35 Burst results for "Borden"

"borden" Discussed on Fading Memories: Alzheimer's Caregiver Support

Fading Memories: Alzheimer's Caregiver Support

04:35 min | 9 months ago

"borden" Discussed on Fading Memories: Alzheimer's Caregiver Support

"Now that I'm revisiting my choices, but we've had that conversation based on what has gone on in our family. My grandmother did not give up the ghost when she stopped being able to see and she was one of those people insisted on living in her home, which she did almost up until she died. It was the last 9 ish months that she lived in Borden care, and it just, it's not that complicated conversation. You know, it's like, hey, nana, nana didn't give up the ghost because she can't see. So what sense would you be able to live without? I think my daughter said hearing. I think hearing was the one we both thought we could live without, but not being able to see was not an option. So, you know, quality of life is a better question then is my long roundabout way to get back. You said something really was you said you revisit that based on other things that you see people go through. And I say even in your right, there's also a, we have a huge survival instinct. I mean, I've seen people fight to live when they would have had zero quality of life and basically they're just existing. In my career, I've seen that. And the existence keeps on. And I think what a big survival instinct they have. The will to live, we never know what's going on inside of a head, though, you know, right? So there is that too. And I think it's fair and right to say, this is what I think for now. And when I get there, I revisit it because while it might seem that losing your site is the most devastating thing you can imagine. We do tend to cope. We're pretty adaptable. And then there's something else. And that's okay. I've seen that's how most people probably do it. The question to have would be, what if you can't make that decision? How much, how much do you go from there? And that's actually easier in some regards because then if you can't make that decision that speaks perhaps to your quality of life already yeah. And one of the conversations I have frequently is people who

Borden nana
"borden" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

06:21 min | 1 year ago

"borden" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Is your Bloomberg business flash. All right, really appreciate it, Doug. Well, this next half hour, we're going to talk a bunch about healthcare. Thanks in part to signify health the stock soaring the most since it shares started trading last year. Thanks to multiple big name suitors including Amazon competing to buy the home health technology and services provider. That's according to people familiar with the matter. I mean, there is so much interest in this company, Katie. And I never heard of this company before until apparently everyone and their mom wanted to buy it. Exactly. Let's get more on what's going on. Bloomberg news healthcare M and a reporter Michelle Davis, joining us in our Bloomberg interactive broker studio. So great to have you here with Katie and myself. Who is this company? Yeah, signify health is a company that IPO last year based on Dallas, they get most of their revenue doing these helping to facilitate these home health assessments where basically they'll send a nurse or a doctor to your home and they'll check someone's vitals, check out the layout of their home and see, oh, maybe they're not in the best neighborhood, and there's a lot of noise pollution. There's all this stuff, so they take down all this data. Oh, this person doesn't seem like they're keeping up with their prescriptions, that sort of thing. That's how they get most of their revenue, but because they are in people's homes, they have a ton of data on people. And so that's the big theme around all of this interest. If you are so what we reported today is that everyone from Amazon to CVS, united health, massive insurer, and this company option care that's partly owned by Walgreens. They're all vying to buy signify health. And a big part of that is because they want the data that signify health has. And the stock is up 31% as we speak. But it's sort of the diverse set of potential suitors here that caught my eye because I mean, okay, for sure, CVS. I get that. Amazon raised my eyebrow a little bit more, but I guess to your point, it's all about the data here. When you think about a company like Amazon, yeah, and so for a company like Amazon, you know, they have been increasingly not just dipping their toes, but really getting into healthcare in a big way, just at last month we saw them buy one medical. That was another company that we reported to CBS had also looked at so we're seeing them do get off right here. Again, but so this is a way for them to get into the home and also have data to help them maybe like lower healthcare costs. That's what they say. Their goal is without actually becoming a regulated insurer. Whereas for a CVS, there's a way to, you know, if you have more information about your members, ideally, or theoretically, you could help keep them healthier, which means less money that you're spending on them. So if you know, oh, this person's like high risk for blah, blah, blah. You can make tweaks and send people into the homes more often. And for CBS, there's like a cross style where if they have access to these people and know that maybe they need to pick up their prescription, maybe the hope is they'll go to CVS and then buy some makeup or like this. Maybe you need this. Exactly. Yeah. Well, I do wonder about. So how do you, as someone who covers healthcare M and a, think about Amazon specifically as now, since here it is again, they've got not just, it feels like dipping their toe anymore. They're kind of jumping in. Big timing the healthcare space. How do you think about them? And their role in healthcare going forward. It's a really good question, and it's funny because, you know, up until earlier this year, people had known that Amazon was pushing into healthcare, but we really hadn't seen them do too much. And so they'd kind of fallen off the radar, but now after the one medical deal, any company that people talk to me about, they're like, oh, well, Amazon could be a buyer for that. It's like suddenly the M and a bankers. Just yeah, people, you know, investors, sources, that sort of thing like everyone's like, oh, Amazon, you know, could buy it because suddenly everyone remembers that they are trying to do healthcare. And so it's a name that everyone throws out. And they have the have to look at everything. It's unclear, we don't know yet how this one's gonna go. Bids aren't final bids aren't due for a couple of weeks. There's always a chance, you know, one of the parties gets eager and decides to preempt, and that means, you know, they just submit a bid like earlier to kind of beat everyone beat out or win out. And then with Amazon, I mean, I know historically they hate leaks and actually in the proxy for the one medical deal, it said that when they sent over their letter of interest to one medical they said if our interest leaks like all talks are off, I don't know if that would happen here, especially given how competitive it is. Depending on how much conviction they have, that might not be the case, but that's always something to think about as well. It's yeah, I don't know how it's gonna go. But Amazon's definitely, you know, they're looking and they're reminding people that, yeah, we're serious about healthcare. And Michelle, there's also a chance that signify could remain dependent here, right? Definitely, yeah, that's yeah, nothing is certain. At this point, you know, if it turns out that the signify Borden management don't feel that the offers that have come in are attractive enough they could just kind of table things. We've been seeing that a lot recently where there's been a big disconnect between where a company sees its value and where the market is valuing it just gives us a little bit more suitors. The one thing I want to ask you in general healthcare, M and a, is there a lot of stuff going on? Because I feel like this is one of the industries the areas of our world that has been slow to innovate and disrupt but I feel like it's picking up momentum. Oh yeah, it's been super busy. I mean healthcare M and a is the second it's a, if not most or second busiest after text, you know, 20% of the economy. And there had been a drop off in the volume of BioPharma M and a, but we're starting to see that pick up again as well. Just because all the big pharma companies have so much cash that they are dying to spend and they have tons of drugs going off patent, which means they need to acquire more things. So yeah, just real quickly, oak street health, Cano health. I hope I'm saying it correctly. Care max, these all jumped as a result. Just got about 20 seconds. Might something happening with these properties? Yeah, there's been a lot of speculation that those are companies that could get taken out, especially by whoever doesn't win here. They'll be interested in buying some things. So it's like, what's next? A space that's definitely on the move. Michelle Davis, thank you so much, really appreciate it. Healthcare M and a reporter at Bloomberg news here in our interactive broker studio. As we mentioned, shares of signify healthcare up almost 32%. This is Bloomberg

