35 Burst results for "Boorda"

"boorda" Discussed on Behind the Prop

Behind the Prop

04:02 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on Behind the Prop

"It was the amount of control she has. And what that key. Air points capable of doing was amazing. Some of the acrobatic planes. I saw you know they were they were rated for five six seven x gravity To be able to pull that kind of a load Both inverted and upright which means they're pretty strong stable aircraft. The maybe not stable. But they're not gonna fall apart without a whole lot of force being applied upon them so alberto age asked other than water in the fuel system. What have you found wrong during preflight. And i'm sure while you've seen it all I think some of the things that i've seen in as flight school owner. That i hear about that is really common that i don't think makes sense to a brand new hour fairly young. Private pilot are things like Some really abnormal conditions. That you might think are intentional. But they aren't I've heard about tape being on on the static port In the reason. Take my on aesthetic boorda's because someone washed the aircraft that didn't want to spray of water in that static port and they left that tape on. That's that's gonna create some havoc in the cockpit if you don't catch that piece of tape on that static port and remove it I have seen a- a- strut that's been bombed out and i think early on in my career i was taught you watch the strutton. Hold three fingers up and if you got three fingers you starts your starts good. I just don't know that. I really understood the mechanics of the strut. But the strat has a little bit of air and a little bit of fluid in it and that front wheel supposed to be able to go up and down a little bit and help students when they land a little firm to lessen the blow in the force on the aircraft but though struts they're just they have a little over ring seal kit in them the silk. It's less than five bucks but it's doing a lot of work to hold that air that Fluid in there so during the summertime. They they they get they work well and then the winter comes and it gets cold and those things contract and you might see some fluid. It's not the end of the world those Probably three or four hours of labor in a five dollar struck kit We'll get the thing fixed them going but you don't wanna land without that straight having some fluid and some air Other than that while he was some of the things. You've you've heard about or seen or watched applicants missed or watch student pilots miss that you were training. I will give you. I'll give you two stories of mine. things that that i missed that were Kind of a big deal I was in. This is going to be some self disclosure here. I hope the statute of limitations has a has expired on this first one. This was many many many years ago. I was training. Cfi candidate.

boorda alberto
"boorda" Discussed on She Podcasts

She Podcasts

05:34 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on She Podcasts

"Want to have it delivered to your room you can definitely make sure that you go there and and you can even buy the groceries and just have them walk them out to you. If you want upside curbside. I will say this always made fun of you for going to whole foods but at our last event you asked me if i wanted anything i think i've said berries and something else in having them in my room was the best decision i ever made. I marched on those berries at night and in the morning and i was so grateful to have them in fact next time i might have get yogurt to go at those berries and granola because that was an amazing decision. And i mean we'll elsie and i will be there for a whole week like we're going to be there eight nights or something like that. So yeah we're going to be there for quite a while. So i'm obviously planning a little bit of 'cause i'm okay eating at restaurants like that's not a big deal but i do get bored. Yeah yeah you're gonna get bored. That's the thing i mean. Most of the people were talking to are going to be there four days three four days. Max yeah but you're going to be there eight days we're going to be boorda shit so we have to figure out how to eat with our fridge and our microwave and hopefully maybe there's a freezer or at least have stuff deliver. It'll be by the end of it will be tired of. I don't know though. I i've been there twice now and i've yet to get tired of the food there. It's weird but you been there for as long as we're going to be there that's different. That's true that's a different thing right but still think. I hope that we answered at least some of those questions when it comes to. Yeah so i will also say this. Just because i have to say that loud and.

boorda elsie Max
"boorda" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast

Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast

03:36 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast

"Think that fate the world whatever you wanna call does send you people when you need them if you're open to receive them and whether that's a buddy on a you know wednesday night where you spend two hours talking for a twenty minute podcast. You know it's you. You needed that connection and and and we find that and so yeah great choice absolutely song. That changed your life. Are i thought this for really long. I'm okay yeah no it was just like with boorda run right. Yeah there you go like or is thunder road right right. It's like that's the answer. Yes exactly is it. I don't know it feels. Like i'm i'm taking the cheap way out but like oh that's all right. That's my answer. The final answer now. No that's good thunder road but mostly run. Yes yeah Land of hope and dreams was my answer for that because it would have been mind. Yeah right exactly right and you know for that very reason right like for all the reasons you talked about it it. It was the song that all sudden. Oh my goodness so yeah i. You can't go wrong. Bunder on born to run north thunder road song that surprise you drive all night you stick on nerds okay and narrow. It is literally the sweetest i mean. If april is mad at me. And i can't figure out what to do i'm just like i would literally drive all night just to it. You choose. yes. I don't know how to say this to you. I will do anything for you. I love like just tell me what to do get. I will drive all night for shoes. Like we're being a thing that i just thought was a dumb so i'm beginning that i think about it is sweet to me. Yes it is like saccharin sweet to me. It is yes. I don't know no i think that's great. Yeah exactly song guilty pleasure. I'm on fire. it's okay. I think that's a great choice. Yeah it's weird Like even said baby girl which guests the little girl. It was good is. It is more socially acceptable. But either way like i don't know just i'm on. Fire is a great strong. Such structurally yes. It is a sexy song without words. Guess what is that like one to step on a corporation. I remember anyway yeah. The chord progression is just tense tense. it's great. And it's a short song super. I love schwartz on. Yeah and two minutes were out. That's hard like everybody started. Yeah fun. I'll i won't stick around. Don't need me your that and just oh. It is just doesn't hold up enough you know. Yeah one of the things that i.

boorda schwartz
"boorda" Discussed on John and Ken on Demand

John and Ken on Demand

03:03 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on John and Ken on Demand

"We're seeing. It's all good questions. We just saw this footage. It's horrible to watch. I just have to get more information on april. I don't i don't have more information on it. I've also seen the video. I can't imagine what the scenario is where that would be appropriate. I'm certainly not suggesting that. But we've just seen the footage short earlier this morning right. She just paint circles by the way. I'm sure other questions were asked but you can see once again members of our media not more curious. How did this happen. We just gave you the long explanation. Thanks to the center for studies. It's the biked administration policy. That allowed this to happen. The border patrol agents are there. They're told that people are not supposed to enter the country illegally. They're trying to do their job to do that. But again it's all about. They're using whips on the mississippi humanitarian crisis. I mean this is. The open borders crowd. You you can't do this. This is their ankle. This is the questions that they ask this. This is the chaos that the administration created. Guess this world that the borders now opened the trump years are over. This is what you get. No one wants to cover that angle to this. Unless they're open borders they feel like we owe it to the world to welcome everybody and that's having a hard life. Well i don't know if these if these agents Went crazy on their own. Or what's going on fox news has story and most of it is about reporters and tweeter tweeter discussing the photos. And there's only one border patrol agent who said we do not carry whips and the only thing i see in their hands is the reins fake news. I that's what this one guy is saying. But he doesn't have an end to it and he's buried at the bottom of the article. This is fox news. I think trying to do some damage control. Boorda today went nuts on this. That they're using whips doesn't excellent job when it comes to the use of force straining there's no way a horse patrol unit would be whipping aliens. Whips are not issued or authorized for use and. Now the thing is it. They do look. Like i don't know that'd be they do look like whips.

center for studies mississippi fox news Boorda
"boorda" Discussed on The RIFT Radio Podcast Network

The RIFT Radio Podcast Network

02:54 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on The RIFT Radio Podcast Network

"Right. Oh i have my other grandson. That's over there too and She's been living here for a month. So it's like kinda. I want my nan now and he can't come here either. So it's like that's would marrying do what i'm sorry. Maybe in two weeks. I mean you know you're only corn. What can they. yeah right. do facetime with And put. I don't know get a coup or seven foot high ice-cream or something out there you gotta freezer they came. They came on the porch and talk today. So frost it i. I don't know. I think the people have you know. Really good Abilities i think there are affected more by things happening. Yeah always. I wish i did. You get the next ten days at a quiet life. What do you think that you're gonna be so lost in boorda man. Yeah i just got out of quarantine i had. Rsd and my husband was in the hospital for a day. And i was stuck in the house all by myself. You know and i just started getting back on my feet and everything was going good and now my grandsons down and out. So it's like it's never boring. No never is not even with me. Yeah you have a lot of things going on to. I keep about things going on. Yeah i wanted to go on vacation. My husband and i missed reimer serie. Who was in the hospital for it and i was. You know here you can't get into the hospital you can. You have to go through all this crap to get up there and you only stay a little bit and On whatever code is really hitting everybody hard. I had bad news this past week to take a week figure out what to do. You know i'm down in my last five weeks of class time.

boorda reimer
"boorda" Discussed on Tha Boxing Voice

Tha Boxing Voice

01:48 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on Tha Boxing Voice

"Wars will be kicking off at five. Pm absolutely free link is in the chat. Fill free book market. Save its share. It live fights coming to promotion was up. Everybody this is show kid. Just reminding you to tune into the box voice. Channel youtube september eighteenth boorda was twelve is going down watertown wisconsin. This quick psa man. I'm trying to figure out how. Gaza hunting and twenty six pounds. He gets tied in one hundred twenty six. This is this is. This can't be true in this. Is the god give sit. The fuck was show kit. Come on nobody wants to join a big hug. Dooney mario's cousin referee. Please stop this guy for holding please. I got thousand people coming out to see me. Nobody wants to see this guy. Home helped me out right. People actually me all week at you. Knockout george baker. Show get. Who's gonna be in the fish. Nobody's worthy but i might do rematch with or jose. All ages knockout king for the fun. I'm flip a coin. We'll see who's next once again tuning. September eighteenth she showcased not joining the fuck out. Let's go go love this. I'm loving this. I seen a few already seen show kids. That is crazy. Oh shut out. The show.

boorda Dooney mario watertown Gaza wisconsin youtube george baker jose
"boorda" Discussed on Strength To Be Human --Global Arts & Affairs Podcast, Hosted by Mark Antony Rossi

Strength To Be Human --Global Arts & Affairs Podcast, Hosted by Mark Antony Rossi

02:38 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on Strength To Be Human --Global Arts & Affairs Podcast, Hosted by Mark Antony Rossi

"Boorda happened a couple years ago they lost icon flicking and and a big big defeated humilation. The the indians ironically used a lot of a lot of Soldier people from Tibet finance area and they were very effective against the the chinese forces over. There does the reason for them. They manson with this border. So when the indians coal china bullying and and that's the nicest word they can use their right because there's no reason for it at all..

