous. That was awesome. You guys really should listen to that one hundredth episode when we had bussan. Oh yeah walking fantastic. And then the solo comes in. It's it's it's a lot of course keeps repeating itself but it's fucking great Gene says bob. And i wrote that together. Most of it was mined. Then he says this cringe if you want. I know. Bob brought down a black rapper to rap on it. Why does the guy has to be black. I know why. Can't you just say rapper. Gene the fuck dude. It never worked out like yeah. But bruce played it for us. Yep and you're right you can hear. I played this with the ear buds. On and i'm like i can hear a couple of words. I wanna be here. 'cause there's still there's still some kind of weird like tuned like auto tune lyrics or something going on to their during the break down but i i don't know exactly what it is can't really understand it but very cool tune. Yeah absolutely great deep cut. Let's move onto the next one. I got.

bruce ruutel eric eric Bob azran Jean jean eric Bob Gene
"azran" Discussed on The Relationship School Podcast

The Relationship School Podcast

04:58 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on The Relationship School Podcast

"So ads were co-regulate. Our children azran relationship. But then there's also you know your world of of of your love relationship being so absolutely huge in critical into the in regardless of what that formation is whether it's current or pastor co-parenting wet whatever it is Again like it's it excites me. We i think we both shared the we both did some of the wilderness guiding work and i remember being a young man and being out there and like feeling the intensity of all of these humans realities in having to somehow through them and we've them together and create space for everybody and i remember at the time being like man. This gotta be training for having a family and the nice. I don't think it was in some sense but now as it that like it's it's the scale on the intensity is so much more that yes. I think it was a good training but just imagined like after this call. I'm gonna drive home. And i'm gonna who knows what's going to happen but for sure the kids are gonna wanna play My wife is certainly gonna wanna talk and you know who knows maybe duke. Maybe duke didn't nap and so he's going to be really tender. Probably needs this from me and june. Might be a little edgy. And so it's what what a wild. What a wild riady right. Let's exactly everything to practice. It's all there's never not a moment of practice to to kind of final questions. Rapid fire style for me refer. You is moms. That don't have a present dowd. Dad's kind of offline and he's not doing the work and stuff if they're listening. What would you say to them as a way to get. I don't know like 'cause they're like okay. My mom does. My child need male figures in his life. like what. what could she be thinking about. This might be a cheap answer. But i would recommend a a safe approach to outsourcing that maybe starts with the mom herself having healthy relationships with. I don't know brothers friend's cousin's mentors co-workers right and some. I don't think a good place to start doesn't even necessarily need to be a big formal long relationship. But just exposure ri- just just exposure to healthy interactions with men. And it doesn't even have to be between that manager child necessarily but between your your child being exposed to your interactions. That sounds people is a good starting super helpful and then final question Is how important is your relationship with your wife to be in the kind of dad you can say all the wish crude like as credit at this at least it seems this as well..

azran dowd duke
"azran" Discussed on GSMC Football Podcast

GSMC Football Podcast

06:08 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on GSMC Football Podcast