Amazon Michelle Davis CVS Bloomberg news healthcare M Bloomberg united health Katie CBS IPO Doug Walgreens Dallas Borden Michelle Cano
"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

The Strategists

05:26 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

"For vaccinations. The tactic has been tried in the united states as well carter. I'm going to start with you. Whether you wanna hit on the fact that jason kenney was away for a couple of weeks and had no deputy charge to really kind of guide us through the rise in cova cases on delta whether you wanna talk about the hundred dollar incentive that is now being offered or whether you wanna talk about the fact that none of this was in the sense preordained destiny that we could have avoided a lot of this. I'll let you pick the the lane you swim in. I and we'll go from there and have a conversation on what we're seeing in in our home province delta began to surge in alberta basically the second week of july I think anybody paying attention. Warsaw that by the first week of august things were starting to get pretty bad and they were certainly on the on a trajectory up and we didn't do anything until almost september. It was september september. Yeah was september why because the premier needed to rest and get ready to continue and then he came back and took five full days. Because i think it does take time to make a good decision and made a shitty decision made a decision that doesn't work on any level and i think that you know the question that i have is does anybody. Anybody think that these restrictions and and incentives are enough to force people to actually do the right thing. We have seen uptick amongst the vaccine hesitant in other jurisdictions when a passport or the like has been brought in when you have a requirement when you have a big enough stick you will actually move. You said that we were the first province to offer money. Keep in mind. We were also the first province to offer a one million dollar prize and that didn't move anybody when we when we put up a million dollars. The percentage was almost exact same as it is..

jason kenney cova carter Warsaw united states alberta delta
"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

The Strategists

04:13 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

"The segments is the topic or is the format. What would you magic wand if you had it right now the segments the topics and the format corey go to you. You have to give your take from a perspective of what's best for. I don't get sentimental but for our democracy for the voters you know you. People are tuning in now to this election. One to ten. what do you think of. This consortium format and approach. And what would you change. I give it a low score. Because why would i give you. I've only giving you one number this whole segments bypassed all of that okay okay i got a feeling of it and i signed it in my head. I agree. I mean. I was just not an aggressively to what stephen was saying. About the fact that many people on the stage there's way too many characters here. And i mean it's just it's like really overindulged for the whole like media political elite here. A lot of people will be watching on online and be like who is this person. Why are they there. What is their take do. They have a political agenda. I mean it's just too much to try to process and interpret and you're right. I mean all of a sudden. We got five leaders. We've got five journalists and we've got a bunch of voters now to who are all in this mix and it's just too much and who cares and everything. Besides the leaders is supposed to be backdrop right. I know we're in this hero journalist phase where the idea is you have a great moderator. You have great debate. And there's a certain truth to that but you don't often think of like a committee giving you that great experience that you want. You're just going to have to put your faith in somebody to run a kick ass debate and drive a vision for the debate and ask the questions but i suspect that this notion of committee and this blending all of this shit is going to manifest..

corey stephen
"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

The Strategists

05:28 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

"Percent reduction instead of the fifty percent reduction right and it is a way that i think the conservatives are still fairly retrograde compared to their competitors on the other ones i feel like there are arguments that they've been misinterpreted misread or torqued certainly on abortion certainly on private healthcare. Maybe on assault weapons depends on your read of that issue which gets muddier by the moment as as everybody talks about it right. And so i don't know if i would have thrown in like what is an obvious slam dunk. With a couple of things that are a little dodgy because you may just sort of pollute all of them like. Did you see that ad about aaron. O'toole man pretty damning right. Yeah but did you know that private healthcare thing got manipulated warning on twitter. Did you know that abortion thing was on sex selective abortion specifically not on abortion overall and the conservatives had. They wouldn't reopen the question. Did you know the assault weapon thing is really about class. That's the week or one classification but like my point. Is i feel like if you were having a conversation with your neighbor about this ad and your neighbor was a little up on the issues. They might school you for thinking that this was actually an accurate representation of air tools views. Because the only one that actually sort of one hundred percent truly is is the climate. Change one and so in that sense. I i don't love it but it is certainly hard hitting it is certainly Direct carter doesn't like that about it. I think i kind of do like that about it. But i think that ultimately it's built on some flimsy material we're gonna go to our final one in our strategy scale and i'm going to ask you guys to view this not from the lens of a political party not from the lens of any political leader but from the lens of the electric because i want to talk about the consortium debate. We've just learned today the framework for the debate. That's going to be happening on thursday evening. The english language debate to remind folks. This is the debate. Put on by the consortium of News and media outlets. We're learning a couple of things. We're learning that. There's five themes to the debate. Affordability climate covert recovery leadership and accountability and reconciliation so once again affordability climate cove recovery leadership and accountability. That's one and reconciliation and then here's the format. I went actually lay out the format to guys too because i want you. To view this from the lens of the electorate or a voter and then we can get into a discussion of debate et cetera. We'll do all that stuff. But it will start with all five segments will include right so each of these teams will include a question from a voter a question from a moderator or journalists there's there's one moderator in sachet curl and then participation by tv and global then. They'll be leader to leader debate with three of the five leaders..

toole aaron twitter carter
"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

The Strategists

04:51 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

"I believe both of you have seen. If i'm not mistaken called take back canada. It has o'toole in a montage saying take take candidate back. Take back take back. A presumably from his leadership run and then it has a voice over with some imagery and headlines. That says o'toole wants to take canada back to private healthcare assault weapons abortion and denial on climate change. Carter i want to start with you. This liberal spot and more specifically the message one to ten. What would you give it and what would you change or tweak or do differently based on what you saw in this particular spot we could break down all three but this one seems to be the one they're hidden on so i want to try to go with this one. I think you've seen it. If i'm it feels to me like i i'll i'll put it on record. I don't like this type of heavy handed negative People always ask why why. Why don't i just feel it's so artless. There's no there's no craft. It's just the the standard he wants to take you back. You know it's the same fucking voice over. You can hear this voice over in every attack at ever produced. And i find it just boring i. I think that it's a it's a week. It's a weak example of of advertising that Hits you with a sledgehammer instead of kind of moves you to where you wanna go now. It may be the thing that's required. But i just i don't like them. I think that There's there's better ways of getting a negative heard. I like humor more of a big fan. My best my favorite example of negative advertising is the mac campaign run by apple for years where they just fucking viscera ibm and microsoft right like just a visceral p. side and They did it with a sense of humor and those ads to me. They still stand out. I still remember them. Because there was a cool guy and the other guy and that branding really worked for apple. And i mean obviously they could walk away with once. They started printing their own money. But that was that to me is is the type of advertising that i would like to see in a negative advocate pain Something that tells a story that tells narrative this this type of advertising campaign takes a sledgehammer puts my hand down and then smashes me with the sledgehammer. And i just think it's. That's that's not your thing. I don't think it's as effective. Either i think that it can be effective. I think it still works. But i don't think it's as effective as something that is. There's memorable that. I want to watch that interesting because i have choices. I don't have to watch fuck all right now. But i i will watch something. That is funny that that the brings me around to something. That is really good. Corey the rejoinder of more than likely to carter's point be you're not here to win campaign art contests. You're here to win elections. But i want to give you the chance because you may be on the same wavelength as carter on one to ten based on this ad that you see what would you give it. Would you have said or done differently. And i'll just highlight the focal points again right. It was healthcare assault weapons abortion and climate. Change right. I think it will be fairly effective. I do think that it could have been more effective. If they'd constructed debate different wanted to mention one thing about the. Get a mac ads though. Because it's funny to be that. John hodgman and justin long. Where in them..