Boorda Tibet manson china
"boorda" Discussed on The Art of Manliness

The Art of Manliness

02:53 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on The Art of Manliness

"The ability to kill manner beast. So what's going on there. I mean. I think i need the point you made is that it's something that people think tacitly accept as being a part of being a man if you're able if you have the capability to do violence but they're dodgy by. They don't like to talk about it. Yeah i mean it's it's dodgy ground because you uday wrenching the criminal in culture if you get back to traditional societies most of the rights of pastures were either you kill the lion or or some some dangerous beast where you killed a member of the tribe but not in the sort of psycho pathologic warfare of the twentieth century was probably some kind of rating warfare and even tribes like the nagas. Do you know these. Headhunters in in burmese indian. Boorda spent some time with you if you ran away. You weren't considered account but if you've got killed in a raid you would give him a dishonorable burial just just quite interesting limited warfare but allow people the chance to to to get involved sometimes. Of course people killed in the in those environments but that if the numbers were far far less than the vast numbers have been killed in the in the twentieth century. So we can't really busted all system is more humane or more manageable. So i think that gets rid of that objection but the hard part is to to to say that that is an aspect of potentialities of killing. Somebody paps anyway rounders to talk about defense. You know that you are prepared in situations. Put yourself in a difficult situation and be competent to to to protect somebody. Even if it meant dispatching somebody does. Did it is borderline psycho though so that is going to be the problem and i think the way round is to think of this is a skill which is a kind of bridging between the sort of the past and the present that if you are if you believe that you couldn't in a certain situation feminity was threatened and you had to defend them. He believes you. You just walk away net and be killed and you wouldn't do something about it then the something missing you know. I think you need to have that potential in that skill to be able to do that. And probably it's more of a willpower thing and is nothing to be particularly proud of because you know thousands of people as well to government killing people you know without any thought you know. A friend of mine told me that he he was in somalia's whoa reporter and when he decided that the game was getting a bit dangerous was when a kid you know ten year old kid pointed classical pool the trigger because it was unloaded so or the jammed whatever and he was lucky but that the ability to just blow somebody away not some huge great skill in.

Boorda somalia
"boorda" Discussed on Ante Up Poker Magazine

Ante Up Poker Magazine

04:38 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on Ante Up Poker Magazine

"Making the second best hand you know. And i didn't realize that you had to tighten up when you get more cards. You don't lose up. You tighten up and it's like people don't get that and i didn't get it. I learned my lesson. it was an expensive lesson. But you know that's how you learn to to really figure it out and in this case you know queen queen six is not and again invested in and when someone's bent over you like that. You're you're done here. Says he's capable of this many flusher street as he knows i'm tight all hands such as a straight or flush given the board pair. You could have easings here and given that the with another club ace. Her king king possibility because he won't go nuts when he's as always re race with especially if the pot won't be going to go all in with it before the flop after flop and we weren't ends up having to skype full house. There are only three four hands of bb whole them. Unlikely i call. I will say that your disguised you disguise but there's three or four hands up. They are very likely not unlike you. I can't see them being unlikely. Six hand is a disguised. But there's a bright and centerstage full house it's been out there. Since the flop is typical hand that people would play or even having their hand vaguely up four cards. And that's nine eight or nine eight. And i just don't see why those aren't hands. That would be his aunt. I see especially because. I think this person was in. The blind was the big blind so he was forced to play his end. Anyway so i don't see why it's not strapped so he's to put a dollar in that he didn't need you but but yeah okay so dollar right. Yeah exactly but it wasn't like he was entering. It willfully with no money. And i mean it was like you don't see the button either so it's a fact that we're considering aces and kings in. His hand does not make sense. And you did say you wanna raise. It gives reasons for it. But generally you know you're raising with in appeal high and kings and particularly in this spot. So i think i doing is very unlikely because it wasn't a raised there now. Obviously you've played with those guy a long time better than i do but most players are going to be raised movies. You came so yeah. I agree literally staring down at one and hopefully not to nine here. All right the rivers the seven of diamonds or final boorda's nine diamonds into clubs nine clubs clubs diamonds. And apparently he's acting i this time for best one hundred dollars. I'm starting to wonder if maybe he didn't include that. He checked to him or something this whole time. But you know what i mean. That's one hundred. The i'm wanting to go again. We were out of it before then. Seven help us all. I mean we were hoping we had one car that can help us and that was a six and as you mentioned that might not have been good either so back that we didn't get it get it so all right. Our does shove is remaining. Tiny bit he says. And the opponent shows nine eight nine deuce for flop quads and our ariza..

skype boorda
"boorda" Discussed on Dead America

Dead America

04:48 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on Dead America

"Culture. And i always ask them. Who are you aligned with in the community as a charitable partner and most organizations will do things like you know they'll they'll collect codes in the winter and give them to a homeless shelter or they'll do toy drive at christmas or they'll do a canned food drive for the local food bank and that is so so important. That's the first step but if you really wanna make that sustainable culture then you don't do what i call one offs where you know at a holiday or whatever. You're just collecting stuff that need is there and it's important and i don't want to downplay it. But so many of the great organizations i work with actually have a charitable organization that they're aligned with could be autismspeaks. It could be a veterans a a homeless program. It could be the bank. It could be the local children's hospital and pretty much once a month. They're doing some kind of employees led activity. Where they they'll go to the hospital and they'll they'll read to the kids that are you know in the hospital or they'll they'll put together birthday parties or halloween parties for those kids who are undergoing life saving treatments and are in the hospital or they'll go to uh food bank and they'll serve meal so you make it part of the culture. There are a couple of boorda's asians. I work with that. Are like hall of famers when it comes to this and once a quarter they take a day. Every employee is given the pay off. They'll come to the office. i'll do it from their home. And the employees will raise funds for an organization that they care about and the most creative ideas. How five whatever. The total amount of money is raised for any of the individual organizations. The company will match that for the top five organizations. And you talk about a. Wow you talk about employees who will work when When others well who are committed who won't leave organization even when they're offered more money because they wanna stay at that culture that is true leaderships. That's true goodness and that's that's that is sustainable. Way way more than grand way more than people that's culture that makes a difference. Everybody wants to be part of that. Yes giving back is so important and.

boorda
"boorda" Discussed on Tha Boxing Voice

Tha Boxing Voice

02:09 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on Tha Boxing Voice

"Oh come on god. But i know but i totally do understand. I really but remember the modern did it like while his girl was pregnant. you girl. let's say i'm the woman i'm doing this with the failure. All right. we're gonna let you go because you like. He's doing machinery in the background. I just cut the sheet metal like woche but yemen. Some of you guys. That's all you gotta do. Look i'm not telling you break upwards of women. I'm just saying you gotta look look. I'm not going to call that. This is my midlife crisis you know. What do you want me to do. would you rather fuck braids or go. fight in. This border was going to spend money on. Call that go this chain real quick. Go buy a boat. You know what. I'm saying like no. Let me go do this with my fellas and show you know what i'm saying and that's what i gotta tell her like. She gotta give you one chance look first of all you specifically need to tell the truth is i was training for this one. Boorda was five and then you know you got pregnant. So i wanted to beat if for you. Shit we on twelve now. Now you're talking about. I can't do it because of the house. How about you find a house and every night after the gym i come in look at the houses you found on zillow and truly and you know before we go to bed. We i'll give you my opinion on those and on the weekends we go see those houses physically like come on man. I done all that she just gave you the sched- said i just bought this house. Man like get out of here. I was training for out j. When i bought this house and literally moved it. We did boorda was ten over here in florida me just purchasing his house still training moving all that so don't know skew sucker. Don't give me no excuses okay. And i'm older than your man. I'm fucking oh yeah yeah. Yeah yeah.

Boorda boorda florida
"boorda" Discussed on John and Ken on Demand

John and Ken on Demand

03:53 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on John and Ken on Demand

"Don't stand they're going to do. I mean you know be honest and make the case for why we need hundreds of thousands of illegal of illegal immigrants. Some of them who have the virus may orcas playing part here and play acting in tough. Yeah he looks just like jeff bezos. I'm looking at his picture ruined. I can't get over it. Yeah looking at a picture. One of the new stories and new york is looks just like the same bolt heads. Same eyebrow look the same. Here's what these people do. They all have to take orders from the boss right. The boss says you go out there and you just try to get some sympathy. Try to get people to put themselves in your shoes cyclic. Very difficult challenge here You know we're working as hard as we can abai and you don't have anybody in the news media saying wait a second. This didn't exist Eight months ago did not exist or what happened in the last eight months. Oh yeah biden. Biden destroyed all the trump's accomplishments boorda policies got reverse. Yeah they asylum policy and so you gnashed you. They knew this would happen. They want it to happen. It's party we learned a couple years ago. Remember those Those caravans yeah that the activists in those countries said just overwhelmed them now they got the right president to do it because trump wasn't he was saying we're going to start goes and eventually some of those governments did guatemala mexican. They stopped some of those characters. Aggressives believe that there should be no borders. They believe that the world's poor should come here so we could equalised their economic situation and tax. The wealthy wealthy americans can take care of and transfer the money to these poor people who happened to be born in foreign countries where there's little economy and it's not fair. It's not right so opened up the gates to america and then charge it all to the rich people that is that is that is telling you if you sat with them and a coffee shop or at a bar they would say exactly that and then what happens is they get into government and they papered over all kinds of bs to confuse everybody. Oh this is just terrible. It's such a challenge of stop it. Some frustrated border patrol agents. Smuggled out some video. It's showing a packed holding facility with a bunch of immigrants. Yeah they're all sitting on the floor. That not wearing masks. They're huddled together. It looks like a sea of humanity and overrun homeless shelter. Of course this stuff doesn't make the news because if this is happening under trump these pictures of everywhere in the media it does what trump is doing to the migrants. It looks inhumane. I mean they have some kind of gated partition. There is a fencing of some. Yeah that they're they're fenced in with some kind of it looks like a security gate at a garage but it just. They're getting uncooked food. They're not getting any medical attention. There's prolonged stays. Well what are you know The temperatures reach above one hundred degrees on a daily basis. They're literally laid on top of each other like firewood. That would be a story a big story of trump or president. Telling you okay coming up next. We're going to take a look at that Problem with that..

boorda jeff bezos biden Biden guatemala new york america
"boorda" Discussed on Growth Experts with Dennis Brown