"I'm getting better. I'm gonna prove to them just because they put enough faith to me and not giving up on me. I'm basically on a repay. Would i and outside of me though do goal regardless the super bowl respect respect king. Just one me back. maybe. I won't slander you too much. But you gotta remember. You still got boys on your back eric. Stokes in team members are waiting. That secondary is not gonna wait to replace if they need to all right so going to have to figure it out real quick and going up over to baltimore are saw the ravens quarterback lamar jackson playful in charismatic. Mood was put on pause for one question on tuesday Has jackson heard the talk that the nfl will catch up to him. This season Last week Jeremy fowler reported that people around the league have told him this might be the year that everybody figures out lamar jackson and he said we're going to see but i doubt it though i strongly damaged so he just wanted to be real player within like that you know between nineteen. He went up. Nfl ep. lena league touchdown passes thirty. Six rushing yards by a quarterback one thousand two hundred and six thousand setting the record numbers Jackson number dipped a little bit last year. And that's why everybody thinks that he's slowing down slash. Everybody's catch up with him. But he said he got something else up his package and with that being said Talking about lamar. Jackson his versatility. The league catching up with him understanding him. So you might wanna think like okay so what it superior back in the game these days. Well i didn't want to touch on that. And it just azran article that info quarterback council twenty twenty one ranking. In the top ten quarterbacks in so many different categories arm strength accuracy decision-making rushing ability more I just went to kind of highlight a little bit of that. While we're talk start off the show still gonna get into these games in what. The teams teams revolve around quarterback so guessing instead of just saying like. Who's the best quarterback you kind of get a better idea based off of this. There's some things in here. I found surprising. If i'm being honest. So let's talk about armstrong's now. I don't know how their misery ct or how has decided about how far smyth oh from one into the other but the first one is you know who are the quarterbacks during the ball vertically android Into windows with authority so deep down there right so number one. Got patrick mahomes than josh allen. Air rogers matt matt stafford rosa wilson. Justin herbert Deshaun watson riot. Ryan tannehill kyla. Mary baker mayfield aright straightforward. No ice I think aaron rodgers should be number one that he has the best strongest arm. it impacts be three Josh allen still good to calamari. Honestly i put a ten baker mayfield above them. And just if we're having so off. Why i think get better all right Obviously is the best of the best. We're talking about here so it depends on if we're having a good day if we're having a different day No one on that list necessarily surprise me that they're on it at all argued that and i'll say somebody that you know that they might have been overlooking dak. Prescott might be somebody that you know. He did receive one vote at least one vote. They have a section for that. But i think he could have done them on the made tom his arm. A little looser. Now maybe not the case now when it comes to accuracy to have gone from one to ten air rodgers. Tom brady russell wilson. Patrick mahomes shawn watson kirk cousins ryan tannehill dak prescott josh allen in justin herbert kane. Are you done okay. I mean i guess my surprise here is kirk cousins. Been at six. That's it I guess even if he is accurate against the decision making shouldn't have them up there can't we can't be on both of those who will be. When more games are who got the touch array tied for one. Is patrick mahomes in tom brady. Then we got russell. Wilson air roger dak prescott to shawn watson matt ryan justin hubert kirk cousins. Derek carr okay. So we're talking about touch you're talking about how right on the money flow toward to go drop right up in there. All right For the most part the list is fine cool. I like to see how some people are starting to overlap here who we keep saying. Keep saying russell. Wilson keeps saying aaron rodgers. Patrick mahomes does shawn watson. Thank you for that people might have been overlooked. Josh island stafford possibly all right And then another exciting one is field of vision now. Of course you might be like well who Tallest the shorts. You know tall one can see what they see. But it's always a little bit more today. You know i. It's it comes down to a little bit mechanics will will a quarterback audible out win. He needs to he diagnosis and understands different. Defensive looks and how quickly can he get you know through to that Vision see that. Come in because plays can be very quick Getting calls looking at the phil reading that. Make us which all that takes time. Now it's more general stuff but you have to seek quick in order to get that out quick. Does he get stuck on his. I re- too long when it's time for After the snap making it easy for the defense to get to or can't he skin the field and make the Defensive bite with their is in then finding open receivers. Well ladies and gentlemen the order for that one is and this is a very.

lamar jackson josh allen Jeremy fowler patrick mahomes shawn watson lena league azran Nfl Patrick mahomes matt matt stafford rosa wilson Jackson Justin herbert Deshaun watson Ryan tannehill kyla Mary baker mayfield Josh allen baker mayfield Stokes ravens kirk cousins super bowl
"azran" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