toole canada Carter apple ibm mac microsoft carter Corey John hodgman justin long
"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

The Strategists

05:33 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

"Twenty that rap. Yeah and so but it was even then. I never really got the sense. It was driving the agenda driving the narrative driving the votes. So not clear to me that it's vote-getter but i think that it does reinforce narratives votto tool. Did he lose votes because of his position over the last week. I don't know i look. I look at the tracking polls and they're still showing the conservatives in the lead generally speaking by a few points to more than a few points depending on which tracking police looking at here. The overall trend continues to support the conservatives. I would argue that. He erin o'toole that being has stalled out. Perhaps as a result of this. You're not seeing the hall to the. Perhaps i am hoping the momentum. Certainly it's not the thing he wanted to be talking about for the past four days. I am absolutely certain about that. But will it be enough. I feel in some ways. The same way i do about the anti vaccine like. Can you really sustain an entire election about this especially after erin. O'toole back down yell spent messy. But i just. I don't know we got fourteen days to go whereas recording carter carter take correspondent and run with it. What would you try to turn guns into. Can it can be the opening to a larger narrative thread around. This guy will say anything around trust around the fact that he's positioning himself as a pc but he ran in the leadership as the more right wing option versus mckay. Like what are you trying to do with guns. If it's not leaning into it to galvanize votes about guns it's about establishing a narrative of who he is and how far to the right is because keep in mind. I mean the the nova scotia election. I think it was nova scotia election. The where they the the progressive conservative party one That that was kind of a model for how tool is seemingly trying to run this election. He is moving more towards what we would call a progressive conservative option and moving away from You know the more severe right wing policies But all those right wing policies are still in his his platform and more importantly all of those right wing policies came out of his mouth during the leadership if they begin to establish a narrative that that aaron o'toole isn't the erin o'toole that he's trying to be that creates real dissonance within the audience. And if you don't understand who the character is. You don't understand who who it is. It's earning your vote. Then you're very unlikely to give that person to vote. Now the same can be said for trudeau. But you know right now. This is what. I think that the trudeau liberals need to do i is is tear the shit out of the air. No till using his own words and establishing not narrative and and that seems to be working. I remember so about twelve days ago. Ten days ago we were recording the pod and one of the things i said is in the last two weeks. I really wanna see significant negative. And i think they've just started early. They didn't build themselves up. Which was what. I wanted them to do. Say levin they don't follow the podcast the same way as the mvp but this is a way for them to john pit. What did i say. What did i say. Keep moving okay. This is a way for them to to jump in and and really have the The last two weeks be about what their narrative should be hogan trump and yes the the hidden agenda conversation. There's been a bit of polling on that..

toole carter carter erin nova scotia aaron o mckay conservative party trudeau john pit levin hogan trump
"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

The Strategists

03:13 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

"We're seeing that here in alberta. We're seeing Jason kenney losing control of his right wing and they are moving to other places. We're seeing also. Max burn yay who has no business pulling at the levels that he's polling at start to switch and it doesn't take very long. We've been talking about the the The vote split between the liberals and the end ep Or the vote sharing. If you will it doesn't take very long for the. Ppc start moving up. And all of a sudden writings. Like calgary confederation become in play Admitted millwood's edmonton centre. Calgary centre calgary skyping. Those are just the ones in our province You take eight to ten percent in these areas and tag onto the ppc candidate and all of a sudden things are getting very interesting. So maybe they saw the if they didn't win these votes. And that's how i tend to to look at votes split. There's no such thing as vote split. Do you didn't win enough votes to win. I didn't earn enough votes to win. Maybe they felt that this is a way that they had to make sure they could retain some of these votes and by watching the polling. That's going on with with max bernie. They may be right koi. I wanna come back to you on this because you mentioned a second ago about guns maybe not being a mode vote. Move through for a vote mover in many ways. And now we're heading into the stretch. The pundit class has been saying all this is the final two weeks. This is when everyone pays attention. Everyone gets out there. They're printer prints the. Pdf's of every party is going to start studying the flat scoring erdo tools case. Still have an extra sentenced to read But cory what are the liberals needs to do to to maybe make this vote-getter but to perhaps leverage this moment of the four days which have been pretty good for them and putting o'toole on his heels to electoral success or to you know putting numbers on the board so to speak. Yeah the liberals. Talk about forward not backward. It's pretty clear. They think that this is their ballot question. But really in some ways. They don't even mean back to what candidate used to be just like retrograde regressive bad policies. Something that's more akin to this american american version of conservatism. Right and so in that sense. I think the gun issue. It plays into a narrative. We all watch the situation in the united states with horror right. You have something like sandy hook happened. You have something like the pulse nightclub shooting. I mean there's no shortage of shootings. I feel like the minute. I start a list. I'm just going to be missing massive shootings that are out there. Las vegas you name it. And i think they wouldn't mind if people thought. Well this is that americanization and this is this. Nra approach to things coming north of the border. And that's erin o'toole and that's what the conservatives represented so in that sense maybe reinforcing of an overall narrative about the conservatives. They're trying to create here but the issue itself guns is just. It's interesting to me. it's it's never been clear to me that it's something that people care a ton about because it hasn't been a big flash point short of the long gun registry in this country i mean the the liberals is not new. The liberals had their ban on assault weapons where it was fifteen or was that nineteen. I guess it was nineteen ninety nine thousand nine hundred..

Max burn Calgary centre calgary max bernie Jason kenney millwood alberta toole edmonton calgary cory Nra united states Las vegas erin
"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

The Strategists

03:38 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on The Strategists

"Then i don't. I don't even know i mean it so baffling to me. Because the most obvious way to not have the last four days that he's had his. Why is this in the platform at all. Who gives a shit about this issue in swing ride. I mean i know. There's lots of people who give a shit about this issue do you. Do you need any of them to win this election. And so then coming from there. I guess if he was going to take the stance that he took today and yesterday i don't understand why he didn't come up with four days ago. There's this notion of failing fast in entrepreneurialism and also in politics if the writing was on the wall four days ago right. The answer was bad that first night. It wasn't going to get better. They knew they needed to fail on this one and just move on very quickly and so that would have been the obvious thing to do. I generally speaking the messaging. They landed with pretty reasonable. But it would've been. It would've come off a lot more true if it had happened many many days ago. Because then you can say like this is the liberals this is them. They're going to parse every word looking to construct wedges in this platform they're going to see created classification system. That's different and try to scare you into the idea that there will be guns. Rampage on our street is what they do. This is what they always do. But here's my commitment to you. This is my deal to you as canadians. I will always take a reasonable approach. I will always take your feedback. I will listen. I will clarify wins necessary. And i will change when necessary to and i will never forget that it's canadians. That are in charge. You think he should have made this change. So a speed you you're recommending bath fucking faster. This would have been like a y thursday night. Friday morning thing for you absolutely done. Yeah and so a speed and be make changing your mind..

