35 Burst results for "Billion Times"

Noah Was a Conspiracy Theorist Until It Rained. Dr. Vladimir Zelenko a Conspiracy Realist

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:57 min | 1 year ago

Noah Was a Conspiracy Theorist Until It Rained. Dr. Vladimir Zelenko a Conspiracy Realist

"And so doctor talk a little bit about how you've had this correct hypothesis from nearly the very beginning. And you've now seen the vaccine and some of its failures. You've seen all of this kind of unfold. How are you processing this? It must be incredibly frustrating for you, especially as you see what's happening in Israel here in the United States because as you say you've treated 7000 patients. It's incredibly liberating for me. I have to tell you that becoming aware of reality, even if it's unpleasant, but at least living in reality has therapeutic value. And not living in a lie. So I reverse engineered the worst crime in human history. And I've put the pieces together and I see the puzzle. I see the big picture. And I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a conspiracy realist. There's a joke, right? No, in the Bible, was a conspiracy theorist until the grand, right? That it wasn't the theory. I'm going to use that. Wait, feel free. So it began when Cuomo murdered 20,000 nursing home residents in the state of New York. Blocked access, he issued an executive order where my patients can't get hydroxychloroquine. And it was my patients because I was the only one in the state doing it. Let me ask you a question. A drug that was used over a billion times over 65 years is FDA approved for lupus rheumatoid arthritis malaria malaria prophylaxis is given to nursing mothers is giving to pregnant women given to children. Some people live on it. Their whole lives. And all of a sudden, it's deemed dangerous, but it's all dangerous for COVID patients. It's not dangerous to pregnant women or taking it to a room to arthritis. And so he issues an order where patients can get it. Well, that really made sense to me. So I improvised I did research again. I innovated. I found the substitute for hydroxychloroquine. On the NIH server, it's funny. And if something called quercetin, and I didn't even know what it was, I just Googled it. And I see that it's over the counter. I said, oh my God, I just discovered the cure to tyranny. Because I could say listen, Charlie, screw the doctor and there are two reasons why people die from COVID. Is the moronic doctor that delays treatment? And the tyrannical government that people live under that blocks access to lifesaving medication. Besides that, there's really no reason to die from COVID. That's what the evidence shows. So all of a sudden, now I can just circle then all the regulation and just say go to the right and shop buy some corset and vitamin C, D and zinc, take it in the right way and you'll be okay. And that's incredibly liberating. I have to say, because people could reintegrate back into society and they could see the people they loved. They don't have to be isolated. Then I have to live in

Lupus Rheumatoid Arthritis Mal Covid Cuomo Israel United States FDA New York Arthritis NIH Charlie
"billion times" Discussed on WBSM 1420

WBSM 1420

04:31 min | 1 year ago

"billion times" Discussed on WBSM 1420

"Of those day and date releases its released by Warner Brothers, So it's in theaters right now. It is also on HBO, Max right now, so you can Watch it in one of two different ways. And you know, I'm really torn on something like this, because in some ways, seeing a movie like as a horror movie, especially James Wan Horror movie, because James one understands light and shadow and darkness and how to frame stuff on the picture, So his stuff looks great on the big screen. And when you get that full Dolby mix you can hear sounds all over the place. So you know, unless you have a really, really good sound system at home, That's a real big advantage of the theater. I remember seeing insidious in the theaters and just absolutely loving the depth of sound and this movie like everybody. Lives in some weird haunted house, sir. I mean, this is old style house or there's some old style apartment or hotel or something like that. That's where all the murders are taking place, and this is Perfect for that kind of a mix. But on the other hand, it's also something that would be great to watch at home. Turn down the lights. Get the popcorn completely control the environment. You know, when you're sitting there alone in your house watching it, it could be pretty scary that way as well. When it comes to James one as earlier stuff I thought was okay like saw. It wasn't a huge fan of dead silence. But boy when he hit that stride with insidious and then the conjuring I fell in love with the guys work and those sure it's need to see the you know what did fast and furious 61 of the furious movies, and he also did Aquaman so I mean, the guy can do other stuff, but he is a great horror film director and his need to see him coming back to this Now there's certain things in the in the marketing that you can see that that evokes images from the sixties like sixties Jallow horror. There's of course, that picture of The character on her side and her eye and there's something pointed coming down at her eye, but it's also just an interesting story and interesting. It's not your typical ghost stories, not your tip. I don't even know if I'd call it a ghost story. It's not your typical haunted house story again. I wouldn't know if I'd call it a haunted house story. There is as something more to it than what you see when you started. Of course, I don't want to get any spoilers. But the biggest problems I had at the beginning was a little bit murky of how they were settling into the story. It takes a while for yourself to kind of Get comfortable within the story and to see what's going on. There is stuff happening, and you really aren't sure how stuff fits together, so it's not as cohesive at the beginning. But as the movie goes on, it gets better and better. And finally when they get to the end, and when, at least to the reveal, you might be able to guess something's or have an idea. But it's kind of bunkers. And, you know, I just recently watched the other day. The movie the Manitou, which is this old movie from 1978 starting Tony Curtis. And it's this horror film that's that's completely over the top and in a way, not not necessarily the story elements are the same in this movie, although there are some weird Connective tissue. If you pardon the pun, this movie reminds me of the Manitou because the Manitou starts out as just sort of just creepy movie and it just goes bonkers and over the top of the end, and this one really takes A bizarre turn. And in a good way. I mean, it's not 100% perfect, but, gosh, I enjoyed it. I thought I thought it was kind of refreshing. It was different. It was not something we'd seen done before billion times. And it also had James Wands signature style of shooting and sound design. So yeah, I got to say I really did enjoy malignant. I got to say I totally rocked rocks. Excellent. You're listening to fat guys had the movies with Kevin Car. Now is the time we're going to talk about Kate. Kate is on Netflix. It is a friend in radio as she refers to a movie like this as a chick Quick film, Archie Quick flick. For so many years after John Wick came out and made a big splash in the box office. Everybody's always trying to make the next John Wick movie we saw. That was something like nobody earlier this year, but there's also this push to make a female John Wick. We saw that with atomic blonde. We saw that earlier this year with gunpowder milkshake. And this is another one of those check quick movies. And it has a little bit of D O a thrown in there, too. If you remember that movie from the forties or the remake in the late eighties with Dennis Quaid after being poisoned, an elite assassin in Japan uses her last day on Earth to hunt down the yakuza who took her out. I.

Dennis Quaid 1978 Warner Brothers Japan James Wands Kevin Car fast and furious 61 of the fur 100% HBO Earth Netflix James Tony Curtis Kate John Wick sixties billion times one James Wan Max
"billion times" Discussed on KLIF 570 AM

KLIF 570 AM

02:05 min | 1 year ago

"billion times" Discussed on KLIF 570 AM

"I don't know anything about college football. Um, well, no football that's played by college. Yes, that much. I know. But I'm just saying, I don't have a I don't have a I didn't go to college, and I didn't. I didn't live in an area that had a big time college program, So I don't have any allegiance or anything like that. And the fact that the players changed so much so often, But anyway, college the college part of this doesn't really matter. I know it does. Um, but I was just gonna I was gonna mention just as an introduction. But I do know that this was a bit of a shocker. Um Saturday With Clemson only scoring three points. Yeah, that was Georgia losing to Yeah, it was a low scoring kind of boring game. The only place where college factors anywhere into this story. Is that if you compare professional football fans to college football pans fans generally, college fans are usually a little more wild because you're rooting for something that is emotional for you. Like your Cowboys fan. You're less emotional about the Cowboys. Then you are the school. You went to Okay, you know, because you spent money and time going to the school getting a degree. You maybe knew some of the players that funny you means more than the Dallas right? So anyway, So there's a reporter name is Lindsay Go out of Savannah, Georgia, and she was doing a live shot after the game. And she's gotten really ticked off because I'm usually on the side of reporters. This is this is a live shot. Also called a stand up. It's simply you've seen in the billion times where reporter is standing in front, Tom, I'm wondering here in the hurricane. Where the polling 60 MPH. Yeah, Yeah. Okay. Well, she was standing in the concourse where all the fans are coming out of their seats. Like where you would go get concessions and in those little hallways, and she's really mad that people are bumping up next door. I got a little bit of audio. It's kind of tough to hear. But let's let's let's take a listen to.

60 MPH Tom Cowboys Savannah, Georgia Lindsay Go three points billion times Clemson Saturday Georgia Dallas
"billion times" Discussed on Movin 92.5

Movin 92.5

02:23 min | 1 year ago

"billion times" Discussed on Movin 92.5

"Him to look at them. I just looked care. I just need to know what I speak with the officers? What? To tell their you out of your f king mind? He's a perv who was looking at my phone. This is the dumbest ever. Okay, so care. This is what I'm going to need from you. All right? Okay. I'm not giving you anything. Nothing? No. I'm going to give you a phone number. And I'm not taking anything from you. I'm not giving you anything. And I'm not taking any economic. I'm just trying to help you out here. Care, Okay? You're in some deep. So this is the best that we can do to save yourself by phone. I know that's why I'm going to give you this number. And you just text me that boob pic so I can verify with the bag boy that it's definitely the one. Okay. Okay, I get it. I see what you're trying to do. Yeah, I'm trying to help. You want me to send you a picture of my boobs? So it's a big setup. You know what? You could get fired for doing this? You can't just call hot girls because you want pictures of boobs. Are you crazy? Actually, Keira present as the manager of this grocery store. Melons are my business. So I resent that you said that now you're harassing me. So I'm going to report you. Okay? What's juice switcheroo? Because what you're doing is harassing me. Oh, really? Yeah. I'm going to tell my husband and he's going to come down there and kick your ass. Okay? Well, it's not right. The thing Keira is I've actually spoken to your husband about this matter. And he wants you to text me the photos. No, you have not talked to him because he is at work, and he has nothing to do with it actually care A He has everything to do with this because he set you up for the prank phone call. Yeah. What are you talking about? I'm talking about this being a joke. Because this is actually Jeffrey from the radio show Brooke and Jeffrey in the morning. Your husband set you up for a phone's app? Oh, okay. Yeah. Cody had his frank you to teach you a lesson about keeping nudes on your cell phone. Oh, my God. He says that he's warned you a billion times about having pictures of your boobs on your phone. And he says it's going to come back to haunt you. So here it is. Oh, my God. I thought I was going to jail. Yeah, but no seriously, girl, I do need you to text me over that picture of your boobs. Just to be sure for safety reasons would like that, wouldn't you? Oh, my God. My dumb, huh? Wake.

Keira Cody Jeffrey Brooke and Jeffrey billion times
"billion times" Discussed on Movin 92.5

Movin 92.5

02:23 min | 1 year ago

"billion times" Discussed on Movin 92.5

"And you were intentionally trying to lure him to look at them. I just looked here. I just need to know when I speak with the officers. What? To tell them you out of your fucking mind? He's a perv who was looking at my phone. This is the dumbest Ever. Okay, so care. This is what I'm going to need from you. All right? Okay. I'm not giving you anything. Nothing? No. I'm going to give you a phone number, and I'm not taking anything from you. I'm not giving you anything. And I'm not taking any economic just trying to help you out here. Care, Okay? You're in some deep, So this is the best that we can do to save yourself phone. I know that's why I'm going to give you this number. And you just text me that boob pic so I can verify with the bag boy that it's definitely the one. Okay. Okay, I get it. I See what you're trying to do? Yeah, I'm trying to help. You want me to send you a picture of my boobs? So it's a big set up. You know what? You could get fired for doing this? You can't just call hot girls because you want pictures of boobs. Are you crazy? Actually, Keira as the manager of this grocery store melons are my business. So I resent that. You said that now you're harassing me. So I am going to report you. Okay. Lets juice switcheroo, because what you're doing is harassing me. Oh, really? Yeah. I'm going to tell my husband and he's going to come down there and kick your ass. Okay? He's not right. The thing Keira is I've actually spoken to your husband about this matter. And he wants you to text me the photos. No, you have not talked to him because he is at work, and he has Nothing to do with this actually care. He has everything to do with this because he set you up for the prank phone call. Yeah. What are you talking about? I'm talking about this being a joke. Because this is actually Jeffrey from the radio show Brooke and Jeffrey in the morning. Your husband set you up for our phones out. Oh, no. Yeah. Cody had his frank you to teach you a lesson about keeping nudes on your cell phone. Oh, my God. He says that he's warned you a billion times about having pictures of your boobs on your phone. And he says it's going to come back to haunt you. So here it is. Oh, my God. I thought I was going to jail. Yeah, but no seriously, girl, I do need you to text me over that picture of your boobs. Just to be sure for safety reasons. We would like that, wouldn't you? Oh, my God. My dumb husband, Uh,.

