38 Burst results for "Beverly"

DerrickTalk
A highlight from "KOUNTRY WAYNE's Netflix Comedy Special Was Not Funny...That's The Truth
"Welcome to another edition of Convo Over Cigars. I'm your host, Derrick Andre Flemming. Um, let's talk about Country Wayne, Wayne Coley. I've always talked about my respect for this man because he comes from humble roots and he's very transparent about that. He talks about, you know, being a dad, you know, raising 10 kids, things like that. You know, just what he's going through in his life. The fact that he was absent of a real father during much of his life. He talks about things like that. And I think that's what makes Country Wayne, Wayne Coley so amazing. But I'm here to basically give an honest review of Country Wayne's Netflix comedy special, A Woman's Prayer. Wayne Coley, the comedian who got his start on Facebook, he recently released a Netflix stand -up comedy special entitled A Woman's Prayer. The stand -up set is about life as a dad of 10. How to know if a woman likes you and why he keeps it real with Jesus. He also talked about his HIV -positive uncle cooking in the kitchen. Wayne has had unparalleled success and has amassed over 8 .3 million followers on Facebook. The 35 -year -old comedian is very transparent about his life struggles and that's what makes him great in my opinion. I also love his catchphrases, Jesus is popping and help is on the way. But the one hour long, something like that, Netflix comedy special was absolutely horrible. That's my honest opinion. I'd give it a one and that's being generous. Real comedians, people like Dave Chappelle, Eddie Murphy, Mike Epps, they are naturally funny. We're talking demeanor, their delivery, their stories, the way they narrate their comedy, they're just naturally funny. Country Wayne and I watched the entire comedy special, he looked like a guy who struggled to be funny, the entire set. The jokes did not land, the reaction of the audience was mediocre and it just was not funny. Funny is one of those things that's like, I guess chemistry in a relationship, it's either there or it's not. This Netflix comedy special was not funny and though some people say, I liked it, it was good, he did okay, it was his first time, hey, give him a break. Yeah, but the thing you have to realize is comedy is one of those things where there are different types, his skits to me are very relatable and they're very entertaining. He shows a little bit of everything, his relationships, relationships of other people, people like Mike Bless, they help the skits out, he's had Derek Jackson on there. I think his skits are amazing, I think they're wonderful, I think they're well planned out, they're well scripted but I don't think stand up comedy is Wayne's thing. I don't think that's what country Wayne should do. I just don't think he's a stand up comedian. I think when you look at guys like Lavelle Crawford, people like Chuckie, you remember Chuckie Ducky, people like Bernie Mac, I mean Dave Chappelle, Mike Epps, there's so many people, Cat Williams, that are just naturally funny. Stand up is not for everyone. Eddie Murphy, he was a great actor, you saw him in Beverly Hills Cop but you saw Delirious, you saw Raw, he was a comedic genius on that stage. His timing, his jokes, the level of comfort, country Wayne just didn't have that. So my honest opinion, I give the Netflix comedy special a one and like I said, that's being generous, I just thought it was absolutely horrible. That's just honest. You guys have been locked into another edition of Convo Over Cigars, I want you to check out his Netflix comedy special. We're talking about Wayne Coley, The Woman's Prayer. A lot of people say it sounds like a movie or something a little bit more dramatic but no, it's a comedy special. Want you guys to check it out and I wanna hear what you guys think. Guys have been locked into another edition of Convo Over Cigars, I'm your host on a Friday, Derek Andre Flemming, take care guys.

Red Eye Radio
Fresh "Beverly" from Red Eye Radio
"And friends serving as caregivers. The of toll the disease is monumental and no one should face Alzheimer's or dementia by themselves. Free help is available 24 -7. For resources and support, visit the Alzheimer's organization at ALZ .org or call the helpline at 800 -272 00. You are not alone. Between business life, social life, and her best bud Loki, Beverly has a lot to focus on, especially while fighting Stargardt, a blinding retinal disease that starts during childhood and gets worse over time. But despite her vision loss, she's hopeful because she knows she's not fighting alone. For years, 50 the Foundation Fighting Blindness has funded research into treatments and cures for blinding diseases, providing real hope to those fighting vision loss. And our nationwide community of local chapters provides networking and support for people with vision loss as well as their loved ones. Because the best way to fight against blinding diseases is to fight together. And for Beverly, winning the fight means on what's closest to her. The Foundation Fighting Blindness. Together, we're winning. Learn more about how you can help us end blinding diseases at FightingBlindness .org Visit us at www Thanks for watching! HotShotSecret .com Available at truck stops and online at HotShotSecret .com Hot Shot Secrets, powered by science. At Commercial, Progressive we know a trucker's time is money. And, well, there's a lot that can impact your time on the road. Like that temporary road construction that's been going on permanently. Every time those orange cones appear, the redder you turn. We can't save you from never -ending construction, but we can get you back on the road fast with our heavy truck roadside assistance available 24 -7 year -round. See if you can save at ProgressiveCommercial .com There's casualty a insurance company in affiliates. Optional heavy truck roadside assistance provided by third -party and subject to policy terms and conditions. Not available in all states. Red Eye Radio and our sponsors are devoted to trucking safety. That's why we are proud to bring you the Red Eye Radio Million Mile Club. We've been saluting drivers who have surpassed the million mile mark with preventable accident -free driving. By reaching this milestone you could be a part of an elite club of drivers who share remarkable safety records and demonstrate superior driving skills. If you or someone you know is a truck driver with a million miles or more of driving under your belt without a preventable accident, register online at RedEyeRadioShow dot com. That's RedEyeRadioShow dot com. The Red Eye Radio Million Mile Club would not be possible without the generous support of the fine folks from Petro Stopping Centers, Howes Lubricator, Motel 6, the St. Christopher Fund, and CatScale. We applaud the individual truckers and fleets who drive care and keep our highways safe. The Red Eye Radio Million