"borden" Discussed on High Tea

High Tea

06:58 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on High Tea

"Not good at what you do, absolutely not. So I talk about that with my team and this is not just at this place I've worked in other places I've worked. Being a good leader is not just about knowing how to do the spreadsheets and look at the expenses and do the invoices and inventory and all that shit. It is also your managing people and time and time again, we see different types of leadership styles. And they start to become just boxes that get checked, which one are you? Oh, you're the Borden who thinks they just got to rule over the prison that they walk around and don't actually know any of their people's names. Just another cog in the wheel, got it boss, understood. So those people like that that they had baked energy. No, they're napoleons. They're just reacting. They're just doing things that they think would show power and dominance and not just learning how to talk to people. Oh, no, there's just one thing that's true about what you're saying is when people retire or they leave a job. They're not leaving because their work performance is never good or it has never been good. They leave because of interpersonal relationships. And that's from the higher up and that's just from coworkers. If you can not be with people and you don't know how to interact with people on a managerial level or just in general, people aren't going to stand for that. And if you're putting out your insecurities where you have that LBE or the little dick energy, that's going to affect everything. I've watched it literally destroy a work environment. An environment that in normal circumstances would never had such low turnover and actual high camaraderie and watch it go from that to high turnover, unhappiness, toxic work environment. People drop in life flies and not just it was everybody from staff to managers everywhere. Yeah. It takes one dark evil presence to spread the nasty. Yeah, no, I agree, because even though I don't work in hospitality, I still work in a people centered field. So even in the field that I'm in, like, you see people dropping like flies as well because if people don't feel appreciated or people don't feel like they're being compensated properly or being treated properly or even being heard, people don't want to work for you. And a lot of the time, people take that, how do I put this in words? Employers take that for granted. People want to feel heard, people want to feel respected. It's not just about you. You can't run a business without employees. And that's not to say everybody's opinion matters, because that's not what we're saying. No, no, no. 'cause everybody's opinion doesn't matter, because people just like to talk. Yes. That's very clear. Here they're all noise. Right. Yeah, I'm good off that. But if an employee of 5 years is coming to me and talking about, oh, I'm seeing these changes. I'm seeing this happen. I'm seeing that happen. These are some actions I think we need to do to fix this. That is a person you want to listen to and take their information and use it. Instead of taking that information as a criticism that you're not doing your job, because that's the type of personality they are. Are they taking as an attack? Instead of just advice and betterment because that person cares about the environment they work in. Yeah. So don't confuse the glorious BDE for classic asshole. Yeah. And I do sometimes think that at the same time there is insecurities that people have to work on in order to get to that point. Of transcendence in person, I guess that's the best way to put it. I feel like I feel like it's a transcendence, you know? It's a move up stage. It's a stage of your life where you have you have to get comfortable with yourself. You have to get comfortable to yourself and you have accepted a lot about yourself. Yeah, you never did before. Exactly. But for me, personally, I know that I'm not the prettiest bitch in the world. But I don't think I'm done these bitch in the world, either. So it's just like, and that's kind of where my BDE rest. I don't literally sit here and measure myself against other women. I know that I have attributes to me physically or mentally in my personality that are unique to me. And I don't measure that against myself. I'll measure that against other women. Because it's stupid to me in a way. And one thing I've always said, and you both know this, I have a gap in my teeth and I had the option of fixing this gap for years. And I've never done it. Because I over the course of time, I've learned to love my gap and accept it for what it is. So now, at this point in my life, if I fix it, it's going to be weird because now it's just like, I don't smile and I don't have a gap anymore. That's weird. This is my trademark. This is who I am. And I'm so poor niggas with a gap. Don't get that shit twisted. You don't need straight teeth to be pretty. First of all, you don't need first of all. To get a man is not hard. It's not hard. I'll just make it very hard. To find a good man who does two checks the boxes you need. Are there complicated? That is harder. I agree with anyone. Yes. That shit is not easy. And that's kind of where the learning or insecurities and working past your insecurities and gaining confidence within those insecurities come into play. Because you can have your insecurities because trust me, we both got meat on our bones. Help me. We got guts that jiggles. We got 5 set rump together. We all know what our insecurities are. But we're not gonna let that stop us from propellant in life. That doesn't make any sense. That's a hell no for me, dog. Right. Like those are physical things you can change over time. So I'll never forget I went to dinner with a girlfriend. And.

Borden
Lizzie Borden, Axe Murderer, Maybe

This Day In Esoteric Political History

02:38 min | 2 years ago

Lizzie Borden, Axe Murderer, Maybe

"The incident. Nicky what do we need to know about what happens on the night that are on the day that andrew and abby are all i guess hacked to death is the is the right way to put it. Yes the day they are axe murdered. Well i mean we know we have a pretty clear timeline of what happened actually Because it happens in a short window of time when they're alone so abby was the first to be killed And she was struck in the back of the head and then hacked sawmilling seventeen times like it was a pretty vicious brutal murder And then it's like. I think an hour an hour and a half later when her husband andrew comes home and then he is hacked as well and there are people in the house when this is happening. So the made is there though. She is supposedly up on the third floor. Taking a nap and lizzie. Bordon is there. She said you know some people say she's in the barn for a while she comes back. It's an unclear. It's unclear where everyone is During this but the maids as the she hears lizzy say come. You know my father is dead and then the police are called and they do kind of shoddy investigation and it goes from there. She's arrested The murders happened on fourth So she's arrested about a week later and then we get to the trial and the trial. Is i suppose not that big of a surprise. A sensation is covered breathlessly. Not just in the town and not just even in boston. But it's let's pick up national attention. You know described to us kelly. Why what is it. That's appealing about this trial. And what are the narratives that emerge particularly as we said they start to tilt a little bit in lizzy favor. Yeah so there's so much about this. That i think would not happen if the family were not wealthy. This was related to like as being like the titanic of its moment. What seems a little suspect me. But if you think about like the exorbitant amount of wealth and how tragedy gets connected about people sometimes have like an insatiable appetite to want to know what happens to rich people. And why and so. And so lizzie gets caught up in this now. She is supported by her community. The women's temperance group comes to her aid. They protest by her side saying that she could not have committed this crime and it really becomes sort of this. Well you can't even say a. He said she said moment because her father. And some of the can't really say you know what happens so it becomes her story versus everybody else versus the evidence of the

Abby Bordon Andrew Nicky Lizzie Lizzy Kelly Boston
Boban Marjanovic Is Your Favorite NBA Player's Favorite Player