Keira Cody Jeffrey Brooke and Jeffrey billion times
"billion times" Discussed on Lex Fridman Podcast

Lex Fridman Podcast

02:42 min | 1 year ago

"billion times" Discussed on Lex Fridman Podcast

"Of the story has a likely lab week in china. It has a unlikely hero in japan The story is naturally not a simple one but in any case Amora discovered this molecule. He Sent it to a friend who was at merck Scentists tim campbell. They won a nobel prize for the discovery of the ivermectin molecule. In twenty fifteen. Its initial use was intriguing parasitic infections. It's very effective in treating The the worm that causes river blindness The pathogen that causes elephantiasis scabies very effective anti parasite drug. It's extremely safe. It's on the who's list of central medications. It's safe for children. It has been administered. Something like four billion times in the last four decades it has been given away in the millions of doses by merck in africa. People have been on it. For long periods of time and in fact one of the reasons that africa may have had less severe impacts from covid nineteen is that ivermectin is widely used there to prevent parasites and drug appears to have a long lasting impact. So it's an interesting molecule. It was discovered some time ago. Apparently that it has antiviral properties and so it was tested in early in the covid nineteen pandemic to see if it might work to treat humans with covid it turned out to have very promising Evidence that it did treat. Humans was tested and tissues. It was tested a very high dosage which confuses people they think that those of us who believe that iraq and might be useful in confronting. This disease are advocating. Those high doses. Which is not the case But in any case there have been quite a number of studies. A wonderful meta analysis was finally released. We had seen it in pre print version but it was finally peer reviewed and published this last week It reveals that the drug as clinicians have been telling us those who've been using it highly effective at treating people with the disease especially if you get to them early and it showed an eighty six percent effectiveness as a prophylactic to prevent people from contracting covert and that number eighty. Six percent is high enough to drive. Sars kobe to to extinction if we wished to deploy it. First of all the the the meta analysis is this the Ivermectin in nineteen real time analysis of sixty studies..

Six percent china japan africa sixty studies eighty last week six percent twenty fifteen millions of doses four billion times Amora nobel merck Scentists iraq First elephantiasis nineteen real time one of last four decades
"billion times" Discussed on Chasing Poker Greatness

Chasing Poker Greatness

04:24 min | 1 year ago

"billion times" Discussed on Chasing Poker Greatness

"God's as like a bonus for feeding frenzy and basically risks that. I had found that. Teach you most everything very very quickly so that you can understand the broad strokes very quickly and i think that's the thing i probably going to continue making for my products moving forward just because like those kind of furious are very very helpful. Help you logically navigate. Those kinds of spots without having one hundred percent of the information memorized through rote memorization for sure memorization. Not necessarily you want to play poker because you're up against so many different players and it's so much information any way. Try too hard to to write a memorize right you to you. Got to kind of understand like a lot of stuff that i coach and teach i try to show them how they should analyze and look at the situation. All the different data points in this one hand right now. Not only you take your past experience into account you've seen players make this type of bed a billion times. What does it normally mean right. But then also noticing everything else in this one hand right now and try to figure out a way to like holistically. Put a big picture together of what's going on in making your best place 'cause like really. It's it's so hard i've tried it before and poker. I can't really memorize certain. Plays on this certain board type all this time as the pre papa as prefab caller when this comes out i just can't remember all that stuff you know so i've had to devise ways to basically pay attention. The action analyze the situation and and consider your options and choose the one that's most positively yet in a i think there's a misnomer and one of the one of the higher level players in greenwich village said something that really resonated with me and just a brilliant brilliant poker player poker coach. He said he doesn't think poker players professional poker players do significantly better job of capturing data points than weaker players. The thing that he believes they do way way more efficiently and our way superior ad is.

one hand one hundred percent greenwich village billion times one players
"billion times" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

05:49 min | 1 year ago

"billion times" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

"Did you just pick the first one that came up in the search or did you look at a couple of different ones to try to find the one that was the right fit for you. I looked at about six to twelve to be quite frank. And i went through open. I looked at all the pictures. And i looked at what they had contacted. The hosts because i want to have fastened past wi fi has got to be quiet. Podcast right and yeah. An airbnb actually allowed me to do that. Frankly very efficiently. I mean like in a half hour and also the key there is. You went to airbnb because it had the greatest availability and selection. You have very specific needs when you're doing this travel like you said you need a house. It needs to be nice but it also needs have great wi fi. It needs to be silence. You could podcast and record and airbnb because it's a dominant player has the broadest selection and therefore it's a place that you're going to go now multiply. Jv a billion times and all of a sudden you think to yourself all the people who are looking to rent their homes. They're going to go to the place where all the. Jv's of the world are going. There are going to go to the marketplace that has the greatest liquidity so airbnb has really strong network effects. It really works to provide a better place for you to stay and to provide better revenues for the people who are renting their homes if somebody cloned airbnb exactly and offered it to you and said oh you don't have to pay whatever it ends up being fifteen percents airbnb. You get to keep all the money but guess what. There's nobody there to rent the homes. There's no homes on the market. It's useless and the network is what drives the value. And that's what creates that winner take most marketplace and part of that winner. Take most i mean just a feature of airbnb is the i can read all those reviews and i'm the guy who does bad reviews ago. Yeah let's like a nice place. But i won't be standing there right. And that's part of what they provide and that makes it much more valuable to me absolutely and that's one of the.

Jv fifteen about six first one half hour twelve one billion times couple
"billion times" Discussed on Fore Play

Fore Play

03:16 min | 1 year ago

"billion times" Discussed on Fore Play

"In california. Clearly i thought maybe i in my head. What way would he show up. One of these like navy helicopters that we see who knows. I didn't work out the details. But i'm just saying like flying over like george w bush and katrina the details. I'm just saying like. I got like a little butterflies. My stomach seeing him being california and torrey pines taking place in the history with him. Here like i just thought maybe it was a conversation. I wouldn't have me convinced because like you said he's got such ties. He's from southern california. He's won at torrey pines like billion times he. The two thousand and eight win amplified even more because they put a plaque out how much it meant to him to play in that tournament that he played it with a broken leg in a torn. Easy yell and then one the thing that i you had me kind of convinced that like he might just appear on site now would they treat him like a president that goes to like the army navy game. They treat him like how would he. He can't just crush around the thing. I i don't know what hard it'd be a scene i. That's all i know he's got to be elevated. Can't have him car elevate. He's got the club house here extinct so it's not like you didn't get like a golf cart. Version of the pope mobile the beat bulletproof glass around if he was just waving people. That'd be pretty amazing golf cart. That looks like the pope mobile tiger woods. Driving around torrey pines. That's a magic redshirt. Even maybe just like read. Red absurd isla amaze me there were still no fans. There's a good chance he would show no. You can't do it. No fans and it's weird. Now he's going to get people cheering and people. Nobody gotta look at him like. I agree with that wholeheartedly. If he's like if you're looking down to the golf cart as he's driving by it's like this is this is not right. He needs to be up he needs to be elevated and they're almost the must be like red flags yeah he need to be throwing roses that s and if he's in that situation they could almost kind of do what they did with fdr for years they prop them up. You came and tell his injury right. He's sitting in this throne thing doesn't need the crutches and the whole mobile moves on. Its own and it's like he's back story by. Feels like kind of a mrs. They don't do interesting that i didn't know before you said that he was the only there for twenty four hours. I saw that again. From the t t w spot account okay so then we claim that was trent years back. Well i am a little bit of fun with the guy. Took it very person which i yeah we were. We were laughing about it. But i want but he never revealed his identity ever so i just wanted to claim that it was me today. Enforcement joke redid. It was but he ended up. Demanding an apology from frankie. He's got one. He just tweeted relentlessly for days. Being like my reputation served out there. No he said we're ruining his reputation. And frankie specifically he made frankly biologists and frankie delivered a trust that account though when i see it totally brought it up on the show..

california twenty four hours two thousand today southern california trent years back frankie torrey pines one billion times eight win army navy One katrina pope george w bush pines thing frankly
"billion times" Discussed on Asian, Not Asian

Asian, Not Asian

03:54 min | 1 year ago

"billion times" Discussed on Asian, Not Asian

"And we'll come back to other asian that asian podcast podcast. Asian guys enough major talk about american issues. Nobody cares about and today mike. Mcglynn nutmeg win. Oh god mike is gonna murder me mike. No win is once again gone. He is in la i. he's no longer with his wife. But he's continuing his solo journey in la. Because he has to help his mom clean his house or something. I don't really understand muscle vietnamese thing. I don't really get it for another week. Actually he i think he did a show dumbfounded. So if you're in la maybe caught him there so if you're a new listener from that welcome welcome so in lieu of the great mike lynn. Obviously no one person can replace him. So i got two people today. They are my favorite guests on the asian that asian pockets. They've been like seventeen billion times. The host the holidays. Podcast called emotional. Slut i don't even know it's still happening because the last time they pose episodes in april about that as well. Please give it up for jason. How dare you episode was like one month ago. Two months is what he says immediately. Thought you meant april twenty twenty twenty twenty twenty you call me out for accurately doing his due diligence correct projector insecurities on me wait wait. You said he's no longer his wife. Did they separate no he last. He's been gone for like two weeks which is pretty long. He he was like his wife was with him on the first leg. You're on vacation second week now. He's in taking care of family business or something like that. It got so doggone. Bless bless mike. Good to see you guys. I mean i feel like Podcast is the only way you can get us room together. This you think he's almost becoming we were just talking about. You can lure us in with like if you put like delicious underneath. The held up with a stick louis literally. Last time we went to that outdoor little space for on knows held up by village. Remember when that thing happened when we all try to pay with credit cards newspaper in your favorite cinematic between us. I want that to being. Somebody's because good for all three of us have a chase sapphire preferred card thank. You don't brag because reserve is better two hundred dollars. It's absurd a year so anyway we are three and the chase sapphire preferred is like a substantive card. It's like made of titanium put it down and so it was three of us with our like natural god given asian name names zone sun minxing. None of us had the names that we go by on the fucking just feels like really authentic like arthritic selves are credit asian-american experienced love it. I think it's gonna picture last time all really credit the virus only on the back in no way. We're like brothers. That was the asian equivalent of like spitting on your hand and biff rather yes brothers man Before we get into it. Which i'm so excited to do. We do need to do a patriarch shout out. These are people who've donate patriots. And if you're a new listener and know we're talking about patriot. Is this website where you can donate to our podcast on a monthly basis. You can give you from five dollars to fifty dollars. Where'd you can do a customer and you're like why would i want to give you guys money. You guys radiates. Here's the thing. We're not on a network. Where complete dependent and the more money you give us the more time we can devote to this because it will become like our full-time jobs kinda and we're doing pretty good. Pretty good we. We have enough money to pay for. Maybe one of our rent's but again there's two of us so we need. We need more money. Guys and return you get bonus episodes we started. Dmz shout on this podcast and try to get her last name. Oh yeah that's like. We don listening to you. Know i just say like hi and i look at your instagram. When i see something funny about it it's great only that okay..

two five dollars two weeks two hundred dollars april fifty dollars second week one month ago mike lynn today two people mike jason instagram three one seventeen billion times first leg one person vietnamese
"billion times" Discussed on H3 Podcast