Rock N Roll Archaeology

05:21 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

"I don't understand this. And this is the same thing with double platinum always bitching like well all these producers especially when we get the double platinum and sean was bitching about what fucking What's his name did. Azran did on destroyer. It's like i can't get the same song. Louder somersault wider. I can't get them on this greatest hits without the fucking volumes. Shit everything being off and so there was one that couldn't moved and that was destroyer so then he had a change everything to make him sound like the sound. They added destroyers sound and it just fucking changed everything all the way down. I don't understand how everybody else can do. Greatest albums and they can make it work but just a tool them the most popular ones and they can't make him fucking all work. Well i think. I think the problem is is that they thought that what they were doing with smashes thrashes and hits was the right thing to do they will reintroducing an eighties era to class today classic songs. They totally discredited. People like us in the diehards that grew up with dressed to kill and heart of the sorrow platinum to tom. Not as bad naughty did they still with their theory. That i again somebody. I want somebody to explain it to me. Like i'm fucking two ural. How come everybody else can do. Greatest hits and they can fuck and lab the tracks out great but kids can't because every producer data different sound and i can't put it on the greatest hits because it'll fuck it up and like jesus rice. It's not that hard. well know double platinum. I agree with you on that. We'll get to that when we cover that but smashes they purposely did all this. They won only did but saying. It's just stupid stupid and that's right at the time it was great. But in retrospect like said thirty thirty years later however many years later p this this does not hold up. It's not a goto al because it sounds like shit. It's just well. The track listing the track listing is fucking great. The track listing is as i have no complaints. The track listing. You got i was made for love. You gotta heaven's on fire tears a fallen off. You got all all the ad here telling me now if we're going to go through the track listing. Yeah you've got fifteen songs including only ones thirteen can go on this. What's missing okay. Okay so well. let's do that. 'cause we always do that we're talking about is nothing from.

Azran jesus rice sean tom
"azran" Discussed on Hello Monday by LinkedIn

Hello Monday by LinkedIn

08:30 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on Hello Monday by LinkedIn

"For reshuffle with tamarin hall when the pandemic shit and workplaces closed nationwide many of us thought. How am i ever going to get my job. Done from home now with offices opening back up into hybrid models. Many of us are asking. How am i never going to go back. Do i really have to reshuffle. My entire life again is hybrid for me. I'm tamarin hall. And this is reshuffle. Cameron explores radical change to the office retail stores business travel and hybrid schedules in this new limited series. We'll see how companies are embracing diversity and how women hardest hit by the pandemic are forging their own paths. Follow the lincoln news page on lincoln to watch new episodes every tuesday. And we're back matthew mcconaughey. Hey for a long time made romantic comedies. He was great at them. He was so fun to watch and he had fun too. He made money but at the certain point he hit that moment that a lot of us well a lot of us find ourselves in right now where what used to fulfil him. It just stopped working. The system. hollywood was still interested in matthew. Mcconaughey the romantic comedy star but matthew wanted something different. He needed to make a change. I think we know inherently as humans. I think we know what we need to do. More often for the hard part is choosing window can put stuff off bump fuller for so long like him. It looked at as a quoting our love that keeps coming to rise to the top in the recent which is sometimes not about what decision you make just make one commit to in whom reveal itself. Because i've done it and dancing. Sit there and limbo. Well maybe maybe also a decade goes by and you're still weighing in like the dude just just jumped one way the other ten years ago. You know you'd be on paths. You'd have found it would have defined it so wrong or right. True or false. I was very successful wrong. Joy do but. I remember feeling like i feel like i'm just an entertainer and i was which won't be entertained. That's great value. I love energy. That's great and i. I know but i said i'm i'm not like i was bro- in my work. And at the time parallel might work the ramadan's i've met kamila. We've had our first child so now my life is by tau. I mean i feel. I'm my joy the ceiling of my joys. Muhtar basement of my anger is much lower. I laughed louder. love harder. i get angry. I mean. I'm feeling alive but my words not feeling that fire lies. He's got me sweating in my boots in a good way. Dave work feels like i can do that tomorrow. I'm