Growth Experts with Dennis Brown

02:17 min | 1 year ago

"boorda" Discussed on Growth Experts with Dennis Brown

"Right obscene lot of businesses. That happened today. they are around you. Copy on opening a restaurant opening this category creation. Yeah degree creation and it basically sort of gives rise to that concept together and it's really wonderful because you understand how the businesses today are the ones that created categories because then there is no competition for you right. That is where the real scale happens. That is where the real defense happens. When you create a market for yourself. Altogether like for example there was a category vision. News nutty captioning before that node ide shedding before that i think yes books i think one is niche. Down in the other one is played bigger. I'm not sure which one i think. Those are the to play bigger. Okay yeah that's a thanks for that so you know it was really good. I mean i go back to that time again. Because i love the concepts i mean. He has the perfect all right. Well listen. i really appreciate you being here and congrats on all your success. It sounds like things are going really really well. I appreciate you lending your expertise and and all the lessons you've learned. Let everybody know if you would rahul how they can connect with you. Learn more about design hill or just send them to wherever you think they'd get the biggest value so know that's designing benzon read it on back home so it's www dot designed dot com of twenty four seven customer support boorda's man so you know anybody has any questions but any demean. They wanna talk me or about us services you know you get in touch with one of our executives. Otherwise i'm mostly active on being given so you just type in my name our lager wild with design and you know pop in and optimize event. Pretty quickly plan that. I'll make sure. I put all those links and the show notes once again truly appreciate you being here. Congrats on all your success. And i'm sure we'll talk again soon. Thank you so much. Thank you so much listeners. I wanna thank you for tuning in. I truly appreciate your time. If you're enjoying the podcast then do me a huge favor. Click the subscribe button now and please leave me review. It would mean a lot to me..

benzon boorda
"boorda" Discussed on Fantasy Football Today Podcast

Fantasy Football Today Podcast

01:37 min | 2 years ago

"boorda" Discussed on Fantasy Football Today Podcast

"Four hundred dollars and six hundred dollars dan. You never played before. So i'll give you the rules which is good because i need to make sure i say the rules beforehand. You cannot lose any money for wrong guesses. I think the daily doubles kinda stupid. So i think i'm going to eliminate it in this format. Yeah we're gonna limit daily double The first person to say his gets to answer. I and again no penalty for wrong guesses so if he guesses. I and guesses wrong. Feel free to jump in and that is fantasy jeopardy and jeopardy two clarifications that. I would like to make before we start. Okay how long after you say your name until you have to answer three seconds three seconds. Okay so you should not say your name and then try to think of an answer not for guessing so it would seem like that wouldn't be a bad strategy to are we using the internet. That's in front of us or not. No no inter inter. I don't really do. Yeah there's a few that the internet could help you with us. Look at atoms beautiful face. And that's all you need. Okay so spaces where my internet is. So our categories are throwers of the football carriers of the football and players. You may see at the zoo players. You may see at the zoo okay. He's your the veteran boorda's yours. Would you like throwers of the football carriers of the football players..

dan football boorda
"boorda" Discussed on Romeo Siaw-Mensah Podcast

Romeo Siaw-Mensah Podcast

02:16 min | 2 years ago

"boorda" Discussed on Romeo Siaw-Mensah Podcast

"Medicine power shooting boorda would help our economies. Rather don't think about that because what you received the power goes you can do that. You need to start from this quickly. Cook if you come to my prefer people to listen six one day therefore come together. The ask say laud all that at this town again. The kingdom of israel from from from romance to talk politics if you're chrysanthemum. Put the upper policies. Don't about what goes president is in power. What can good government is in power of our minds on..

boorda israel
Snobbery, Like Most Things In Life, Is Relative

Trent365

01:53 min | 2 years ago

Snobbery, Like Most Things In Life, Is Relative

"I was having a discussion recently about how much i've enjoyed mine. Espresso coffee capsules during these various lockdowns and that comment boorda reaction from a mehta mine. Who said i'd become a coffee. Snob no longer was instant coffee. Good enough for trent. Trent now needs his espressos. He's become a coffee snob and at the same time. Another made the comment that i was a total neanderthal. When it comes to coffee how could. I possibly consider myself to be a real coffee drinker. When i drink espresso a real coffee connoisseur would never stoop so low as to drink and espresso but that to me. Pretty much sums up this whole concept of snobbery of being a snob of considering your taste a little bit superior to it's totally relative. I don't consider myself to be a coffee connoisseur for what it's worth. I just like coffee. That tastes to me a little bit better than what. I was drinking out of instant coffee but i. It wasn't so important to me that was willing to put in the extra to create a superior coffee to the spray. So i i worked just fine for me in some people's eyes that will make me a coffee snowed in other people's is it makes me in the end of a when it comes to something like coffee and over the years i've had similar conversations about whiskeys and wines and cheeses all sorts of things and i think the reality is for most of us. We think about how that reacts how that relates to other people we think about how other people view us are. They going to consume snow before. Drink this particular wine or drink it this way or taste this way. Well the reality is some will. Someone doesn't really matter. Be comfortable with what you know what you like. Just be self aware. Be aware that others will think you're snob. Some will think you're not doesn't really matter because like most things in life is relative

Boorda Trent
"boorda" Discussed on Artificial Intelligence (AI Podcast) with Lex Fridman

Artificial Intelligence (AI Podcast) with Lex Fridman

05:14 min | 2 years ago

"boorda" Discussed on Artificial Intelligence (AI Podcast) with Lex Fridman

"But creating from wear and in service of what creating from a sense of connection everything in homeless in service of the wellbeing of all of it is very different which is back to that compassion. Conversion access being doing becoming pretty powerful also could potentially be alphabetized into robot just saying where does Where does death coming to that being forgetting. I mean the the the concept of time completely is a. There's a sense the doing it. Becoming the has a deadline in built in the urgency built. And do you think death is fundamental to this to a meaningful life acknowledging or Feeling the terror of death by boorda's becker or just acknowledging the uncertainty the mystery the the melancholy nature of the fact that the right ends that part of this equation or thought necessary. Okay we look at how it could be related. I've experienced fear of death. I've also experienced times. Where i thought i was gonna die. They felt extremely peaceful and beautiful. And it's funny because if we we can be afraid of death because we're afraid of hell or battering her nation and the bardo or some kind of idea of the afterlife. We were projecting some kind of sentence suffering. But if we're afraid of just non experience. I noticed that every time i stay up late enough that i'm really tired. I'm longing for deep deep. Sleep in non experience right like actually longing for experience to stop. And it's not morbid. It's not a bummer. It's and and i don't mind falling asleep. I sometimes when i wake up one and go back into it and then when it's done i'm happy to come out of it. So when we think about death and having finite time here and we could talk about if we live for a thousand years instead of a hundred or something like that is finite time. The one bummer. With age we die is that i generally find that people mostly start to emotionally mature just shortly before they die but There's if i get to live forever. I i can just stay focused on. What's in it for me forever..

a thousand years boorda hundred
The Chilling Case of The Woman Without a Face

Casefile True Crime

02:05 min | 2 years ago

The Chilling Case of The Woman Without a Face

"Done walked down a lonely jim in straight particularly at naught. If you do you might feel something heavy. Jump on your back weighing you down. You can't shake off the crater nor can you kill it. According to german folklore diaw hawker meaning lake upon is a mythological shape shifter that will hang onto you until you pass away from exhaustion or tara variance to the legend. Say that the alpha kills its victims but tearing out their throats it can take the form of goblin or a sad old lady and in some cases no shape at all the f. hawkeye can never be caught changing shape as pleases and two disappearing into the nine it. He said that church bells son. Lot pra and profuse swearing may help to ward off the evil creature. Another version of the alpha lies in the legend of a beautiful young woman who preyed upon a boorda god returning home after a long day at work. Hey spotted the woman and as he approached was attacked from behind by a force that he could not see nor fight off the god struggled and screamed before the attack suddenly ceased to beautiful woman disappeared leaving the god to wonder if he had been saint her at all. Although the legend of the alpha kappa was the raw from roots buried deep in german mythology a real life shed shift struck throughout europe in the early nineties. So pervasive was this woman who became known as the woman without a face that she traveled through multiple countries and murdered recklessly without ever being saying she vanished every time leaving few clues behind to mock her presence.

Tara Variance JIM Europe
Are we going to meet our vaccination target or what?

Coronacast

04:57 min | 2 years ago

Are we going to meet our vaccination target or what?

"Hello this is karina. Cost a daily podcast. All about the coronavirus. I'm health reported teigen thailand physician and journalists dr norman swan. It's wednesday the third of march and norman. We're already more than a week into our vaccine. Roll out here in australia. Which makes us old hands at it now but there were reports over the past few days. That strategy hasn't quite met the targets that i was expecting to in terms of numbers. Vaccinations delivered in this first week. And we've got a pretty big target for october as being sort of the end of the roll out the end of the first big sizes of the rollout. What are some of the issues that have cropped up. I mean it's such early days. It feels a little unfair to stop critiquing the performance when we're on the awakened but what are some of the issues that have been identified as maybe slowing us down a bit. So far rove is clearly been a major cities of hiccups with the commonwealth rollout in aged care. As we've been saying in current cast in fact the main game is boorda. Workers airport workers flight crew and hotel quarantine workers and what we should be doing but we're not as their families in households. So that's the main game securing our borders. And doing that hyper quickly. And you've really got to do that with the vaccine because it's going to take you twelve weeks to complete it with the astra and it's not going to be as good coverage with the with the new variant possibility so there's been a cold up in aged care because the commonwealth doesn't run anything have his own services therefore they've got a contract they probably should have contracted it to the states. But they've going into private providers and been cups which have been well publicized so it's to take the commonwealth a bit of time to get their act together and also some of the states have been a little bit slow so this combination of supply of scene. But also as marion kane or imply. Just today the bookings haven't gone quite as quickly as they imagined. And they could cope with more bookings. And i think there's been a hint of that in some other jurisdictions so people have got to come forward when they're booked and have that but around the world there has been a problem with people. Not turning up for bookings people don't turn up for their appointments and that means that you have a system in place where you've got people on standby people that you can take a. We've got jobs over. can you. At five o'clock in unexpectedly get your vaccine. So we saw we had the new south wales primary gladys and yesterday criticizing the maybe lack of communication between the states and federal government. Is there improvements. That could be made there. Probably and the minister of sought yesterday to have a press conference which is probably in part induced. By the new south wales premier having criticized the federal government for not being clear with the doses. And how they're going to arrive. I mean i think some of the surprise here is that if i had a long time to develop this. And it's still not clear how the next phases are going to be rolled out how people are going to be told what booking system is going to be like. Gp is still not clear how they're going to work into it. They've had their letter saying they've been accepted as a as a center for you know the practice to deliver vaccines but even then the ph primary health. Networks are often not clear whether or not the four thousand six hundred practices are indeed the ones that will end up doing it. So there's a fair bit of uncertainty another area of uncertainties that third pretty good administration stopping doctors commenting on the relative efficacy of vaccines. Because they're calling it. Advertising saying the vaccine come to my practice sits behind that there's a lot influx. We'll get our act together. We're good immunizing country. People will come. Forward is just that. We don't want to lose momentum.