ESPN Daily

01:37 min | 2 years ago

Boban Marjanovic Is Your Favorite NBA Player's Favorite Player

"Sam borden you've just published this profile of boban mariano vich of the dallas mavericks and you titled it. Why bobin is your favorite players favorite player so after getting quality time with them. What's he actually like. You know pablo is funny. Like i've been fortunate to spend some time with a number of athletes with amazing personalities. Samborn is a global sports correspondent for espn zlatan. Ibrahimovic comes to mind. Martellus bennett comes to mind. But i have to be honest. I have never spent time with an athlete. Where i have come away feeling better about myself about the world about everything in general than the time that i spent with bovine on the bench i to speak with everybody in man of the people to be friendly giant. This is a guy that just positivity is like exploding out of him and that was what everybody that i had spoken to about him said. These has the loved this any player in the nba by his team's. Yes anybody about volvo. Like man dude you know. And after spending time with him myself it is one hundred percent true. This is a guy that basically lights up the world feel amazing. You know first time on. Tv throws it down town. The young

Sam Borden Boban Mariano Vich Bobin Samborn Martellus Bennett Dallas Mavericks Ibrahimovic Pablo Espn NBA Volvo
Interview With Real-Time Voice Changers, Jaime Bosch and Alex Bordanova

The Voice Tech Podcast

02:07 min | 2 years ago

Interview With Real-Time Voice Changers, Jaime Bosch and Alex Bordanova

"I'm highway highway. Bosch the co founder and ceo voice malt and alex borden over the director of audio experience at voice mode. Haina alex. welcome to the show. Hey karl thank you very much. Thank you happiness. The city's highest hero founder at westmont. Hey clark thanks a lot for the mutation so happy to be here. Today was great to have you both on the show. Jamie what things off by telling us. What is voice mod. What type of uses do you serve and what. What does your energy help. Those users accomplish voice with mission is to help people express themselves through silent than amplify every experience and we do these towards our bigger vision that is a world where everyone can create unique entities at the end of the day What are doing is. We evolved human connection through sound by building tools and creating spaces that allow people to sound. They way they want to sound to be hurt. The way they want to be hurt the kind of user some or the main use cases that we have today are social players sent conduct create or so for the social players. What we are adding them is the possibility to have these conversations in a moral way to react to things happening in game life and even to having more immersive experiences and also for the creator use as we are providing them a tool to make to create content and to make their life streams and their videos more entertaining. Okay so it's not just gaming is about content creation as well And i love what you said that it's about creating human connections and allowing people to make those connections in the way that they want to be heard so alex. It sounds like voice. More isn't just about voice modulations or adding cool sound effects two games. It sounds like there's a lot more to voice mud. We are helping the people to build their digital sound identities so building your digital selfish so important because that will allow people to become what they really want to be

Voice Malt Alex Borden Haina Alex Westmont Bosch Karl Clark Jamie Alex
"borden" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

KOA 850 AM

06:46 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

"About that particular product and project at the bottom of this hour, But the big sell it is and what a wonderful way to keep those gutters clean and free flowing. So today, let's talk about what you're working on. Let me give you the phone number. You can grab a line. It's 808 to 38255. Also the bottom of the next there with Lance Lang. He is with dry lock. We're gonna talk about some waterproofing paint for floors and for walls. And that particular products been around a long time and does a great job. So if you're not familiar with it, I would like to introduce you to that at the bottom of the next hour, So we're taking your calls regarding your home improvement projects. Yesterday was a really busy day. And s O jump onboard. And let's make today busy also throughout the country of the past, the ants and all that they're showing up in a vengeance. It's somebody called yesterday and said, You know, I got these big carpenter ants and I can't tell where they're coming from, and they're not coming from outside your inside my house there inside your house. And the carpenter Reince do have what he calls satellite nurseries, but the queen is still outside somewhere. And they love damp, rotted wood. So an old tree branch. Lot times hangs over the roof. They fall down through the chimney and enter your arm set up a satellite nursery and their business a lot of times. If you have mulch, you could just watch him parade. It's like a highway. They're gonna run across the mulch bed up the tree into the branch. Alone. Behold your have something on that house where they're gaining entry. If you just spend Oh, 5 10 minutes, you'll see the highway system. You'll see where they're going to. You'll see where they're coming from, and you'll see their entry. And then you get these baiting in apparatuses. Rescue dot coms got him. This is not just the liquid in the piece of cardboard. It's a self contained baiting system. They take that baby back to the queen kills the queen. That's how you get rid of the ants. Takes about three or four days. First couple days you'll see more ants than you ever knew you had. But it's very efficient in that particular bait. Yesterday, I was explained when we go through transitional seasons. Um, answer require a change in there, um, in their diet, whether it's carbohydrates or proteins, as far as I know, the rescue one. Is the only one that has both carbohydrate and protein. So they're attracted, regardless of the weather, cool and damp. Warm and maybe even hot, so they're attracted to that. And they take that bait, and they start eliminating the working on eliminating the queen's. So, um, it's rescue dot com You can check that out. Again. Our phone numbers 808 to 38255 will kick things off with Terry Terry, welcome. Thank you. I listen to you all the time. Thank you. I've called in three or four times and gotten good advice straight. This time. I'm purchasing a house and it Zay Pris Borden bat. Okay? And I really like that. I had another house. That was Cyprus boarding back, but I mean, I know I can use wet and forget to get rid of the green stuff. But is there something else that I should I should be using to clean the whole outside. Well, if you got a lot of dirt, and you got mold and mildew, Ah, probably been recommending a good oxygenated bleach, probably for 20 some years and it's ah It's a powder that is Sprinkle, you know, mixed in with water in a tank sprayer, and you can wet the side of the house. Let's sit about 10 minutes and then you know, scrub it down like a Wood fibers, street broom something along those lines. Something has got some guts to it. Okay, agitate that and then rinse it off. It works very well. But it's a good grade of oxygenated bleach. It's used in a lot of debt cleaners used in a lot of mace Street cleaners and used also is a sighting wash, but it's safe on You know, plants and safe for you and does a really good job of cleaning. Okay? And I know the lady Previously you mentioned where to get that oxygenated bleach. Well, most hardware stores will have it. Most hardware stores don't know they have it. So you know what I always do is I send people to his website, which is the fi would stain dot com. And five wood stain dot com is a stain of wood stain, Obviously mainly used on decks can be used on houses and they have a wood cleaner, which is about the highest grade of oxygenate bleach that I know It's very, very good. Okay? Well, that's great. Um I am. You're saying Tito win it all down with this and then scrub it with like a broom right? Something that's got a little guts to it. So again, it's a powder. It'll have the mixing instructions on there. You went that sighting down and you leave. It went for about 10 minutes and then just slightly agitated. The street broom works really well. It's got the wood fibers has got some guts to it just kind of agitated and then hose it off. Hose it off. It'll get rid of the molds. The mildew is the darts. The whole works. That's wonderful. That's wonderful. Well, thank you so much. I'm glad we're here for us. Very good. Thank you very much. Take care of Terri. Bye bye. All right again. Our numbers 808 to 38255 and Mark welcome. Gary. Good morning morning. I'm in chagrin falls and I walked around my house the other day, and I've got a concrete block. Um, that looks like it's just deteriorating. It was part of the foundation of just one block, maybe 1.5 blocks and there's an area about 13 inches by maybe one of the quarter inches deep at the deepest point. It looks like it was just just popped out. Huh? Is it our corner right in the middle of the bird blocker? It is.