H3 Podcast

06:22 min | 1 year ago

"billion times" Discussed on H3 Podcast

"Teenage. Oh it was just so the whole week because was like you know the last time we did the fertility treatment. She got her period like early. And we're like oh. This is so disappointed. I have that one. Hope at least one because she's like we'll know if you're pregnant in two weeks and then a week later. She got her period. We're like oh this is so sad. Lucky especially when you're when you're trying so hard. Yeah and i don't know if you've said this but like the. The process is brutal. I was sticking her with the syringe in the stomach every night. Hit a certain spot or does anyone anywhere. Just anywhere in the stomach. The belly button but like the solution is like for some whatever reason it's really painful. Yeah what i think. It just stings a lot inside the beltway. I don't think i would trust you to poke anything in my belly. No as urine your reckless your soul like wild anyways as with your just you don. I was like okay. You just closer do you get. I would pass out doing it to some better. The i was stressful. But i got better at it. Done it like billion times now. I literally don't know if i could do it. I was like ill aguirre. Study this because when i diabetes. You're going to be doing this to me nine. I did today joke on talking to not fly. what'd you say. Oh joke about diabetes. Yeah it was the almost there tiktok whereas almost there. I'm almost there you typing it done. Like you can't joke about diabetes. I'm like you can't even joke about diabetes. But we're fat. We're like that anymore. You can't be we hope you now. You're working out every no good for you know it's very small. It's getting smaller. Want you from the side stand up and showing because it actually waller out. There are people who wanna see. Let's see why don't stick it out and be stupid. Just be normal. Be normal cast. You're being stupid. It looks like all right avenue. The fanny pack that you wear. That looks like a dude's gut. You're making an attractive. see normal with. Oh god put your put your down. Now put your head down and show at one guinea hoodie. It is yeah you you really are not supposed to tell people if they're losing weight either because i can also be triggering for people because they think they have to keep going to draw the line. I'm not gonna make fun of diaby. I'm not making fun of diabetic person like fucker. You got diabetes. So you're gonna get diabetes. At this rate. Medical joe had diabetes. He just died last year actually arrested. Because i love joe. Yeah he was like oh he would love that he would love it. Yeah he had diabetes his foot seriously. Who's having surgery to get his foot off and he died during surgery right before we started it was like two days into covert was really losing foot today. He had he already did. He couldn't walk on. It was like was the big guy. didn't so he never did and yeah but he we were the closest. He always everything i did. My family doesn't know anything about like what i do my dad or anything but he's always like support But yeah he did lose weight towards the end of his life. But you know yeah. That's such a fun talking about almost like honestly. Oh that's not right. The people bullied to bullying me to love myself. Like it's okay anyways anyway about rats on the base. This is very exciting. You are because we were on edge all week and so so one week past and we're like okay and then every day past the week was like okay no period. Yeah that's how far then. We're like on thursday and then we hit thursday. Were like get usually knows when she's about to get her pregnant. She get sore and stuff. She's like no prayer period. Pains or anything and i was like. Oh and then. So she pees on the stick and we keep getting these inconclusive. But i was. You're definitely pregnant. Did and she was like super tired. Which happens when you get back new but this was her first time finding out here on the show with the first time finding for i would one of those like pregnancy surprises when people like make baby carrots baby back ribs and guests and the was like are you pregnant. Does he do it the first time we were together. I think i do like a q. And a video. I'll be doing among with moses. And i would just be like hold a baby or something. I don't know what i would do. That would be fun. But i don't think either. Animal baby baby that placenta ground up this placenta for you babe. Do you think they make replica placentas to eat like they did with horse arts from my game. Throw the you can find anything online. Really you can find a real placenta online. I know a guy surprise you to when i get pregnant me on the podcast a way to private. That'd be fun what i feel. I don't know. I don't know i just touch your photos. Now that was my. I'm sorry more on your side. I just yeah just knowing together being upfront about the fertility thing because it is like something. That's not talked about a lot and it's very stressful. You know when i go to these fragility clinics to like you know not in a cup for for wait. What what do you mean. Which part are you confused about a. Yeah that was what we're doing. We're doing insemination so they were. They took my. What's the what's my apply where to put this my massive k. And they basically turkey based her with the. How do you think you were talking about. How do you not know like they don't switch it. I know it's scary. Isn't or something. I know scary. But they said they only do one at a time and you watch. Are you watching them. Transfer it out probably like that. Yeah well either ask them in there like we've never been asked to do so i was like i'm just being prepared. Watch lifetime movies. I'd be like do that. I and then and then she comes an hour later and then they intimidate like comes. No she. I don't think the doctors making your orgasm. That'd be weird..

last year today thursday two days a week later first time nine billion times one week past an hour later two weeks one guinea one turkey
"billion times" Discussed on Capes and Lunatics

Capes and Lunatics

05:05 min | 1 year ago

"billion times" Discussed on Capes and Lunatics

"The flags measures. Don't want to accept because you can see clearly how easily it would be to flip the script. And it's all the d. Blips who we're going to refugee camps. It's all the blip who are now in that place because well know someone who's been living there for five years ago but at the same time. Yeah it's it's a different question. Marley speaking altogether. Because in that situation you ever seen that movie up in the air with the clooney scorning beautiful in how this this giant corporation is letting people often. They're having these exit interviews in. They're hiring these really. Psychologically people to speak to these people to help them frame this experience in a positive way where they can do the best to the people leaving and lead them in the best position to be able to rebuild and Do so. I think something like that would have been helpful in situations like this. If you're going to displace all these people have like these little Places where you sit down and talk to these people and say okay you know. Tell me why you think he's up. And i and i bet you'd be really hard to find a logical argument except for. Oh i really like it too but like really if you think about it. This was the home whatever happens. They have to come back. If you can make an and i bet you no one would be able to. At least that way you lead somebody understanding their situation and not feeling like they were victimized when they know that the truth of the reality of the situation is dealing with a difficult situation we all us being society back to where it needs to be the promise. You have to do that. Four billion times and that's where it gets is wouldn't sit down with a knee. I just have vision to this. How bad we don't get back until wonder rebuilds. If that's the problem is it's like an alternate realities with with a vision..

Marley five years ago Four billion times Blips
'Arcade': The Story of Its Continued Success

Monocle 24: The Globalist

02:06 min | 1 year ago

'Arcade': The Story of Its Continued Success

"Now for the third installment of our eurovision series. We speak with the winner of the last edition of the song contest in twenty nineteen the dutch singer. Songwriter duncan lawrence. Who won with the beautiful ballot arcade. The winning song became a hit not only in europe but also charted in the united states dunkin. We'll make an appearance on this year's final. That happens on saturday. He spoke to monaco's fernando augusta per shekel about his future music. Plans and all things eurovision Is oh that's we went into your vision with this song and to be honest i watched eurovision. But i haven't written or did this song bore your vision. I always saw revision as a great platform. Chance and opportunity for me to show the world or at least europe like. Hey here i am. This is dunkin Musician and this is my song and it just took off half a year ago on tiktok because it was used in a bunch of harry potter videos. so that we're like fans author End they were using the music to put on their their videos. And that's how it kinda started. That's that's how it spread and that's how it grew on its own. The song has been streamed over one billion times performing arcade. Please welcome dunkin lawrence and fletcher. I said it at eurovision music. I always i. This is a an example. When it's like people like a song and people relate to it on some sort of level which is amazing and it's just so amazing that that's my song and that we had to amazing journeys with one is your vision and the other is now. It's going everywhere.

Duncan Lawrence Fernando Augusta Dunkin Europe Monaco United States Dunkin Lawrence Harry Potter Fletcher
"billion times" Discussed on KGO 810

KGO 810

02:39 min | 2 years ago

"billion times" Discussed on KGO 810

"It constantly resorts to these familiar movie addiction trumps and stereotypes, which has never really is able to occasionally even transcend despite the actors Mila Kunis and Glenn Close doing there. Yes, to lift this script into some kind of semblance of believability. This is one of those movies where now I've talked about this a lot on your show where if you removed the famous actors on screen with lesser unknown ones, this movie would just be like, Oh, God, it would be almost comic. So I say, Skip it. But if you want to watch two great actresses having a valiant go at trying to make this material work, you should check it out called four good days. I wanted to watch it because I'll see anything. Glenn Close is in and she's Great care and she's She's great souls. Mila Kunis. What an actress. Wow, but they need material. Yeah, I mean, and I hate to diss on this movie because it's a real serious attempt that the director is God, What's his name? He's the same director that directed Glenn Close in Albert Nobbs. Did you ever see Albert Marriage? Really, really good close was nominated for an Oscar for it, but it s O. Rodrigo Garcia, I think is his name. And so it's got a really, really good pedigree based on a true story. Great actors. The script is good, too. But the problem is, as we've seen this story, like a billion times and they literally you know they have the scene. Where Mom, let me in. I promise. I'll go to rehab. I mean, it's the same. It's just the same old, same old, so I hate to diss on it. But You know, I try to be objective. I've got to be fair and just like you with no Madeline. So it Z playing and I am fair to Nomad Landed. You are made me feel that's all know that that was actually a very good review You you, you. You present your own subjective reaction. Wild pointing out what was good about it. I'm impressed. Oh, move aside, Tim. Seek a pattern coming to critique world. The legendary Tim Sika. Yeah. Legend. Oh, that's right. I'm certainly not to that status and I wouldn't consider myself a film critic. I just have opinions. So okay, we're gonna take a break, but that one for good days That one is playing in theaters right now, but it kind of sucks, so don't bother. Wow. Yeah, I mean that. That that that sounds like a very cavalier dismissal, But if you want to put it in those words, okay? Yeah, It sucks. All right, we're gonna We're gonna take a break. We'll come down. We'll come back with more with Tim Sika. And I think with Kim McAllister, I think she's still here. You're listening to K G O Hello. This is your apartment. I.

Glenn Close Mila Kunis Kim Tim Sika K G O Tim four good days McAllister O. Rodrigo Garcia Albert Marriage two great actresses Madeline Oscar Landed billion times close one of those movies Nobbs Nomad God
Looking Back at Rain Man

Bald Movies

02:03 min | 2 years ago

Looking Back at Rain Man

"Today. We're talking about one thousand nine hundred rainman. Who a correct me. If i'm wrong. Jim this is like the top grossing film of the year and also did quite welford self in oscars nominated for eight one three and it made like a billion times is budget not bad. Not bad Is directed by barry levinson which you might recognize from his work on the natural. Good morning vietnam wag. The dog and sleepers is written by barry morrow and ronald bass. Maybe ronald bass. I didn't look that up. Shoot just realized which we'll talk about. We'll talk a little bit. More about barry morrow when we start talking about the impact of the of the film had on this subject matter Stars of course. Dustin hoffman as raymond ray babbitt and it stars. Tom cruise is his brother. Charlie and also val area go lino. Who i'd only known as the hot funny girl from hotshots and hotshots part do as a remember her from them. She's actually. she's playing italian in this movie. So gotcha and i wondered if like what happened to her because she was in these big movies in the eighties and i looked through her Like imdb and some does just one thing after another match kept trying to work on both sides of the pond and one contract would interfere with another contract and then that would fall through and that was delayed and she liked it. Seemed like ten years relied. Click by and so. It's a shame in a lot of big movies like the. I'm not saying this was a big movie. But she went to rainman right after big top pee wee which you know not the best. But she's in like you said she was in leaving las vegas. She was in escape from la. She was leaving las vegas. Apparently playing someone named terry jesus. We just saw that movie. And i did not. I didn't did not really must've been a minor role

Ronald Bass Barry Morrow Raymond Ray Babbitt Barry Levinson Oscars Dustin Hoffman Lino JIM Vietnam Tom Cruise Charlie Las Vegas Terry Jesus LA
"billion times" Discussed on Wild Business Growth Podcast

Wild Business Growth Podcast

04:46 min | 2 years ago

"billion times" Discussed on Wild Business Growth Podcast

"Let's get to fan. Favorite segment called wild business shadow of the week business out of the week while business shadow of the week. This is where we talk about creative marketing campaign. Something new exciting kind of breaking through the clutter twitter spaces. Obviously there's a lot of energy towards we'll call it drop in audio platforms. That feels like everybody's every other word is clubhouse but what is it that appeals to you about twitter spaces You know i. I was excited about clubhouse until i started using twitter spaces spaces awesome Two weeks ago. I sell it. What somebody on my team said we needed. You know hashtag. Winning son has been shared over twenty five billion times. I think we just found out two weeks ago. That's amazing so i can't even count that high. I know i was like billion with a b. sure. I definitely can't count that high but in all seriousness say so that was really cool and then i got twitter space. Start using it literally. The day that i finished. I was so blown away. It was the biggest engagement in a very long time. I've been on clubhouse and i love clubhouse as well but this is for me at least ten times engagement and has a feeling of one i i started on twitter. I remember when i first reached eighty thousand followers. At the time i was like. Wow this is incredible so cool these new people and this and that and then get to one hundred thousand two hundred thousand and three hundred thousand and then at some point. You're like i can't even. I don't even know all these people so it just feels like a number. Don't feel like that relationship with twitter. Spaces feels like back in the day when you first started and you're still talking to people on a one on one basis and people are super engaged and you're adding value and they have an ability to reach out to you so i jump on. Everyone's oh i'm.