Dr Norman Swan Boorda Karina Marion Kane Norman Rove Thailand Astra South Wales Australia Federal Government
Is Astra the wrong vaccine for border workers?

Coronacast

04:46 min | 2 years ago

Is Astra the wrong vaccine for border workers?

"One of the big milestones we had about yesterday. Was that the oxford astrazeneca vaccine. I devices of that have arrived in australia. Which is something that we've been waiting for. We're in phase one of the role at at the moment and those are the priority people. And i thought that those people were getting the fis at shot. But now we've got the oxford esters shut here. Are they going to be getting that as well and should they be getting that as well. We're in the press release from the prime minister and the minister. They say that they will guess. That's what they say in the press release and in fact the minister himself a week or so ago a press conference said the same thing that there would be a mix of these vaccines and the trouble with. That is an an accord. Chris murray who ahead on seven thirty last monday which he was. Who's the head of the institute for health. Metrics evaluation in seattle is. That astra is the wrong vaccine. If you're looking at borders let's pull back a little bit about what you're trying to achieve and your vaccine strategy are vaccine strategy is really for a country that has lots of covid around in the middle of covid outbreak. Because you want to partake. H care quite rightly aged care. Workers quite rightly you want to get in there and then you want to protect the rest of the population you want to. Doctors nurses people who work in hospitals all that nor question and we still want to do that but if the virus gets in through the borders that's how the virus gets seen it doesn't suddenly pop aged care home or residential care or pop up in the alfred hospital in melbourne. It comes from overseas. We'll come back to the new zealand situation currently in a minute. So the total strategy in the first instance should be about the borders if we can keep our borders secure. The virus won't get in and then we've got time to immunize for safety reasons. The rest of the population and so astro is the wrong vaccine for. That is not the wrong vaccine. I'll get. I want to say up front. I will get the astro vaccine. I'll be happy to get it. It will protect you in severe disease. But it won't necessarily protect our borders. It will against probably against the uk variant. It's not going to protect almost certainly against us at african variant which only showed ten percent efficacy against. We don't know what is going to do against the brazilian variant which shows vaccine escape. And there's the california variant in american various which. Look as if they might be a bit vaccine resistant themselves and so what we should be doing is saying well astra's fine and the scottish artist suggests it's fine for preventing severe disease but that's for a country that we should be covered getting in the first place. So that's about the pfizer vaccine because it stops transmission. More effectively than the astra zeneca vaccine. I it works within three weeks. You don't have to wait. Three months for the efficacy. Second reason is that moderna there is no. There are no data drawn. Skerritt said on chronic is last week for pfizer. But it's almost identical vaccines to madeira and moderna reasonable efficacy against the south african vary not great but much better than ten percent and and it gives stronger immunity faster so for our borders we should be using pfizer and getting quick protection and we should be protecting their households. Because where's it gonna go after they get infected should he be infected. And if it's the south african is going to go to members of their households at a higher chance so their families or flatmates should be immunized with pfizer to and then the third thing that we should be doing which nobody's talking about just wondering why not but when i talk and by the way this is not necessarily me talking actually sounded out on people who know what they're talking about who aren't where willingness to publicly contradict the government. They say es actually what we should be doing and it's largely what new zealand is doing. They are immunizing. their hotel. boorda workers and their immunizing their families. They've had an outbreak which will come to in a minute. The other thing we should be doing is actually having a forward strategy. Which is if you want to get back into australia. Get immunized and we should help them so some vaccine doses could go overseas to australia. Scott send send it over to make sure the co chain right to our consulates and remember. Pfizer is not quite as temperature sensitive as people say. It's it's a problem once you've dominated you've got to get rid of it but it's not quite temperature sensitive as can last for a while so if you're an australian in london paris and new york senate to this german embassy or their physicians. They've got doctors attached and immunize streams. Get them to pay for. It is cheaper than a hotel quarantine and so you. Don't get on the plane until you've had two doses and you waited another two weeks so you're fully immunized

Astra Institute For Health Oxford Pfizer Alfred Hospital Chris Murray FIS Skerritt Australia New Zealand Seattle Melbourne Boorda UK California Scott Paris Senate London
Interview With Kfir Yeshayahu

AI Today Podcast: Artificial Intelligence Insights, Experts, and Opinion

05:09 min | 2 years ago

Interview With Kfir Yeshayahu

"Our guest. Today is kafir yahoo. Who's the senior vice president of products. Advair atone so high kefir on. Thanks so much for joining us today. One it's gonna be with you today the We'd like to start by having you introduce yourself to our listeners. Tell them a little bit about your background and your current role at their tone of course so under the product invade on of busy building. I will which is the alternative system for high as well as accompanying tools to really solve some of the toughest problems in adoption today. In general one of those challenges that were focused on is open holder tising. Ai which is a fascinating topic for me. Having started with data science many many years ago. I've seen how data science was done in some of the most sophisticated data organizations in the world back in the israeli intelligence community. And i've been living the sort of evolution mini revolutions fe. I ever since in loud companies like microsoft and has of groups in the and others before joining the verizon i managed devops oriented boorda in. Aws the amazon cloud so my perspective on 'em at all is coming from both sides from day iside and Devops and now. I'm saying that the dan's in the space who both the perspective of on itself. And i don't own business units as well as Without many customers of the iowa who are in various stages of the junk. That's really very insightful. Because we've been definitely spending a lot of time talking about machine learning operations. Emily obstinate model management. And all these things that have you have to deal with once. The model is as building. People tend to think of of sort of all the work that has to go into training a model making the model happen which is definitely a lot of work. No doubt about it especially even the data preparation even before even build the model right. That's a lot of work but now that you know these models are out there in the wild in in production people are realizing the challenges of keeping these models relevant and high performance. And just doing what they're supposed to be doing. So maybe you could talk to us about what you see. Some organizational challenges as they tried to bring machine models into production of course so different studies and surveys though talking about some little between fifty to ninety two why blamed but fifty two nine hundred projects. Don't actually make it phone. Put that to production regardless of where you fall in the way. It's a pretty sad ratio. Now what makes it even wolves. Is that a project. Take a long time to demand often six months to a year. And you know they'll be walked by Most expensive in the organization we invade have experienced the same thing in the past the first day i projects and applications developed by our business units to literally month to complete. Now we're looking at fox and the stakes were sometimes too high to even start. The border. don't going directly a question about challenges until recently. A lot of the buzz in the industry was about talent shouted. I think this issue is is going away. The market is is balancing itself and good talent is coming from all sorts of different defections into the will. it did not cheap way more accessible than before. The challenges didn't have shifted in my opinion from talent gaps to both insistent cups. And i'll try to gonna show that in four different buckets. So one of them is is portions. How do i estimate the ally often. Ai project how do i define the budget endgame. That's very different than than traditional software projects. Why d- projects the second bucket is integration applications and and solutions in genoa. Now this may sound of sideways from from but it's out of the whole challenge of production izing. How with to play with the application. This is interesting for me especially from extent point because naive. Boches don't always walk because of the nature of the modern. They'll give you one of many examples. Ai models often produce results with degrees eleven of confidence.

Boorda Yahoo Verizon Amazon Emily Iowa DAN Microsoft FOX Genoa Boches
Climate-friendly jobs for unemployed oil and gas workers

Climate Connections

01:12 min | 2 years ago

Climate-friendly jobs for unemployed oil and gas workers

"An oil or gas well can keep releasing pollution long after its retired from use. When an oil and gas company walks away from a well that had been producing and does not plug it. In those can impose heavy environmental and climate costs. That's jason bard off director of the center on global energy policy at columbia university. He co authored. A recent report on inactive unplugged wells. The can leak methane which is a potent greenhouse gas into the air as well as other harmful air pollutants according to the epa. There are more than two million unplugged inactive wells in the united states board off says that together they emit as much carbon pollution as two million passenger vehicles per year. President biden has pledged to a program to plug many of these inactive. Wells boorda says this approach could create employment for oil and gas workers who lost jobs during the coronavirus pandemic. many workers have lost their jobs and are struggling and if they have a skill set that can be used to help the environment by plugging these wells. That can be dual. You're putting people back to work in a period of high unemployment until the economy is back on its feet and you're providing an environmental benefit.

Jason Bard Center On Global Energy Policy President Biden Wells Boorda Columbia University EPA United States
Explorando el Instante con Camila Ibarra

Cafe con Pam Podcast

05:19 min | 2 years ago

Explorando el Instante con Camila Ibarra

"Let me like. Oh my staff human trafficking from alabama's. Yes we need the dmv n. o. J. except for learning list twins getting blisters. What's your heritage dive. Amelia's go was out those took on a separate Have asset one of your grammy gonna separate the Here is more useful elegance thousand years when he was Hoan as soon as i've ever lay story is pay scale. Get super porno instances lemire. They'll is presented scare you key. The is the joe. Go they alimony. You ain't got it's at been announced. Ucla overnight he gonna berto hamblur key. Less prisoners am doesn't the latin america unofficial said which was issue the most and believe that ian in the biens and thumbs. His nose is go acrimonious. You and he therrien russillo or is he in bigalow. Alert secret can make Geeky lucas that sioux city and the mutual is colonie said. Donald visit goes independent amid the to the question. Those is colonie semyon. Though be an exploration they have gannett is no porchet woman which Erasure sybil wrong lays the low sixty s fulfillment you to learn new jersey amusement. As course those the is is is lebron. look at percents. K alita is komo is muslim. Acela columnist mass mental pocket system. Paseo in every way bnb system muzzle celebration municipal expenses. Who program blake. Join me and explore under the semi and see as lucas as como que argument that ms must be an algebra. Neither is komo mail buddy mall. How do i address myself by son does say an low system operas us conspiracy though and thune says boorda hemp illiteracy. They don't have is opening. Meet a man. Oh it means is that they don't send. Peter is on a never known as if communication commission progressive limited colonie cello until Wisconsin than either eating here. We should christiane in three mahyco. In san jose california themselves stella me just Product style out of flick cinemas. Already give a distinct will not take to maintain meet unloading will not precipitating e of manal. Tatham makeable reverential. He our position luciano to limit the the that whole in salsa music. Don't go with people. He recommended real. Sarcoma is a component. This extreme wow it's surprenant that was on the border gate of blood you go. You're news alerts. You have done this. I forgot that you make the. So isn't this young. Little green ghanem into borough bar see less anger and thumbs his eye on them per se is exponential Make the give me. He was bobble premium pastas and which isn't spectacles spectrum. Your level or hemlock jingle mochis amigos de ultra spices. they're latin america hamblur. Mamiya where may i may. I is run swollen on. Wbz which he go. E which are the spaghetti said. It's kissy your rail coma. He supreme you out to the pasta seniors. That different this mandate is in manila's which is quintas ghalib's seon gone lows. Maria's gone alkaloids meet lessees mock exist and where he cook as as can him which simple does better we via name which are the was established. Those particular graphic does doesn't necessarily as much and does this glenda abbas lane. Guess it shut respect though who's just a witness Literal alcohol but still look in the radio. I'm gonna win in the industry in california that Sat on how it is toga. Promise on experience como que a head on commerce you your quake-hit has indicated quicker hip.