Gary Terry Terry Terri Mark 1.5 blocks today three Lance Lang Yesterday yesterday one block four days both four times 808 to 38255 Zay Pris Borden 808 to Cyprus 20 some years Reince
"borden" Discussed on Mind Tales | Life Coach Kavita Popli

Mind Tales | Life Coach Kavita Popli

03:45 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on Mind Tales | Life Coach Kavita Popli

"You will describe your message in the best possible way. And it will have the highest likelihood of being received and understood as you intended like think of the family of friends or your. You know people you love. You don't struggle for word you just know exactly what to say. Your timing is right what you say you say confidently in all of this because you feel safe secure in confident entrusting in the company of those people right now. Let's go to the second part of the conversation. Which is once you ensure that you are in a relaxed eight. Fueled by positive emotions and you pass on a message. How this message is received as also dependent on how the receiver is receiving it. There are chances that you use that this message very clearly in the right state of mind but the receiver wasn't in a positive state of mind. Receiver was probably hijacked by negative emotions. Too no matter. How effectively your said. It just won't be received an understood it in the way that you intended it to. Now that's the importance of emotions behind that communication. It is really do way right. Bought the sender's emotional state of mind and the receivers emotional state of mind playing borden role. In how the communication is now. It's not really the words. The variety of the words or the intonation house. Lower fast speaker are you..

borden
Rookie Edison, New Jersey, cop dies suddenly at home

Steve Trevelise

00:23 sec | 2 years ago

Rookie Edison, New Jersey, cop dies suddenly at home

"Edison Police are mourning the loss of one of their own 26 year old officer, Ryan Borden, a newly sworn in member dine unexpectedly Tuesday, according to the department's Facebook page, the Edison police chief telling us Borden collapsed in his home while working on a renovation project at his mother's home in East Windsor. Why that happened remains a

Edison Police Ryan Borden Borden Facebook East Windsor
The inventor of the cellphone calls on carriers to focus more on closing broadband gap

The 3:59

05:19 min | 2 years ago

The inventor of the cellphone calls on carriers to focus more on closing broadband gap

"Following. It's the second part of our four part interview with martin cooper inventor the phone. I'm roger chang and this is your daily charge or one of the issues. I've talked a lot about on this podcast and seen that in general the issue of the digital divide. I know you talked about that near the tail. Ender near the second part of your books. I'd love to get your perspective on really the deserve holistic impact of the cell phone and whether or not it's been a force for good in how it's been a force for good in closing that broadband gap that digital divide. We'll just think about this routers The whole educational system has been challenged today because the teacher gets up and gives a lecture and he's talking to a bunch of students if they're connected if they have smartphones they have access to all the knowledge the world the shakers not gonna give them information that they can find words so the whole nature of what a teacher is changes. The teacher now teaches people how to reach out for of religion. How to handle it. Taylor's educative process to individuals that having a lecturer to talk a people each different girl every other person. So we discover that what the result of this is that people's minds the challenge borden. They did before and the result of that. Is it their brains. Get bigger thinking smarter. Just think about that. Now that in this country one of the most advanced countries not in the world but in history forty percent of the students in this country do not have access to broadband wireless forty percent. Just imagine what that means over long term when the educational process chain that we end up with forty percent of the population with bigger brains. They're smarter or sixty percent and forty percent are dummies unacceptable with Broadband wireless now as essential to people as water food. So somehow that problems got to get fixed at the moment. The government is not digging right approaches. The only way to do that is through a first of all accept the fact this is essential and go to the carriers people have exclusive use of a spectrum and tell them either. You service all of the public or we're going to allow other people to do it. The technology exists to provide students with robin wireless whereas littlest cyber ten dollars a month. At that level everybody can have access to the but semi were we have to remove moves us exit seventy two big guys t verizon d mobile. They're doing a great job for the dense areas for the city's suburbs. They are not to have good job for the rural areas. They are after a good job for the people that can't afford a sixty dollars a month for a cellphone. The technology exists to do the both of those legs to handle people that can't afford into the rural areas and it's up to the government now to do figure out ways for business to provide those two kinds of services. We have to have one hundred percent accessibility for students and ultimately for everybody. Because i i'm so delighted you read the book because you know that it's not just education it's healthcare we're all going to be ultimately connected have have our bodily characteristics measured continually. There is the potential that we can anticipate diseases in people before they happen. Just because we're measuring things continually so healthcare is going to be a revolution. You can't provide after one segment of the public but public and keep it from other people so between those two issues education healthier and then you get the most important wall in. That's what your profession is is. Collaboration is getting people to talk to each other to generate ideas to people who are always more creative corporate than one person but of you got people talking to each other groups independent of time independent of where they are the potential for improving the productivity of people will be such that the idea of poverty will disappear. There's going to be enough for everybody. There is no reason why everybody can't be wealthy announced. Never worry about food or housing and everybody can't downs. The education served there.

Roger Chang Martin Cooper Ender Robin Wireless Borden Taylor Verizon
"borden" Discussed on 710 WOR

710 WOR

04:46 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on 710 WOR

"Well, Good morning, everyone a lot coming up this hour at 9 20. We're gonna be joined by Jerry Zaks. He's the Tony Award winning director. One of the previous times he was on with us. He called Michael Riedel yachts, so I obviously have various stewed observer of the scene, and we'll be speaking with Gerry Sachs. Little Bit later on our Big three stories this morning. Well, the article of impeachment against Donald Trump will be sent from the house to the Senate today. The trial is going to begin February the night by the way. This morning, Rudy Giuliani was sued by the Dominion voting System for $1.3 billion for what they say is spreading false information about them. Interesting case also in a big three. What else is new? Tom Brady's in the Super Bowl for the 10th time. This one is a member of Tampa Bay in the game is in Tampa Bay. That's never happened before where a team played on his home field in Super Bowl. The Buccaneers will be hosting that champion Kansas City Chiefs in two weeks and rounding out the Big Three. We lost a couple of legends. 87 year old broadcaster Larry King. He had been hospitalized with covert coming up at 9 35. We're gonna talk to Robert Thompson for my alma mater, Syracuse University. He's an expert on the pop culture and television will talk. To him about Larry King and also about Tom Brokaw, retiring and one of baseball's all time great players and people. Hank Aaron past at the age of 86. No caused was given there. But he had taken the covert vaccine a few weeks ago. So ah lot going on on this Monday before we get to Alice Stockton Rossini because this is the start of restaurant week. Interesting concept without indoor dining before Alice sorts it out, Michael, You have some real estate you want to sell Joe Bartlett. Yeah, just a quick story here because I remember when Joe was looking at houses down in South Carolina. That was kind of the tip off that we knew he was not long for the for the world. Little little did no man the rest of us new know exactly. He's long for the world. Just not the Northeast part of the world, All right? So I found this house job. I'm kind of intrigued. I'd like to know if you would You know if you'd like a house, it's OK. It's an old houses from the 19th century, but in excellent condition. It's a three bedroom house. Beautiful open living room. Nice kitchen clapboard house. Got a nice little porch in the back comes with a standalone garage. Ah, lot of room up in the attic of very well kept up an old house, but it's on a beautiful new England tree lined street. Doesn't have any lower for you whatsoever. Just say, you know, I feel this is a loaded question. Um, uh, because we know Redl. Yeah, I'm just describing. I'm describing the house. Yes, it sounds very nice. Right. How about if I told you the house was associated with this nursery rhyme? Lizzie Borden took an ax and gave her mother 40 wacks when she saw what she had done. She gave her father 41. You could own the Lizzie Borden murder house. Does that change? How much perspective two million bucks? Two million. Yeah, Now he doesn't want it. He doesn't care that the murders happened there. But that's two million. He's not gonna take Wow. That's a lot of money for a little tiny house. It's true, but it's you know, it's his history. Just want to say because, well, hold on one second. Just want to say you know the 40 wax and then the 41. In fact, evidence showed that Lizzie Borden's mother was struck only 19 times with the hatchet and her father only 10 times. So what crime is not as glad as we are not bad people in to believe, like to ask you a question. Don't ever. All right. Great story. All right, let's check in with Alice Alice. How do you have a restaurant week starting today in New York City without the indoor dining that seems like it. See more on to me. Yeah, right. Well talk about getting whacked over 1000 restaurants have closed in New York City since last March. So this is a restaurant week that really needs all New Yorkers to order out and in some cases, if the outdoor structures air warm enough, you can. You will be able to get the special $20.21 deal, which gives you an entree and at least one or two sides. Chris hey, would've NYC and company caught up with him. It's the 29th year of Restaurant Week. 571 restaurants participating more than any other year. Never had so many participants and never had somebody participants in the boroughs beyond Manhattan. So it's a true citywide celebration. This year, we decided to waive all the participation fees to encourage more participation, but it does show that restaurants want to do everything they can to really engage local New Yorkers. We don't have the visitors.