one hundred thousand three hundred thousand eighty thousand followers Two weeks ago two weeks ago twitter two hundred thousand first over twenty five billion times least ten times one billion
"billion times" Discussed on Section 138

Section 138

04:55 min | 2 years ago

"billion times" Discussed on Section 138

"Be starting in that first serving empty stadium. So it's going to be interesting to see. But robbie ray and vladimir grow junior both players so far who have just got off to a spectacular. Start on we're. We're over halfway through spring training now so you hope they end on a good note and you hope this carries over to the start of the regular season because i mean the way. These guys are playing. These numbers are super inflated which is good and It like like yeah. I think it means something if the numbers are this high you know if it was like regular numbers you who cares like Most of the other The others on the team but these these numbers are standing out. These are eye-opening for both players and They need both players end. Especially robbie ray. That's the one. I'm circling more on this one. But vladimir guerrero junior is this is exactly what we were all hoping for on what we've all been waiting for so it's good to see and your throat the regular season this. You gotta help the stays up the end. You've got to hope that this type of production is are you know. It's obviously not gonna stay like this the entire year. But you hope you hope that they're you know excelling performing at this high standard. And i hate to beat a dead horse. Because i know we've talked about this over and over and over again but it's just so insane you look at the numbers for robbie ray. He led all of baseball with forty five walks last year. He had forty five walk. Sixty eight strikeouts that work to a one point five one strikeout to walk ratio and again. It's spring training. You look at the strikeout-to-walk ratio. It's at three point six. He's had eighteen. Strikeouts only five walks so regardless of the quality of the opponents who is facing. What's the lineup. Day in and day out of course teams aren't having their starters out. Their starters are only going to three innings. Now they're working up to five innings stuff like that but regardless of all that you can boil things down and you can at least take face value the strikeouts and the walks or the strike to ball ratio. And you look at it and eighteen strikeouts to walks. That's insane. i mean. I don't know i don't care how you want to spin it but that's just fantastic like there's no other way to spin it so again spring training again. I've said this billion times. But i just can't stop talking about it because i'm so excited for both of these guys to see what they have been really like. We talked about the injuries. Talk about how horrible that is. But robbie ray being the guy. He's shown to be so far in spring training. That's like the best case. Scenario for the blue jays of course may pearson being inter not the best case scenario but robbie ray being back to his two thousand seventeen self. Things can get much better for the blue jays. I think the good thing you mentioned there was actually the strikeout to walk ratio this spring because that was i..

vladimir guerrero eighteen robbie ray three innings forty five walks one point last year both eighteen strikeouts forty five walk five walks Sixty eight strikeouts six five first both players one strikeout vladimir grow junior three point billion times
"billion times" Discussed on Unapologetically BOLD: I'm not sorry for....

Unapologetically BOLD: I'm not sorry for....

03:04 min | 2 years ago

"billion times" Discussed on Unapologetically BOLD: I'm not sorry for....

"And <Speech_Female> that's the point that that <Speech_Female> is at every <Speech_Female> day in this. The <Speech_Female> thing that i love <Speech_Female> about learning is it's <Speech_Female> not linear <Speech_Female> set in <Speech_Female> Understand the one <Speech_Female> percent better principal <Speech_Female> with some <Speech_Female> days early twenty five <Speech_Female> percent worse <Speech_Female> in so in average. <Speech_Female> Let's get <Speech_Female> an average of being <Speech_Female> better daily because <Speech_Female> the thing is <Speech_Female> that that <Silence> is live like <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> understanding and it <Speech_Female> makes me think of even <Speech_Female> like my husband. <Speech_Female> Learning like our <Speech_Female> actually <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> actually <Speech_Female> pulled up our <Speech_Female> yesterday. We both <Speech_Female> did on <SpeakerChange> i'm <Speech_Female> dea. He's an <Speech_Music_Female> esi <Speech_Female> And how <Speech_Female> do we communicate <Speech_Female> better in. It's not <Speech_Female> to come in. And <Speech_Female> that's one thing that i <Speech_Female> love that you're talking <Speech_Female> about and i think we've hit on <Speech_Female> in a lot of times with <Speech_Female> this. Podcast is being <Speech_Female> unapologetically. <Speech_Female> Bowl is not <Speech_Female> you get to walk <Speech_Female> out in your dominance <Speech_Female> say. This <Speech_Female> is who <SpeakerChange> i am. This <Speech_Female> is how act <Speech_Music_Female> is understanding <Speech_Music_Female> who you <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> are <Silence> and understanding <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> what best <Speech_Female> ways that <Speech_Female> we can have conversations <Speech_Female> what best ways <Speech_Female> that we can know ourselves <Speech_Female> so that we can <Speech_Female> help us walk <Speech_Female> out my confidence <Speech_Female> or we can actually <Speech_Female> help communicate in. <Speech_Female> It's more of the win <Silence> win situations <Speech_Female> that <Speech_Female> are so <Speech_Female> important <Silence> to understanding <Speech_Female> that <Speech_Female> we're all different <Speech_Female> and one of my <Speech_Female> things that <Speech_Female> mal listeners <Speech_Female> have heard me say <Speech_Female> a billion times. I don't <Speech_Female> like like minded <Speech_Female> people. I like <SpeakerChange> like horrid <Speech_Female> i wanna <Silence> have a mission <Speech_Female> but my <Speech_Female> best <Speech_Female> growth is whenever <Speech_Female> i've been around <Speech_Female> people that do not <Speech_Female> think like <SpeakerChange> me <Silence> and i gotta work <Speech_Female> on. <Speech_Female> Because they're <SpeakerChange> gonna come <Speech_Female> up with cooler. <Speech_Female> I thought <Speech_Female> like. I never <Speech_Female> want to be the smartest person <Speech_Female> in the room if i am. <Speech_Female> I need to leave that room. <Speech_Female> And i <Speech_Female> think this <Speech_Female> in essence <Speech_Female> sums of a <Speech_Female> lot of what we've talked <Speech_Male> about in the past <Speech_Female> in pass <Speech_Female> podcast to <Speech_Female> that i just <SpeakerChange> think is <Silence> so beautiful. So <Speech_Female> i'm so <Speech_Music_Female> grateful for <Speech_Music_Female> you. I <Speech_Music_Female> i <SpeakerChange> like. <Speech_Music_Female> Yossi watt excited. <Speech_Music_Female> That i get her <Speech_Music_Female> like on <Speech_Music_Female> akin. I <Speech_Music_Female> can have her <Speech_Female> like just <Speech_Music_Female> a short drive <Speech_Music_Female> of <Speech_Music_Female> your such an amazing <Speech_Female> woman. You <Speech_Female> are out of work <Speech_Female> that you do <Speech_Music_Female> love your heart <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> and i love <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> just <Speech_Female> the care that you <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> have people because <Speech_Female> that's really what <Speech_Female> the first time i heard you. <Silence> You talk <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> in a meeting. I'm like <Speech_Female> ooh she <Speech_Female> gets it. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> She gets up. She <Speech_Female> understands people <Speech_Female> in now. <Speech_Female> I think <SpeakerChange> it's a lot of your <Speech_Female> analytical to seeing <Speech_Female> as a <Speech_Female> power superpower <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> in in <Speech_Female> a lot of people are like. Oh god <Speech_Female> they're just nerves <Speech_Female> like they dislike. Look <Speech_Female> at books and they just <Speech_Female> type out. And i'm like now. <Speech_Female> You need your <Silence> analytical <SpeakerChange> beagle <Speech_Female> you really <Speech_Female> do <Speech_Female> and <SpeakerChange> i think that's <Speech_Music_Female> important so <Speech_Music_Female> i just want to say thank <Speech_Female> you. Thank you so <Speech_Female> much for joining me today. <Speech_Female> And i want <Speech_Female> to say thank you for all <Silence> that have listened. <Speech_Female> How <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> having amazing <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> in blessed <Speech_Music_Female> day <Speech_Music_Female> thank <Speech_Music_Female> you so much for <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> tuning into this. <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> Episode of unapologetically <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> bold. <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> I'm not sorry <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> for <Speech_Music_Female> this touch. Shoot any <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> way please. <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> Like and <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> subscribe <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> and share with your friends <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> as we <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> continue <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> the message upbeat <Speech_Music_Female> apologetically <Speech_Music_Female> bold bobby <Speech_Music_Female> hot humans <Speech_Music_Female> who are humble <Speech_Music_Male> open and transparent. See you next.

yesterday today first time both one thing twenty five billion times one Yossi
"billion times" Discussed on The War on Morons

The War on Morons

05:27 min | 2 years ago

"billion times" Discussed on The War on Morons

"It looks like we're getting another call. Probably good to get away from that endorsement of mail. Theft there why not pick this. Yeah sure all right area code seven. Oh to the war morons. Tell us your name and where you're calling from. Ernie bob baker in henderson nevada. Of course my social security. He had this billion times. I don't want your social. Come on. Man i just want you to be able to like look me up maybe do my taxes or whatever i got vaccinated last week you can. You can look it up. I don't care got double vaccinating Well actually i wanted to call 'cause you you're talking about the aliens. Aliens are coming in in jacksonville florida. You know peoples mail right kinda yeah. That's cool yeah so I i it kind of goes along with. Now it's gonna blow your mind man. I had it with you. Gone i go. I mean this is crazy. I i don't like i don't believe crazy stuff anymore. You know the year. She writes that area fifty one and the bob was. I don't even all that right right right right right. So iowa's out in the desert with my metal detector. And i was looking for 'cause i had to find some silver some goal. There's rat number. Some point is yeah. Yeah you know. I as I found me. It was over two four against the duty work with me metal and i found this. Just if it's so it's like. I keep now it pretty while your mind you i mean look. I don't to say that was crazy and that would be you know. That's a bridge too far. I think it might be a way to talk to the alien lau that anything dining ever heard anything like you. Want to hear it Can you even lake listen to you. That's that's how i listen my gm. I actually you you we listen to these tapes. You wanna listen to some warrant. I got some warrant here. We now yeah. I'm out. thank you just wanted to play the tape. Arcadia i it is. It's like this meditation or something and it calls the you know. Let me just your house. Put it on my cassette player. I'm hearing as you welcome to guide. Admitted the laura. I am lara and i will be here. Conduct their on this list. That gold charity across the universe we will be reaching across stars to call for thick consciousness of wise being in the andromeda galaxy. His name is debbie alon. He's like really really like they're now in order to call. Seb yulon earns i you have to travel to the desert. You must go will take with you. Nothing but this taint with which to play the sounds of maive crime year.