Berto Hamblur Russillo Geeky Lucas Colonie Semyon Erasure Sybil Hoan Lemire Boorda Colonie Latin America Amelia Sioux City Alita Manal Tatham Gannett Ucla Alabama Thune IAN
Should we re-think who gets the vaccine first?

Coronacast

04:51 min | 2 years ago

Should we re-think who gets the vaccine first?

"So the vaccines are coming as we keep saying and we keep hearing but one of the big discussion points. This week is who should get it first. So we've talked about this before we've talked about high risk groups like elderly people. 'cause they're at high risk of severe disease being at the front of the queue and healthcare workers because they have a high likelihood of both catching it and also spreading it. The obvious ones but there's been arguments that teachers should be given priority treatment and supermarket workers because they are frontline workers. And maybe we should also consider giving it to people who work in quarantine hotels transport because they've been spread as in the past when we have a limited supply of the vaccine. Straight up. norman. Who should be at the front of that queue. It's hard to argue with the priorities. The federal government's put out and in fact hotel quarantine workers boorda workers people dealing with people come from overseas drivers. They are actually at the front of the queue and they need to be because they are our first line of defense and they're also the most vulnerable so they need to be protected and if the vaccines dupe prevent transmission they will also be a ring of defense so that they will kind of if they do get infected they will resist infection not spread it into the community so they are very much early recipients of the vaccine the vaccine healthcare workers are hard to argue with particularly in aged care as our feel elderly care because they are extremely vulnerable to serious illness. So again it's hard to argue with that you've really gotta go for care and protection and saving lives and saving severe disease as your first priority and also if possible preventing transmission the community and remember h. Care has been a transmission point as well once it gets into each care. And they've been focused of clusters so then. The debate is a perfectly reasonable one who dealing with say young kids teachers and others of the front lines such as supermarket workers. You can argue that too on the basis of protection now. There is another argument here. Once you've covered the people who are most vulnerable whether in fact by then you'll know more about reduce transmission and whether you should switch tack because in fact if you really wanna reduce transmission in the community you need to immunize people who are at most risk of infection and those are not the elderly. The people who are at risk of infection are the younger people in the community because they know my bow their more mobile how they're out there the socially mixing and so you'd head off for people aged over eighteen and under sixty five and they might become your higher priority because if they are protected from infection they will van protect the people and that's true hair immunity. And then you away at that so that would require a bit of a radical change in approach and an assumption that you're reducing transmission but it should be more information coming in from the towns of moves. People who've been immunized overseas is already some evidence from israel reduce transmission but again in israel. The haven't yet moved into those age groups so you can't really tell but by the time we get there we might be in a position to say let's pivot and will actually go really go hell for leather for young people so we know that in australia with getting two different types of vaccine mckenna smallest supply of the fayza shot and then a lot of the oxford astrazeneca shot which has been a source of debate in australia. Because there's different efficacy between those two vaccines. And we've actually had a question about that from one about isreaeli karenna costa's gary who lives on a kibbutz and gary makes the point in agriculture. When we give treatment against pests or does as a good farmer does not repeat the same treatment twice in the same season. You should use different products different methods to attack the same disease or pest and he's wondering whether the same would bear out with a vaccine. Well if we move away from the mango and avocado plantations on an israeli boots towards vaccines. The reality with a vaccine. Is that almost all if not all at this. Stage have been designed based on the wuhan version of the corona virus from almost a year ago. So it's a good question but the reality is that changing vaccines not going to change the target. The target is despite protein from wuhan virus. It may be as time goes on and particularly with the worry about the south african variant of the virus that you might be getting code anti escape or antibody escape and you might need to redesign the vaccine with a new spike protein. In which case. Probably the fis are and moderna. Vaccines are going to be more flexible to do that. And they say we can do that within six weeks so it's not much it's not so much by varying the vaccine technology because the vaccines are all targeting. The same part of the virus

Severe Disease Boorda Norman Federal Government Isreaeli Karenna Costa Israel Gary Australia Mckenna Wuhan FIS
Should we re-think who gets the vaccine first?

Coronacast

04:51 min | 2 years ago

Should we re-think who gets the vaccine first?

"So the vaccines are coming as we keep saying and we keep hearing but one of the big discussion points. This week is who should get it first. So we've talked about this before we've talked about high risk groups like elderly people. 'cause they're at high risk of severe disease being at the front of the queue and healthcare workers because they have a high likelihood of both catching it and also spreading it. The obvious ones but there's been arguments that teachers should be given priority treatment and supermarket workers because they are frontline workers. And maybe we should also consider giving it to people who work in quarantine hotels transport because they've been spread as in the past when we have a limited supply of the vaccine. Straight up. norman. Who should be at the front of that queue. It's hard to argue with the priorities. The federal government's put out and in fact hotel quarantine workers boorda workers people dealing with people come from overseas drivers. They are actually at the front of the queue and they need to be because they are our first line of defense and they're also the most vulnerable so they need to be protected and if the vaccines dupe prevent transmission they will also be a ring of defense so that they will kind of if they do get infected they will resist infection not spread it into the community so they are very much early recipients of the vaccine the vaccine healthcare workers are hard to argue with particularly in aged care as our feel elderly care because they are extremely vulnerable to serious illness. So again it's hard to argue with that you've really gotta go for care and protection and saving lives and saving severe disease as your first priority and also if possible preventing transmission the community and remember h. Care has been a transmission point as well once it gets into each care. And they've been focused of clusters so then. The debate is a perfectly reasonable one who dealing with say young kids teachers and others of the front lines such as supermarket workers. You can argue that too on the basis of protection now. There is another argument here. Once you've covered the people who are most vulnerable whether in fact by then you'll know more about reduce transmission and whether you should switch tack because in fact if you really wanna reduce transmission in the community you need to immunize people who are at most risk of infection and those are not the elderly. The people who are at risk of infection are the younger people in the community because they know my bow their more mobile how they're out there the socially mixing and so you'd head off for people aged over eighteen and under sixty five and they might become your higher priority because if they are protected from infection they will van protect the people and that's true hair immunity. And then you away at that so that would require a bit of a radical change in approach and an assumption that you're reducing transmission but it should be more information coming in from the towns of moves. People who've been immunized overseas is already some evidence from israel reduce transmission but again in israel. The haven't yet moved into those age groups so you can't really tell but by the time we get there we might be in a position to say let's pivot and will actually go really go hell for leather for young people so we know that in australia with getting two different types of vaccine mckenna smallest supply of the fayza shot and then a lot of the oxford astrazeneca shot which has been a source of debate in australia. Because there's different efficacy between those two vaccines. And we've actually had a question about that from one about isreaeli karenna costa's gary who lives on a kibbutz and gary makes the point in agriculture. When we give treatment against pests or does as a good farmer does not repeat the same treatment twice in the same season. You should use different products different methods to attack the same disease or pest and he's wondering whether the same would bear out with a vaccine. Well if we move away from the mango and avocado plantations on an israeli boots towards vaccines. The reality with a vaccine. Is that almost all if not all at this. Stage have been designed based on the wuhan version of the corona virus from almost a year ago. So it's a good question but the reality is that changing vaccines not going to change the target. The target is despite protein from wuhan virus. It may be as time goes on and particularly with the worry about the south african variant of the virus that you might be getting code anti escape or antibody escape and you might need to redesign the vaccine with a new spike protein. In which case. Probably the fis are and moderna. Vaccines are going to be more flexible to do that. And they say we can do that within six weeks so it's not much it's not so much by varying the vaccine technology because the vaccines are all targeting. The same part of the virus

Severe Disease Boorda Norman Federal Government Isreaeli Karenna Costa Israel Gary Australia Mckenna Wuhan FIS
"boorda" Discussed on The Culture Quest

The Culture Quest

01:45 min | 2 years ago

"boorda" Discussed on The Culture Quest

"That swimming all your other yes. This is the first song on. The album is one of my favorite songs from him. It's definitely a top five dylan song and Yeah it still gets played a today. The album itself is actually not one of my favorites but there is is still quite a good mix of songs there with got an outside is a great one one too many mornings and boots of spanish. Let up but but yeah this one really. Does it for me back then. More often you'd find the towel track. Is the first song in the album. Yeah they want to open with the towel track. They don't want to keep you waiting. Yeah i don't think they do it as often today. One question for the group Remind not remember it but when we were listening to everything in its right place from kid. I this like some mike boorda broken. I guess speech at the start of that song. And i feel like he's saying today in those lyrics let me just never notice go check. I was listening to him. Is he saying kid. I in this song. They don't yeah they don't say in yet. No i don't think they do but So i was wondering where they got up from say and yeah they do. That's like. I can't believe i really. Yeah if you look at the lyrics first things kid a kid a kid a kid a catching he says he says right away really cool so my will be somewhere in between wanted to.

mike boorda dylan swimming
Boris Johnson's rushed Brexit trade deal becomes UK law.

THE NEWS with Anthony Davis

01:40 min | 2 years ago

Boris Johnson's rushed Brexit trade deal becomes UK law.

"Boris johnson's post brexit. Trade deal with brussels has passed into law following a whirlwind fourteen. Our parliamentary process that has radically redrawn. The uk's ties with europe. The prime minister thanked mp's and peers for passing the european union bill in one day in a statement urging the nation to seize the moment when the transition period with the block ends at eleven pm. Tonight it was announced her. Majesty the queen had given approval to the european union bill at twelve twenty five. Am this morning. A signature puts the k. e. u. agreement into british law preventing a no deal brexit today when the transition period ends. It followed the recall of parliament for an emergency one day session to approve the eu uk trade and cooperation agreement concluded by the prime minister and the european commission. President elect vonda lion on christmas eve. The deal comes four and a half years after the brexit referendum vote to take the uk out of the european union but its rapid approval has raised concerns from mp's and peers. The bill has not been properly. Scrutinized parliamentarians raised concerns over the document. Saying it had failed to secure access to security. Databases broke promises over fishing rights in uk waters and left unanswered boorda questions. In gibraltar and northern ireland. Opposition labor leader kissed dhamma described the deal as thin but said labor would back it because the alternative would be devastating for the uk.