Lizzie Borden Jerry Zaks Alice Alice New York City Larry King Tampa Bay Michael Riedel Donald Trump Hank Aaron Alice Stockton Rossini Robert Thompson Joe Bartlett Tom Brady Senate Gerry Sachs Kansas City Chiefs
"borden" Discussed on KTOK

KTOK

02:52 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on KTOK

"Bots that the prosecution just did a horrible job they had to have. They did, and the defense did an excellent job. In fact, the defense attorney Got a very important piece of evidence to very important pieces of evidence excluded before the trial on the basis that they were too prejudicial the day before the murders. Lizzie Borden was at a pharmacy trying to buy process acid, which we know is cyanide. But the pharmacist said, Well, you can't buy that without a prescription now. Why does somebody by cyanide and Sinai's type of poison that if you ingest it, you're dead within. Oh, yeah. Your history your history, the other piece of evidence that Woz excluded from from testimony. Was that of Lizzy's friend Alice Russell. Noticed a couple days after the murder, Lizzie burning one of her dresses. Alison. Why did you burn that dress? Lizzie and Russell said, Well, it had some stains and and it doesn't You know, I shouldn't be wearing this. Um, I think those are two pretty incriminating pieces of evidence which can show motive. Um, motive and intent on also, um Lizzie's attorney. His name was, um Andrew Jackson. Jenning. Well, he did a good job. Yes, he did. I mean, he did what he was supposed to do. Absolutely. And the thing is George and this trial happened over 100 years ago. 80 92 in 2012. Andrew Jackson Jennings. Journals about the Lizzie Borden murder trial were finally released publicly by the Fall River Historical Society because this happened in Fall River, Massachusetts. And he wrote about Lizzie, and he said that there were times that she seems sensitive and grieving for her father. But that other times she was absolutely cold blooded and callous. Maybe she was schizophrenic, dual personality. It's very, very possible, and there's also a huge motive element here. The board and fortune. Um There was a lot of tension between Lizzie and her father, and, um, her father's wife, Abby Borden was not Lizzy's mother. Apparently Lizzie's mother had died some years before. And so Abby Borden, the stepmother and Lizzie Borden and Didn't get along. They didn't like each other, And there were times they reported were Lizzie wouldn't talk to her father for days that she throw temper tantrums. That she'd.

Lizzie Borden murder Andrew Jackson Andrew Jackson Jennings attorney Lizzy Alice Russell Fall River Historical Society Fall River Alison Woz Massachusetts George
"borden" Discussed on NewsRadio WIOD

NewsRadio WIOD

02:40 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on NewsRadio WIOD

"Hacking apart. A jackal lantern. You know a pumpkin with you in it, and and I heard Justice will be done. And so I'm reporting this to the client. I go. This sounds really, really weird, and I'm describing it to her. Because Oh, my God, I know what she said. Mark she is I'm a descendant of Lizzie Borden's Unlike what And she said, I suppose she keeps saying Justice will be done. She's hacking apart. Jack o lantern. So instead of the client, I said that indicates to me something about Right around the end of October around Halloween. He said. The man who murdered my son is going on trial and it starts October 31st, which is Halloween and so and in the last message I got from from this From from Lizzie Woz. He'll die a gruesome death in prison. So what I did, George is I waited about a month after Halloween, and then I called the client. I said, remember the reach because Oh, Mark He said. Jury selection started October 31st. The trial lasted, you know, practically two weeks. Was found guilty, convicted to life in prison without parole. And I said, Wow, she said, and the other together, George, he said, You know, I'm a Christian, and I'm not supposed to take comfort in the suffering of others. But I can't say that this makes me feel bad. I said, Well, you know, I've never had the spirit of a psychopathic killer come through before and make somebody feel good, She said. Well, Mark, I guess there really is a first time for everything. And now has anything happened to the guy in prison at this point. Not at this point. He's only been in for about, I guess about a year to have two years now. Um so but the client she you know, we we keep in touch because this was such a profound thing. And it's very interesting because after the reading, I found out that there Lizzie Borden had no Children. Neither did her sister Emma. However, the Borden family is very large. And so let let's say you and I are both descended from George Washington. Even though he had no Children. He had cousins. Okay, so they're all part of that. DNA's Was really fascinating George and the recent bringing this up because this is settling into the ancestors. Is that some of Lizzie Borden's descendants include none other than Winston Churchill. And also actress Elizabeth Montgomery. Remember the old TV show.

Lizzie Borden Mark He George Washington Lizzie Woz Borden Elizabeth Montgomery Winston Churchill Emma
"borden" Discussed on 710 WOR

710 WOR

02:35 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on 710 WOR

"Fair trial. Amazing. Okay, well, let's let's get into the real estate, The Lizzie Borden. The houses are up for sale. What's going on? They are. There's not one but two that the house where the murder occurred, which is the Borden family home is at two 32nd Street. Fall River, Massachusetts. That was the side of the murders, and it's been a bed and breakfast for quite some time, and it just went on the market within the last couple weeks and asking price is $2 million. Um, there have been several TV crews in their paranormal investigators, and, um, according to reports That both the TV crews of the paranormal investigators said that there's all sorts of electrical anomalies with the equipment. And a lot of people believe that the spirits of both Andrew and Abby Borden The murder victim's still haunt the house. And then, um, a couple blocks away is Mabel Cross Mansion and Maplecroft Mansion is at 302 French Street. Fall River, Massachusetts. All right, hold on for a second mark. We're already at the break. We're going to come back. We'll talk about the Lizzie Borden real estate and some other haunted real estate That's out there, plus Tell me what's going on around the country when we come back do people who are selling a haunted house have to disclose that? I think it's some states. You probably have to do that back in a moment of coast to coast Am Get daily show updates right to your inbox For free with the Coast's own newsletter, Sign up today it coast to coast am dot com. Did you get out an airplane? If you knew it had a 50% chance of crashing. You.