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition
A highlight from Advanced Nutrition Strategies for Inflammation and Insulin Resistance
"Hello, and welcome to the Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition Podcast, the show designed to give you science -based solutions to improve your health and life. I'm Dr. David Jockers, doctor of natural medicine and creator of DrJockers .com, and I'm the host of this podcast. I'm here to tell you that your body was created to heal itself, and on this show, we focus on strategies you can apply today to heal and function at your best. Thanks for spending time with me, and let's go into the show. If you're struggling with stiff or aching joints, and you're tired of letting the cis -comfort steal the joy and freedom from your life, then I have a natural solution you're going to love. It's called Joint Support by Pure Health Research, and this stuff is amazing. It contains seven of Mother Nature's best superfoods for supporting comfortable, healthy, and flexible joints. It even promotes healthy cartilage growth, too. All it takes is one small capsule of joint support every day to start feeling the positive effects on your health. As a listener of our show, you can try Joint Support risk -free today and get a free 30 -day supply of Omega -3 when you take advantage of this special offer. It can promote healthy joint lubrication, making it easier to move in comfort. You're also getting two free e -books, so you can learn more about joint health. Just head over to getjointhelp .com forward slash jockers. That's G -E -T -J -O -I -N -T -H -E -L -P dot com forward slash J -O -C -K -E -R -S getjointhelp .com forward slash jockers to order Joint Support and claim your free bottle of Omega -3 while supplies last. Again, that's getjointhelp .com forward slash jockers. Welcome back to the podcast. In this episode, I'm being interviewed by Dr. Beverly Yates for her upcoming Reverse Type 2 Diabetes Summit. We talk all about the best advanced nutrition strategies to reduce inflammation and improve insulin sensitivity. There's a lot of things you can do if you are looking to lose weight, if you're looking to improve your blood sugar sensitivity. We know insulin resistance is at the root of all chronic inflammatory conditions, but there's a lot we can do from a nutrition perspective. We go through that in this interview. I talk a lot about intermittent fasting and how that helps improve mitochondrial function, helps improve blood sugar stability and turn on fat burning. We talk about how to improve your stomach acid, bile flow, pancreatic enzymes, so you can reduce the amount of endotoxins that are released from your gut and into your bloodstream that drive up inflammatory activity in your body. So this is a really powerful presentation showing you exactly what you need to do to stabilize your blood sugar, to burn fat for fuel and reduce inflammation. If you know anybody that's dealing with type 2 diabetes, prediabetes, perhaps they're overweight looking to lose weight or they're obese, please share this episode with them. And you can also check out the Reversing Type 2 Diabetes Summit that Dr. Yates is putting on. Just go to the show notes for this episode on DrJockers .com and there will be a link there where you can register for free for the Reversing Type 2 Diabetes Summit and listen to all the great interviews with top experts when it comes to blood sugar stability and type 2 diabetes. And if you have not left us a five -star review for this podcast, please do that now. When you leave us a review, it helps us reach more people and impact more lives with this message. It's really easy to do. Just go to Apple iTunes or wherever you listen to the podcast, scroll to the bottom, usually the review areas at the bottom and leave us a five -star review, leave a comment in there. That means so much to us and helps us reach more people. So thank you for doing that. Thank you for being a part of our community and let's go into the show. Hey everyone, welcome to the Reversing Type 2 Diabetes Summit. I'm your host, Dr. Beverly Yates, MD. It's my distinct privilege and honor to interview a wonderful colleague of mine, Dr. David Jockers. He's been a leader in many aspects of health and continues to help people have clarity about their health. One of the things that's so interesting as we do all the episodes here for the summit is I'm trying very consciously to give people different points of view and different aspects of what it takes for blood sugar success to be well. So with Dr. David Jockers, we're going to introduce him in just a moment here. He's a doctor of natural medicine and runs one of the most popular natural health websites online in drjockers .com and has gotten over a million views for monthly visitors and his work is really popular. It's been seen on shows like The Dr. Oz Show and Hallmark Home and Family. He's the author of the best -selling book, The Keto -Metabolic Breakthrough and also The Fasting Transformation. He's a world -renowned expert in the area of ketosis, fasting, brain health, inflammation and functional nutrition. He also hosts his popular Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition podcast. Be sure to look up his work, check out what that he's offering. Dr. Jockers, welcome to our summit. Thanks so much, Dr. Beverly. Great to be on with you. Yeah. You know, I've really been excited for our talk because I think that there are so many ways in which people can eat and nourish themselves and some things are certainly more helpful or successful when it comes to blood sugar control and glycemic regulations than others. So with that in mind, let's dig in right away here. So please, if you would share with us your perspective here, what is inflammation and how does it develop? Yeah. Inflammation is just a natural process of healing. In fact, it's actually designed to help protect our body from some sort of chronic systemic infection and so, well, not chronic infection, but some sort of systemic acute infection from killing us quickly. And so I think we look at the history of mankind. More people have died from infections that got into our bloodstreams, bloodstreams spread throughout our body, went into major vital organs and killed us is what used to kill most of our ancestors. And so our body has created this inflammatory process to help protect against that. So the infection that gets in doesn't get into our lungs and cause pneumonia or our nervous system and cause meningitis. And so in order to do that, we created this inflammatory process to keep basically infection under control. And it's also part of the healing process. We break down damaged tissue and we try to remove that in order to build new healthy tissue. So for example, if we sprain our ankle, we're going to break down that tissue and try to rebuild new healthy tissue in that area. So inflammation itself is life saving. The issue is that it should be turned off when the appropriate area is healed. And so in our society, we have certain vectors that are turning up inflammation. For example, one is called leaky gut, right? So when somebody has leaky gut, there's damage, micro damage to the intestinal lining. And every time that person's eating food, particularly food that causes more gut irritation, they are further tearing that gut lining and they're not really allowing their body to heal properly. And therefore, they're spewing out bacteria and endotoxins into their bloodstream through that lining, through that hole. And that's driving up inflammation in the body because the body thinks that it's under attack from some sort of systemic infection or some sort of basically infectious process that could be life threatening. And so we've got to do what we can to get inflammation under control in our society. And so I think about it like a fire in a fireplace. You know, if the fire is on in the fireplace, it's great. It warms the house. You know, it creates a great environment, an ambiance. However, when we dump gasoline on the fire, right now it spreads on the walls and starts to burn our home. And obviously that's when it's a major issue. And so in our society, we have lifestyle habits that are dumping gasoline on the fire and causing us to burn up our home. And we just don't really understand it. We don't realize that's actually what we're doing to our body. And then we later, you know, after doing this for years and years and years, we get diagnosed with the chronic disease. But this is many years of chronic inflammation, damaging cells, tissues and organ systems of our body leading to, you know, that disease diagnosis. Absolutely. Absolutely. Thank you for laying that out so clearly. You know, it's so interesting in clinical work, sometimes it comes up. People are like, this just happened to me overnight, thinking that their body has attacked them or betrayed them and that their diagnosis has come on all of a sudden when in reality, nope, this was years in the making. So thank you so much for pointing that out for us. So anyone listening to this, if you have an inflammatory problem, please know. It took time for it to develop and it will take some time for it to heal. The good news is, if healing is possible, that it's likely to be a lot faster compared to the silent onset process. It's like too bad. It would be great if our body, as we get more and more inflamed, gave us a sound or a noise or maybe we turned polka dotted or something so we can know that something's going on here, you know? Yeah, for sure. And many times people do have chronic symptoms that are giving them a warning sign. And we just ignore it in our society, right? It's kind of like a check engine light goes on in our car. Typically we know, okay, I need to bring this in and get it looked at. But in our society, if we have headaches, chronic headaches, if we have chronic gut pain, if we have chronic joint pain, if we have skin rashes, acne, eczema, if we are gaining weight and we try some lifestyle strategies and we're just not losing weight, if we're gaining weight and we can go on and on, in our society, oftentimes the first thing we do is we go right to some sort of medication or we try to just ignore it. It's like we just let the check engine light stay on or we take some duct tape and just kind of stick it over it and pretend that everything's okay with the car. And that's really what we're doing. We're not actually getting to the root cause. Exactly. So that brings me to my very next question for you, which is this. What are some of the root causes of inflammation and how can this be measured quantitatively with lab testing? So when we look at root causes of chronic inflammation, one, and this is what you're really addressing in this summit, is a diet and lifestyle that is not right, right? So high blood sugar and insulin resistance, primarily driven by the food that we're consuming and lack of exercise, right? Lack of movement, food that we're consuming, obviously stress plays a role. So high stress, poor sleep hygiene and poor sleep quality. Sleep quality is super important. We've got to make sure we're sleeping really well when we are sleeping, but also proper hygiene when it comes to sleep. That plays a big role with our sleep quality. For example, shift workers, they might sleep eight or nine hours, but because they're sleeping at the wrong hours that are not right with, you know, humans, natural circadian rhythm or we're supposed to be sleeping at night, they tend to have higher levels of blood sugar and insulin resistance compared to people that are sleeping the same amount of hours and working kind of a normal shift and then sleeping overnight. So those are major factors. And then beyond that, we have things like chronic infections. So we know that when we have different infections, whether it's a candida overgrowth in our gut, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, H. pylori infections in our stomach, parasite infections, Lyme disease, things like that, that all drives up inflammatory processes in our body. Chronic overload of toxicity. All of us are exposed to chemicals in our air, water and food. So all of us have levels of toxicity coming into our system. But if our drainage and detoxification pathways are working properly, we should be eliminating a good amount of those and keeping our toxic bucket under control. And so we all have kind of like a toxic threshold. And so if we keep things under that threshold by keeping, you know, by limiting our exposure to toxins and then by allowing our body to detox and drain effectively, then, you know, that doesn't drive inflammation. However, if we're consuming lots of toxins from the food, we eat the air, we breathe the things we're putting on our skin, the water we're drinking, and then we're not doing things to help improve our lymphatic system, our liver, our gut, our kidneys. Right. We're not we're not peeing. You know, we should be urinating. Right. We should be peeing out toxins. We should be breathing them out. So respiration, perspiration, that's sweating, urination and defecation. Right. So we should be peeing, pooping, breathing. And sweating out these toxins. If we're not doing that, then our toxic load goes up, goes over that threshold, drives inflammation in the body. So toxicity is a big factor. You know, I mentioned stress. There can also be things like post -traumatic stress disorders. Right. So where somebody's had major trauma and their body never really recovered from that trauma and they're kind of reliving that trauma. Maybe somebody that was a war veteran or perhaps they were sexually abused or something along those lines. Right. They may relive those traumas on a regular basis, driving up inflammation in the body. So all of these things need to be addressed and and considered. Somebody might be living in a mold toxic house, right, breathing in mold and mycotoxins on a daily basis. They're trying to live a healthy lifestyle, but they're constantly overloading their their system with toxins. And so we've got to be able to look at all of those factors and make sure that we're addressing those to keep inflammation under control. Now, when we're measuring inflammation on labs, there's some easy labs that we can look at. You know, you can get done on blood work. For example, one of the most common is high sensitivity C reactive protein. CRP is a protein that our body, our immune system produces in response to inflammation. And, you know, so long as you don't get a false negative, like if you work out really intensely right before you get your blood test done, your CRP will be through the roof. That's actually a healthy level of inflammation, because after we exercise, we have inflammation to help our body heal and recover. So normally you want to not work out roughly 48 hours before getting the test done, ideally at least 24 hours. So you get the right measurement and your HSCRP should ideally be under one and really as close to zero as possible. And so typically it's not flag tie unless it's up over two or three, somewhere in that range. But anything over one is a sign that there's underlying inflammation there. And that's something that we definitely want to look at and address. So that's a big factor. You know, I know in this in this summit, I'm sure you've got people talking about things like hemoglobin A1C. We know hemoglobin A1C, that's a sign of the glycation process or basically when a sugar molecule binds to a major protein, like in this case, when it binds to hemoglobin, major protein that helps bring oxygen to the cells in the body and denatures the hemoglobin. And so it causes a sticky protein process. So we should have ideally like the optimal range really is is really under under 5 .2 on the hemoglobin, 5 .2 percent under. And so typically in our society, nothing is flagged until it's up over six, up over six percent. I like to keep mine under five, right? Between four point five and five. Some are in that range to make sure that my hemoglobin, my red blood cells have great capacity to bring oxygen to the cells so I can create the cellular energy I need to really thrive. So hemoglobin A1C is a really good marker. There's another one actually that you can test, too. It's it's it's called a novel marker for systemic inflammation. It's called GlycA, right? And so it's also a marker of glycosylation and again, a sugar molecule binding to proteins. In this case, GlycA looks at proteins particularly involved in the immune system. And so when that's elevated, I like to see it between one hundred and three hundred. Some are in that range, more closer to one hundred when it's up over three hundred. We know that's a sign of systemic inflammation. In fact, there are some individuals that will have normal HSCRP, but we'll see the GlycA elevated. And so that's a really good it's a novel marker. They've just been doing a number of studies on that, really starting just in the last five years. Very interesting marker. We know, for example, statin drugs will have a cholesterol lowering medications can have a mild anti -inflammatory effect that may bring CRP down, but they don't bring GlycA down. Whereas a lot of lifestyle strategies that you're talking about on the summit will help bring both of those markers down. And so that's a that's a really important thing to be looking at. Another key marker is LDH, lactate dehydrogenase, which is part of our natural energy, you know, our glycolysis and Krebs cycle. It's kind of a Krebs cycle glycolysis intermediary enzyme. And so when that's elevated, it's a sign that there's inflammation, particularly heart tissue related as well as liver. Right. Could be related to liver. And speaking of liver, liver enzymes are another really good marker. So when we're seeing liver enzymes like ALT, AST, GGT, when these when these are elevated up over roughly up over 25, that's a sign that there's inflammation affecting the liver cells. And then based on the ratios, for example, if ALT is real high, AST is kind of in the normal range, roughly 10 to 25 in that normal range. We know that inflammation is really affecting the liver when AST is high and ALT is more in the normal range or a lot lower than AST. We start thinking about that inflammation affecting muscle tissues or affecting the heart in particular. So that's a key marker for that. When GGT is real high up over 25 again and the AST and ALT are lower than the GGT, then we start thinking about biliary tree, gallbladder, bile ducts, that region. So it kind of helps us understand more of where that inflammation may be located. So these are just some of the markers. You know, if you get a good a good look, you know, you can also look at just a lipid panel, like where you're looking at your LDL, which is considered the bad cholesterol, your triglycerides, your HDL levels. We like to see the triglyceride to HDL ratio. If there was one thing I was going to look at on a lipid panel, I think all the markers can have some importance. We can get some good clinical data from all those markers. But if there was one marker I think is most important to look at, it would be the triglyceride to HDL ratio. So how many triglycerides, which are basically free fatty acids that our body can use as an energy source that are circulating in the bloodstream versus the high density lipoproteins, which are a carrier molecule that helps bring fats, lipids, all different types of molecules back to the liver from the cells. And so when we're looking at that ratio, we ideally should be under two. So under two parts triglyceride to HDL, roughly close to one. And that kind of close, as close to one as possible, one part triglyceride, one part HDL, like to see that triglyceride level certainly under a hundred. OK, and we look at that. That is a key marker for insulin resistance and inflammation. If your triglyceride to HDL ratio is up over two, if your HDL is under 50, you know, triglycerides are up over a hundred. You know, definitely a sign of insulin resistance and inflammation taking place in the body as long as the test is done fasting. Right. We always want to make sure with the lipid panel definitely can be affected if we eat a meal right before we we get that lab done. But that's a really key marker to look at and helps us understand how well our body's responding to getting nutrients into the cells. So when triglycerides are real high, we're not good at burning fat for fuel. We've got all these extra fats out in the cell or outside in the bloodstream. And those fats can become denatured and cause more reactive oxygen species and drive up oxidative stress and inflammation in the system. So all very important markers to be looking at. A lot of these tests are not expensive, but glyca is a little bit more pricey. But most of the other ones you can easily get from your physician. Just go in, ask for the high sensitivity, high sensitivity to your reactive protein, lipid panel, liver enzymes. Right. They'll run all of those. And then one other marker that we should look at as well as vitamin D levels are 25 hydroxy vitamin D. A lot of research out showing that levels on certainly under 30 nanograms per milliliter, where you're you're the lab will actually flag you as deficient, you know, linked with all cause mortality. So if you have levels under 30, you're all cause mortality, cancer, diabetes, heart disease, osteoporosis, neurodegenerative condition. We talk about any sort of chronic disease and then dying of anything goes up. Right. So it's really easy actually to bump that up. Ideally, we do it by getting in the sun. However, most of us just not getting enough sunshine. We may not be living in an area where the sun's going to impact us in a significant way to get the vitamin D if we're up. Let's say we live in Canada, we live in Maine, we live in these northern climates. It's going to be harder to get enough vitamin D from the sun. But if we are in a you know, even if we are in that location, like in the summer months, trying to get as much sun on as much of your body as possible. Obviously, you don't want to burn. But outside of that, trying to get the sunshine is key. Sun offers a lot more benefits than just a vitamin D supplement. However, taking a vitamin D supplement as well can be really helpful. I usually recommend about a thousand international units per twenty five pounds of body weight taken with meals you do at one or two doses, depending on how much of that you need. And that will definitely get your vitamin D levels up. You want to test every three to six months or so and kind of look at where you're at. Ideally, I like to see it up over 60 nanograms per milliliter, usually not concerned about overdosing. The research shows that as long as you keep it really under about 150 nanograms per milliliter, you won't deal with any sort of, you know, toxicity, vitamin D toxicity. It's really hard to get it up over 150, although it can be done if you're taking like 50 ,000 units every single day. So if you're taking roughly five, 10, 15 ,000 units every day, you're probably going to optimize your vitamin D and do really well. And so those would be some of the key labs I would definitely recommend. All right, great, thank you for that list of people listening, friends, you know, here in the audience, please do take out your notes, get your paper and pen ready, or if you're keeping a Google doc or however you're keeping track and look at this list because it'll be helpful to you to help guide your own health and be aware. And you may find you're already working with a doctor who's doing these kind of testing. It's not time to time to up level. Hey, I just wanted to interrupt this podcast to tell you about my cell liposomal glutathione. This is an amazing product because our modern world is toxic. No matter how health conscious you try to be. The truth is that every single day you and I are being bombarded by harmful toxins and stressors, things like EMF, 5G, heavy metals, chemicals, processed foods and the like. And when left to roam free, these toxins take on the form of something called free radicals. Free radicals promote an unhealthy inflammatory response and contribute to oxidative on damage the cellular level. This is kind of like the browning of an apple. This is happening inside of our bodies at all times, and it's potentially leading to premature aging, a lower quality of life and a range of health problems. But the good news is that we can fight back with antioxidants and they are crucial in combating free radicals and keeping you on track. And one of the most powerful antioxidants known to man is glutathione. You see, glutathione fights free radicals and molecules that cause cellular damage while repairing the DNA and flushing out toxins. The only thing about glutathione is that not all supplements are created equal. You want a kind of glutathione that has optimal absorption capacity. And that is why I love the Pureality Health My Cell Liposomal Technology, which delivers the nutrients into your bloodstream. And it's proven to be 800 percent more efficient than other forms of glutathione. And even better, this is backed by a 180 day money back guarantee. And today we have a 30 percent off coupon for you. Just visit PurealityHealth .com and use the coupon DRJ to access 30 percent off today. That's Pureality Health. That's P -U -R -A -L -I -T -Y H -E -A -L -T -H dot com and use the coupon code DRJ to access 30 percent off today.

Ben Shapiro
Fresh update on "beverly" discussed on Ben Shapiro
"Though I have disdain staying for Notre Dame because of my roots I have nothing but you know reverence for their history obviously. lot Spent a of time there too. I did that was unbelievable. But anyway Marcus Freeman I saw one sign our coach is better looking than your coach. I mean he's he's one of the best looking guys ever to be a major. You think so do you? I think so yeah. I mean you know I mean I don't know he's a good -looking guy. I mean if that speaks to you it speaks to you. I don't know does that matter? No it doesn't matter. I mean they also had Lou Holtz who looks like Granny from the Beverly Hillbillies. So I mean you know you don't have to be a great -looking man to be a successful coach. But I don't know is that distracting when you have a particularly handsome coach? Distracting to who though? I have no idea. To the team? I don't think so. Student body in Notre Dame is jazzed by their good -looking coach. I can't wait to see this matchup here. It's just about to kick off right now. Notre Dame Ohio State. You know this Notre Dame team and I could sense the frustration with Brian Kelly and why he took the LSU job. Because he had gone as far as you could possibly push Notre Dame. Twice he got into the play. Well once was the BCS championship game the other it got in the playoff and both times they got routed you know by these SEC and powerhouses he had gone as far as you can. But I don't know Marcus Freeman after start. Seems to have gotten this Notre Dame. I just curious if Notre Dame actually wins today. They beat Ohio State. Huge huge win for the for the program in Freeman. Like it. He came out and like you said he started Rocky. So everybody was like oh well what are we doing here. Right. And kudos to the you know the university this way. There are no instant winners or you don't come right in and to a national championship. You have to change the culture. You have to bring the players in that speak to what you're trying to do offensively defensively have to bring the right staff in all of these things take time. And in the short period of time Notre Dame has become one of those powers again. And meanwhile you got Ryan Day's situation. Talk about a guy that could be on the hot seat after back -to -back years losing to Michigan. Losing to Michigan at Ohio State that'll put you on the hot That's why Harbaugh has been on the hot seat. Well there was a great coach at Ohio State John Cooper. Couldn't beat Michigan. In fact when Trestle took over he said we're gonna beat Michigan. I think he lost once. When you're hired at Michigan or Ohio State yeah you must say in your welcoming press conference. Oh he did it in a basketball game. You have to put that out there so the people know what's going on. Right because you that means I understand. That's I know I get it. National championships. Blah blah blah. Beat Michigan. Yep. Because that's why my predecessor was fired because he couldn't beat Michigan. Can't do it. Yeah so this is a huge game again for Ohio State. Their quarterback is off to a okay start. A little shaky in the first game. Played much better the last couple of games but they get the ball first. How do you like those Notre Dame jerseys? They almost look like Oregon out there. They do almost look like Oregon. Is it me or am I looking at Oregon with that color scheme? I mean they still have the gold helmets but still that that's Oregon -ish. I don't know. When do you have classic uniforms? Can't we just stay with them? No man times change. Aztecs uniforms are I mean that helmet is gorgeous. It's great. I miss the old one. I love our old one. But Yeah. that's because I played in the old one. So you know times change. Everything changes man. You just got to go with Alright so right off the bat Ohio State moving the ball against Notre Dame. I get a sense we're gonna see quite a few points in this game today. It feels like the type of game where it'll be a lot of points put up. Alright. Shoot up shootout style. Now some other games that are going on right now we got Iowa and Penn State both undefeated. We mentioned how many battles between 3 and 0 teams today. Iowa checking it at number 24 in the latest AP poll. Penn State is at number seven. Is Franklin going to get Penn State back in the mix? He's been knocking on the door haven't we the last couple years? Yeah he has. But he hasn't had quite the quarterback to get over the hump. Yeah it's imperative to have that guy in college football. I talked about it earlier having a quarterback when you're competing at that level in these power five conferences and with eyes on the college football playoffs you have to have the guy under the center be formidable at a high clip high level. So we went back to the Clemson and Alabama days when you're seeing Deshaun Watson and Trevor Lawrence and then you're seeing a Jalen Hurts and I mean you know. Bryce Young, Mack Jones. All of them. All starters in the NFL. All of them. So that's why you win national championships. You think Justin Fields is fixable? I think he is. I think they need to... Because Ohio State quarterbacks it's not pretty at the NFL level. You gotta remember it wasn't pretty for Miami quarterbacks No. Right? The irony was the quarterback that Miami had right before Bernie Kosar they won that first championship with a guy named Jim Kelly. They went to the USFL and then on to stardom in the NFL. They never had... I mean Vinnie Testavordi wasn't terrible. He had a solid NFL career. you When get to the next level it's all about the team you go to and the willingness of the coach to make a change that fits your skill set. Well that's a hundred... singing I'm your tune I've always said this right? Identify what you do well and it puts you in a position to succeed. Kyle Shanahan was one of the first coaches to do something like that when he took his storied and history offense that his dad ran. Gary Kubiak ran zone offense and he changed for it RG3 because of the talent when he was at Washington because of his talent. RPOs became a read option all those things became a viable weapon that weren't in his classic playbook and they excelled. RG3 was co -rookie of the year that year they made it to the playoffs they won seven in a row. He beat out Andrew Luck for offensive rookie of the year then he got hurt and it's a testament to you know that and now that became the thing right so no one in the pros had a run style offense for quarterbacks. Alright I want to talk to you about another NFL team on the other side this is Fox football Saturday. College football fans your season