Ernie bob baker last week lara jacksonville florida Seb yulon iowa debbie alon henderson nevada andromeda galaxy billion times over two four double fifty one laura seven
The Most Distant Black Hole Ever Seen

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary

03:19 min | 2 years ago

The Most Distant Black Hole Ever Seen

"Astronomers of sudden you record for the most distant quasar ever found the quasar dating back some thirty point one. Three billion years is a thousand times more luminous than the milky way galaxy and is powered by the earliest known supermassive black hole a true monster more than one point six billion times. The mass of the sun the newly discovered quasar jazeera three one three minus eighteen o six and reported in the physical journal letters and on the pre press physics website archive dot. Org doesn't just provide new insights into the evolution of massive galaxies in the universe. It also raises profound questions. About how such massive black holes could have existed just six hundred thirty million years after the big bang. And that's a point underlined by the study's lead author for enjoying from the university of arizona. Who says black holes created by the very first massive stars simply could not have grown that large in only a few hundred million years the most distant quasars a crucial for understanding how the earliest black holes formed and for understanding cosmic realization the last major phase transition of the universe from the cosmic dark ages before the first stars quasars a powerful jets of mass and energy generated by black holes feeding on surrounding material as matter falls into a black hole it forms an accretion disc around the black hole event horizon a point of no return beyond which material falls forever into the singularity a place of infinite density and zero volume scientists understanding of the laws of physics breaks down material on the creation disc is ripped apart of the subatomic level by friction and gravitational forces releasing huge amounts of energy radiating out across the electromagnetic spectrum. The amount of energy emitted by quasars is enormous with massive examples such as this one being visible right across the entire universe. J zero three one three minus eighteen. O six was first spotted in data from the pan stars new kurt hemisphere survey with follow up specter from the keg in north telescopes to measure the size of its central supermassive black hole measurements from spectral lines that originate from the guests around the quasars. Accretion disk allowed astronomers to determine the black mass and study its rapid growth influences. Its environment for such distant. Quasars important spiritual lines are red shifted to knee infrared wavelength by the physical expansion of the universe over the past thirteen point eight billion years. The and jim nine north observations and covered an extremely fast emitting from the quasar in the form of high-velocity winds travelling at twenty percent the speed of light the energy released by such an extreme. I city flow easily. Large enough to impact star formation in the entire quasars galaxy as for the galaxy itself. Well it's undergoing a spirit of star formation producing you stars two hundred times faster than the milky way the combination of this intense star formation a luminous quasar and the high velocity outflow makes jazeera three one three minus eighteen. O six antos galaxy a promising natural barberie for understanding the growth of supermassive black holes and their host galaxies in the early universe.

Quasar Jazeera Physical Journal University Of Arizona JIM Barberie
"billion times" Discussed on Dear Writer

Dear Writer

05:19 min | 2 years ago

"billion times" Discussed on Dear Writer

"I don't need to know. I just need to notice if a fair amount of structure so that i can work within that structure that site those key points that you need to hit somewhere along the way to make the story work but how you get those key points as i guess. Just see what happens exactly and i'm also in not particularly beholden to things. I write down to like always just a roadmap and so it's like characters things like leaving jinda might change later on if i feel needs tour so that there's always of loose but then later on things subject to change but i just need that yeah have sketched that that base ideas work from i guess yeah i totally understand. That is very similar. Actually to the way that i write win ongoing in all these bags to the book that i've written and i did infect change a couple of judaism things like that mean ashley. We're a lot more structured because we have to be with the two of us. But i think it's a good way to be sort of doing a bit of a mix of the two in allowing sort of creativity inspiration to strike you as you go but then sort of having an idea point to get to definitely now so find. I'm quite fan of as it sits of non linear storytelling trying to get it. Weird with it. And if i can only really works if you've also got some what virtue is anchor points that billion times right as of sort of they've decided they're gonna rights hair prequel novel or there's going to be flashbacks with is going to be and they haven't really if a defined loose points they have. They're not that beholden to them and then when they start right prequel things. They will contradict things that have happened. Or they'll because they just sort of like. Yeah i'm going to write prequel scared. This is just what's happened then someone that's quite into the lawmaker will..

two billion times two of jinda judaism
Roblox IPO Update

Esports Network Podcast

07:24 min | 2 years ago

Roblox IPO Update

"This year. They've been talking about an IPO and that was originally they announced they were going to do in November and December. They're like, actually we're going to delay it. You talk about sort of their decision to delay that IPO and instead raise the series 8 Round which came with a much higher valuation. You make the argument that hey this was a really nice called a delight to take us through why would a company would make that decision? We're going to delay the IPO and what Roblox gained by doing? So yeah. So I mean, this is a a pretty interesting and strategic play by by the CEO of Roblox by you know, the originally anticipated a traditional IPO for November and then they delayed it then back December but the second delay, I'm sorry in December they decided to delay and a lot of that had to do with what they saw happening with Airbnb in doordash. Those were two months, you know, highly successful IPOs both of them pretty much doubled on day one and so it kind of made Roblox think okay. Are we leaving something on the table here? Right because the original birth And when they wanted to IPO was was an average valuation of of eight billion. That's kind of what they were targeting. Right? And so after seeing what happened with doordash an Airbnb, you know, they felt like okay, they're an appetite here for investors to actually value robots in a much different lens. And so that was the you know, the option that they decided to take and so there there was a comedy there was supposedly a company-wide memo that explained to the Roblox employees as far as why decides they decide to take it off and revisit this strategy and so from December leading up to about January to your point. They actually were able to gather another round of Investments through a series agent round that valued them at twenty twenty nine and half billion. So, you know, you literally go from an eight billion valuation to a 29 and 1/2 billion, which is quite remarkable, right? And when you put that into perspectives you look at epic Gaming right and you look at their recent valuation went down. Leave I think they dropped about a 250 million investment that valued them roughly about 17.8 billion time around that ballpark. But you know, you take that into perspective right? You got a very successful such as fortnite that has the Unreal Engine. They've got a great ecosystem here and there at Seventeen and half and yet there's investors here that are valuing Roblox now at close to $30 billion, right? So Thursday impressive and I have to imagine now, you know epic Gaming evaluation is probably significantly increased. And so now you know it could you know, when you look at that as a comparison like, okay. Well, wow, these are two very successful franchises, but with a much different strategy, right Roblox is clearly a platform gaming strategy versus epic is a lot more of building in Palm Coast system around gaming and even outside of just gaming right the comparison to Epic Games is so interesting because I think people would assume dead. It's a more valuable company than Roblox. You mentioned the two different ecosystems. And you know with this is being said with the caveat that you're right. The Roblox is new valuation may have it as sort of a Leap Frog situation with epic games where they can take that and go to somebody else would be like actually we thought it was $70 billion now, we now might be 35 or whatever it like it sounds absurd but based on what Roblox did this year? It's clearly has a model that that could exist. So why does Roblox have so much value when compared to epic games that has that owns rocket League? They have fortnite they're bringing in all these different Major Brands into fortnite. They have the epic game store. I mean, they felt cocky enough that they got into a lawsuit with Apple after all. What is Roblox? What where's the intrinsic value from the company coming from? Yeah. Well what's impressive about Roblox was the abilities to build dead? A platform that targeted a market that probably wasn't as heavily looked upon right when you think about fortnite. It's a little bit more on the teenager Spectrum, maybe above but when you look at the Roblox a platform it the average or the the their sweet spot is really the nine year olds thirteen year old demographic right? And so there weren't a whole lot of platforms that were developed. I mean you can argue maybe Nintendo switch or even the weaving of platform but I think robots was able to sort of expand apply the this from a mobile gaming but also you can play Roblox and PC. So there's a lot of different platforms that you could play it on. That's more widely that can be more widely distributed towards kids right versus a Nintendo switch. You've got to convince your parents to spend an average of 3 to $400 on a on a system or a console. So I think that that's number one and then it's I think the reason behind the valuation here as well is when Roblox did wage Our file for an IPO they did have to of course release information. They're asked one and it was quite intriguing information that they released as far as their their daily active users and just the hours of Engagement due to the Panthers made their hours of Engagement pretty much doubled from roughly about 4 and 1/2 or four billion to almost close to nine billion hours, right? It's crazy when you think about that number, D E Yeah it like nine billion. I mean, you know to put that into perspective right you look at twitch twitch obviously is a very big streaming platform and their average wage, you know hours of streaming double during the pandemic as well, but it went from roughly about 2 and 1/2 to you know, a little over 5 billion hours, right? So you look at ROBLOX, you know, like oh, this is just one Platform One game will maybe not one game but one platform, right and they're able to track 90 million hours versus something as widespread as twitch is is is trailing in, New Jersey. Five billion in streaming hours, right so crazy to think about that. But then you also look at the daily average users of kids that are playing. It's like somewhere close to like 35 million daily average users. And so you look at that potential of the amount of kids that are playing this the amount of hours. I think if you do the math, it's roughly each kid playing it from roughly about 2 and 1/2 hours per day off, right and that's a lot of time right and and the question becomes now is okay. Well is that can even continue number one post-pandemic? I think that's where the speculation comes into play. But even if it doesn't look at how many kids had gotten onto this platform that are only going to continue being on that platform for at least several more years and then that a monetization that they've been curd based on their virtual currency Robux. I mean when you put all of that in a play-off like that's where the valuation comes in a place right? They've actually been able to monetize this amount of frenzy that these kids are going on this platform and buying, you know, using these robots to age. Not even enhance the game per se. It's really more for skins right or or how do they enhance their Avatar which is which is mind-blowing right when you think about all that. The Skins whole whole industry is the

Roblox IPO Airbnb Palm Coast Nintendo Apple Panthers New Jersey
Bad Bunny tops Spotify's most-streamed list of 2020

The Woody Show

00:45 sec | 2 years ago

Bad Bunny tops Spotify's most-streamed list of 2020

"Spotify has announced their year and stats and the most streamed artists. Globally of twenty twenty. Congratulations bad bunny. Bad bunny bad. Bunny was streamed eight point three billion times ever. I am whenever i see bad. Bunny show up on like a show or super bowl. Or wherever i like him i. I actually really like him. A lot Drake came in second last year. Drake was crowned the most streamed artist of the decade coming in third j galvin followed by juice world and the weekend of the most streamed song of two thousand twenty one that we love in hair blinding lights from the weekend of one point. Six billion streams in twenty

Spotify Drake Bunny Galvin
Ultracold Soup: Meet The 'Superfluid' States Of Matter

Short Wave

04:18 min | 2 years ago

Ultracold Soup: Meet The 'Superfluid' States Of Matter

"Or at quang. I am ready to go back to school with you. Which honestly dreer great. We would be good lab competitive. Yeah we will be competitive but we be great together. I think and so the science concepts. We're going to unpack. Today is states of matter. You know some of those other states of matter. You didn't learn about in science class rights so the physicist i called up to explain this is martin's veer line at mit. and what. i find hilarious. How martin is he said when it comes to his own kid. He actually prefers to keep this particular science lesson. Pretty simple to assam like. Oh yeah you the gas liquid solid bam. Leave it at that you know. He's seven and states of matter is really just a way to describe how a group of particles think atoms or molecules etc move which is sort of beautiful and collective and different from what you would gifts by looking just at a single particle and changes in temperature and pressure can cause those particles to move differently and change their behavior right. We see the super easily with water. That's right in the liquid phase water molecules slip and slide past each other but we humans quickly learned that if you lower the temperature the particles slowdown bam. We see is appear and we fridges. And we're very excited about. That actually was a huge deal hundred years ago to make ice and if we go in the opposite direction heat water. The particles move faster and farther apart and eventually the h. two o. Molecules breakaway and dissipate into the air as water vapor humidity. That's right it is already a miracle in itself. Water exists in these three different states that we can see those states at temperatures that we can reach as a humans in the kitchen. But here's the thing we can only do so much in our kitchen. Speak right speakers though there. But there's a limited range of temperature and pressure that even you can achieve in your kitchen mattie and there are states of matter beyond this okay like do you remember plasma who ya. Sometimes it's called the fourth state of matter and it can happen when matter gets heated to a super high temperature like electrons rips from atoms which actually allows plasma to conduct. Electricity super cool. Lightning is plasma. Plasma is wild. It is wild. Yeah and if we were to go in the other direction to an extreme if martin son were to ask dad what can happen at a temperature much cooler than ice. Is there something else. I might start telling him about these superfluid states of matter which is exactly what martin's studies at mit these superfluids states of matter that we're long predicted but not easily observed in nature. So how many states of matter are out there. Well we don't actually know martin want to even commit to a number. When i asked him this question he actually said ouch. The is apparently no end to the series of interesting new. Twist that nature gives us to to find your states of matter. We just are digging as we speak. We're digging into this all the time and that's because in theoretical physics. You can use math to predict things that experimental physicists haven't observed yet and i say yet because in the last few decades scientists have successfully coaxed atoms under extreme laboratory conditions to enter other states of matter states that could have useful applications for future technologies awesome. Okay let's get this. Emily like how do they do. This kind of lab can had to exist for these other states of matter to emerge. I'm so glad you asked. They had to get cold. Ultra cold we work in the neno. Kelvin regime for breakfast ano- kelvin. So you might ask what so. That's actually very called. It's a billion times cold interstellar