like okay. that's cool. did you got some. You could just be like you did tomorrow. But i wish could i find some work that makes me sweat my boots like my life does. Let's go for so. Yeah that's those dramas i wanna do. Hey what about this for this. They don't want you. Well i'll take. I'll take Take a huge pay cut. I'll take an eighth of what that what might they sit on. Which dana can't do what. I wanted to block block. No no no no. No then i said okay. I can't do what i what i wanna. What if i stopped doing what i've been doing. Even though it's paying my doing more than paying my rent it's afforded me a lifestyle. So i quit june. The wrong comes and that was tough decision. There were tears many tears at the ground over that because was taking a one way ticket out of hollywood. Who the hell was i. What was i think. I come from place man. I'm i'm privileged to be doing what i do. I'm happy doing what i do. And my brothers for like. What is your major malfunction. Matthew do but they knew the way i said. This is what i'm gonna do. And i'd already talked about it with camilla. She goes okay. We're gonna do this you know you're going to get wobbly. You're going to have these days of no structure and nothing look forward to and you're gonna get a little off balance for stick with it so k. And i did for the first six months. Nothing comes in barranco. No no no no no no no one comes in at eight million dollar offer. No they come back to jim and dollar no they come back six point five million dollars no they come back the fourteen point five offer. I say let me read it again. So was so puritanical. That the number ten dollar. Mac came back and i read that script. Same exact words in the fourteen point five dollars for azran eight dollar same exact words but at that price it was better script okay so it was funnier. I had langas. yes. I can make this work anyway. I said no. When i said no to that i think for me and some somehow invisibly for the industry. The industry is out. He's not bluffing. he's really not doing so then. Nothing comes in no offers for the next twelve months. I call my agent every week. Anything since serve matt. You haven't even heard your day now. Thinking i did i just wrote to check it out holiday now at the same time. I'm gaining a little strength. Because i'm getting a bit of honor in the endurance in the sacrifice. I'm feeling with each day. I'm getting another little piece of arm. And i have a hunch. There's value in this very similar to that australia. If i could just go another day fat last this thing about endured this. There's a greater prize at the. So then i started kind of get jazzed on this. I felt like i was playing like you made another day without. Gimme another day without well when i got into that mode and felt that way it was now really considering other vocations for the rest of my life. What happens twenty one months since you were forbidden. Hollywood known as where the hell i am. I've been massing guys. Been forgotten or at least found anonymity. We haven't seen him guess. The new great novel idea for lincoln. Lawyer killer joe paper magic. My blood true. Detective doubts i and i was like yes and we just. I packed up our bags less than what we said. Let's go hammer. This is what i've been wanting to do. Let's go so i- unbranded. in that twenty month periods. Many of us have had to do in this last sixteen month. You brand dude. Then rebrand and i think for all this out there in this like what is this rebrand phase some of us some people have had to just keep their head of water the slack sixty month other people in companies very early on projected that eighteen months and beyond is we're making a pivot early and his pay an awful because they said oh this is we're now living in the future. They were saying that a year ago. Year abba this is the new future. Let's bet on but a lot of people just had survive so but now come out again. How's the world change. Don't go straight back out was because it hasn't. It's not how it was and it's never gonna be just out. Was what are the opportunities out with engagement. Also knowing that when we think i'm the only one confused about where the future is as we're engaging everybody else's still confused about where the hell's everyone. Everyone needs a little bit of amnesty right. Everyone's going to be awkward coming out. I was socially rented people outside a couple of weeks ago. And i was like. I'm feeling like this is weird. I didn't know how to socially so just know that everyone's got that and that can give you a little bit of relaxation now that everyone's in particularly same boat not you your own personal goals for the next five years like what are you. Where do you want to grow. Maybe particularly where do you want to grow that. We haven't seen you grow yet or be more me. I wanna investment time and energy and things that that that that feed mitra so four and if they do that they're gonna feed my family more and i believe they do that. There's been a feeble people. I'm still interested in playing characters doing films and be imparted stories at the same time. I'm really sayin' questioning will..