On The Rekord
A highlight from Episode 122 - Sept. 17th, 2023 - B.A.N.S
"All right, all right, all right, all right. Welcoming you guys to another lovely episode of On The Record Podcast. I am DJ Intense, your host the most. And to the left of me, I have I am Walt. What's up, Walt? I'm about to say another word, my guy. If you guys heard earlier, you know, we were just doing some things off cameras. They're off the record. Things we don't, we're not going to bring on the record. And if we are, you're not going to get it. Unless you paid for it to Patreon. You know? Yeah, me too. That voice you hear right now, but there's no other than Ceddi said, what's up Ceddi? The infamous C -E -D. What's up people? How you doing people? I'm doing all right, I'm doing all right, man. You know, we took some time off. It was Labor Day weekend. Yeah. And then the final weekend, which is work weekend. Dude, we were work, work, work, work, work. Nonstop. Dude, I just figured they don't. Almost 90 hours of work. OT, OT. Man. One day was 20 hours of work. That's the state job. I can't wait till you quit that job. You and I both, brother. I need to make some money, but working like a slave ain't it, man? Nah. Bob Brock just said it. You think that you can get by with this hard work alone? Nah, you're fooling yourself. You're fooling yourself. Used to do that, but now you're doing that. It's a lie. It's a lie. It's a myth. All people is you do hard work, and you'll become a successor, that's all. Listen, reality is in this country, in America, you have to do a lot of grime. You gotta do a lot of collaboration. Depending on how you wanna do it, but most of the time, all those people who are billionaires and trillionaires are the ones who did the most foul -ish humanly possible to get what they're at right now in life. Listen, right now we're at over 180 days in the writer's strike and the actor's strike right now. And it could have ended this right now. This thing should have been handled already. $50 million for both unions. And now they're gonna get a loss of over $300 to $500 million because of this strike. And you have people like Drew Barrymore's punk ass. Well, she reneged on it though. She had to, because dude, she was getting the business with the WGA and the SGA. And it's separate, you know. Even... Bill Maher's bitch ass too, man, was... I didn't get the damn thing off the running. Was, oh, I don't need no writers, I'll be our show. Look, dude, your show sucks. The Seddie Swear Counter is in full effect. There you go, you have one. You can do like a ding sound from now on for my swears. I'm gonna keep it calm. I'm gonna keep it professional. Seddie the Sailor Man. I can't swish, come on. Listen, man, I'm just telling you, when Seddie get that spinach boy, man, we poppin' ice today. Oh, yeah. Little bird watch out. Now, but on some real issues, like dude, Bill Maher, the guy who said, I'm not a field n -word, I'm a house n -word, and who crapped on Stan Lee after he died and stuff, and says a bunch of other ridiculously retarded things, says he's gonna do a show. Stan Lee who? Marvel comic Stan Lee. Oh, Stan Lee, oh. That's what Bill Maher said. Yo, he be going extra heavy trying to relate to us blacks. You're a not house n -word. You're at the table, bro. You got the good chair. You got the good piece of chicken. He used to be down by the dam, but nowadays, man, it's horrible. He's just, you know, he's trying. What the legend Paul Mooney said, everybody wants to be black, so it's time to be black? Listen, you think Paul Mooney is trying to be black and competent? Hell no. I want to be in a gated community area. What's wrong with you? Like he says, everybody wants to be black. He listen to King Koon, so he know what that's about. Yeah, but Bill Maher is doing his show still, which I think it was crap with writers. It's going to be crap about writers. And then, you know, you're going to have to hire writers who are not non -union writers. We're going to be scabs. We're going to pretty much destroy their any chance of them getting actual work when the strike is done. If you get caught. Well, if you are what you say you are, then have no fear. Even if you're on YouTube and you want to get a chance of being in the industry, you can't do no reviews. No, no movie reviews, no TV show reviews, nothing. There's a strike. You doing that? You will be known and accounted for when you want to get your membership. And trust me, you don't want those problems. But my thing is, if there was already YouTubers like successful already doing movie reviews and being credible and stuff like that, that won't affect them. Is it already locked in like a partnership or whatever with certain movies? Then they could do it. As long as they get the permission from their respective union. OK. If they do something brand new, if we're coming out with The Exorcist coming out next week, they can't do no review for that at all. Oh, wow. Wah wah. Listen, I can't go into it because I want to become in that union because I want to be a voice actor. You want to sell out. I get it. So I can't speak on it at all. No, no, no. He's not selling out. No, he wants to. He wants to. No, he doesn't want to sell out. You want the Disney money. No, I want to buy in. He wants to buy in. Oh, yes. You want to buy in, you got to sell out, right? No, the license is fucking me, bro. I'm just saying. The license, the thing to get a SAG card, it's over $3 ,000 to get a SAG card. And you have to get that SAG card in order to get some work and residuals and all that stuff. That's just what it is. Listen, man, listen, Harvey Weinstein's in prison, bro. He can't get to you, my guy. He can't get to you, my guy. Listen, man, don't take that hotel meeting, bro. Am I Rose McGowan? Shoot it. It's either a Zoom call. I'm actually Judd. It's either a Zoom call or a posh Beverly Hills restaurant or a Permell Studios, wherever that super creep was out here making his rounds. But you don't got to worry about that no more. Filthy behavior. One of the girls was saying like, yeah, when I said no more hanky panky, you know. He felt a way. Yeah, you want that rolling letter to there, don't you? My guy, how could he feel a way? You've been imposing your will on these ladies for a long time. Speaking of entertainment, you had a concert this weekend, right? Yeah, yeah. I was, you know, I was like. This guy was really outside. I was like, I was like, I was like. What concert was this? I was like. Let me tell you. Go ahead, say it. I was like from the acting sheriff up north, back to back out here, you know. Yes, so for all the first time, longtime listeners, and you know, last time listening to how evidence goes, I had a couple of shows. This past Thursday, I went to an event that was sponsored by Spotify for up and coming artists. I saw three, three very, very talented artists. The main artist I went to see goes by Kamari. He's an artist that I discovered around COVID. He has a lot of like influences. He reminds me of like a Frank Ocean. He's really that, you know, artist type dude. And he put out this great, incredible album called A Brief Nirvana, which I advise everybody to check out. His name is Kamari, K -H -A -M -A -R -I. Highly recommend him. And I also saw these two other artists from the UK, St. Harrison and Elmin. That's my boy. And overall, it was a great experience, very, you know. It was at SOB, Sound of Brazil in New York City. Very intimate setting, great turnout, great energy.

DerrickTalk
Fresh update on "beverly" discussed on DerrickTalk
"Welcome to another edition of Convo Over Cigars. I'm your host, Derrick Andre Flemming. Um, let's talk about Country Wayne, Wayne Coley. I've always talked about my respect for this man because he comes from humble roots and he's very transparent about that. He talks about, you know, being a dad, you know, raising 10 kids, things like that. You know, just what he's going through in his life. The fact that he was absent of a real father during much of his life. He talks about things like that. And I think that's what makes Country Wayne, Wayne Coley so amazing. But I'm here to basically give an honest review of Country Wayne's Netflix comedy special, A Woman's Prayer. Wayne Coley, the comedian who got his start on Facebook, he recently released a Netflix stand-up comedy special entitled A Woman's Prayer. The stand-up set is about life as a dad of 10. How to know if a woman likes you and why he keeps it real with Jesus. He also talked about his HIV-positive uncle cooking in the kitchen. Wayne has had unparalleled success and has amassed over 8.3 million followers on Facebook. The 35-year-old comedian is very transparent about his life struggles and that's what makes him great in my opinion. I also love his catchphrases, Jesus is popping and help is on the way. But the one hour long, something like that, Netflix comedy special was absolutely horrible. That's my honest opinion. I'd give it a one and that's being generous. Real comedians, people like Dave Chappelle, Eddie Murphy, Mike Epps, they are naturally funny. We're talking demeanor, their delivery, their stories, the way they narrate their comedy, they're just naturally funny. Country Wayne and I watched the entire comedy special, he looked like a guy who struggled to be funny, the entire set. The jokes did not land, the reaction of the audience was mediocre and it just was not funny. Funny is one of those things that's like, I guess chemistry in a relationship, it's either there or it's not. This Netflix comedy special was not funny and though some people say, I liked it, it was good, he did okay, it was his first time, hey, give him a break. Yeah, but the thing you have to realize is comedy is one of those things where there are different types, his skits to me are very relatable and they're very entertaining. He shows a little bit of everything, his relationships, relationships of other people, people like Mike Bless, they help the skits out, he's had Derek Jackson on there. I think his skits are amazing, I think they're wonderful, I think they're well planned out, they're well scripted but I don't think stand up comedy is Wayne's thing. I don't think that's what country Wayne should do. I just don't think he's a stand up comedian. I think when you look at guys like Lavelle Crawford, people like Chuckie, you remember Chuckie Ducky, people like Bernie Mac, I mean Dave Chappelle, Mike Epps, there's so many people, Cat Williams, that are just naturally funny. Stand up is not for everyone. Eddie Murphy, he was a great actor, you saw him in Beverly Hills Cop but you saw Delirious, you saw Raw, he was a comedic genius on that stage. His timing, his jokes, the level of comfort, country Wayne just didn't have that. So my honest opinion, I give the Netflix comedy special a one and like I said, that's being generous, I just thought it was absolutely horrible. That's just honest. You guys have been locked into another edition of Convo Over Cigars, I want you to check out his Netflix comedy special. We're talking about Wayne Coley, The Woman's Prayer. A lot of people say it sounds like a movie or something a little bit more dramatic but no, it's a comedy special. Want you guys to check it out and I wanna hear what you guys think. Guys have been locked into another edition of Convo Over Cigars, I'm your host on a Friday, Derek Andre Flemming, take care guys.