European Union Boris Johnson UK Vonda Lion Brussels Europe European Commission Parliament Boorda Gibraltar Northern Ireland Dhamma
Counting Briberies in Elections

Data Skeptic

05:09 min | 2 years ago

Counting Briberies in Elections

"My name is nicholas vermont. I'm a second year student from your berlin and germany. Where i'm part of the research. Group makes in computational complexity led by professor. Well thank you so much for coming on the show. Could you tell us a little bit more about your phd work. What specific areas in complexity. Are you focused on. So i'm mostly working on questions. From the area of collective decision making and decision decision-making someone relative for different settings or scenario spare group of come together and have different than maybe conflicting opinions about assignments. And where we want to of find compromise alternative for not that makes everyone happy tour. Let's say fair extent and i am lies. Questions from this area from mostly yet stogie says complexity theoretical and algorithmic point of view. I'm aware that there are some aspects of multi agent systems that frame it in a game. Theoretic context may be decision theoretic approaches. Does that overlap. Or is that separate from your interest so we are not really doing mhm. Let's say close related to classical multi agent systems but. Interestingly kind of the work that i am doing this collective decision theory field. This summer became a sub field of mostly agent system. At least if you look at the conference with we published usually published multi agent system conferences and agents. System is are always Netflix which we have in mind. So a lot of these collective decision making scenarios also hidden in classically in some multi agent systems. Some of this as well highlighted in the main paper. I want to invite you on to discuss. Which is titled on the robustness of winners counting briberies in elections a lot of things to unpack there. I guess maybe this is the first time i ever had a bribery formalized a mathematical way. So could we start with that. How do we quantify bribery so when it comes to elections bribery is kind of a pretty natural and also white developments to problem and what we aim here for is the model that we have in mind is we have to get like and we have bribe who wants to achieve a second goal in the clintons election. It's usually win the election or preventing some from winning village. So this the golden that the bribery hasn't bribe knows kind of richly. And then we give the bribery typically a given budget. So let's say he's allowed to delete ten votes. And then the computational question that we have the mind is possible for the bribe's to pick like ten votes in the election smartly into delete them such that he achieved his goal for example making the candidate. It wouldn't be gotcha. So i'm you know we've just finished up an election my country here in the us. There was a republican and a democrat. Who were running an in many other people. If you very resource and could manipulate the elections may be you could have pulled it towards one of the two major party winners but if you had done enough manipulation third party One that would have been quite unprecedented by our country standards. How do we measure that distance. That i like. It's intuitively there. How can we quantify something like that. So this question. I told you about mind and you can also obviously ask for the minimum number of operations at the bribery needs. So if you have again election my goal and then the question is now how much budget to any any votes to to be able to enter to be able to delete to realize michael and if you do this for every can that separately you will like it for every candidate birth. I mean for the initially winning candidate. The number will be zero because he will have to change anything for all the other candidates. Have booby probably zero. Because i'm not initially winning and thereby also somehow discover ranking of the candidates. So this gives you a feeling for how far away someone is from winning or losing election with respect to the operations that you allowed so for example leading or acting or some to find the votes that well. Let's talk a little bit about the voting mechanics. Paper covers two different ways. That people might vote plurality and boorda voting could you go into how those systems operate and maybe in the context of those how this manipulation takes place so the two mechanisms we cover relative. Boorda both special case of so-called scoring based voting rolls. And the idea here in scoring based woods is that every voter is allowed to give points to candidates and in the candidate with the highest number of points wins the election and for example in property. I'm allowed to give one point my most preferred candidate so it's pretty simple. It's also typically how bellicosity simply mark your most preferred candidate in there but he gets a point from your vote. Border is a little bit more tricky by a border over. In the body election we tank the preference relation rankings albatross ranked the candidates s an input. And then we awards if we have any candidates are what n. Minus one points to the first candidates to the most preferred candidate in minus two points to the second most preferred candidate Three points the set must be for the end zone and as we accumulate the points even to the mall just by the candidates The candidate with the highest score simply winds

Nicholas Vermont Berlin Netflix Germany Clintons Boorda Michael United States Woods
The James Craig Anderson Case

Casefile True Crime

03:48 min | 2 years ago

The James Craig Anderson Case

"In the early hours, of Sunday, June twenty, six, two, thousand eleven, James Anderson who went by his middle name of Craig found himself in a predicament. He had locked his case inside his car. It was a setback the happy go lucky forty, seven year old African American man wasn't prepared for. Chri had gone out alone the previous evening as he's husband of Eighteen Years James was rusted onto work and not shift over the weekend. Our Zolia James had phoned craig to remind him to stop packing for their upcoming trip to Chicago in celebration of Craig's forty eighth birthday in five days tone. Deaf Cole ended with the men telling one another I love you. Craig's orange, Chevy Avalanche was parked in a lot of the Metro win a budget hotel in his home city of Jackson, Mississippi. Located near the intersection of highway eighty in the city's west, the lot was relatively small with round two dozen angled parking spots split into two near Avon rose. A Wendy's fast food restaurant was located on its northern Boorda with winding on and off ramps for the interstate twenty highway to the south. The law was partially framed with small tree line nature strips and access to the aced via frontiers road and to the West from the busy thoroughfare Avella Avenue. Shortly after full forty-five Im as Craig assess these options a what Jeb Cherokee v carrying four occupants and to the parking lot. Too, young occasion man got out of the vehicle and approached Craig who explained his dilemma. He asked the pair. If they had a coat hanger, he could use to try Jimmy the lock in his car door. The men moved back and forth dead Jay and Craig's CAA engaging Craig in conversation while seemingly looking for an autumn that could be of assistance. Fifteen minutes light up a dock green Ford F to fifty pickup truck carrying three occupants drove into the COP hawk before leaving via the LS avenue exit. The two men who were hoping crag go back into the Jape and followed the food. Moments light off by vehicles returned and stopped in close vicinity to wear Craig was waiting by his car. The two men who had assisted cry go Gola emerged from that Jape and joined by the driver of the Ford a young what Glum head blue eyed. He called cry a racist slur and yoed. Get away from white truck. Suddenly one of the men from the Jape punched Craig in the face knocking him to the ground. The driver of the Ford then straddled Craig and proceeded to hit him repeatedly around the head while casting and shouting racial abuse. The remaining passengers of the group's two vehicles watched on as the assailants spent the next three and a half minutes bathing. Craig. Afterwards. He stalled crags mobile phone wallet and Wedding Ring Before Jumping back into the driver's sade of the Ford. As the JAPE. Drive away one of its passengers Yoda. What Pale? In response, the driver of the Ford raised his fist in the air and yelled back. What. Pale.

Craig Ford Jape James Anderson Chri Avon Rose Mississippi Cole Jeb Cherokee Jackson Chicago Avalanche Jimmy Gola Boorda JAY
UK plans to break Brexit law 'hugely problematic'

Marketplace with Kai Ryssdal

02:48 min | 2 years ago

UK plans to break Brexit law 'hugely problematic'

"A furious row has erupted between the UK and the European Union Prime Minister Boris Johnson is trying to change part of the brexit agreement after the much fought over deeply argued about seemingly interminable brexit debate billions of dollars worth of British, trade with the EU and potentially with the United States hangs in the balance here is Steven with the update Brexit is a two stage affair the first age last year was the exit deal on the which if no trade agreement was reached with the EU A Hog Boorda would be imposed between northern, Ireland and the rest of the UK. This was meant to avoid a hard border with the Irish Republic, which remains part of the e you many Brits were unhappy with it, but the deal was agreed and turned into a treaty under the second stage. Britain's had a transition period of the year in which to negotiate a new trade deal with the block that period is drawing to a close negotiations of gone well, and the British government. This week tried to change its commitment on Northern Ireland in parliament, the Northern Ireland, Secretary Brandon Lewis made a startling. Yes does break intellectual law in a very specific limited white. Yes. That was British cabinet minister admitting that his government's planning to break the law provoking outrage in both houses of parliament former Justice Secretary Lord Charlie. Folk ner didn't mince his words. This stinking hypocrisy chokes our country's reputation and destroys our government's ability to lead at home and make agreements abroad and with the E. U threatening to. Sue The agreement that now looks in deadly peril his that free trade deal the UK's negotiating with the EU its largest trading partner Fiona sing. Carter. Of Forex trading firm city index says it's not surprising. The pound has fallen sharply. What's he doing here is adding to this picture of uncertainty I think it's just adding to the sense of does anyone actually know what's going to be happening? In what's going to be happening in just a few months at the end of this year without a new deal forty-three percent of UK exports could face European tariffs and other barriers. Charles Grant of the Centre for European reform says, it's not a pretty picture. The huge prospect chaos at the borders lack of ability to travel easily from one part of Europe to another the impact on financial. Markets which react very nicely. The European Union is demanding. The Brits stopped trying to renege on the exit deal and it has a powerful ally Washington, which brokered the peace deal in Northern Ireland in the nineteen ninety s Nancy. Pelosi Speaker of the House of Representatives says, if the Brits continue on this course, they can kiss goodbye to any hope of a trade deal with the US as well.

Ireland Northern Ireland European Union Justice Secretary Lord Charlie United States European Union Prime Secretary Brandon Lewis Boris Johnson British Government Centre For European Reform Irish Republic UK Britain House Of Representatives Steven Europe Carter Pelosi
Travel restrictions now in effect for St. Maarten