Martin Quang MIT Emily Kelvin
Bytes and Pieces: Americas Chinese-Tech Attack

The Economist: The Intelligence

08:26 min | 2 years ago

Bytes and Pieces: Americas Chinese-Tech Attack

"As the heads of Amazon Alphabet facebook and apple were being berated in Congress, last month how many competitors did facebook ended up copying we called it Amazon heroin. Why does bny steel content from honest businesses tiktok the goofy funny video sharing app was having an altogether better time of it. Golden. Do. Not, so much anymore we're looking at Tiktok we may be banning TIKTOK. Thursday the trump. Issued a deadline of September twentieth for ending all American transactions bite dense to talks parent company as well as with. China's second most valuable, Tech Company ten cent with Para companies based in China apps like Tiktok we chat and others are significant threats to personal data of American citizens not to mention tools for CCP content censorship. China's government called the executive orders a nakedly hegemonic? act. By dense is looking for a fire sale buyer for some of its international Tiktok operations and it seems Microsoft is checking pockets. But the administration's zeal is likely to harm America's interests as well as the Chinese tech champions. We knew a band was in the offing at is still everyone by surprise Thompson booth is the economists technology and business editor I. Think most people were expecting president trump to wait until a a TIKTOK deal had gone through to reach a resolution on whether there would be a ban on not and it's also quite surprised that he's gone after we chat and tencent. And the reaction from the two companies has been quite strong. Bite dance has said that it's GonNa fight the executive orders in court. Well, as you say, there had been some expectations around Tiktok by dense. Why? Why was ten cents included in the end? Well there isn't a certain unfortunate logic to this. If you're going to say that you're concerned about Tiktok on national security and espionage grounds, you sort of have to be consistent and we chat has about nine hundred, million daily users in the US and the executive order basically bans people from making transactions on we chat which it's a sort of super APP. That is really widely used in in China and Chinese diaspora what is the trump administration's rationale for these orders? Do you think so the stated reason from the administration is the Chinese government is spying on Americans and hear the evidence is Circumstantial. So the worry is that Chinese spy agencies have stolen massive consumer data sets from various companies over the past ten years. So from Mariot Equifax anthem health insurance TIKTOK has been downloaded two billion times. It's the mother of data sets. There is no hard evidence that bite dance would ever cooperate in such an endeavor but the idea is that if you've got engineers with access to Tiktok by Don, service than the government could lean on them to get the information out. So that's the stated reason from the trump administration. Think that's enough for the American government to threaten to ban the APP. I gather from investors case to buy dance at the real reason is a level playing field issue as much as the spying concern. So one gathered that in particular. Mark, Zuckerberg of facebook has been outlining pointing out to trump that take talk is wildly successful in the US and yet facebook google than allowed into China. It's sort of the idea of why should tech top able to come to compete with us when we can't do so in the other direction? And as things stand now, Microsoft is the evidence suitor for for Tiktok operations at least in a in a few countries what's in it for them? I think for Microsoft is really stunning opportunity on their part. So bite dance reckons that the TIKTOK US asset is worth in the realm of two hundred billion dollars oversee the pudding, very generous estimate on that. So the price being talked about now that Microsoft might pay and that it's on the block for more life fifteen, forty billion. So it's just a real steel in terms of the price. I'm talking to the hottest social media property out there right now it's uses incredibly highly engaged and Microsoft you out of stroke gets into territory of the social, the digital media giants, and it gets a massive data set on teenagers daters the new oil. Attack, there is lots of sketches in the Microsoft just is kind of getting out of its core competence that it won't really know how to get and keep the teenagers. The other risk for Microsoft is just kind getting dragged into the Mile Strom of content moderation and hate speech and all this kind of stuff that attracts more political scrutiny and then regulatory scrutiny having said that Microsoft is regarded as a really high quality acquirer of businesses it generally tends to do it quite well. Microsoft. CEO Sachin Adela notably is currently probably regarded as the best big taxi. Oh so now we've got this deadline of September twentieth what happens between now and then Firstly, Microsoft going to carry on negotiating to try and buy Tiktok we're seeing more suitors for Tiktok on the scene over the weekend the reports that twitter is definitely interested I know that Netflix's on the coolest the venture capital backers of Bite Don's possibly even Disney I do think the likeliest thing is still the Microsoft probably strikes a deal just because it's got the deepest pockets will also be really interesting to see whether Microsoft manages to get more markets at. The moment, it's only going for the US, Canada, New Zealand and Australia. It's not buying the UK having the actual executive order from trump will create more uncertainty around Tiktok and there's no doubt that it is already harming the asset. It's no joke said, the clock really is taking on that deal and what about ten cents? It's unclear. What ten cents is going to do it's unlikely to try and sell international we chat as by dance is doing with Tiktok. It's possible that it could come up with some kind of structure to address. US concerns. It's a complete unknown how tencent now is going to react but I guess the question is, is the right way for America to get its concerns addressed with a problem with. It so far as that feels completely sort of ad hoc on his whim. Really undermines investor confidence in the US is the place of the rule of law. And there are alternatives and I think there's three main steps that we would advocate versus to strengthen the vetting procedure that's already in place. So the Committee on foreign investment in the US surface that probes should stop properly and quickly. So in the case of Tiktok and musically the US APP that bike dance bought therefore triggering this whole situation, they took two years to start looking at it and then did it in a rush which guarantees Robert chaotic ad, hoc situation. And overwhelmingly, the US needs to tighten up its own data privacy regime. So the reason that tiktok is such. A worry in terms of spying theoretically is that US firms, your facebook's Google's and so on her normalized that the slurping just masses of personal data from Americans. So what's required is a strong federal data privacy law. The third element is displayed to you can do in. Terms of requiring transparency into the Algorithms being used auditing code that's coming in from overseas for now, the question for those two billion or so people who've downloaded tiktok whether their favourite platforms going to survive or whether the current chaotic procedure that has affected, the company will mean it. It's rivals take it over and teens leave. Thanks very much for your time Tamsin it's been a pleasure.

Tiktok United States Microsoft Facebook Executive China Tencent America American Government Google Chinese Government Heroin Amazon Congress Apple Ceo Sachin Adela Mariot Equifax Tamsin
Coins and Cash: Shortages, Hoardings, and Threats

Money For the Rest of Us

03:54 min | 2 years ago

Coins and Cash: Shortages, Hoardings, and Threats

"Walking money for the rest of us. This is a personal finance show on money how it works how to invest it, and how to live without worrying about it. I'm your host David Stein today's episode three, Zero Eight. It's titled Cash Coins. shortages. Forty and threats. Weeks ago, my daughter and I were at a bakery buying a couple of loaves of bread. We didn't have the exact change and they didn't have the coins to make chain. So they rounded down, we got a small discount. This week I was going through the McDonald's drive through, and there was a sign that said due to treasury shortage of coins, use credit or debit cards. Round up to the nearest dollar, donate the different to Ronald McDonald house charities or use exact change on cash transactions. There is a coin shortage in the US right now. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told Congress last month. What happened is that with the partial closure of the economy, the flow of coins through the economy, it has gotten all. It's kind of stopped. We've been aware of it. We're working with the meant to increase supply while working with the reserve banks to get this apply to where it needs to be. The Agency of the US Treasury responsible for minting coins is the US. Meant it was established in seventeen ninety two by Congress when it passed the coinage Jack and it chose Philadelphia as the site of the I meant. Now, the US mint operates production facilities in Philadelphia, San, Francisco Denver, and West Point. Every two years, Congress requires US Treasury to give a report on the US mint its budget and its cost to produce its coins. In twenty twenty, the US meant projected that it would produce fourteen billion circulating coins. Including eight and a half billion pennies. One point, three, billion Nichols two point, four, billion times. One Point, eight, billion quarters. Now. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the US mint cut back production of circulating coins in March and April. Year to date through July, they had produced eight point, two, billion coins. They said, they were back up to full capacity by mid. June anticipate producing one point six, five, billion coins per month. That would equate eighteen point, one, billion coins. But here's the thing about circulating coins in the US and other countries. The meant only contributes a relatively small percentage of the new circulating coins each year twenty, nineteen, it was seventeen percent. New. Coins. Going into the supply chain? The remainder came from third party coin processors are recyclers as individuals by things they get back and there are machines where you can put your spare change and it will sort it and this recirculating process. Make sure there is a sufficient supply of coins that has broken down. A couple of weeks ago, meant issued a bulletin, which said, we ask that the American. Public start spending their coins, depositing them or exchanging them for currency at financial institutions or taking them to a coin reduction kiosk. The coin supply problem can be solved with each of us doing our part. This isn't the first time that there has been a coin shortage. There was one in the early nineteen sixties in the US.

United States Us Treasury Congress Twenty Twenty Ronald Mcdonald West Point David Stein Federal Reserve Mcdonald Jerome Powell Nichols Philadelphia Francisco Denver SAN
Gretzky plays his final game on this date in 1999

AP News Radio

00:44 sec | 3 years ago

Gretzky plays his final game on this date in 1999

"Twenty some one lawmakers years ago are April criticizing eighteenth the nineteen airlines ninety nine who will Wayne receive Gretzky government plays his final payroll NHL assistance game is his Rangers but are drop playing a two hardball one decision with to passengers the penguins in overtime that's going the to kill nation's me not airlines to play are splitting but the twenty five billion time dollar does something government to you and aid package to help time pay workers and and avoid massive and I feel layoffs really confident in an about industry my decision virtually I crippled ever wavered by travel one ounce restrictions in the last because of seven the new days coronavirus naturally Gretzky but a assisted group on of the senators Rangers long once goal the airlines afterward he to received show some the high leniency honor from commissioner for passengers Gary Bettman who canceled when you take trips off that because sweater of the global your pandemic Jersey after they say today's only game to you discount will be the carriers last player Allegiant in the NHL and spirit are offering refunds ninety nine the others are handing the NHL's out travel all time scoring vouchers leader is nine but keeping hundred thirty the six cash points ahead which of runner the lawmakers up your arm you're younger estimate I'm could Dave be Ferrie about ten billion dollars of customers money the major airlines have to give out refunds if they cancel flights but not if the passenger cancels Jackie Quinn Washington

Rangers Gretzky Commissioner Allegiant NHL Ferrie Jackie Quinn Washington Wayne Gary Bettman Dave
Trump Spent $19.4M On Facebook Ads in 2019

Marketing School

04:42 min | 3 years ago

Trump Spent $19.4M On Facebook Ads in 2019

"Super committed to your success online. We've worked with them. To a special offer just remarking school listeners. All you have to do is go to dream. Host DOT COM slash marking school to learn more and get your website online today. Welcome to a another episode of marketing. School I'm Eric. Su and I'm Neil Patel and today we're GonNa talk about how Donald Trump spent nineteen point four million dollars on facebook ads in twenty nineteen and our thoughts around it. That's a lot of mind to be spending on ads. So Eric You WanNa go over why he spent nine hundred and nine dollars on ads while I mean he wants to win the presidency again. But we'll talk about this under the read some kind of interesting things from this article where we got this idea from the Guardian. Put this out. So it says one year inside. Trump's monumental facebook campaign as the Guardian Investigated. By the way. You guys can do yourself go to the facebook. Ad Library. Just look what he's doing. They looked at two hundred eighteen thousand ads. The really analyze said while this is actually pretty sophisticated. They spent way more than what Democrats were spending. And what I find fascinating. I'm looking at some of these ads right now. The Sent you the link before. But if you look at the ads and I'm sure you might be pulling it up right now. It really taps into the psyche of who they're targeting so it's like okay gun control right. What else is in here gun control and there's also a lot of fear right like you can't trust the Democrats and so it's based on what people like sure and based on that it's like okay. Let's let's have these very specific ads. Target them the way I look at this in terms of my thoughts. Yes he wants to win the presidency. I'M GONNA go a little further out first before we kind of bring it back. I'm kind of scared of this because if you think about the longterm because is in its infancy right now but when it gets really good. You could just basically manipulate humans. 'cause it's basically happening right now and hey if it works then it doesn't make sense for him to not do it right but he spent nineteen point four four million dollars two hundred eighteen thousand ads which were seen between six hundred thirty three million times one point three billion times and whatever something bad happened like the impeachment inquiry. The adspend ramped up. So that's something to be like you know you see the media's publishing negative stuff about the candidate okay. Let's go ahead and wrap up adspend okay. Let's wrap up more stuff more positive stuff about me so I thought this is fascinating. What do you think Neil? I definitely do as well. And what's crazy is guys aren't just running ads blindly. They're using data to figure out who to target what to show. Why does show it and how to change people's perception of anything that's going on now? There's two ways to think about this one side. We could be like. Hey they're using as to manipulate us at the same time though. We use Nedia to manipulate people as well. I'm not saying either is good but if you look at what's happening on news or television depending on especially when his political related different channels swing different ways just like it is in any country certain channels always prefer one party over another. Doesn't you know through news newspapers magazines? Why can't people do it through ads? Now I don't really think either is right and people shouldn't be doing this. I'm just saying that's how the world is and they have the opportunity to do it through both ways. Now in reality it'd be great. If everyone including news organizations these platforms like facebook and Google controlled everything. So it was more. I would say politically correct. And transparent versa is targeting and showing specific messages abusers to play on their emotions to try to convince to go one way or the other. I mean. That's that's the thing right. I think there's always been manipulation throughout humanity. You know maybe the news in the past the newspapers can control everything. You can bet that there's manipulation going on even when you're marketing to people you're trying to get people to take an action. Maybe sometimes it's not as deep as maybe something like like we're talking about right now but you are trying to get people to take action. And sometimes I think some of the worst offenders on this might be affiliates Shady affiliates or shady like multilevel marketers. That are doing it to something her people but it's happening all around. You're staying based on what we're seeing. Now it's going to happen in much greater scale. I think the people that know how to utilize it. Those are going to be the winners for the long term. You can see. Trump's campaign is way more than Democrats out. There I think Bloomberg right now is just spending a ton of money. I think he spent what over two hundred fifty million. You do not know what the numbers I don't but I just know a lot of money. Yeah so guys I mean you. You have the tools available in front of you. It's how you WANNA will them? And then if you're gonNA take advantage of the tools