The Maverick Paradox Podcast
A highlight from Call Centre employees - stopping the quitting
"In this short talk episode, I speak to Beverly Hatthorn about quiet quitting and what employers, specifically call centres, can do about it. We discuss the causes of quiet quitting and the signs to look out for. I create clear thinking and decisive leaders who can amplify their influence. Contact me to find out how I can help you or your organisation. And today our guest is Beverly Hatthorn. How are you doing, Beverly? I am well, thank you so much Judith and you? Yeah, I'm really good and quite excited for this conversation. But before we jump in, tell me what excites you about life? A new day. I would say a new day. I'm always excited to see what's going to happen today. Will it be my new client or will I see an old friend or just what will happen today? Will I get some financial unexpected windfall? Oh lovely, that would be something to be excited for, isn't it? Yes, yes. I am always excited for a new day. I'm always excited and thankful for a new day because we never know what that new day is going to bring and I'm uncurably optimistic. Optimistic is good. So for an optimistic person like yourself, what do you think about this quiet quitting epidemic? What do you think of this quiet quitting taking place? Well, I think that leaders and organizations can maybe do a little more to reduce that. I think that investigation and review needs to occur to find out why that's happening in your organization. And first, of course, you need to identify who is participating in the quiet quitting and then you need to identify who may latch on to that concept. So I think that we need to learn as leaders, we need to learn what is making our employees back off and not give us all that they have to offer. And often that is something that the organization can reduce. So your background is in HR, isn't it? And you run a HR company, is that right? That is correct. I am an HR consultant and I support primarily customer service managers in contact centers who are struggling with high customer escalations, customer complaints, employee disengagement, quiet quitting. So I help organizations, contact centers specifically, to reduce or minimize those occurrences and their impact. So this is interesting. Thank you for sharing around, you know, call centers because it's hard to work in a call center. It's noisy, it's fast -paced, depending on the organization, the customers could be very, very unhappy or very, very demanding. How do leaders in that environment actually manage to keep their employees engaged so they don't quite quit? Well, there are several things that you can do fairly easily. One is to engage with your team and get to know them, get to know their plans, their personal development wishes, help them with that when you find out what it is that they'd like to do, maybe direct them to some training or direct them to an opportunity. You can also help your employees understand where they impact the business. Customer service representatives, if not correctly guided, will tend to think that, hey, I just answer phones and place orders, you know, that's really all I do. But if you help them understand how important they are to the organization and the success of the organizational goals, that tends to make them feel a little more a part of things. I happen to be one who optimistically believes that most people want to do a good job. I don't really feel that people get up in the morning, fight the traffic or whatever, get to work to sloppily present themselves. I think most people want to do a good job. So if you help your employees understand what that is, what that looks like, show them what that looks like and let them know how important they are to the business, that really helps. But in some respects, it needs to be more than that because it can just sound like words. How does an employee actually believe that? How do you get them to believe that to be true? Well, there's several different ways. Of course, there's recognition. You know, there's recognition. There's also when you have your performance reviews, how often that is. I personally believe that once a year is not enough. Some organizations only do that once a year. I think you should have some sort of review with your employees maybe every 60 days to let them know where they are and how they're performing and how you as a leader can help them do better. I think that we need to give our employees a sense of wellbeing. I talk a lot about psychological safety, autonomy, and flexibility to give them the ability to manage and do their jobs. We hired them. Hopefully, you had a vetting process, but we hired them. We trained them. So let them do their job, the job that we hired them to do. So those are just some of the things that I think we can do to help employees feel more a part of. Thank you. What makes the challenge harder for call centers compared to other organizations? Well, employees and call centers. I'm speaking from experience here. I was a customer service representative in a very large call center for a very large Fortune 500 company. I also was a manager in that call center. I managed teams, coaching, and directing. I also implemented customer satisfaction initiatives. I designed those and helped implement them into the organization. So we need to give our employees the opportunity to participate wholly. It's difficult for the employees because call centers are often busy, fast -paced. They're usually large, so there's not much opportunity to stand out and make yourself known. Of course, the demanding and irate customers that they face all day, every day. One of the things that leaders can do is help them understand that they're not in this alone, that we're all in this together, and I support you from my position. But employees just tend to sometimes feel they're just another cog in the wheel. Again, that's something we need to get away from and let them know when they resolve a customer complaint or when they cool down an irate customer, the impact that that has for the customer and the organization. I think that's why most call center employees are so, I wouldn't say that they're unhappy, but they're not always content because of the surroundings and the atmosphere. So anything you can do to cool that down, I don't know if it's casual Fridays or donut Wednesdays or filling out Tuesdays or whatever you want to call it, just anything you can do to help soothe that atmosphere for them. I think that helps. When the call center staff are not performing well and have decided to quite quit, then it has a humongous impact on the customers. So if a manager of a call center was not aware of staff quite quitting, what are the signs that you need to look for employees? And that's a very good question. Thank you. You need to, of course, look for employees who have reduced enthusiasm, I guess would be a good word, particularly those who previously were very enthusiastic. When you see employees start to come to work late or consistently leaving early, barring any personal things going on in their lives, spouse illness or child illness or something like that, barring anything like that, when you see reduced energy, that is a sign that as leaders, we need to get in there and find out what's going on. When you see employees who don't seem to care about numbers, metrics, organizational goals, employee goals, that's an indication that quiet quitting is occurring. I have this little phrase, I say quiet quitting is when an employee just does their eight and hit the gate.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Why Chris Kohls Wanted to Review the Original "Karate Kid"
"Chris Cole's welcome back. It's been a while. Yeah, it has actually, not for the listener, or the viewer, but for us it has because we shot these in a weird order. It has it feels like a really long time, but it's so fun to get back into it, and what a great movie to do so with Karate Kid a classic. The first in a franchise, cartoons remakes, you name it now a new TV show Cobra Kai a spin off. You chose this movie, why did you choose it, Chris? Well, you know, this is one of my childhood favorites. I think it's my brother's was my brother's favorite movie for many, many years. And it's just one of these films where when you're a kid, you know, it's an underdog story. It's obviously it's like one of the quintessential underdog stories in history. And underdog stories have existed since the dawn of time. But I don't think they ever made one quite like this, and then once they made Karate Kid, I don't know if everybody remembers this. I was born in 79. So when this movie came out, I was about four years old. But it was a phenomenon. I mean, it was sort of in the same way Beverly Hills cop was. This may have even been bigger because although it didn't do as well as at the box office, this was a movie for kids and at least kids of my generation, everybody just loved Karate Kid. People wanted to take karate, Japanese culture became more interesting to people and this movie just changed American culture. It was a really, really big deal. They did the underdog story better than probably anybody else ever except for probably rocky, obviously. What's the connection? The connection of course is the same director. Yes, same guy who did rocky John Alvin also directed this one. He was accused of making basically rocky with karate for kids, so basically it's a ripoff of his own movie.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
A Review of Steven Berkoff's Role In "Beverly Hills Cop"
"Else needs to be said about this movie, Chris. Let's talk about any what my old colleague used to say, stray voltage. Let's talk about Steven berkoff. Now, Steven berkoff is a British actor for some reason Hollywood loves people with a British accent when it comes to playing villains. I have many, many times been offered by those who don't have the power to do so to be the next Bond villain. Miss broccoli, I'm available. You can find me online. It's said gorka dot com. I am available. But Steven berkoff, who kind of is known for having invented a very aggressive style of theater in the UK it's called actually colloquially in your face theater, a bit of a brechtian kind of guy. He ends up in Hollywood. He did this, then he was the evil Soviet commander in Rambo two. Him and his henchmen atelier, pretty good casting, don't you think, especially the henchmen who kills axel's body in Detroit? Yeah, yeah, yeah, Mike Ehrmantraut from Breaking Bad. I don't know if you watched Breaking Bad. I consider it one of the greatest shows ever made. Michael Ehrmantraut, one of the scariest henchmen. Seriously. Well, he's not really a henchman in Breaking Bad, but he's this, I don't know, he's like a hitman or something. We get his backstory later in Better Call Saul, but in this show, he's a very young man, but he still looks pretty dang old. He managed to do that. But yeah, he has this sort of gravitas to him. And then you're a guy whose name fails me. Steven Burke. Burke off, Stephen broke off. I mean, as soon as you see him in this movie, and this is pretty early on in the film, axel foley is a good detective. And he just knows I got to get right in this guy's face. I got to shake things up. I got to introduce myself and let him know him on his on his tail here and looking into him. And you get a sense of this guy, and he has got the visage, the visage. I don't know what the word had to pronounce that. He seems very much to me like a Bond villain.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Dr. G and Mr. Reagan Discuss Standout Scenes From "Beverly Hills Cop"
"Been to a cell that had a phone in it. Can I stay for a while 'cause I ordered some pizza? Somebody needed. I'm sorry, it's just like this seemingly throwaway line. But for me, that's comic genius, that he says, I've never seen a prison cell with a pizza. Can I stay here? Because with a telephone, can I stay here because I ordered pizza? I mean, that's the genius of Eddie Murphy. Yeah, and that really feels like it was an improvised moment. And especially when he's walking away from the cop and he says, it's all right, somebody eat it. You know? You can barely hear you got to have headphones on to get that. It's almost like it's almost like he throws the line away. But yeah, and this whole Sarah's thing. Oh my gosh. This guy. Talk to me about savage with his twist of lemon. So this guy becomes this character balki, I think his name is on a TV show here in America became a huge hit. I think I don't remember what it was called, but it was a big hit. But this guy's whatever it is, flamboyantly gay Beverly Hills guy. In the 1980s, it was such a spot on impression of the kind of guy that you would imagine would work at an art gallery in Beverly Hills. You didn't really know this guy in real life, but he did it so brilliantly you thought, okay, yes, definitely this is, this is that guy. Whoever that guy is in Beverly Hills, this is him. And he's like, he's like, how much is this? And he says, oh, it's a $130,000 or whatever. This piece of art. And he says, get out of here, and he goes, no, I will not get out of here. I am serious, you know? And I sold it yesterday. Yeah, they sold it yesterday. And the way he just presents that, I've never seen anybody do such a ridiculous character so authentically and so perfect. I mean, it's a perfect performance. And there's a lot of that in this film. And like you said, they couldn't do it today. Because this is a little bit of a send up of the homosexual of the 1980s. And you can't make fun of the gays now. You couldn't make fun of a trans character now, but in the 1980s you could.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Some Big Names Were Offered Roles "Beverly Hills Cop"
"Script was around Hollywood for about 7 years before it was actually greenlit. And let's talk about some of the choices of who was going to play axel F go ahead, Chris. Okay, well, the biggest one was, of course, the great Sylvester Stallone. Yes. He was going to play excellent. And he wanted to make this movie into something far more serious. And I mean, obviously everybody involved in the project was like, wow, wow, wow, wow, wow. This is not a this is a comedy. This is not going to be like a dangerous film. You've got to have this cute little wink with the blond here in the car. You know what I mean? Everything has to have a wink to it. Everything has to be a bit of fun. Yes. No. But you know what I think this is my theory, I think that Sylvester Sloane looked back on this film and said he missed out on something. I think in his mind he thought he missed out on something not doing the comedic version because he did end up doing the serious version of Beverly Hills cup, which was called cobra. He made his own film called cobra. Right, so go ahead. Well, I think that he felt like he missed out on doing the comedic Beverly Hills cop version, and he realized it was a great film. So then he went ahead and he did a film called demolition man, which was a much lighter film, but very similar to Beverly Hills cop when you think about it. A movie which, if you watch it now, has predicted a lot of the things that we now see as wokeness. If you don't remember demolition man, if you thought it was, you know, wasn't funny. Watch it now, and you will think that it was the script was written by Nostradamus. So here's the development history of this movie. So the people they consider didn't offer it to, but they considered for axel foley Al Pacino and James Caan, they offered it to Mickey Rourke, they paid him $400,000 not to do any movies and keep him on ice. That expired and he said, guys, I'm going to keep your money but goodbye. Then they offered it to Harrison Ford. He refused Harrison Ford and along comes Stallone and Stallone. Well, like he does with many things, he just rewrote the whole script. He wanted to quadruple the budget, the end scene would have been him driving playing chicken in a Maserati with an 18 Wheeler. They said, we've only got $12 million. We can't make this movie, and they finally placated him and they said, okay, we'll make a movie where you're like, you know, fine machine guns and cleaning the city up. But it's going to be a different movie. That was cobra. I think we have the post of cobra. A very different movie, not with a lot of humor in it.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Sebastian and Chris Kohls Review the 1984 Film "Beverly Hills Cop"
"We are here to make movies great again. I'm Sebastian gorka, and we are joined as ever. By mister Reagan, Chris Cole. Beverly Hills cop. Oh jeez. Why did you pick this move? I love it. Why did you pick this movie? Well, let me just say, I think this may be my favorite movie that we've done so far. And it's not because it's necessarily the best movie that we've done so far. But the reason is because I think it's the movie that I've seen the least often since I was a kid. I think probably it's been the movie that the longest amount of time has passed since I've actually watched it. And I kind of forgot how good it was. You know that it's a legend sort of intellectually in your head, right? You know, there's this legendary film. But it doesn't have a sequel like Ghostbusters does recently. You know, it hasn't been in the news like Back to the Future has recently. A lot of these films are kind of still in the public consciousness for whatever reason, Beverly Hills cop seems to have faded into obscurity and I'm not really sure why, but it really is a masterpiece. It's fantastic. This movie, although you look at these opening scenes in Detroit, yeah, it's dated. You look at the vehicles that cop cars, the cruises, yeah, this is a movie from 1984. But nevertheless, my word. I have to agree with you. This is just such a fun film to watch. And of course, it's the first movie that had Eddie Murphy in a title role that really this is the one that propelled him to international stardom.

The Eric Metaxas Show
Pat Boone Has Always Been a Beacon of Wholesomeness
"Fascinating that at that young age, you were presented as this image of a wholesomeness and already in the 50s. Look, this is just the way of the world. The dark side is always attractive. And people don't understand what they're getting into. You know, you kind of think like, wow, Elvis Presley, the idea that he died of a drug overdose bloated Iraq at age 42. It breaks your heart. How many of those people they trod that path? And they died so young whether they were talking to Jimi Hendrix or anybody, any name, you know, Jim Morrison. I mean, on and on and on and on and you represent it obviously something very, very different. And The Rolling Stones and even The Beatles, if they were experimenting with drugs, they were very wealthy, and they could go to Switzerland and then have their blood transfused. Yes, Keith Richards famously had to get a blood transfusion because he was so loaded up with drugs. He's like, not a problem. I'll just go to some clinic in Switzerland, and we'll take care of that. Yeah, but kids were dying by the thousands following examples with the drugs that they couldn't afford to have their blood transfused. And people weren't even making well, there was a connection, but I mean, you know, you couldn't blame them for just sinking in their songs and living their lives the way they wanted to. But the fallout from it was too bad. It was very unfortunate. And of course, here I was had four daughters living in Beverly Hills and going to church regularly and riding bestselling books of Christian principles. And yet having rock and roll records at the same time. And so I was okay.

AP News Radio
SportsWatch intro wrap-sportsminute-09-41-08-812
"AP sports. It's the all star break in some NBA players around the move. Russell Westbrook will sign with the LA clippers according to an ESPN report, who also reports the Chicago Bulls are finalizing a deal with Patrick Beverly. Myers Leonard will resume his NBA career with the Milwaukee box who signed letter to a ten day contract letter hasn't played in the NBA since he used an anti semitic slur while playing a video game nearly two years ago. Kevin Love will sign with the Miami Heat. Top 25 college basketball. Third ranked Kansas got revenge from an earlier season blew out loss. This time they handled number 23 TCU 63 58, jayhawks coach Bill self on the difference between this game and the 23 point loss last month. At least we started to rebound in 40 minutes for the most part. We did a good job on their guys. We felt I could really have big nights. In the NHL, David pasternak scored twice. He's got 40 for the season and Boston one again, three one over Ottawa, Florida, top ten Anaheim four three and overtime. It was James reimer stopping 26 shots, lady San Jose to a four zero shutout of Seattle, Philadelphia top Calgary four three. New York islanders over Pittsburgh four to two, Bo horvat and Anders Lee scored less than two minutes apart in the third period. Lee says his team played a complete game and didn't fold against the penguins. I'm really proud of our guys tonight. We could have gone another way. And we pushed through and we took control and were able to come out with just a big one. While Winnipeg goalie caught her hella buck had a spectacular night, he made 50 saves, leading the jets past the New York rangers four to one. At this point, we just taken wins anyway to come. We did a lot of good things. We brought some energy. And we definitely kept into the outside and controlled rebounds. So, you know, there was definitely a lot of those good block shots. It could be K, power play goal. So there's a lot of good stuff tonight. I know the shots are flop sided, but it was a good team game. Former San Antonio spurs in Minnesota Vikings owner, red mccombs has died. He was 91. Chuck Friedman, AP sports

AP News Radio
Kansas beats TCU, the Jets goalie has a big night, and a vormer pro sports owner has passed away
"AP sports. It's the all star break and some NBA players around the move. Russell Westbrook will sign with the LA clippers, according to an ESPN report, who also reports the Chicago Bulls are finalizing a deal with Patrick Beverly. Myers Leonard will resume his NBA career with the Milwaukee Bucks, who signed Leonard to attend a contract Leonard, hasn't played in the NBA since he used an anti semitic slur while playing a video game nearly two years ago. Kevin Love will sign with the Miami Heat. Top 25 college basketball, one game, Kansas, got revenge from an earlier season blowout lost. This time the third ranked jayhawks handled number 25 TCU 63 58. In the NHL, David pasternak scored twice. He's got 40 for the season and Boston one again. Three one over Ottawa, New York islanders over Pittsburgh four two. Each scored two minutes apart in the third period. A former professional sports team owner has died. Red mccombs who at one time owned the San Antonio spurs and the Minnesota Vikings passed away at the age of 95. Chuck Friedman, AP sports