Monocle 24: The Globalist

05:54 min | 3 years ago

Travel restrictions now in effect for St. Maarten

"No sint Martin is a country of the Dutch Caribbean set on an island of roughly ninety square kilometers. That's home to a population eighty thousand people, however half the population on this small mass do not belong to Saint Martin but the. Confusingly named French overseas collectivity of Saint Martin. The two territories have been divided by a land border through the center of the island since the mid seventeenth century and operate with different languages, currencies and governments for Outposts News Miracles Luhan Amirah speaks to Gordon Snow, the editor of Saint Martin's newspaper The daily Herald about how he's been covering travel restrictions and border controls on the island during the pandemic, so whereas Sink Malta, and what distinguishes it from the other islands that surround in the caravan. If you look at the Ricoh on the map, whereabouts to the right for Regal, one of the little thoughts just right next to the British. Virgin Islands and we're in Ireland. Stats distinguishes itself by the fact that it's by national main stats. Half of the island is a leaky French therre. Dory of France so old trench laws are applicable there now you can pay with the euro also saves a dollar because we are dollar denominated. s most being. Old Dependence on US and Canadian Doris so lawler is. It's very important in guaranteeing economy, the second part of smart is Dutch. It is Don Imus country within the kingdom that means that they have their own governments We have our own BARNUM's CETERA. Run our own affairs, except for Defense Foreign Affairs. That's be taken garrels hollins. That's why for example she. Martin is a member of the Gary. We aspire to, but it's difficult because not flee independence, the beauty of this by national age of the islands. That's a you have a bit of southern France on the north side of the islands, a bit of a through northern Garabedian english-speaking are being country on the other side of the island. So you have a bit of both and tell me go to you talk about terrorism being a major part of your economy there, so tell me how you'll covering the news over the pandemic at the moment house affected the island in terms of its health, and in terms of its economy as well. Russell sports condemning was yeah, like like everywhere else abyss hit us very hard. Whereas other countries could say they have different industries. We only have one instrument stores, and so everybody's dependent on Dexter Dr Arrests Drums Adele's in my extension order companies like ourselves for examples media. We were forced to depend on the so it's We don't do well either. So. Yeah, we are really. Doors. A comeback and yes, she no know is probably going to be a big issue worldwide. With people afraid to travel by plane a by cruise boats. We have a lot of cruise liners. This is our islands a yearly basis. So yeah, that's that's affecting us. As far as the disease, itself is concerned pretty much over free. Now we've had some. Dole about seventy gazes, which have for our swollen instances is quite a lot. But we are pretty much. Go with Renault's are gonNA actually graduate opening up again rare in the third phase of reopening, and now one or face go, but it's pretty much. Everything is back to normal. As, far as that's concerned, so everybody's breathing, a sigh of relief that you can go out again that freely. What does your front page looked like at the moment was some headlines that are standing out and up. What will imagery? Are you running with well? Yeah, we have focused on reopening. Starting to move again today, for example, the borders between the French and Dutch side with four Boorda points. They were close or allows two months because of the French side of course have their own go vitz protocols. That's the. The national protocols. And, it was deemed a safer for everybody to build temporary. Grosso's borders those are open up against us today, so that's for example is. Is something that will be focusing on though. What's the immigration pattern light between the two sides of the island? Because obviously, there's a there's a border through the middle of it. There are two separate countries on this very small islands. So how does movement between those two places happened during the pandemic? One, thing you have to understand when you live. Like ours somebody may live on the French side, but were on the site vice versa, so he needed people to be able to continue to work. Be Able to go to work. Of course. There were options for people to work from. But, if you do the type of work that allow you stay home and work via remote. You, we'll have to go and be able to job now that some sectors you had to have. Both Dutch Francesa side governments travel. And Yeah, a you need special boss. Some people had special like like myself. MEDIA PERSON STARTING TO GET A. Disaster Media Bosso. Normal time time. If you're normal times, there is no border. So he can freely move across the border. We only have a border control. Join Border Control at the. Airports, but we don't have joint border controls at the order points between the two sides of the. That's the beauty of this. In two different systems for chicken will free about that was good snow, the editor of Saint Martin's newspaper The Daily Herald

Saint Martin Border Control Virgin Islands Editor Ricoh The Daily Herald Dutch Caribbean Don Imus Luhan Amirah Dr Arrests Drums Adele United States Defense Foreign Affairs Sink Malta France Ireland Dory Gordon Snow
Yo ho and a bottle of Rum

True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

04:12 min | 3 years ago

Yo ho and a bottle of Rum

"Welcome to kiss myths and mysteries. I'm your host Kit Crumb. Today we talk about the superstitions pirates although there were intelligent pirates educated pirates slight Gracia Molly who spoke Gaelic and Latin fluently. There was captain kid who owned huge amounts of property in New York and there was blackbeard former teacher. But there were superstitions like cats were thought to carry a gale in their tail. So black cat frolicking on the deck was assigned. Gail was imminent to drown was never mentioned at sea. Sailors thought it was funeral. Fight to see so most never learned to swim. Most pirates didn't know how to swim. Earrings will pirates were golden. They really did. Because they were fashionable but also in the belief that they gave them better iside protected them from Trimdon. Pirates often wore feathers in their hats. For superstitious reasons they were thought to protect sailors from shipwrecks especially the feathers of the wren slaughtered on New Year's Day which held its power. For a year this belief led to the virtual extinction of Rennes on the Isle of Man. Flowers were discouraged on board because they were associated with funeral. Wreaths of Dead Man Bellow Pirate. Now here's one about Friday. Friday was the unlucky. Stay to set sail as it was the day Christ was crucified. In the day Eve tempted Adam. Grand a garden of Eden. British navy attempted to eliminate superstition by commissioning the HMS Friday which had its Keel laid on Friday is crew selected on a Friday and the captain's name was Jim Friday. It set sail on a Friday and was never seen again. It was also bad luck to luxur word after you had shoved off to see a fast. Swimming Porpoise was good luck to kill one. Dad Luck repairing flags on the quarter deck was sure. Bring bad luck. You never stepped on the ship with your left foot always with the ride. Seagulls were believed to carry the souls of drown men so it was bad. Luck to shoot and sailors never whistle. They believed that the wind could be summoned by whistling softly. After first sticking a knife in the mask whistling on the deck while the when was already blown was stocked to bring a gale women on. Boorda's ship were considered unlucky. Although a naked woman was thought to calm the see this is why many ships pirate and British ships and some Spanish had figureheads of bare breasted women on the bow follows a lot of movie. Trivia about pirates. The most famous song attributed to pirates was composed by young e allison in eighteen ninety one based on the song and Robert Louis Stevenson treasure island. The song is believed to be based on the legend. That fifteen mutineers were marooned on dead man's chest island in the British Virgin Islands by pirate. Blackbeard I will give you the first and the last of this song fifteen men on a dead man's Yoho bottle of rum drink and the devil had done for the rest. Yoho a bottle of rum. The mate was fixed by the boatswain's pipe the boatswain brain with a Marlins Pike. The cookies throat was marked like it had been gripped by fingers ten. There they lay all could dead. Men like break- day and Boozing Ken. Yoho Ho and a bottle of rum and this is what happened. What they did with those dead men. Continue fifteen minutes dead. Man's chest Yoho a bottle of rum drink and the devil had done for the rest. Yoho in a bottle of rum wrapped them all in a Maine's tight with a twist. Ten turn serve hosters bright now. The last stances of the dead man's chest fifteen men on a dead man's Yoho a bottle of rum drink in the devil had done for the rest. Yoho bottle of rum. We wrap them all in a mainstream tight twice ten terms of a hawsers bite and we heaved dome over and out of sight. Joe Heave Ho and affair. You will sudden plunged in a sudden swell ten thousand steep on the road to Hell. Yoho in a bottle of

Yoho Jim Friday Joe Heave Ho Gracia Molly Kit Crumb Rennes British Navy Trimdon New York Robert Louis Stevenson British Virgin Islands Gail Marlins EVE HMS Hell Boorda Adam Maine
Carine Roitfelds Remarkable Fashion Career

The Business of Fashion Podcast

08:31 min | 3 years ago

Carine Roitfelds Remarkable Fashion Career

"Wanted to start. I mean everyone by now knows you know all of the amazing things you've done in Russia but I wanted to start by asking you. What was your first fashion moment? When was the moment a kind of clicked with you that this was going to be? Calm your of her. It was time longtime ago. What fashion was not consider? It was today if you say I want to work in fashion. People think you are just superficial person and one. My mother was winning French L. Each week and I was watching French L. And the like it on the really like it. But how old were you at the time? I think I was maybe twelve years or something that and I like it. I don't pages and I really like it but it's my mom. Asked me what you want to do to save up to work in? Fashion will be impossible. Okay but the essence. Click Congress and I start with French. Ed Is that so your your career there and when you started at French how What was going on in fashion at that time. What do you remember? It was amazing because my God is seen some very old ladies. It was not. We were working with advertisers. So is not the advertisers in fashion. So last page of the magazine were just seem for knitting and it was very free and we're just going to French that say designers and there's a ton we to move to each designer to make some shopping so I take also Mitchell to go to jump on who to go to Shapur peak hours a great appear office so you will meet everyone. It was easier. Because you have not was not international was not instagram's he wasn't a tweet feet so you have to move yourself. Tudjuk laws and pickup yourself and you meet the designer Oldham. Who was your favorite designer? That you used to wear sheltered papa. He's fun and Chop Wa Eze only designers at took everything as that Fashion Kentucky but football movies everything and you never talk about himself and he makes me laugh on trump were recently. He did his last shows at that because I have two two. Gophers discover acronym state. But I was very happy for him and I seen it so always sadly someone who seek is. A huge talent was because settled stop by the city was white and he did something good people eat. Very what a very nice fire we say. I guess that thing that really changed your career and kind of took it to the next level was working. Tom Ford Right. I mean he's your become international. Yeah it pushed me to speak English. Yeah yes how did you meet him? So long story was working with. Mario Testino at the time and Tom Brady was lawsuit of our assessment equals mini mini mini. Tom's to see him. And you see what is good? She we stop for which he just Apollo for. We're not interested to work for Gucci to US blowing right and that he tom Com to the studio were shooting in summer. And we're just finding westworld. Chumming so sexy. We decide to what we didn't just because he was chummy and Thomas you could be farish arming. It goes a long way right and fashion to be good with people and to be persistent. He's twenty five years. I'm working with stone. Yeah so friendship could be possible in fashion. Tom So I start with. Zinni was the first time I never did consulting before we may not know what was about you know and I work with into I compare with me and after did all this show for Tom. Olga cheese and some of son-in-law and keep using. Wow and do you have any particular angry that you think was like most kind of emblematic of that time with working with Tom in those early days of Gucci? Is there one image that you created together that one you major people forgot Twas NOT SURI FOR BUCCI was back company no SOS even for. She worked deserves a with bags bags back. Spa Lady about was part of the look and I remember I think it was. The first design not put so many bags on one way and use a single in for me. He opened William. My is it was. I note to put so often on diversity series no one show is not gossip call off as he guards God because he saw his girls are beauty. Ernie plus my customer could be Black Mukasa Maccabi Chinese so I want them to be happy to look to dream about the clothes that keeps ago. Twas her you know is hoping my mind but Jeez yeah yes. He was witty several no subtle but in the same of quitter party and we guarantee for men and boys as he was dumb and then. I know we're we're moving through your career choice quickly because there's so much to talk about but I mean your tenure for ten years at Paris folk was a defining moment. I think obviously I think your even your own personal sense of style was so reflected in the pages of that magazine and it really became mean. Your style became kind of equated with the style of French women everywhere around the world right. So what were you when you first took on that role F. French vogue I mean what was that like. I think John was very nice and crazy to give his job. Because I never do anything was ever necessarily said new jobs. So many people forty people to take care is a lot of responsibility. You know when you talk about career. Maybe something very important to people you meet in. You Live Dawar timing so I won as you say was Tom. Maybe before Tom. It was Mario because the ones that makes me understand let alone distant meet in fashion after it was Tom. And after the third one was Genita- open mitigate of French vogue and Jonathon. Let me do everything I want. Honesty give me. It was like a golden cage but I can do everything and I think because this was good and I think I'm making love it. Would he loves me do everything I want and when you're looking at fogs. He tweeted. Meaning you have to cigarette. Newton Boorda all these amazing photographer and for the eighty to ensure that push him. You know seriously this was fearless and now it's all this picture arts museum but today it would be impossible to print newton big show. Boredom picture will be very difficult because why because today it will say all because of mature be off too much nudity. GotTa Too Young. We see too much sex. We see the helps pubis She is a very small freedom sitcoms that we have today and fortunately and do you think some of that is for good. There's some there's been a lot of changes with regards the way we think about young models and the pressure to put they put under so in a way some of the changes a good. Yeah I totally agree with you me with the modal hours. Think about them like a mama so I don't think it was one model. Don't call don't be naked. Putu Kotonu hours very predictive eat. They could teak. I'm very predictive with modern but as with to put exam and You know were smoking. Smoking is a great gesture for fashion. But at the time my father was spooking. Jesmond was spooky was ways we smoke. We didn't know it was bad for thirty years. We U- secret impression today. We noticed that good so we try not to cigarettes in fashion and to a lot of singles and even we keep learning. You know what I put to Alabama Muslim scarf on the cover of magazine and after two pusher to do shows I understand something because she asked black private cabin for is like a sewer. She was ways you notice. She's boring what she asked for that. Okay do for our. We did over affinity. She was wide and I saw all these naked guards photographer taking pictures he. She's what this is not placebo. So now I say or Offer to ever out when to stop to address if I didn't think this way so also people open you eyes