tamarin hall lincoln news Muhtar matthew matthew mcconaughey hollywood Mcconaughey kamila azran lincoln Cameron ramadan barranco camilla joe paper dana
"azran" Discussed on The Final Furlong Podcast

The Final Furlong Podcast

06:45 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on The Final Furlong Podcast

"For his own good But he's clearly tons of the. Bill is yes yes. He showed without some That when it said kemp's in natural. But i've assigned now at the end of last season that asks who's very disappointing I'm then on his return to surf. It's a european. May he was us. Well fund on again run news or risk. It's all been number twenty five nice In eleventh not taste so it could ask questions Us as said he's only have the three one one scene on the azran heroin sue them but he's to be true essentially nova. We know that. The formerly sean is not some is not indicative of his ability on a couple of Rebound and on yours. One of those transfer morse's Conran very early or other funds resources. Their career luigi bumper. Finish behind me. Y'all both kim either. Run run very well on the next stars You know that might be in. Alaska was his last. Ron last season Give annual seems of those transfer. Loaded horses Announced opened up to two trains horses on down. They say there's some something by the lead. A lewis should be absolutely fair. Some horses just never seemed to get on our seeing the Said in the wheels was spending from the star. Never got never danny purchase for whatever reason. A lot of voices just seemed to run. Not just you know ten shop widow form but still middle for me. stephen rundle kind risks also It's difficult. I find it the the by my friend but at the same time i could carpet you on You know i would certainly be happy back in with his form. Vigorous in us I last i last almost but it was wellbeing I'd rather than than he was finishing six or seven and having every chance are just suggested that he's pretty well handicaps. I'd always you know. I is often the case i think. Race stupid wave during the handicapper when of course runs by eagles has a habit of dropping. The times you wanted to. The this is not indicative of course to drop all or you do take the view. The defines i this joining kind for again. Being funny ibex defies. Is you know it's a crazy way of treating horses. But i guess it's know you'll get horses. Who disappoint on a regular basis. You don't you know if they come wayne lee at try. The horse studies romping connection than you. You can find yourself in a situation where you can never draws so remember the b. h. handicapper. Be cray yo mean. The team always said if a horse runs on the run so badly wrong country than we will never draw and yet and yet the evidence is those horses get dropped time always And it seems it just seems a an old way of doing things but some you know. Ideally you need to find a reason. is what you do with it. I i see the frustration for trainers. If you can't wait on your running so badly but it's not getting trump. it's all what to do with it. Leave the answer there. Is you need to find a risk. You didn't have a program races where you can find. A racing also be added on often. You'll get horses. Who are risked to the essy's but you gotta run them into clamor on a seller to prove the really it should be ready to twenty times lower because in order to get to the market should be. You've run them so many times that iran out of ocean An it works differently in different. Jurisdictions was different states in different parts of where we are we are hugely rely on the system And it has lots of issues like this. But that's that's fine us as a bigger discussion. Yeah i'm we'll be irrelevance race. We'll we'll be tackling some big racing topics on on monday show as we will also be reviewing the racing but there's a lot of stories to tackle the good old precocious come back into the spotlight again. Thanks julie harrington really appreciate that. that's fantastic. We were all doing so. So you're found section is going to be surmised prescott and long cider has tons of you know you just. He's he's cracking each way about Arguably a window me back Give you know you do to balance a lack of experience with this is potentially But some you know. There's a lot of upside upsides entity could be it could be group. I wouldn't be concerned. It's all about his a one hundred forty seven days doesn't bother you this season weeks but this is simone. Prescott is is a trainer. You always vision for better on house races. He wants to run them in so we saw some of the time. That fits their progression. Yep so he's got a horse race at fifty five. We thinks us capable of out. The statements he gets in my little doesn't it never is never liked getting eighth. June historically So you know as one of the last six tables to bring the bigness horses is. He doesn't mind running the nine in january february together. Qualifying runs in a done. A lead balloon into the summer On the five horses meekness is Turf debut at the age of four in july Would normally ring alarm bells about will be absolutely barbara this okay. So i'll do the bucks exact with some my uncle and soto sizzler and make an absolute fortune from thank you very very much or should that be known as a trifecta indeed so combination trifecta and see you all dubai folks one fifty san switch tracks the carl challenge. You'll be live on racing. Tv group three hour cbo heads. The bedding rubber cal who specializes with sprinters and jamie spencer on board..

azran stephen rundle wayne lee kemp luigi morse sean kim Alaska danny julie harrington Ron lewis Bill eagles The times iran prescott Prescott simone
"azran" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast

The Eddie Trunk Podcast

06:56 min | 1 year ago

"azran" Discussed on The Eddie Trunk Podcast

"Xm each and every day for rock. Talk if you're in the us or canada of course always bringing you some great interviews and some great content each and every thursday and this week is certainly no exception This week we have. For u k k downing former guitarist of judas priest talking about his new band cake as priests. The first track from that band has been released and that is hellfire thunderbolt which is out now full album and tour coming soon as well second interview a guitar hero from the marty friedman best known for his work on many classic megadeath albums. Marty has lived in japan for a long time where he is a very successful career as a musician tv host in japan he speaks japan japanese fluently and has put out a new album tokyo jukebox. I believe it's volume three and instrumental guitar records. So it's great to visit with marty our very international this week on the podcast. We've got mardi joining us. Live or at the time. Live from tokyo and k. k. Joining us from his home in england now k. Talks about will start with k. k. And he talks about his feelings about priests his issues about priest. How we'd like to have been back in the band given that. They're celebrating a fiftieth anniversary tour. Clearly that is not happening. So he's going about business with his own band as we mentioned called cake as priest. So have that going on with k. K. and since this interview was done priest has announced a more extensive tour for their fiftieth anniversary. What's interesting though is priests continues to show glenn tipton in the ads for their tour. We know glenn did not do much. Very little of touring last time priests played. we know. unfortunately glenn continues to battle parkinson's we certainly hope he's okay. We also know. It's probably highly unlikely. Glenn is a part of the next leg of priests touring and if he is it would be an very reduced role like he was before but they continue judas priest in their press release for their tour continues to picture glenn and also does not say in the press. Release if andy. Sleep will continue to sub for glenn tipton when the band plays live. So we're not entirely sure who the second guitar player. Next to richie. Faulkner is going to be when priests plays given the fact that the ad shows glenn tipton who be wonderful if he could do it but it's highly unlikely he can't and the press release does not mention if they are going to continue using andy sleep now. Andy sleep was doing it. More in a fill in role helping out the last time around and is by trade predominantly a record producer and had made comments saying he kind of really needs to stay with producing to keep that under his world going. But we also know. Andy loves judas priest and probably loves doing that gig as well so it's just a bit unclear because priests hasn't said who else is playing second guitar with them for the bulk of their live shows. I guess we'll find out when they start up. Or when they do interviews more interviews to promote the tour as going to go about his business. As you're about to hear he made a record. Tim ripper owens singing. It's going to go out and play some shows as well also interview number two. Like i said marty friedman and he's talking about his new record and life in japan and more so that's all coming up for. You will start with k. k. We'll go to marty if you're a regular listener of the sirius xm show. I mentioned that. I saw in advance of the first part of the coming kiss documentary. I would go back and listen on the app to the trunk nation. Show on sirius. Xm on tuesday where. I broke down the kiss documentary in it Here on the podcast in a nutshell. I'll tell you the first part that i saw as very good ace and peter do not participate with new interviews. There are new interviews with jean paul producers. Eddie kramer. Bob azran. Very well done. If you're a hardcore fan. There isn't anything in it. You probably didn't know already but there's still some cool stuff in there to check out and i'm sure you will enjoy it. A lot of there is a weird moment in it where they reference the peter. Chris would not let them use the song bath in the documentary so that's a bit awkward and uncomfortable and also the most shocking thing about the time line in it is that they completely jump from destroyer to dynasty and never go through making rock and roll over love gun or alive to thought that was really really strange given that those records when we're in kiss kiss the biggest band in the world at that time so that was a really interesting and bizarre move. I thought to to not even mention that period. But that's how the time line of it goes. It's a lot about the early days. It's a lot about wicked lester. Leading up to them breaking with alive and then it from there after destroying just kind of jumps to dynasty and the wheels coming off and really the big question is going to be part. Two which i haven't seen yet. A lot of fans are hoping they do a lot with the eighties period of the band. The non makeup era. I can't say because. I haven't seen it my senses. It's going to be about the early eighties. Them taking off the makeup touching on the mtv era and then probably quickly jumping to the reunion with ace and peter the wheels coming off of that and then a big hard sell to what they're doing now which let's be honest. They always like to sell what they're doing now. And that is continuing to tour. So there that's my prediction on the second part. But i haven't seen the second part. The first part i did see and it was very well done. However no ace and peter. No new interviews. You hear them voice over from old interviews. And it's very much and paul story and built around their story and their narrative as you would expect. Tommy and eric are in it in part one but talking about kiss from a fan standpoint because of course they were both fans before they were in the band. So that's coming to a. And i think it's june twenty seven and twenty eight more of the recap on my tuesday's show on volume and i'll tell you about part two when i do have a chance to see it. Okay let's get to our guests on the podcast this week. K k downing starts up marty. Friedman finishes it up. That's next eddie. Trunk back with you first up as promised downing here. He is on the trunk..

Bob azran Eddie kramer Andy japan Marty Chris Glenn england Andy sleep Tommy eric Faulkner marty marty friedman This week tuesday second part glenn tipton glenn eddie