Stuff You Should Know
"beverly" Discussed on Stuff You Should Know
"And it's like, how many times can this place burn down? I guess the answer is three. At least, yes. And big thanks to we need to mention Dave used to book for this research by a man named Peter Bronson, who wrote easily, I would say the quintessential book on the Beverly Hills supper club fire and northern Kentucky forbidden fruit, colon, sin cities underworld in the supper club inferno, and it was in the video that you sent to? No, there's another guy named Robert Webster who was in that video I sent June. He wrote another definitive book on it. Called the Beverly Hills separate club fire. The untold story behind Kentucky's greatest tragedy. And it's really exhaustive to apparently it's got 5 years of research behind it as well. Everything that Bronson guy missed, right? They're famously feuding with each other to this day. Yeah, they keep burning down one another separate clubs. Oh, no, no, no. All right, so this thing, like you said, opened in 70 burned, reopened in 71, shilling was not to be deterred. And it was a big deal. And Frank Sinatra came back even. He was like, that place is open again. All right, I'm back. You can still get a flight into Cincinnati, right? Ella Fitzgerald played their red fox, the righteous brothers. It was, again, a big deal. And such a big deal that they would routinely oversell and over pack that place out. So I saw this is under dispute. So I think Robert Webster in particular, he talked reports of that up to poor reporting. Early reporting after the fire, that they routinely flaunted the building capacity, the fire marshal's capacity number. I don't know that that's necessarily true, but it seems like it came out in court that it did, though. No, but they said that there was some minor violations, but nothing that cost anyone in their lives. So that tells me right there that, no, they weren't doing any major violations like over capacity crowding. Okay. And it was a huge place too. It was so mind bogglingly big that I think people were like, oh, there's 1300 people there. Obviously it's over capacity. Well, I mean, I think they said there were 1300 people in that one room. Right. And the cabaret room. Yeah, where the main stage was. Right. Which was, that was a sweet looking. Place. I mean, the decor in this place was awesome. All right, so Memorial Day weekend is obviously going to be a big deal at a place like this. And it was certainly the case in 1977. John Davidson was the headliner that night, John Davidson, who would later make noise in the 80s for guys like us, is a co host of a show called real people. Isn't that right? That's incredible. That's incredible. Okay, a real people was the other one. Yeah, it was the down market version or maybe the upmarket version of real people. I think that's incredible. That was the one with tarkin and Kathy. Rigby? No. Oh yeah. I think that's Kathy Rigby. Yeah. Remember she always came out wearing a beard of bees like every episode? I just remember the guy. I remember two guys. There was one guy that could catch arrows. That was Kathy Rigby. They would bring on people to do this. Right. And then the other guy, I think I even remember his name for some reason. It's funny how these things stick with you as an adult from when you were a kid. I think he was the yogi kudu. He was the guy that could fold himself and put him in a tiny little clear cube. That was Kathy Rigby too. You were a very confused young man. I'm gonna have to look that up. I think it was yogi kudu. So chuck, we kind of set the stage, Kathie Lee Crosby. Oh, nice. Okay, good job. Kathy Rigby was a gymnast. All right, I'm glad I said that. But I was thinking of Kathie Lee Crosby, I just had the name wrong with you. But that's who I was thinking of. At any rate, we've set the stage for this may 28th, 1977 night at the Beverly Hills supper club. Yep, John Davidson is going to go on. Apparently shaving backstage at this moment. And I say we take a little break, leave John Davidson to his shaving and come back and really

Stuff You Should Know
"beverly" Discussed on Stuff You Should Know
"We are, chuck. And it turns out that despite prohibition being in full force, liquor is really, really easy to get. Especially imagine that. Especially because there was a loophole in the volstead act that said, I know we talked about this in the prohibition episode. That said that if you are making alcohol for medicinal use, you can't. You have to have a huge license. Each bottle has to be bonded by the government. You can't be it's got to be a hundred proof on the nose. There is a bunch of criteria, but you could legally produce alcohol. And there was a guy named George Remus, who was a lawyer. He also was a pharmacist by trade, but he had been defending all sorts of bootleggers in Chicago and realized, man, there is a lot of money in bootlegging. So I did a little research, found out that 80% of the legal booze producing the United States was coming out of the Cincinnati area, and he moved over there and said, I'm going to get into organized crime. And boy did he ever? Yeah, he was living in Chicago at the time. And if you're leaving the organized crime in Chicago to go to Cincinnati, then you must have some good insider information. And indeed he did, he was known after he made that move as the king of the bootleggers because he would and it's a great scam. He would manufacture this quote unquote medicinal whisky. And then he would have a setup where his guys would steal the truck, hijack the truck, and then sell it. And money number is staggering because it says at one point this guy was making $40 million a year in the 1920s. Yeah, it's about $900 million today. So, I mean, that's that made him probably one of the wealthiest people in the United States, if he would have been able to keep the operation up, but of course he wasn't. For sure. So if you were a politician or a police chief or even probably a local cop in the area, it made you pretty wealthy too, because one of the reasons why he set up in northern Kentucky's particularly in Newport was because you could pay people off a lot easier. It was a small town. You can basically make it your fiefdom and that's what George Remus did. And you're right. He got caught pretty quickly. I think within just a few years of setting up this organized crime syndicate. And I just a little aside on him. He was really interesting. He had a cellmate in jail who turned out to be an FBI agent, not an informant, an actual agent who was planted there. The agent found out about all the money that remus had that his wife control that was in her name, the guy left the jail quit the FBI and started an affair with remus wife imaging, and then talked her into basically like selling off all his stuff and funneled money from her. So the FBI guy robbed him blind, remus was so mad that when he got out of prison, he tracked down his wife and shot her in public in broad daylight. Did he get pinched for that? He got pinched. He was convicted, but found not guilty and reason of insanity was taken to sanitarium, right? Same victorium or tearing. I can't remember. A mental hospital. And then because he was a lawyer, used the prosecutor's reasoning that he wasn't insane to get himself released from the actual mental hospital and became a free man very quickly. Well, he knew all the ankles. Yeah, he did, and also one other thing about him is that it's pretty much a certainty that Jay Gatsby from The Great Gatsby was based on George Remus because he had met F. Scott Fitzgerald at some point. Yeah, and probably through some pretty wild parties would be my guess. For sure. But he didn't drink or smoke. Well, well, it gets me here. I think you have to be drink some. Yeah, I think you did. All right, so it's 1925. He's in jail, but by this time he had established such an operation there in northern Kentucky that a little industry of sleaze grew up around it. Kind of a red light district is how Dave put it. And this is where we get to the birth of what was then called the Beverly Hills country club. There was a guy named impeachment who now factors in this story who used to be a driver for remus. And in 1927, he bought this old roadhouse outside of Newport perched up on a hill and basically renovated it into a casino. And a really nice one. They had casinos there, but they were they were called bust out joints. They were kind of, again, they were kind of sleazy places to go. And the Beverly Hills country club was what was known as a carpet joint. And it was a nice place. It was it was the blueprint for what ended up being Las Vegas like a nice place where you could go and you could gamble and you get a dinner and some drink. And even see a show. Yeah, so the thing about that is, yes, it was the whole jam was kind of sleazy. In fact, Newport earned the nickname sin city back in the 30s. And again, Las Vegas is a glimmer in anybody's eye at this point. No. It's a tumbleweed. No, like Newport is Las Vegas in Atlantic City wrapped into one. And if you were a tourist like you were totally fine, you were safe, the streets were clean, like nobody was gonna mess with you because it was so fully mob run, but it was mob run by a bunch of like different disparate people who used to work with George Remus and the Cleveland mob that led by mo deletes who went on to help found Las Vegas. He was one of the original founders. He said, I want this action. This is like just off the border of Cincinnati. We're in Cleveland. We're going to get in on this and he moved in on Newport and started buying up casinos around town. Deletes, deletes that's what I saw. Oh, really? I know, I want to say Dallas, but it's not Dallas. It's deletes. Yeah. It's delightful is what it is. If you look at mobile. He looks exactly what you would think of a mobster mode deletes would look like. He was a big time mobster. He was one of the ones that was grilled by the kofa committee. Kafa. He was one of the ones that helped found Las Vegas years later. Right, right. Yeah, that's what I was saying. But this was years and years later. And again, one of the reasons Las Vegas was founded is because mo deletes was one of the first big time mob guys who showed up in Newport and took over. It was just the blueprint for Vegas later on. All right, so Schmidt is. And again, chuck, I want to just really drive home. We're talking about northern Kentucky. Okay. Yeah. You know how I know that? Because we said northern Kentucky like 60 times so far. I know, but it's just still boggles the mind. So Schmidt owns this Beverly Hills country club and doesn't want to give it up despite mob pressure. He's like, no, this is my place. I want to own it. So what looks like happened is the mob said, fine. We'll burn it down. This was not the big fire, obviously, that came 40 years later. This was in February 1936. Only one fatality very sadly, 5 year old girl, the niece of the club's caretaker died. And here's the thing, they didn't prove arson, but again, everyone was on the take. So it was kind of just understood that it was burned down because Schmidt wouldn't sell. Well, plus also right after the fire mo deletes came and said you want to sell now and that was it mo deletes now own the Beverly Hills country club. And with that, he basically owned Newport in conjunction with a couple other big time heavy hitter Cleveland

Stuff You Should Know
"beverly" Discussed on Stuff You Should Know
"And welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh, and there's chuck and Jerry's here too, and this is stuff you should know about northern Kentucky. That's right, which was in the 1930s and 40s, the casino capital of the United States. It was the Vegas of the United States before Vegas. And 50s, too, even. It's hard to believe I'd never knew any of this so much of this is very cinematic. I was just trying to work out how to tell the story in a movie. Without doing flash forwards and flashbacks, but that's probably how you would have to do it. So I grew up in northern Ohio, which is not that far from northern Kentucky on the other end of Ohio from it, because the area we're talking about is just across the river from Cincinnati. And I guess I had heard of this before. It's one of those things where I can't remember if my mind is telling me that I had a memory before I actually had a memory like I didn't really have one. I just want to think I did. It might be one of those scenarios, but regardless, it is like a huge, huge piece of northern Kentucky, southern Ohio history, and in fact, the more you learn about it, if you were alive in sentient, you know, in the mid to late 70s, it was a national thing. Like, it was a really big deal that this happened. This Beverly Hills supper club fire that we're going to talk about today. Yeah, it was definitely one of the worst sort of entertainment club fires in U.S. history. I would have to look at numbers. I mean, it's probably one of the deadliest fires in U.S. history. Because a 165 people died in horrific fashion, obviously dying by fire is always horrific, but this was as bad as it gets. And I didn't know anything about it. It's a big thanks to you for commissioning this from Dave ruse. My friend, you did. No, I didn't. I didn't commission this. I didn't either. We're going to have to go. You know what? This may be occasionally Dave will say, hey, have you heard of this cool thing? And we'll say, oh yeah, that sounds great. Okay. So that may have been one of these because I didn't know about this. I don't think. No. What day is it? It is Tuesday, I think. Is this a job? Am I dreaming? You're like that kid David on the way home from the dentist. Is this real? All right, so let's go to Newport, Kentucky in the wayback machine. We haven't pulled that thing out in a while. So let's dust it out that's fired up. But there's a possibility in here. Through the wiring, so I have to hot wire it. Luckily I'm good at that. So let's get it fired up and let's go back to the 1920s prohibition era

The Charlie Kirk Show
Harmeet Dhillon Wants to Get the GOP Back on a Winning Footing
"Us through the math. Where do you think we're at right now realistically? I mean, ronna says she has a 110 votes. I think that's a bunch of nonsense. I think it's probably within ten to 15 swing voters. Is that about right? Yeah, I think that's right. And so there are quite a few members we continue to work on them and call them quite a few. I had a great conversation this morning with one member who said, you know, had been previously committed to Rana, who said, I like what I heard. I'm going to keep an open mind and we should talk more in Dana point. You mentioned Dana point, we have these meetings that are at these lavish $1000. Yeah. Yeah, I know that's going to end if I'm the chair of the RNC. I think one of our last meeting where we elected Rana two years ago was at Amelia island and, you know, it was a sort of a leftover booking that somehow we couldn't cancel, but we blew $3 million on that meeting, which is ridiculous, and we need better negotiations on these things so that we don't get stuck with contracts. We can't get out of. So, you know, yeah, I mean, I think we should be focusing on raising money from donors and that not blowing it on ourselves, but actually using it to win elections. And there was the joke back in the day that, you know, Republicans would wear the red cloth, the cloth coat, the sturdy cloth coat, and be economical and hard nosed about it. That's how our party needs to run to, not like, you know, Beverly Hills divorcing. Yes. That's well said.

The Doug Collins Podcast
Why Dr. Vincent Giampapa Collects Stem Cells in Costa Rica
"You brought up something interesting and you talk about our current model of medicine. I have a lot of friends in the medical industry and a medical profession who have done this. And we sort of left this one out here for a little bit. Let's bring it back now. You can collect themselves here, but you collect them in Costa Rica, correct? Yeah, so you can collect them and store them here. But then they'd have to be transferred to Costa Rica and that transfer process is three or $4000 just to transfer them. So that's why we say people. And you can get treated. So if you come to ours, our center there, and frankly, you can see it's called both you look on the web, RMI international dot com. You will see something that looks like rodeo drive in Beverly Hills, and it is an unbelievable state of the art facility, and it's the only facility in Central America that has government license to legally do

The Charlie Kirk Show
US Gas Prices Are Just Pennies Away From an All-Time High
"Breaking news in the last couple hours, the price of oil has now reached near record highs. It's pennies away from record highs. It's dancing right around there. Now we've gone into great detail why energy without having to over complicate it is what moves the civilization. The civilization or the country that uses technology the most efficiently wins. If you're able to move the most amount of stuff, expending the least amount of energy or in the cheapest way possible you are able to progress, you're able to feed your population, you're able to build hospitals in schools, very basic standardized things. Now, of course, we've decided not to teach students this anymore, so our entire government, staffed with people that think energy just comes out of the air and we can extract it simply from solar panels and wind farms and we could beat the Russians that way. Well, now the cost of movement is more expensive than almost any other time. In our lifetime. We are seeing the price of oil now go up upwards of a 120 near a 130 dollars a barrel. In fact, one report is showing that gas is now over $7 a gallon in Los Angeles, play cut two. This is at some local gas stations. They're way above the average. Well, across the street from the Beverly center, one of the most expensive places in LA, drivers are paying this nearly $7 for regular unleaded, nearly $8 for premium. Drivers said they were surprised and not in a good way. And it will only continue to go up from there. It's going to cost a 150, a $170 to fill up your tank of gas. It literally costs more to go from one place to the other. This is an interesting way to lock down a country by other means. You can now force people to stay at home because they can't afford to actually go out of their home.

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
Kodak Black and 3 Others Shot at Los Angeles Super Bowl Party
"Think today's show can be called maniacal Monday. Today's from an ankle Monday. There were things there were some excessive enthusiasm going on, some examples of excessive enthusiasm. Things that happened to the point of insanity, leading up to the Super Bowl, including a shootout in the Beverly grove section of Los Angeles Kodak black. I couldn't tell you one of his songs, I'm sure if I heard that I'd say, oh, I know this song. Don't know the guy, but I know him, but a bunch of rappers named will were shot, no one died, but, you know, they drew guns at a nightclub where Leonardo DiCaprio was and a bunch of famous people are strolling it out. It's Super Bowl weekend in LA boy. I mean, you talk about possible gang violence between the crypts and the Bloods. You talk about all the nightclubs and restaurants and let's not forget the prostitutes. Oh boy, the escorts and prostitutes this weekend in LA just past weekend made out like bandits.

The Larry Elder Show
LA Sheriff Asks Feds to Prosecute Gang Who Killed Cop
"My guess is LA county sheriff Alex V in a way with sheriff. How unusual is it for a case to be taken away from the LA county DA and turned over to the feds and situation like this? How unusual is that? Well, given that track record of gascon sadly, it won't be the first won't be the last time that this is going to happen. Remember, Beverly Hills had a robbery and it went also went to the fez and they bypass gas going, but most people really weren't paying attention to it. And we're going to see more of this and we don't want to overburden our federal counterparts obviously because our numbers might just overwhelm the federal agencies and federal court, but we need to have a deal that's going to actually do his job. And this gentleman just refuses to. And that's not acceptable for us.