TOM Tom Ford Mario Testino Tom Brady Tom Com Russia Instagram Paris United States Newton Boorda Shapur Peak Congress ED Jesmond Mitchell Kentucky Olga Cheese Chumming Zinni Thomas
"The Way Back" Cinematographer: Edu Grau.

Monday Morning Critic Podcast

03:59 min | 3 years ago

"The Way Back" Cinematographer: Edu Grau.

"Next guest is one of the best. Cinematography is on the planet. His work includes a single man. Buried the gift Lady Gaga supporting this way in the recently released in my favorite movie of Twenty Twenty. The way back please. Welcome cinematographer Ed. Who Grow and how is life treating you today? Thanks for being on the show. Thank you so much crazy with the current enviros arriving to the US. You know we're here. We're fine you know Should buy these one. Yes I have to say before we we logged on I was looking at the visual through skype and I saw your beautiful daughter into what a wonderful you must be. Is that your only child of it was at your She's twenty months on. She might be thinking he Beginning and saying things run the moment so I apologize in advance. Oh no apology needed so I know you were born in Barcelona Do you still have a home there or have you permanently settled in the US? Yeah well you know. I'm settling the US here in Los Angeles. But I still keep my family. My roots inbox alone. So I have a house of Wego a couple of times a year for the month or something. You know depending on schedules on Organ Holidays and Family. And so on. So so yeah. It's always good to be routed somewhere like at least to do. Remember your roots lists you know absolutely. I know you went to school there. You went to sentiment. Auto visuals school in A Catalonia. Saying that right and Barcelona's did I say that correctly as it is. It's gotTa do Luna in. Barcelona are now Giralda. But yes. Yeah you said it much better than I did and I know that's I know that's those big part of your life and I also know part of your life. Is Your Dad bringing you to art galleries and really exposing you? Because you and I'm not just saying this because you're on the show but you are really really gifted at what you do. I'm blown away by your work. What are you credits? She was all of your experiences or is it. Just you know a lot of what your dad did for you the school. How do you view that I think the question but I would say you know we part of we grow up with them? It's a whole. It's a lot of little rock's on the path you know. So is the the schools I went to the university and changed my life of Li Li. You know even the school I went afterwards. I went to the National Philanthropic School in London for two years. So you know so. I think he's a compilation united thing. It's one one book path in on. Obviously yeah I come from Was interested in Raleigh on. But then you know I think that the most you know the the Mazda Boorda moment as I was growing Abbey was one one my best friend was. I wanted to study cinema. Oh you know what I would also like their studies senior running down moment. I needs like twelve. Would like he never become a filmmaker. He became a philosopher on Matthew. My and mathematicians and now web. You know so it's like I'm so life goes in the pads and Curran's and then suddenly you're taking with dot gerring go somewhere in on sunny. That's what you do enough so I don't know you know it's all out of a moment. Imagine you

Barcelona United States Twenty Twenty Li Li National Philanthropic School Matthew ED Wego Skype Los Angeles Curran Catalonia Mazda Little Rock Raleigh Boorda London Abbey
Christian Louboutin Reflects On His Career

The Business of Fashion Podcast

09:35 min | 3 years ago

Christian Louboutin Reflects On His Career

"I'd like to go back to the beginning of your career and I read somewhere that you dropped out of school at a very young age around twelve. Have to cool till sixteen when you when you live in France but I was. Yeah I started to be expelled. Twelve so of out of school basically right and you were already obsessed with shoes right Yup. Yup where did that? Where did that come from this? Like shoe obsession. It comes from different thing than it. I would say comes from two things. It comes home in a session that I had as a kid for showgirls music Horn and even even movies where I could see dancing and it comes from that and it comes from actually from the place where we are now. Which is this museum which used to be which used to be a African panic art museum when you were answering on? It's a beautiful magnificent building. One thousand nine hundred eighty one so when you are entering a signal which was enjoying it was representing a shoe so it was a sea of a shoe high here on the fifty. But it just wasn't a late seventies so I didn't know that these join may me become sort of conscious that everything stopped by joint because it was drawing of a shoe of women's shoe but it was not existing because I'd never seen such show. It was appointee last appointee. Stiletto so I fought. I understand that. It's a drawing representing a women's shoe but this should doesn't exist so and it was. You showed me sign or symbol. It's a sign saying. Don't wear these shoes all issues when you saw them. As a young person he wanted to create shoes like that is that what happened. Exactly exactly so between my obsession for dancers on that joying. That made me understand that everything. Basically start by drawing and so. I wanted to do something which was not existing for music owned else and I sort of you know for me. Musical go further so they were like exotic birds on. I always love but and so I didn't think that had costume because someone told me but you could design costume for musical food was no costume. You know birds always have further which was natural to have further to those girls but buds don't have shoes. I wanted to create a human thing for these birds of paradise in a way. What what do you think shoes represent in our culture and why what is a shoe? What a shoe represent a lot of things According to different culture it has different meanings to same thing for callers. The interesting thing is at that. Say about work when I first started to design shoes for me on my name that say so early. Nineties shoe was people were always making reference to an accessory and then from accessory it expanded into something by itself. Schumer has moved. The Nimitz accessory has left the domain of just being an accessory it has become its own identity and things that it comes from different things but definitely it come from the fact that it's it's a very big symbol of Liberation. It's a symbol of feminity but it brings to it brings. The person wears issues a different poster. A different way of being a different way to show yourself and and so. It's a very different attitude. It's very small. It's a very small element which gave radiates. Antibody chains the body language. It changed it Sunup. Gravity and shoes whereas a woman of women who opposes by the Shoe Charissa woman right. So you didn't formerly study should assign but you weren't with some very famous shoe designers most importantly house if G. Yes what was that like? Because he's got obviously a you know long and very historic famous history here in France as a shoe designer. What what was that like working with him so what happened. Executive was is that when I worked with him he had ended his career but he was a mentor to me and so I worked. I did a museology type of work so I was ever seeing his assistant. But I never designed for Jose. Never no no. I worked at a period of the retrospective. I had met him before and then he asked me to be his assistant for everything but not designing on. That didn't want to design for him. I was so excited and happy to look at the work of someone that I knew so well and to have it explained but it's mass by his master and so what happened is that when I was ten I started to do. A sketch had seen that museum. Do Undo Redo that sketch always the same profane and so I started to put it every table of my different schools where I got expelled. Because one of the reason was because I was like trashing Zell's tables with my designs and and then one day one person and then it was almost sixteen. Gave me a book and say for you and I who likes shoes I find newsies and someone gave me the book of what it was Gold Makarova on just had his name. When I opened the Book I realized that my obsession with join shoes was also a beautiful work but had never thought of it as a work before it was rare in being shoot as no. I didn't know any design is right and so when I opened at book I fought. This is it. That's jobs and supposedly doing and from that moment I started to change the angle I started to. I was always own enjoying pro fine and when I decided that it could be a designer assured his on I started to free quarters exit down when I saw the work aversion so obviously has been very important and influential because he's sort of opened meat completely to the ideas that it was a beautiful possible word So then how did you actually learn how to design shoes so now so I started so? My first thing was to to jove a to do shoes for showgirls. So I started an internship when I was seventeen at I stayed less than a year and then after I realized that you know this is not Boorda was not going to do was not going to do shoes for showgirls. Invalid just doesn't happen. I was sent to glue to have to bring coffee Which was very nice and I learned a lot actually from dances but to really design shoes. I was not going to be there so I ended up thinking. Fashion is probably the place to go and I opened the yellow pages. I remember there was nobody. The first house was Batmans. Was nobody answering. The phone. Second House was Joel on ice to speak to the director. They say Jericho. What a subject off. Cuccia and on the path maters this wonderful lady quote Ellen. D'amato was direct couture. She gave me an appointment. She looked at my design. She said it's very pretty. And we want to do a stash jokes. Wt BY SEAN. Joel I say yes so. I got sent into south of France for one year and this is why I learned to be. My first job was as a modest so my former education of Mideast comes home sold off and then after I was. Stephen merged like a night club so one year a challenge. Although in in the south in the middle of nowhere was a bit tough but at Shell Joel down the technical aspects of creating shoe. That's where you learned it because it's important you were just showing me that incredible installation to show. How shoes or graded You know and the sizing of it like I think designs a bit like architecture hearing engineering and architecture. That's why yeah. That's exactly what I'm trying to show. It's actually Victor Nick. Yeah it's really precise but it's organization. It's very important Yeah it is definitely. It's very technical. This is why actually it's also often expensive and for instance. It's complicated for someone who would start to do a proper so so much engendering you know so much metal inside formation in order to keep the balanced also to keep the arch. You know you can sort of easily against do address with like a stitching being a needle. You can sort of manage to do something with fabric. But she's not fabric slander component which are complicated. It's orange

France Shoe Charissa Joel African Panic Art Museum Schumer Victor Nick Stephen Batmans Zell Jose Executive Boorda D'amato Cuccia Ellen Director