Facebook Eric You Wan Donald Trump Neil Patel Guardian Ad Library SU Bloomberg Nedia Google
Are Cell Phones the Cigarettes of the 21st Century?

The Ultimate Health Podcast

10:38 min | 3 years ago

Are Cell Phones the Cigarettes of the 21st Century?

"We go with Dr Joseph McCulloch Doctor mccalla. Welcome back to the podcast so great to chat with the again. Well it's great to be here Jesse. Yeah we got a lot to get into. I loved your New Book On. Ems and I love the title. Em assist perfect. My sister's responsible for that one love it. I'm sure people are gonNA love it as well as we jump in here. I think it's important to talk about how you first became aware of ems. I know for you. This has been something on your radar for about twenty years. Some curious how did you initially come in contact with them? And what was your initial reaction. Well because I've got a website that seeks to educate the public about health issues. I became aware of this a long time ago about two decades ago as you mentioned and it was pretty clear if you if you're serving the literature that this is an issue so I knew about it. I accepted that they were an issue but reluctantly chose to accept it. Fully embrace it and act upon it in a way that would protect me specifically largely because I fell prey to the deceptive campaigns by the wireless industry essentially replicated the patterns of the tobacco industry. They absolutely do work. They seek to create doubt and confusion. Which is a primary strategy and they certainly did my mind than they effectively by spinning off of many other ostensibly credible research studies. That suggested. There wasn't an issue. So pretty this doubt this lack of scientific certainty and unlike tobacco which has very clear and strong suggestions that. There's something going on here. I mean just common sense. Why would you inhale something? That's Y- smoke into your lungs. I mean it just doesn't make sense is not going to be an issue but wireless radiation. It doesn't have that at all in fact to other counters at our amazing Lee beneficial to us and that is incredibly inconvenient prize with all these tools easy access to the greatest innovation history of mankind. Which is the Internet. And it's invisible. You can't hear see it smell it so you're just never aware that you're being enveloped with these exposures with that. In the convenience aspect primarily I just shows to be remained ignorant and at ignorant but chose to embrace it in full and take measures to counteract it and I didn't really get motivated to get more serious about it until one of my mentors. Dr Klinghoffer confronted me with this. He's a clinician. For many years in sees a large number of people still in the trenches being patient some of the sickest patients in the world sees in Europe and in the US and one of his basic tenants as he refuses to see someone. Unless they're gonNA mitigate the M. F. Exposures because he knows that there's not going to get better so that to me was a giant clue and I got serious about in once I started studying it and it took me three years to compile information. This book became real obvious that this was indeed. A real threat in that the source of the confusion was the wireless industry and they're far more sophisticated than tobacco industry. Everyone knows how effective they were. I mean Jay's we had every federal regulatory agency telling us in warning of the dangers of cigarette smoking yet they still persisted for thirty years before we finally got the black box warnings and telling people very clearly authoritatively that these are dangerous and I think everyone listening most likely can remember when the four five. Ceo's of all the major tobacco industries testifying before Congress saying one that cigarettes were not addictive and to to the best of their knowledge did not cause cancer. They were lying through their teeth. It took that long and they still lied. But finally attorney generals were able to correct that in impose tens of billions of dollars in sanctions against them. And we're going to head towards a similar result with the wireless intrigued but it's going to probably take another twenty thirty forty years. I mean because the evidence is so clear and compelling once you objectively review it and before we get deep into the nitty gritty here. I think it's important. Were on the same page and to get there. Can you explain exactly what? Ems are sure mfs is an acronym is your electromagnetic fields and describes the entire range spectrum. Which can be anywhere from a fraction of a cycle per second which is called hurts too many billions of or even hundreds of thousands of billions of cycles. Per Second. Not all you must are dangerous. We've been exposed to EMS since air entire human biological history and example of those would be sunlight. Sunlight isn't enough broadly. They're broken down into two different categories. I O nizing radiation in which there is some from sunlight. Ultraviolet radiation was gives us our son Tannin. Vitamin D is actually ionizing radiation. That's when you get too much you'll get a thermal burn as dangerous. You don't WanNa get excessive something like that but obviously some as important to stay healthy. I don't think any rational human being other than a dermatologist. Which hard to classifies rational most of the time would disagree with that and we've had relatively low exposures. I mean they're earth actually emits certain very low level. Emf's Shuman Resin Sake. Seventy eight hurts or so but this is very low level but the exposures that we're most concerned about our manmade ones which didn't really exist before the late eighteen eighties or so electrical fields radiofrequency feels these were not around the planet but they started becoming more prominent even though they were around for four years at the end of World War. One they were still pretty low and if you compare the levels of a typical major exposure we're concerned with which radio frequencies which is about two to five Gigahertz Gigahertz as a billion cycles per second those are the frequency that your microwave oven runs on and your cellphone. They're almost identical frequencies. The industry uses heat thermal damage as a measure of the safety. Because it's the same for microwave. So their thought is that if it's not heating your tissue like a microwave than can't possibly cause biological damage will go back to that later. There's this broad spectrum of ems the end of world will want certain level even though ems. Were around be as we're ROTHROCK FORTY YEARS? It was still relatively low out century later. Nineteen or twenty twenty. We are literally at a billion billion times higher exposure than we were a hundred years ago. That's ten to the fifteenth. So it's hard to imagine that an increase in that type of magnitude of exposure wouldn't have some biological impact so today for example getting into the different man media mass. There's four different types. One being radio frequencies than we got magnetic fields electric fields and dirty electricity. Well Yeah. Those are the primary mimic exposures note. Nature does create radio frequencies to I mean they exist in stars amid him. I think you'll see there are out there but the really really low exposures if you were to measure them they be. I mean it almost immeasurable by most commercial equipment so the issue is not only the frequency but the amount of intensity of exposure them out of power. That's being broadcast into your tissue right. We're going to be looking at the Manmade Weinstein how we can lessen or totally eliminate the impact on the human body. You talked about the SARS and you talked about the effect of this radiation causing heat on the tissue so first of all I just want to get into the FCC here. 'cause they're the ones that are creating these guidelines and the guidelines they're creating have to do with heating tissue so let's go a bit deeper into this and talk about SARS and in the measurement that we're using here and how that works will SARS is another acronym again stands for a specific absorption. I forget the IRS Stanford but essentially it's a term used to describe how much heat is generated when you're exposed to electronic device and it's not unreasonable because it is. I says microwave transmitter. So it will vibrate your tissues as certain frequency and create. He'd and he'd can clearly 'cause biologic damage and it can be an indirect indicator of the amount of danger. That's there but by no means a direct because we know now very clearly and there's literally hundreds if not thousands of studies have proved conclusively that is not the heating damage is what we call the non thermal effects and for the longest time it. We really confused me. No one really knew or understood. What the biologic mechanism was for these. Non Thermal Effects. We just knew. That's what causes damage. We knew it was heating was very very clear was not heating the tissue and if you go abide by these standards FCC I think just adopted him from another professional agency is like International Electrical Standards Agency that they took that from and they've got these models based on but even using this flawed model they use this model that is called Sam which was patterned after a six foot. Two or four military guy was weighed about two hundred thirty pounds sale very large head and it totally different characteristics than a child. They're measuring SAR based on that model. So it's flawed and they're not measure for children also it's slugged begin with but even using that model. It's still an indirect indication because it will give you an indication of the amount of power that's being generated by that devise. But you cannot you simply cannot use. Sars is indication of the safety of your phone because it isn't other than you maybe can compare models and will lower star rating. Might be a little safer but you still need the shield yourself because exposure this will clearly increase your risk of biological damage in the most common would be cancer but you know what I call cell phones to cigarettes of the twentieth century for good reason because there's so many similarities. Not only did they wireless industry pattern their tactics after tobacco but they also in many ways are almost identical with the mechanism of the Holocaust. Har- They do not hurt you. After one exposure or exposure for a week a month or maybe even a decade it takes these is a long term chronic exposure. Where ultimately you'll succumb to the biologic damage. So this is a new experiment. Most people listening to this if not been exposed to their cell phone for more than two decades. I mean there are some but there's like no one more than three decades and debt still maybe under the window a word required exposures going to occur to encounter these side effects and you know people can smoke for four or five decades and still not have cancer now. They make succumb to other reasons. Like my mom who's longtime smoker and was confusing to see by the tobacco industry and she ultimately wound up dying from complications from COPD or emphysema. So you don't necessarily have to die directly from cancer but there's a lot of people coming down with brain cancer as and even prominent celebrities. We have two senators Ted Kennedy and John McCain who both died from brain cancer secondary to cell phone

Sars Cancer Brain Cancer Dr Joseph Mcculloch Jesse Europe United States Dr Klinghoffer Doctor Mccalla LEE Copd Congress Ted Kennedy International Electrical Stand FCC Attorney Shuman JAY
How can I successfully pre-launch an online business?

The $100 MBA Show

08:01 min | 3 years ago

How can I successfully pre-launch an online business?