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
Chris Noth Is Being Denied Due Process
"Speaking of this allegation against Chris north, I don't here's the thing. These girls are saying what they say happen. And The Hollywood Reporter printed it. Now other papers around the country, maybe the world, because the daily mail has it. They're printing it too. What I want to know is what happened to due process and criminal investigations. Now, these stories become more and more grand when leaked without any corroborating evidence or investigation that puts everything into a certain damning context. Why are they rushing these stories to press? Just go to the police and make your case. If Chris north is found to have done these crimes, then he should pay the maximum price for his ridiculous behavior. But right now, what's happening is this is all slander. This is all hearsay, and it ruins people's lives. I know sometimes people need to be anonymous, but you can not be anonymous with the police one shoe seek justice. Everything having to do with process is upside down right now. You know, if you want to come out anonymously, then I don't get how a man's life can be destroyed because if this goes to trial and these girls names will come to know and Chris is found innocent for the next three years, his career is shit. Now, he doesn't need the money. He's been in three big time syndicated series. But still it ain't right. I mean, I'll tell you, there's some allegations that the former supermodel Beverly Johnson leveled against Chris north back in 1995 that he used to beat her and nobody listened. But people accusing others of criminal behavior. They shouldn't have anonymity. It's unfair to publicly accuse someone of a crime and remain anonymous afterward.

The Naked Parent podcast
"beverly" Discussed on The Naked Parent podcast
"Learning to let go of things. I hold stuff that's awesome. I do too doesn't benefit me. Maybe ever really appreciate how you've highlighted the epilepsy. Along with the autism. Do you have any kind of final guidance. That either is in line with what we talked about or something else that you'd like to share with the parents out there. I think i would tell parents when our kids were born. We don't know. I mean my is typically developing. She's works in marketing very successful university graduate of my kids. I had the same expectations. But i think that you have to look towards that as it changes. You don't always have absolute control over it. And i think we as parents sometimes we beat ourselves up over. Oh i'm not doing enough. All i'm you know i need to do more. I need to do more and while that sometimes true. Sometimes you know it's like that saying you know that saying that people say behind every successful child is an involved parent while sometimes it's an involved parent behind kit child who doesn't develop as typically who doesn't make the progress and. I don't think that we can lay blame as a teacher. I try to always remember that no matter what the parents are doing. They're trying. They're doing what they believe is best. I think you gave us a lot of wisdom today. I know that i gained from talking with you. And i appreciate you taking the time to talk with us. Share your story. I appreciate the invite. And i hope that we can connect down the road and stay connected because this is easier together than alone absolutely. I do believe that you know they'll be. There are times when you know. I'm sure people in the community feel frustrated by others in the community. But you know there. There is support out there. Thanks beverly thank you so much. I appreciate you tip by. This concludes our show for today and might to personally thank you for spending the time with us on a topic near and dear to our hearts if you'd like to be part of the naked parent nation and help us reach those parents. That are struggling and overwhelmed. There's no better way to help them. By subscribing rating and reviewing the show on items i tunes highlights the show's based on these metrics and the more the show gets highlighted. The more opportunities people will have to be introduced to the show where they can hear that message of hope or that tip that can change everything so follow the lincoln our show notes and we hope to have you back here tomorrow where we'll do it again from the team. Here at the naked parent podcast. We wish you the life you've always dreamed up and then some so long..

Sleep With Me
"beverly" Discussed on Sleep With Me
"We'll just don't like don't go. Do anything brash He says well not take a break or go to california and he calls. He calls his friend janney. Who i can't think of the it'll it'll come to me but In in if he calls her just goes there. But there's a couple of sequences of course going to remember out of order. But they're so cool so basically he next thing you know he's in he's in a beverly like los angeles and again in this. Is the eighties So if you think hollywood in los angeles and beverly hills was la la land. Now in the post ought Back then it was a wedge and another is just a lot of mystique especially with beverly hills so you see leaky goes to beverly hills at source. Friend worked at a warehouse of an art dealer whereas friend jenny works and i. She's just trying to figure out he's just trying to get to the bottom of it right. I don't think he's been connected even all those stats other than his friend. Work to there so he goes to beverly hills and he checks he. I don't know where he first Gets the idea or how he pulls this off in also not sure where he gets his car from but at some point so he goes and checks into the hollywood beverly beverly hills hotel. That's what it's called right. And he checks in there and At another missing some secrets And he gets brought in and he goes into the police station and he's like first of all he's like telling he gets. I think the first people. I'd take him in our these two taggart and billy billy tag tagger in Oh man but there's two there's a young cop in an lake older gruff recap And they go into the station. And i it's like he's like holy cow. Look at how much funding you have and how fancy station is in. Then he meets like the head of the department there and He basically i. I think he tries. I think he like pulls a fast. When he says yemen helping lake anna case Some working but maybe he calls his boss and Yeah like immediately within five minutes is all three main characters. Take a liking to him. In the third character still be rough until he sees his lake Axel hassle like win him over. And it gets it just shows a lot of echo's current times Because it's like it kind of ingrained in the system. I guess in like say we'll have shown just treat me with respect Eventually he's like. I maybe i. He says he's just sound vacation and they say okay. Well Okay we'll Enjoy time then. Sorry about the mix up also talk to your boss and he says if you're investigating anything by they're coming home so i guess what i would call that secret like so there's a sequences there's like The shine of l. a. And then the fancy in the hotel newsletter comedy with him checking into the hotel end like whatever all over the top of hollywood beverly hills Meller stuff then. There's him dealing with the problematic police department and overcoming that and then of course he becomes friends I don't know pretty quickly. I.

Hollyweird Paranormal
"beverly" Discussed on Hollyweird Paranormal
"The nineteen thirties brought construction of the main post office and the magnificent beverly hills city designed by architect william gage in the spanish renaissance style. The old santa monica park was expanded from three walks to the entire length of the north side. Santa monica boulevard from wilshire boulevard to north to heaney drive and renamed beverly gardens park the elegant electric fountain featuring a pillar top which is posed a kneeling tonga native amidst the spray of gathering waters was installed at the northeast corner of wilshire and santa monica boulevards. The jets of water fuse a multicolored glow at night. Thanks to a program. Lighting system in the late nineteen forties as the nation entered the post world war two recovery. The city began to develop rapidly with rodeo drive as its focused. The commercial district came to be called the golden triangle as an ever increasing number of internationally renowned retailers there by the nineteen sixties. The city's reputation as a haven for the famous and center for grant homes luxury shopping and dining spread worldwide through films and tv shows shot or set there. The city also grew physically with the annex of a large tract of land in the hills above the east side of town the area known as the trusdale seats originally part of the grace ernest facing stiff competition for shoppers from the new nearby shopping malls beverly hills moved to shore up its status as the region's premier shopping area in one thousand nine hundred to rodeo and its pedestrian path via rodeo opened quickly becoming not only a shopping and tourist magnet but a popular photo and film backdrop by the nineteen nineties the demand for services and the need for seismic retrofitting move the city to restore and strengthen city hall and build and expand civic center with a modernized main fire station and library and an entirely new police headquarters in one thousand nine hundred six. The paley center for media opened its west coast location a significant new building by architect. Richard meier at the southwest corner of north. Beverly drive and south santa monica boulevard. In addition the shopping blocks of north rodeo drive were enhance with new landscaped medians and sidewalks as well as improved street lighting similar sidewalk lighting enhancements remain to the shopping streets of north. Beverly drive and north canyon drive. And of course as we approach the twenty first century. The city added more attractions. Such as nine eleven memorial striking design containing actual steel beam recovered from the ruins of the world trade center and the wallis annenberg center for the performing arts. And now we're back were guys. Doesn't it sound a little different. We're in the same room together face to face. It's so nice. And surreal the same time and now a year and a half later. I think that time is a myth and that it hasn't been a year and a half. But i recently had my second quarantine birthday and that was. That was a very harsh reality like. Oh oh no we've been doing this for and my birthday is not at the start. So my birthday's in june gemini And at the time last year. I really did think we'll be out of this by june late june. Surely 'cause you know. March april may june like. That's that's enough time like we'll be done and so two now have had a second june birthday in quarantine and yes. It's starting to open up all of that but it was a very stark reminder of how long it has been it's been it's been a century it's like hello darkness. It's like standing and looking at the man in the mirror. I it's nice. We here in la recently. The mask mandate. Yeah which i had my mask sewn onto my face so that will not be coming off at any time because they do not trust. Crowds of people. Do not trust my facial expressions. Oh that's the best sans mask job. People come into my job and they're just like they're just clueless about certain things and that's fine. I'm also clueless about many things. But i do not have a poker face alike. The ability to hide my ir behind. A mask is a gift. I don't think i'll be giving up anytime soon. Good don't they won't my toes until like a an outdoor restaurant and i went to a movie theater and a little baby steps trying to re normalize get back to this new normal now. I know we've gone camping. We've i mean we've taken trips during during this pandemic but with you know caution and horse and you now we are all vaccinated. Yeah and you know. We're just gonna try to pick up and continue with this new normal like i mentioned before and we can move him. Yeah and just try to figure. Figure a lot of things out and we're gonna figure out how we're gonna take a little tour of haunted beverly hills. Don't you missed a segue. i do. Miss a good segway. I don't miss being haunted. But what are you gonna do. I know we live in. La can you do. Bryce beverly hills is for sure haunted by race yesterday. Street racers from the valley and rich rich to my two nemeses. The drive aimlessly throughout the neighbor. Like you're you're you have your blinker on laugh at your trading rain okay. I remember when i first moved here. I had been one of the very first weekends. That i was you know had moved to la and we thought we were so fancy and we were going to go to rodeo drive because we're such idiots hundred percent just these little mid western idiots like we're going to rodeo drive and then like luckily one of our friends She was quite posh. She was from like a nice part of london and she's actually rubio so we avoided a little bit of embarrassment. But we'd like we're just these like school aged like idiots in like our you know our cargo shorts and like our flip flops and we did not belong there and it was so painfully obvious that we didn't belong there like no. You're a tourist in rodeo in your seen walking and flip la- cargo short. And here's the thing. Like i get it i. It's hard to understand. I had a cousin before i moved here. That was like don't ever go to hollywood. Leave it in your imagination and that is true. There are certain parts of this city that you should leave chairman nation and then there are certain parts you should absolutely experience a street festivals and like these little restaurant and like the culture and flavor of la. You have to experience in person. La dodgers lawyers experience. You have to experience so fun and who has a lot to offer absolutely other things. Leave it in your imagination and i would say i'm not wealthy so i can't afford to shop on rodeo drive. And if you were in that poor canoe with me..

Hollyweird Paranormal
"beverly" Discussed on Hollyweird Paranormal
"A sleek well designed and optimize trimmer. That makes shaving. Time your favorite time in the bathroom. i'm going to go with my second favorite time. Ooh what's your i. I just got a day over this last year. And it is life changing my god. I'm jealous now but this'll be number to date. Now you get to manscaping. It's a whole journey. What do you like about the lawnmower for brian. O'brien is the best part is that it's engineered so that the ceramic bleeds are actually contoured so that they're not cutting you. That's the main thing for me. Is that nice a regular razor an electric razor on any of those metal blades. They're going to nick. And that is not a cute love. Nobody wants to see that with a ceramic played. It's designed with your safety. In mind this is also upgraded with a four thousand k. led spotlight. It is customized with trim additional guard links with sizes one through four. And did i mention. It's also wireless charging future. I know the future is in wireless. The new wireless charging system uses electric magnetic induction. Which can help battery lengths last longer. There's you know electric magnetic fields and even when it comes this shaving there's a magnetic induction for basically on mars as it is now but that does sound sexual doesn't it does and speaking of sexual if you really think about it if you've been shaving using the same trimmer on your face and your balls. That's you're doing it wrong in alternately. You don't want to end up with cubes in your mouth unless it's like i don't know you're henry cavill fanfare fake like and we all have it. We all have it so no shame but like let us help you so if you go to manse keep dot com you can get twenty percent off and free shipping as long as you use the code paranormal. That's manzke dot com code paranormal. Unlock your confidence and always use the right tools for the job with manscaping guys all right guys before we go into the episode before we go into the banter and the tour we gotta learn a little bit about the beverly hills history and please feel free to time. Jump to fifteen minutes and three seconds. If you want to go directly into the episode but before we touch on our beverly kills tour we must learn a little bit more about the beverly hills history because you know we like to mix a little history and crime and ghosts so we gathered some information based on the history of beverly hills from the beverly hills historical society website of beverly hills historical society dot org and so according to the beverly hills historical society it all started with maria rita in the years. Eighteen fifty two. Maria survives a a siege and shootout with native americans who attacked her rancho and this may have influenced her to sell her land two years later to henry. Hancock and benjamin wilson unfortunately for the new owners the water straight up in the area a few years later and followed by a long drought that left their livestock to die. Hancock in wilson are remembered today for the upscale hancock park neighborhood and local geographic landmark of mount wilson by eighteen sixty eight. The land was owned by edward. Bruce or press who sought to establish a community for immigrant german farmers to be called something muttiah in the meantime he turned the ranch into lima. Bean fields selling his crop to cover taxes in santa. Maria was never to be yet after another. Drought plotted bruce's streams early in the eighteen eighties. Henry hammel and charles dunker acquired the land with the intention of creating morocco a subdivision with north african theme. The us economic collapse of eighteen eighty eight put a quick end to that scheme in the year. Nineteen hundred the fortunes of the former rancher began to improve a group of oil speculating. Investors led by burton e. Green bought the bean field on behalf of the amalgamated oil company. Green drilled a series of wells that failed to strike oil however they did strike a lot of water enough to support a town in one thousand nine hundred six green and his partners reorganized as the rodeo land and water company inspired by beverly farms massachusetts green and his wife renamed the bean field beverly hills in one thousand nine hundred seven landscape architect. Wilbur d cook was hired to design a street plan for beverly hills. Cook laid out curving streets with larger lots on the north side smaller. Lots on the south side and triangular commercial district between them. All the streets were tree-lined and land was set. Aside for public parks for elementary schools and a high school vision was to make the area affordable to a range of incomes. as long as the buyers weren't black or jewish these shameful restrictive covenants would eventually fall in the nineteen forties. Thanks to a lawsuit brought by hattie. Mcdaniel ethel waters and other notable african americans. The first house was completed in one thousand nine hundred seven but sales were very slow. And by nineteen twelve to bolster the interest of potential buyers green completed construction of the beverly hills hotel on the site where the waters once gathered. The luxurious establishment served not only travelers but the locals as a defacto city hall community center movie theater and religious worship than you. The hotel was reached by the specially constructed. Dinky railroad a wondrous attraction in itself by nineteen fourteen. The local population was large enough to support the incorporation of beverly hills city but real growth didn't take off until the errors most glamorous hollywood couple mary. Pickford and douglas fairbanks bought a small lot on summit drive and dubbed their home. Pickfair put a pin on this. Because we definitely touch on pickfair in the tour. Following their fashionable lead was a host of film industry stars directors and producers who began the celebrity mystique that remains a constant of beverly hills to this day would also brought fame to the young city was the addition in nineteen nineteen the los angeles speedway the site of auto races. Second in importance only to the course covering most of the southwest quadrant of the city barely made it through half of the roaring twenties. Among the notable structures built on the land formerly traversed by race cars was the beverly wilshire hotel in nineteen twenty eight the same year edward l. dini completed greystone mansion a fifty five room mansion and estate which was a wedding gift for his son which is now owned by the city and operated as a museum park and event venue. Also put another pen on this location because we will definitely be stopping here towards the end of our tour because there is a story of true crime and ghosts attached to this mansion with growth. Came the return of a problem that haunted the nineteenth century rancho a potential shortage of water. And this even hans us to this very day in nineteen twenty-three an effort to secure a steady water supply through annexation by the city of los angeles was defeated by the voters. Thanks to opposition led by mary. Pickford who feared the loss of local identity. Celebrities continued to be important to civic life. Most notably the nationally cherished humorist and honorary mayor of beverly hills will rogers in his memory. The park across sunset boulevard from the beverly hills hotel was renamed after his death..

Sexy Unique Podcast
"beverly" Discussed on Sexy Unique Podcast
"Few, we have to do have some connection to so these women. Can you anyone can weigh in and I came in and and whether on reader mail or not, if you know any info cuz I'm sure it's the Talk of the Town. Yeah, let us know right in what's going on up in? What's going on up in Franklin Lakes? I want to know. And also like if you have big summer Cook-Out, Gatherings invite invite, the both of us. Yeah. Cuz I would love to just want to go and just get gossip. I want to get gossip and I want some just like big Italian men to grill, up some sausage. And then just like laugh and smoke cigars. What if I get slap jack though, dead? Well. I'll go, are you would hey, there you are day while you're going to. I think. Maybe the maybe the Italians are a little more friendly. Gay-friendly back then they were there. Like you're one of those lgbtq? Yeah. I knew I had a cousin. I had a cousin who cousin, Greg cousin, Greg who was in the LGBT. We like them. Yeah, he's great, he's great, he's great, we accept his lifestyle, you know, it is what it is, what it is. Anyway, so way off, you know, any information, pray for Dina, pray for Lexi, pray for Deena's, man. And Caroline. All I have to say is your day will come. You're a cloud. You're a clown, you know what? You all care of your clown. That means you're a clown Pagliacci. Anyway, talking about other clown, talking about some Beverly Hills clowns. Speaking of the clowns, oh wait, by the way, I'm Carrie. Oh, I'm Laura and you're listening to sexy unique podcast off Beverly Hills angels. Off off off off. We're back in, we're back. In a, we're back and Old Lake Tahoe. The coma. The lake Cuomo of California saying, I just made that up like Cuomo. They come like, yes. We come up on crystals. Still confronting Sutton about the icing a sudden. I see no color, whatever her last name is Sacco's. What's your last name? I don't know. I forgot to ya in Foster's, a choosing younger than you think that that stock house I'm tired today guy know we'll never know. Yeah so they're like sorry we're going to say no I was just going to say like you think that this conversation has been like nipped in the bud move on but no like we're still we're still in the bare room. Kyle's sitting on the counter. Keeping her cool and Sutton continues to dig her own grave. This was a guy that girl are you. That girl. And she's like, set and starts crying and she gets, I truly don't see color. The word racist to me is a virus worse than covid-19 K. I was like, okay like.

The Patriot AM 1150
"beverly" Discussed on The Patriot AM 1150
"Beverly Hills Cop and Top Gun, The maverick Don Simpson. On live for the movies, and tragically, he died for them. The L. A coroner proclaimed John's body to be the most toxic corpse in the history of California. Autopsy season one takes you inside the nefarious circumstances surrounding dons death. Listen to the podcast series that don wherever you get your podcasts. All right. We roll along 809 41 Sean 15,000 stations at a gas case You're interested. Those shortages expected the last until Memorial Day USA today. People will likely see gas outage numbers peaked 48 hours from now, so it's only gonna be a little worse. It'll be a crappy weekend if you're planning on driving this weekend, but that by Memorial Day shortly thereafter Okay, That's the temporary issue. What about the long term issue? Now we're now we're paying ransom to the hackers. That's never a good idea. Now we got 15,000 stations out of gas and likely going to remain out of gas in the short term in the wake of the gas shortages. You know? Well, why did they then close down the Keystone pipeline? When Senator Grant home and it turns out even John Curry Har voted for the 87 billion before our borders against it. Recognizing That the fact that the best form of transportation that would be a pipeline pipe is the best way to go grand home set and Kerry saying the same thing. Okay, What are you going to do to prevent future? Cyber attacks against the country. Joe, What do you going to do to offer more support to Israel? What are you going to do to stop the emerging, unholy proxy war alliance between Iran and Russia? And China. And what are you going to say? The Vladimir now that you have all the flexibility in the world as president in regards to his cyber attack from his country to this country? What are you doing, Joe? I know you. I know you get your sippy cup Your warm milky you say night night, But what the hell are you doing? Yesterday. If he's confounded, confused and utterly made no sense when he had a chance of a they told me not allowed to answer questions. You're the president. Do what you want..

Women and Crime
"beverly" Discussed on Women and Crime
"Was finally arrested and she was released on bail unfortunately and they waited until november of that year to formally charge her. I guess they were collecting evidence and building their case. There are a bunch of interrogation you could hear online and she denies denies denies. That is as you would expect okay. When she was formerly charged she was charged with four counts of murder. Eleven count attempted murder and eleven counts of causing grievous bodily harm. Wow and this was the worst in history at this time and since then as far as crimes against children and she got bail she did get bail okay. Different than the us system in terms of bail and potentially dangerous people making. I'm sure you know the harold. Shipman case i do very well. Yeah so herald. Killed over two hundred patients. He was a medical doctor. He ended up only being charged with. I believe fifteen death. And i mentioned that beverly's was the worst in history but it's the worst as far as crimes against children. Shipment did not target children killed adults. Yeah while being interrogated. As i mentioned she remains calm. Denied any foul play and said she was merely caring for these children and at the beginning most of her colleagues and the parents of the victims supported beverly and believed that she had nothing to do with the crimes and almost that. You'd like a scapegoat for the police in the hospital. That would quickly change especially after since she left the hospital. All of a sudden there were no more incidences of death. Or illness of this kind while interrogating beverly. They found that she demonstrated a pattern of behavior that pointed to a very serious personality disorder every visited and assessed by numerous healthcare professionals while awaiting her trial but she continuously refused to confess to any murder or injuries and while she waited for a trial developed anorexia which is just a further indication of the state. She was in now. A person who has this condition will intentionally restrict their food intake as a way to help them manage emotional challenges..

Women and Crime
"beverly" Discussed on Women and Crime
"The family was worried that perhaps it was some abnormality that caused becky's death and they were not going to take any chances with their only surviving child right. Did they know they were taking her to the place that you know harmed her while she was in beverly scare and at this point beverly was the main nurse on the ward. Katie's heart stopped and the resuscitation team was summoned yet again. They were able to save her but unfortunately two days later she suffered another attack which resulted in the collapse of her lungs. Katie was then transferred to another hospital where they found that five of her ribs were broken. Did she survive hanging when they don't know why her is broken but attributed to possibly revival attempts. But there's really no way to know. In addition to that she suffered serious brain damage as a result of the oxygen deprivation. The doctors also concluded that katy had large doses of insulin and potassium in her system while she was lucky to be alive. Megan she now had severe medical issues. Such as partial paralysis cerebral palsy and sight and hearing damage. God you want to hear the sickest part of this sue phillips the mother of katie and becky had asked beverley allitt to be katie's godmother because she was so grateful beverly for saving her child's life. Beverly was a master manipulator. She made everyone think that she was part of being a victim. Here and little did this. Poor mother know that alex was actually responsible for causing the death of their one daughter and the irreversible harm of their other. That's terrible over the next two weeks. The incidences of trauma continued. Luckily however there were no more deaths but similar to katie's fate there were plenty of situations where children suffered severe complications. There were seven year old matthew davidson. Who arrived at the hospital. After a non severe wound injury. He suffered a heart attack but survived. Then there was nine month old. Christopher king an eight month old christopher christopher-peres good who were also injured by beverly while under her care next was one of her youngest victims a seven week old baby patrick l. stone who was for a minor ear infection when he was found unconscious once again after being in beverly scare in this case. Another nurse on duty reported that the alarm that alerts everyone when someone stops breathing had been turned off remember. This happened in an earlier case so now nurses saying this seems weird but again. No one really suspected anything. Suspicion slowly start to grow around this time but doctors and nurses suspected that it was perhaps an outsider who was harming the children they could not have comprehended the idea. That one of their own was inflicting harm on these patients. And keep leaving. They had not contacted authorities to this point. I've actually seen that happen with other healthcare situations hospitals are usually afraid to contact authorities. There are also the they worry about their negligence issues. Things like that and their own liability. Yep but i think because they didn't sound the alarm earlier you know. Some of these terms could have been prevented app anyway. Finally in april nineteen ninety-one beverly's killing spree would come to an end after a fifteen month. Old girl claire. Pack was admitted to the hospital..

Women and Crime
"beverly" Discussed on Women and Crime
"This was actually in the same that liam had died just a few weeks before she was able to be revived and the staff decided to transfer to another hospital. Queen's medical centre in nottingham. It was a larger hospital. And i think this point. They weren't taking any chances with things going on and they wanted this girl to get more care soon. After she arrived in nottingham the attending physician discovered a really odd thing she had a puncture hole in her armpit with an air bubble near the whole. Yep so this showed up and chest xrays. Yup the sound familiar to you. Oh sure shockingly. They attributed this to an accidental injection and no investigation was initiated surprising. Right and although she made her recovery she would never be the same. She had several medical issues and to this day she requires medical and psychological care. I couldn't find exactly what type of standing medical issue she has. But i was able to find that. She has severe anxiety and severe mental health complications. Because she's fearful of what happened to her. The next tragedy came when five-month-old paul cramped and was admitted are march twentieth. Nineteen ninety-one due to a non serious lung infection right. Before he was about to be discharged his condition had improved so they were actually preparing for his release so he was doing very well. Allitt was alone with paul and she called for help. Because paul appear to be suffering from insulin shock he got better and then this would happen again. This would happen on three separate occasions. He went into a near coma and doctors could not explain why his levels were fluctuating. On three occasions hall went into a near coma and the doctors could not explain why his insulin levels were fluctuating. So much he to like. Haley was transferred to the hospital. In nottingham. alad ended up writing in the ambulance with him and when they arrived he was found to have too much insulin in his system. Luckily he did end up surviving. But listen to this meghan. He had over forty three thousand million units of insulin which is the highest. They say they have ever seen. I think normal somewhere around five hundred and please tell me. Now there's going to be a problem. Or how are they gonna explain this megan. How was this not enough to raise alarm bells. I do not know but a chocking yup just the next day five year old bradley gibson was admitted to the hospital due to monja and he went into an unexpected cardiac arrest once again he was resuscitated and save one. His blood results came back. They showed high levels of insulin which physicians could not explain that night once again. While under alex care he suffered yet another heart attack. He too was transferred to nottingham hospital where he made a full recovery. Now this is just too much of a pattern not to start. Not even near done yet. Mega yeah and although i actually know cases where this has happened as well so at this point there's enough of a pattern but keeps going okay just the day. After bradley was transferred to year old yukon. Chang was admitted because of a fractured skull from falling out of a window. In the care of alad. His oxygen levels drop dangerously two times once again. Beverly raised the alarm and he was transfer to queens medical centre in nottingham and similar to the boy before him he. He made a full recovery and went home so it seems like these sick children. The second they left this hospital and went to another hospital. They all got better. I don't know how no one put this together yet. On april first nineteen ninety-one two month old. Becky phillips was admitted for a stomach virus that the end her twin sister katie were born premature and they both suffered some lingering health problems so everyone just assume this was part of what had plagued them since they were born..

Women and Crime
"beverly" Discussed on Women and Crime
"Okay so this. All starts on february twenty first nineteen ninety-one when liam taylor was admitted to ward for where beverly worked with chest infection. I read a few reports that said liam was only seven weeks. Old ally out of her way to reassure his parents that he was in capable hands with her and she told them young. Go home get some rest. So obviously the parents were by his side and she was so loving that they really trusted her so they went home to get some rest when they returned alad advise them that liam had endured a respiratory emergency but he had recovered from and this was very confusing because it seems like to know where things took a turn for the worst. But you don't know one suspected anything alad even ended up volunteering for an extra night shift so that she can watch over the boy. The parents at this point chose to spend the night at the hospital as well and to the shock of everyone liam had another respiratory crisis just before midnight but yet again he had recovered. Allitt was left alone once again with the boy and his condition worsened dramatically. He became deathly pale. with red. blotch is appearing on his face at which point elliott summoned an emergency resuscitation team. So in england they call it the emergency resuscitation team. It would be our code blue. Got someone's in respiratory distress at the time alex nursing colleagues were confused by the absence of alarm monitors which had failed to sound when he stopped breathing. So normally there'd be alarms and for some reason they didn't go off and this seemed concerning but it was kind of forgotten about since they were really focused on this little boy. No one really anything of it. Despite the best efforts of the resuscitation team liam suffered severe brain damage and remains alive only due to the use of life support machines at this point. His parents made the agonizing decision to remove their baby from life support being that they were told his condition would not improve. He died on february twenty-second and his cause of death was recorded as heart failure. As a result of an undiagnosed heart condition. Everyone on the word was in mourning and really dumbfounded as to what could have happened to this little boy and it was never questioned about her actions leading up to his death. There was really no reason to question her. Just two weeks later. Timothy hardwick an eleven year old boy with cerebral palsy was admitted to work for the hospital. Due to an epileptic fit due to his condition he was not to be alone at all. So beverley allitt stayed with him and was put in charge of his care once again after being left alone with the boy she summoned the emergency team who found him without a pulse and turning blue. Unfortunately the team was unable to revive him. An autopsy was performed but there were no red flags and his cause of death was determined to be a complication of his existing condition. Everyone once again confused upset. How could another child be lost so soon but nobody thought anything. Nefarious was going on all tragedy. It's a small child but the children are in the hospital for a condition. So there's that alley. In fact beverly was even consoled because two of her patients had passed away so she was the victim in a way because she was so close to these patients. You see what this is setting up for less than a month. After timothy hardwick death one year old kaely desmond was admitted to the hospital because of a chest infection which. She seemed to be recovering. Well from however five days later with aladin charger for care kaley went into an unexplainable cardiac arrest chillingly..