"Product launches have have been around for some time even before internet businesses you can remember when the iphone was launched on windows ninety five was launched and before that launched there's something called a prelaunch this is preparing for the launch this is collecting and gaining the interest of potential customers before you launch why because an audience is really what you need in order for you to have the most success launch as possible the large the audience the better chances of success and of course targeted audience you want people that are interested in what you will potentially launch in fact there are people that are experts at this and made aid their whole living in business at of the idea of a product launch and in that sequence is the prelaunch the expert on this topic is jeff if walker he became a popular or famous because a very successful online courses launched called product launch formula but he also released a book recall launch i really recommend you pick up the book because the book covers the main principles of his idea of how to launch a product including the prelaunch relaunch and we'll give you a good foundation without necessarily needing to buy the full two thousand dollars course of course you want to go deep you can go ahead and buy the course later on but i would say pick up the book as your first step but in today's episode we're going to focus on the pre lajoie prelaunch does is it allows you to start seeding or what's called old planting seeds in your audience to allow the flowers to grow in the flowers is obviously the product launches what you wanna do you wanna drip feed information nation insert educating your audience about your product your service your business and this could simply be done by having a simple landing page the talks about your product it's about to launch and why they should be interested the simplest form of a prelaunch is a landing page with a video in the three long it'd be five ten minutes walking people through this new business this new offering and then the call to action is hey leave your name and email address to sign up for updates for the launch and for a launch offer or discount or bonus you're really incentivizing them to sign up so they can know as soon as the product product launches you might have a window during the launch like a week or two or they get a special offer and if you don't wanna miss that offer you wanna be on this list and this could be bonuses this could it'd be special coaching or mentoring this could be early access whatever it is the point here is is that you're trying to attract people that would want your product before you sell the product why because when you launch you want to launch people you wanna launch to you to an audience that wanna listen to it you have to have to say about about this product and if you have an email list prior to that this will really help you create that buzz i recommend pre launching about three weeks before the actual actual launch so this means are posting on social you're maybe running some ads towards that page so they can wash video and opting for updates and in in that update you wanna send an update at least once a week talking about another feature of your business in the future of the product why they're gonna wanna buy come launch day what are the benefits fits of signing up early all that kind of stuff this is the simplest form of a prelaunch some people do this a little bit more elaborately so they'll have not just one video but they'll have have three or four videos and each video will be released each week before long show let's say for example you're launching three weeks ahead then you'll have three videos one will be ready right there on the page and then the next one will reveal itself after the week goes by the first week goes by and then after the second week the third one comes out and then of course come week three you launch your product and of course this launch page will no longer exist after the launch the patriots needs to be forwarded to the actual homepage of your business of the product now you might be thinking well what's the point of prelaunch wanna just launch and just you know tell people about it and hey by the product well people need some time to think think to wrap their head around your product to be convinced that they need the product and this is what the prelaunch does educates them about your product or service your business what you you do what are the cases they may need it or the situations they might find your product or service useful they need to be convinced of the value you know your products have a price they're going to try to make a decision is worth my money and the prelaunch those videos and those emails their job is to convince them of that and by doing doing this before you launch they're ready to buy come launch there's no convincing anymore you've done all the work so come launch day you have buyers now not not everybody that signs up to that newsletter or that optin on that launch pages going to buy but the point here is that a good number of them a good percentage of them will and knowing that and knowing that it's a numbers game you wanna get as many people signing up for that prelaunch list you can also include in that pre launch sequence a webinar elected to this allows me to interact with that audience and build some trust and report but also to answer their questions they may have about the product this product work for my businesses product worked for this situation relation remind needs and you're able to answer those questions so they're all yeses and you breakthrough all the rebuttals and all the what if and does this work for me questions so come launch day the ready to buy i sometimes running a webinar before launch and then one on launch day so i actually say it's launch orange day jump on a webinar with me jumping ask any questions you have this kind of last chance for them to kind of clear up anything and at the webinar they can just by all the weather or 'cause it's launched some people have really elaborate product launches and a prelaunch where you know they save you sign up today you'll get this discount you sign up today you'll get this bonus some people have on lunch the day of launch day one we're giving away these bonuses come day to a different set of bonuses day three you only get this with this to encourage people to really check their email and know exactly when launched a is in the sign up on those days a second third chance to get something special when when you sign up early if you listen to this show you heard me say a billion times one of the most important assets in your business is your audience and when you're starting a business and you don't have an audience yet this is what the prelaunch four is allow you to have somebody to speak to to sell to offer your products come the day you open your doors there's nothing quite like that a feeling when you actually open your doors and you have buyers versus when you launch and crickets right you don't want that feeling you want people to actually check out and give you money in exchange exchange for the value offering them so eric who's asking the question has a subscription box business one of the things you could do with launches say hey you're part of the prelaunch launched list if you're on this list at on prelaunch before we launch when you buy you'll get a limited edition box or limited edition special founder's this kit or founders bundle and we're only giving those two the first hundred people so this allows people feel special there some scarcity here and they get something that nobody else gets you could do something like have a founders facebook group only the people that sign up during prelaunch and then by during the launch will be part of this this exclusive coaching group on facebook and that's not going to cost you anything but they get exclusive access to a small intimate group and he feels special they're early adopters now just because you launched our businesses i mean you can't do these strategies you can definitely do them with any new products or services you launch make make a big deal out of it this is a chance for you to market and bring in new customers and get your current customers to share until other people about the launch

Nirvana's 'Smells Like Teen Spirit' hits 1 billion views on YouTube

Afternoon News with Tom Glasgow and Elisa Jaffe

00:35 sec | 3 years ago

Nirvana's 'Smells Like Teen Spirit' hits 1 billion views on YouTube

"A major milestone this week for nirvana it's been ten years since it was first uploaded to YouTube but the music video for nirvana's smells like teen spirit just hit a billion views this week the video featuring Kurt Krist and Dave playing a high school basketball court was originally released in nineteen ninety one along with the band's landmark never mind album now for some comparison size Ghanem style music videos been viewed about three and a half billion times baby shark has more than four billion views and weird al's smells like teen spirit rather smells like nirvana music videos a little further behind

Youtube Kurt Krist Dave Basketball
‘Baby Shark’ creators plan Navajo version of popular video

AP News Radio

00:40 sec | 3 years ago

‘Baby Shark’ creators plan Navajo version of popular video

"A very popular here wearing will be reaching some new ears from you to to the World Series to the Navajo Nation followed the creator of the blue shark is now developing a version of the kid song in the Navajo language why would they do that now the whole nation is the largest native American reservation in the United States and the song is already been translated into a host of other towns the south Korean company is seeking voice actors to do the roles of baby shark Miami shark Daddy grandma and grandpa so for the baby shark video has been seen nearly four billion times on YouTube I'm all squirrels gave

United States Miami
Guns N’ Roses’ ‘Sweet Child O’ Mine’ Becomes First ’80s Music Video to Hit 1 Billion YouTube Views

Joel Riley

00:17 sec | 3 years ago

Guns N’ Roses’ ‘Sweet Child O’ Mine’ Becomes First ’80s Music Video to Hit 1 Billion YouTube Views

"My god guns and roses now than viewed one billion times on you too sweet child of mine now the first music video from the nineteen eighties to reach the one billion view Mark Hughes averaged about six hundred thousand views a day on you too this

Mark Hughes
New Harry Potter Game Lacking in Niantics Old Magic?

Business Wars Daily

04:35 min | 4 years ago

New Harry Potter Game Lacking in Niantics Old Magic?

"I'm wondering i'm david brown and this is business wars daily on this wednesday july tenth if you need a little magic in your life you're in luck the new harry potter game wizards unite was released late last month harry potter fans have been anticipating be apps release for close two years since gaming company ny antic announced its development ny antic is known for its hit game pokey mongo which earned more than one billion dollars in sales during its first seven months the first mobile game in history hit that billion dollar mark so quickly with wizards unite code developed with warner brothers entertainment ny antic clearly wanna build on the success of augmented reality pokey mongo model when i antic first release pokemon go players of all just gathered in real world locations like parks and streets to catch virtual pokey minded appeared on these apps virtual maps as if they exist in the real world that playful fun use of augmented reality is what made pokey mongo such a lasting hit three years after its release the game has been downloaded more than a billion times that could be a hard active follow but enormous harry potter fan base could help ny antic repeat it's early success this wizard unite revolves around an event called a calamity which has caused people animals in artifacts from the wizard ing world to appear in the real world like poke him on doing pokey mongo in wizards unite these things called found doubles as a wizard it's your job to break spells collect the found doubles and return them to their proper homes thereby containing magic around the world to achieve you're mission you'll need all the magic you can get or by by which you square in game spending comes in like pokey mongo wizards unitas free but offers numerous options depart which you're real cash on things like virtual gold potions and spells gamers spent three hundred thousand dollars on those features in the first day alone in its first twenty four hours wizards unite with downloaded more than four hundred thousand times and became the number one downloaded app on apple's usa apps store despite zooming to the top of the apple charts the game open to mixed reviews wired gave it a thumbs up but said it's no pokey mongo online site the verge disagreed enumerated all the ways in which the game is a clone pokey mongo but essentially called it a pale imitation lacking in magic in so many fans complained at the basic currency of the game called energy was in such scare supply but it was hard to play wizards unite without quickly needing spend ben real money to buy more and continue game play in less than a week developers responded changing the game mechanics so good it would be easier to play the game free still in its first weekend inapp sales were disappointing especially compared pokey mongo wizards unite to again only about one million dollars in revenue in its first weekend a far cry from poke him on goes twenty eight million following up on a wrecker it hit in any industry movies books games is a tricky endeavor deborah because expectations can be impossibly high still cnn reports the analytics firm at any expects wizards unite to earn more than one hundred million dollars in its first thirty days cnn ads and if it does the game would surge ahead of its closest rival candy crush saga perhaps if i had the wizard ing skills to see the future in a crystal ball i'd be able to tell you whether or not advantage production will come to patch but as it happens i'm all out of potions and spells bernau so just like you have to wait another few weeks defined down the waiting is the hardest

David Brown Three Hundred Thousand Dollars One Hundred Million Dollars One Billion Dollars One Million Dollars Twenty Four Hours Billion Dollar Seven Months Thirty Days Three Years Two Years
Where were you when you saw the first picture of the black hole?

Astronomy Cast

05:39 min | 4 years ago

Where were you when you saw the first picture of the black hole?

"Pamela, this is a conversation that is two years in the making it's been April twenty seventeen astronomers from around the world turned their radio telescopes to wards the black holes at the heart of Imedi seven. And of course, the Milky Way and took pictures of the black holes at the hearts of both of them. And today this week Tuesday was it we Wednesday Haley the tenth two days ago Wednesday. I'm so tired. We. That I picture announcement. So where were you when you saw it? I was in the attic of my house live streaming the event with our Kuzma quest community on twitch dot TV slash cosmic west X where you should all be watching and sharing streams. And so we were hanging out watching it together. And I don't know about you. But I had this moment of okay? So they they got us with them eighty seven at the beginning. And now we're going to have that Steve Jobs. We're thing. But the thing was that never ever happened. And and I don't know about you. But about fifteen minutes into the press conference. I started getting nailed with press releases coming to us from Rick Feinberg and his fabulous press service at the AA S and I'm flipping through them. And I'm like, oh, expletive. There aren't going to be other images. This is it we only get 'em eighty-seven. And I sat there is like the science matches perfectly. And I am sad. Because I wanted our milky wet. I literally of this is great. Where's where's the where say J star? Like, the like, this will be the consolation prize. The main event the first course was supposed to be the black hole heart of the milk away. And it's funny literally moments into this whole process. I started to dig and talked to all of my contacts try and figure out why. So I do know. Probably kinda why. Compare stories because I did the same thing. Great. Okay. All right. So I'd her two reasons the first one is that the that essentially the there's a lot of dust in the Milky Way, we are inside the Milky Way with the supermassive black hole, the heart of the Milky Way. And so that dust is a is a harder thing to tease out of the signal and sort of the resolving distance of the adventure is Intel scope matched up in a way that made it a tougher image together. But the second one that I love even more is that the the is essentially that because the secretary say is a smaller black hole only four point one million times the mass of the sun. It's the and matters swirling around it so fast. It's a much more dynamic environment. And so they went with eighty seven because it is six billion times. The mass of the sun. And so the matter is swirling around it at the speed of light. But it still takes days to go around as opposed to minutes to go around. And so they were able to it was everything happened more in slow motion. They could test their techniques, and then try them out on on the supermassive black hole within the Milky Way. What what did you hear? I heard that. And then I also heard one more facet to that. Which is the angular size on the sky. So the apparent size that the black holes appear because they're two different. Distances means that Sanjay start isn't really bigger, even though it's closer 'cause it's a tiny little thing. And so we don't really get added detail on the part that's Limonov luminous enough to see now, my personal hope is that because we're seeing a faster moving system, and we're seeing close. Or system where the Limonov St. of the innermost part of the accretion disk were not seeing the black hole receiving the shadow of the lack whole my hope is that because that accretion disk is so much fainter. We're gonna get to see other faint stuff around it that isn't lost to the bright stuff. So even though the black hole shadow itself will appear probably about the same number of pixels in size hoping that there's going to be other stuff in the image as well. Yeah. And and the other kind of exciting thing is that because it is changing so dynamically there could be a possibility that we might see like an animation exactly exactly see events in folding over time to actually show what's going on environment. So it sounds like I mean, these two black holes they are the biggest visually on the sky. They're both some blue to Christly small number forty micro arc seconds or so. Something like that. I I've heard them say, you know, the size of a golf ball on the moon the size of an orange on the moon, very small, but they are both roughly the same size is just that the one eighty seven is two thousand times bigger and two thousand times farther

Haley Kuzma Steve Jobs Pamela Intel Rick Feinberg Imedi Secretary Sanjay Fifteen Minutes Two Years Two Days Milk