Women and Crime
"beverly" Discussed on Women and Crime
"Most people say she acted very strange in this relationship. She demanded that she become his girlfriend and when he gave her a ring she declined and said she didn't want to get married but then at another point she asked him to marry her a lot of strange things. She refused to hold his hand in public she. She reportedly would only sex him once a month. They had very violent fights in which stephen was the victim of domestic violence. She would need him in the groin. She also had a habit of lying. She made several claims that she had been raped and that stephen had aids. Oh wow she also claimed that even raped her but all of these things were never corroborated and likely ally when you at her previous behavior but her behaviors continued when she was suspected of smearing feces along the walls of a nursing home where she trained. That doesn't even make sense to me to be honest. Now i don't i don't i don't even see where that fits was any pattern but okay god so that's just an example of this kind of odd behavior. She was having her. Attendance was also very poor due to the amount of illnesses illnesses that she had and as a result of all of this. She ended up failing her nursing examinations. Well it's interesting because you said she dropped out of school so she must've gotten a ged then gone back and for nursing. Okay i get it. I'm putting it together. God despite beverly's history of poor attendance and odd behavior. She was hired on a temporary six month. Contract at the chronically understaffed grantham and cast of in hospital in lincolnshire in nineteen ninety and this is where beverly began to work as a nurse in the children's ward at the time there were only to train nurses on the day shift and one for the night so when she started. It was very much understaffed and it seems that. Even though she failed her nursing exams they may have been desperate. And that's why they were giving her like temporary contract. Okay people. She worked with started noticing. Strange things about her behaviour not long after she began working there while talking to other nurses. Beverly would often make strange statements at one time. She claimed that a poltergeist stuck a carving knife into a pillow that this poltergeists had set her bathroom curtains on fire and fed tablets to her. Landlady's dog none of this makes sense. Nor is it supposed to make because you're looking at me like what are you well. This sounds like delusional. So i'm not sure if she's now blurred the line between you know what i mean like exaggeration to delusion yup and while she worked at this hospital the police were called on two different occasions. One time to investigate a kitchen fire and another time. They were human feces found in the refrigerator. All my god. A few nurses express that they thought that beverly should have a psychiatric examination but they never said anything to her. I don't know if they were scared of her. They just felt like it wasn't their place but either way it was at this hospital that the tragic events at the center of today's episode took place. There are several victims in this case. And of course they all deserve to have their stories. Heard i'm going to discuss each. But i'm not going to spend too long on the specifics of each case because for the sake of time. I wanna make sure that we are able to talk about the arrest. The trial the aftermath of theory. So i might not so much time on victims as we normally would like to..

Deck The Hallmark
"beverly" Discussed on Deck The Hallmark
"Houses. A great imitation. There's no doubt about no no no and that's why we're going strong. That's why it is your love for each. it's just they don't call you al for nothing for nothing. Pendle is can have the panthers the l. Yeah you're gonna be pandals else. Hey i know someone who can renew your vows for you really really. Did they do it. Like maybe in tampa they anywhere anything works. Wow yeah i hear. There's a three day waiting period forgetting mary anytime. What if you're not the first fifteen and he just kind of got it down to where we're just doing jokes for fifty people love not upset about. Hey i know. It's beverly hills but people have beer at weddings. That's not the item there so just taken aback by somebody who wants to have a beer at a wedding is absurd. Like you're spending millions of dollars told me there's an open bar at that wedding with what we were so low class and all of our friends are so low there. They're tasting champagnes. I'm assuming that's for the toasts. That's not or you mean to tell me they're going to the wedding and everyone's just drinking champagne tough. That's a tough one anything better than going to a wedding. You're not excited about it. You're just like i can't believe this is happening. And then you show but it's an open bar off okay. I mean look got bigger. Things are look. Also if they have chick-fil-a nuggets as well does that does weddings with mars. A nugget trae awesome. What we spend all our money in the open bar. What do we do for food nude. Can we stop like like. Let's make weddings fun again. That's what i you know what i'm talking about. Get those nuggets. Like are great like. Stop it with your sideshow bar and nuggets with an open bar. I'm there out go to anybody's wedding if you saved them. Save the money on the like. Don't do invitations. Just let me know what's happening. i'll be there. I'll be there. And if i'm there. I want nuggets. And i wanna know how all open bar wedding. Open nacho bar all my gosh open chicken wing bar open cream sundae bar open alcohol bar hop. I mean i'm there. Why are we planning weddings. I i wonder people wouldn't find our weddings appeal. They're wrong how can tell you that Speaking of wrong brennan penny in this movie says. I don't think i could head back to oregon without seeing the ocean now. I don't really care where they live in oregon. Your job is taking people out onto the ocean. That is what you do for a living sir. I'm just begging. You hear acts like the character makes sense. You can't see you see the ocean every day every once it gets in your blood though man i can't i can't i. Just don't understand. I get it like organs. A big state. I'm not saying. They live near to the ocean but his job is to take people out on the ocean. How is this something he has to do before he goes back. Home doesn't make any sense terrible talking. About what what about. What the hallmarks have you guys. Consider doing those. My idea for this segment would be. It's where we discuss any questions that we have that we would love some sort of clarity to after watching this. Movie panda wok. Why aren't they into social media. Why is jordan so frightened of the social. I mean he. He's manley aggressive about that. I think jordan is like in the witness protection. Yes yes yes yeah. He is much very upset about all of it. Dancing the there filming him wall seriously man like when he's eating the like get a thing. I totally get like not want like. Don't put my kids on social media. Like i'm totally but your grownup like what's like in you're in the witness protection program. This is the world that you live at bow tries is just a part of it. Don't worry too much because terrence makes millions of dollars by being social media influence or. He's not going to have a lot of you and your brother just walking through the hotel there may be like a couple of seconds like it's not going to be all over the internet mad about the dancing things like that. My my other one is the dancing thing that they posted did seem not nice it did. It did have some snark to it like they were making fun of the couple. Not knowing how to dance right. What's up with that tear. It's like a lot of stuff that it all depends on whose side you wanna be. There's a lot of stuff that terence could be faulted for of being awful. Yeah yeah wanted to for sure. But that's the same goes for every character in the movie but that's part of the problem. I think what you're saying like terrence isn't a good guy but his. He's so likable like his personality is really great. And he's not like snarky page in this movie heat like this poor girl. Imagine a woman coming up to you and saying oh. I want to wear the wedding dress of my mother and and talking her out of the trees a monster monster but we like like what is his deal understand. I just need a timeline of events for this thing. I think that's my big issue because first of all they say The weddings going to be on valentine's day and then they immediately say that's in six weeks which means happy new year to you folks but but also it means their six weeks. All these people have jobs they work. And the next day they wanna play beverly hills in beverly hills for. I don't know. I don't know a few days and then come back and i feel like the wedding like the next day or two away. So where are the six weeks like. How long do they spend in each place. So here's my thinking was in this. Because i had the same question i think what they do is they get. They fly up to plan and get flies him back and then they fly back for the wedding so he would have worked. Had they had the beverly hills wet correct but they said no go. They went home and so it makes you think that they ended up because they the only reason they were going to have the wedding. That soon was. Because i. I believe at one point. I heard three weeks. I think there are going to spend three weeks in beverly hills planning it so fly home. Okay my next question subsequent question as you probably also have his how all these people taking three weeks off of work. Well let's go back little wet. Well let's think about it corey you can do it every once Molly she just takes pictures whenever somebody who doesn't even sell them online and the other two people we don't care about their josh door join runs. The farm doesn't join. Russell far formed for three weeks. Doing it you bet you bet you could. Hey i'm getting married. Can you watch weeks weeks pesticide on this and then and then her what does she do. We don't know see some teacher. She's.

Deck The Hallmark
"beverly" Discussed on Deck The Hallmark
"Bad for me. I think it's it's not that low i. It's it's it's it's it's in the bottom half of the classic. Its forced to the christmas. I hate the christmas during just kind of occurring to me. The more i see penny is that i. I kind of like i. I kind of like brennan penny movies. So like i'm i'm kind of like anytime he's in there. I'm like good time with this guy. I'm having a good time with this pal. do you think the issue is brooke. You don't like burke. I i would say going into this movie and my mind i would have put both of these two leads on my lower half of the regulars but i think pennies kind of growing on. Here's kind of like. He's kinda like i didn't mind him in this movie. I the last one. Little christmas charm law was the first time i was like okay. So here's the pride of mine pro think we can. I could sum up my feelings on this movie in a sense. Which is the two leads. Believe they are making an old hallmark movie and the screenwriter and everyone else are thinking. They're making a new hallmark movie. Like those to brooke. Your saying brennan penny are acting in this way that only works in that old formula. That homework isn't using as much anymore. Like this formula. They're trying to tell jokes and they're trying to be funny and they're trying to be modern hip and not have people. Just be nice to each other right out of the box but penny and yours say are still trying to play that those old archetypes of what hallmark lead is. That's my big issue with the movie. It just never jaws because and they're still more interesting to me than the other couple in the movie. That's getting married they are. I mean you know. They are legitimately es just tom. Hanks and meg ryan by comparison to the other couple. That doesn't even seem interested in each other and they're getting married that that's even worse to be. I don't think that they have. This is crazy. I don't think to lead have enough alone time for in their dates like they're always doing something the other couple and so. I don't think i don't have enough time to grow in their relationship. I think that's passed. They do. But maybe i don't know i just it. You don't need as much time together when you have that pass and you're able to work but they're fighting every seen all of it just as a judge like none of jobs you've ever read the movie ever acting in it. None of them are on the same thing. That's fair time for all the field. Smartest show we talk about. What in this movie. Gavison feels panda Man tear it's In general whenever he's on the screen. I think terrence does a really fun job and i really. I will say this for a movie. Where i don't think any of the characters have in my opinion lob redeeming features terrence does have that kind of redemption ark so to speak. I know it's a small redemption. But like he comes and i really liked that he comes. He's like hey listen. You helped me reconnect with what i used to believe in stuff. I think that's fine. Blueberry james magical ma'am i that was the one seen. I think when terence's husband said. Hey you you gotta try this jam like it was like terence's husband knows that terrence kind of may be lost as well yeah sucked up into the beverly hills lifestyle and like it's like that thing where you don't want to just call somebody out but you're like i'm not gonna keep kind of showing you what you're missing and the james. What did it. So i thought it was a sweet moment between the two of them. I thought the jam was a nice connection point to his his past and his home. And so i like that. It's a no for me. I'd i think that you probably all saw that coming. Nothing in this movie felt authentic or genuine or worthy of feel like it all felt like it was people doing a paint by numbers movie with different canvases. So it's a note for me. That's a good analogy. That was really good. One man. I appreciate that. Take away for another time to Unless we take another one come on.

Deck The Hallmark
"beverly" Discussed on Deck The Hallmark
"Little off today. Guys just yeah. It was a little wild and crazy louis while wild monday nights you get it. Yeah guys great to be here on a monday. Yesterday was so much fun alonzo once again hanging out. Twelve dates of christmas mark paul. Abc family very fun. Very fun movie. Hope you listened to that episode. And if not. I'm not gonna tell you the positive. Go listen to that but like if you get to that episode. That'd be really cool to cause. I think you're gonna like this one. We got a lot of really great things plan that we went through show prep whether or not paying a dozen. I'll do them. I'm back on board. you have to. You have to give me the pep talk. You didn't give me the pep talk. Beforehand gives us clues right so it's small but also a little bit bigger than what you would expect pill bottle. I know but it's edible. Hershey kiss now. The pandemic gives us clues stuff. So i'm excited more things like that and they have excellent beverly hills wedding today. Everybody the first of the lever after movies. Now banda you and i were. You came in today and you were like you know what i think. I've made an egregious error in judgment listening back thinking back to deliver his show three stores while he was what i'm speaking of. Is you finally saw the trailer for playing cupid. Next week's movie. And i i was higher on it and i said today. I think it's going to be the surprise of the year Paying a you saw the trailer. As soon as i watch it all know this feels right here for the one star wars movie. I can return gonna like. Yeah no. I'm there for it. So listen you're you're a big man because you're able to admit when you've made just a horrible a horrible. Yeah and able to battle one. And i wish i had. I wish i had finally saw a commercial for mixed in the mediterranean. Ever been on. That looks as wonderful as i am excited about it and then the krakow in the in the hines. I mean. Show me anything. Are you paying to see these mid or not. No no we are from the tv. So tv service though. It doesn't matter like you spend money though you have to take my money. Implies he had to pay for that. Thought about whole like friendly was like do you want to do another month. And he thought about not but then he saw. How do you do the show he was. He's just he hadn't planned planned out. Thought it all the way through. But as soon as craig. Allen hines come in my money wide open wide. Of course don't forget you can watch this show and all of the movies that were talking about For the most part on friendly tv trying. You can't see twelve days of christmas. You know you can see that elsewhere But this movie and all the love of after movies right here in front of tv and daito mark got premature pluses hanging out for you. Waiting another way you can watch and interact with so many of the amazing double deckers. You have joined a facebook group We mentioned last week on on the pods and on social media We've done some some moving things around and regard supremo gem plus and really all it means is if you join. You're going to get more so like even more than than before so exciting stuff. i think. Exciting stuff over on the broncos campus. No it's too late for you. It's too late for you amount. You will not get your money fortunate. I'm really excited about joining. What's the most exciting part for you. Just the fun with the moiseyev. You love hanging out with the boys in the beverly hills wedding so ready. Beverly hills wedding originally aired on february six twitter twenty one. This molly's a photographer who loves shooting pictures of love. She loves it so her brother is getting engaged. She's there to take pictures of the nice little engagement His fiance's brother is her axe. You guys following following diagram on so it's like you know molly and corey. They're in love and molly's brother is in love with corey. Sister is a big big family. Runamuck there i'll tell you what. Why so good. Oh good. I'll put there's too many people in state. It is so one hundred creaking concern little worried. We got closer. We did those house of blues. North myrtle off front. It's a great house blues. So his name's corey. He shows up to celebrate the engagement. Malia psych watts. I didn't see this happening. And it is clear that maybe they're not super comfortable being around each other korean molly. There were together for a while. He left to travel see the world and he didn't even ask her to come along. Just said i'm i'm out. Skeets didn't leave on a very good note. Mali's trying to plan. The wedding doesn't have a lot to work with. And so she decides. I'm going to enter sweepstakes for a beverly hills wedding beverly hills wedding nice. She wins yeah. A beverly hills wedding So they go to the beverly hills and the groom is uneasy. He doesn't want stuff on social media and they're gonna be posting stuff throughout the wedding and preparation leading up to whatever it's free sometimes you gotta take one for the team right boys but molly really hills wet you gotta but molly and corey are starting to spend a lot of time together you know the maid of honor best man doing activities and nothing helps men open wounds like crepes. I've said it a million times. They're planning really. This wedding isn't quite what's the bride and groom are feeling comfortable with. But it's beverly hills. It's got that beverly hills style on everything. They're not super thrilled about it. But it's free it. Keep feeling the pressures he keeps saying. Yeah sure that's fine molly and corier hanging out there by the beach. They almost kiss but she remembers. Seating charts are important. Gotta go take care of that They're all together. They're tasting hors d'oeuvres and those low puff pastries with green stuff on 'em nasty and they're like we hate these and all it all just avid. So we we hate all of this. I hate the dress. I hate beverly hills. I hate you go back to the far where we belong so they call off the wedding that go back and the wedding planner earlier in the movie was handed some form jam blueberry jail. That's exactly right because they will live on on the farm bluebird look at you legitimate farm and he has his job jam and he's like okay but.