Lizzie Borden murder Fall River Borden Mabel Cross Mansion Massachusetts Maplecroft Mansion Andrew
"borden" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

KOA 850 AM

01:34 min | 2 years ago

"borden" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

"Question for these guys. Okay? When the monorail opened Disneyland in 1959. It was dedicated by this man who was then the U. S. Vice President Jang it, Brandon. Yes, Brain. Who's Richard Nixon? Correct date yet. Okay. Pat Carroll, Carl Reiner. In that net, Fabray all won Emmys and 1957 for their work on this comics. Our Hill. You know who were the people again? Read it again. Oh, Pat Carroll, Carl Reiner and Nanette Fabray. They all went in me on this show. Mandy, what is the Dick Van Dyke Show? Nope. Brandon's minus two is six. Cesar. You've got it. It's Cesar. On this 1958 Christmas card. Elvis war, his army uniform. This man his manager was dressed up like Santa Mandy. Tom, you were incorrect. Yeah, Parker. Ah! And finally fate fully. Alexander Borden 1 1954 Tony as composer of this musical, even though he died in 18 87. Thanks for the worst category ever. Hey, fourth question. That is the point. Another one. You have to see something so it can't be that way. Have a horrible category. That only has four questions. I'm actually oddly okay with.

Carl Reiner Pat Carroll Santa Mandy Brandon Cesar Nanette Fabray U. S. Vice President Jang Richard Nixon Alexander Borden Parker Tom Tony
Floridian Finds Fair Value Flipping Furniture

Side Hustle School

07:33 min | 2 years ago

Floridian Finds Fair Value Flipping Furniture

"Today story call center. Employees in central florida binds that restoring furniture too hard with a bit of technique and finesse actually learned a lot in a short period of time. He goes from learning the ropes to budding side-hustle to actually running it as a full time business. I'll tell you exactly how it works. Then he makes another change another career change. That demonstrates y improving. Your skills is so important. It's a big part of this message. I try to bring every day and by the way. Welcome to school. My name is christina. Abo- i have the privilege of bringing you the sharpie day and ultimately it's about encouraging you to diversify your income to create more options for yourself and not just options to be overwhelmed but more options to create more security so that you have a backup plan so that you have more income coming from different places you're not reliant on one source etc so often talked about these things about diversifying. Your income can give you freedom insecurity. Well this story illustrates it really well and it also happens with no debt and very little stress so perhaps the archetype of a model to follow no debt very little stress increasing your freedom and security stories called floridian finds fair value flipping furniture in. Yes i did have fun coming up with that title. The stories coming up in just thirty seconds in two thousand twenty one. A truly diversified portfolio needs more than the mix of stocks bonds and mutual funds. It really needs private. Real estate studies have shown that portfolios with an allocation to private real estate generally delivered a better risk adjusted return with more annual income and lower volatility over the past two decades now with fundraise. This level of powerful diversification is available to you. Fundraise has been a partner of the show in the past. But i also use fund rise. I am a fundraiser investor myself. That's not something. I am required or even encouraged to do but i have really been personally impressed with the platform so i started talking about this in conversations that are completely unrelated to the podcast. So i think they're doing something really really interesting. I want to encourage you to see for yourself. How one hundred and thirty thousand. Investors have built a better portfolio with private real estate. It takes just a few minutes to get started. Go to fundraise dot com slash side-hustle today that's f. u. n. t. r. e. dot com slash side-hustle conroy's dot com slash side hustle ryan krones inspiration for his side. Assault came from a close source. His wife jessica late two thousand eighteen just restored their running room furniture to reflect a farmhouse style. One morning shortly after ryan was getting ready for his job and call center management. They got to talking. Jessica mentioned people would pay good money for refurbished furniture. Like how much right asked probably five hundred dollars for a dining room table. Jessica set intrigued. Ryan asked her to teach him how she painted their table. She did and within a week. Ryan was restoring an old dresser. They purchased for thirty dollars off facebook marketplace. The restoration involved ryan putting on a new coat of paint which only took a couple of hours as well as fifty dollars in supplies. This included a ten dollar paintbrush amazon along with the paint from lowe's although he had no previous refurbishing experience ryan realized. He loved the task when he listed the dresser back on facebook marketplace. It's sold within two hours for one hundred and fifty dollars. He and jessica were shocked at how quick it happened. It wasn't much work for a seventy dollar profit and even better. This was the first time they tried my able to replicate or even improved results. So for the next piece ryan refurbished up to the sale price. It sold in less than a day bufton polish with success. He started searching for more pieces of furniture at garage sales auctions and on facebook. He didn't have a truck at the time so he would borrow one from family or friends in order to source multiple pieces in a single day after refreshing them with paint or stain he would list them online with each one profit between one hundred and fifty to two hundred and fifty dollars since you've listed solely on facebook marketplace and didn't advertise ryan didn't have to pay any costs for marketing is. He began to scale up. He would work on several separate pieces at once. He devised a rotation process in his garage which allowed him to apply three coats to three or four pieces a day. You got even faster once. He learned how to do. Stained wood tops. This feature increased the value of his furniture still further. It allowed him to take a fifty dollar dresser and sell it for up to three hundred dollars in fact. Here's a fun anecdote. Brian purchased one particular piece from a garage sale. For fifteen dollars. Hit looked on. Its own so he ended up selling it as for two hundred dollars not a bad return on investment for practically no work the most challenging part of this project was learning the technique of making furniture reflect that farmhouse style. He messed up a bunch of pieces because he didn't apply the paint or stay in a certain way. Sometimes he could recover them sometimes not sometimes he would distress the coats of paint too much but through trial and error ryan perfected the skill. The furniture flipping continued part time for several months. Meanwhile he was growing more and more than happy. It is corporate job so in august. Two thousand nineteen jessica convinced him to quit and try flipping furniture fulltime. He finally got his own truck and focused on the furniture. Business bringing in between two thousand and three thousand dollars a month. Although this was less than he made it as corporate job he was much more content. Ryan did this for about nine months. Also helping out with jessica's wedding photography business earlier this year. He got a chance to go back to work in call center management but with a twist. This time he found a dream job working remotely as a supervisor. This rule enables him to be close to his family also getting a regular paycheck with benefits. He's quick to note that the furniture flipping business will always be one of his reliable income. Sources it's not mentally taxing and he rebels in the opportunity to be creative. Best of all it serves as a solid backup plan so check this out. This story is a wonderful example of something that anybody can do. And when i say anybody can do like let me just kind of break this down because you might think. Well i'm not handy. I'm not either just just to be clear but it's not so much about being handy. Renovating is a lot like reselling of any form so reselling. I sometimes say one way or another. Everybody can do it. So maybe furniture isn't your market. What about computers or cameras or cars or high end kitchen blenders or upscale fashion items. These are just a few markets in which it's possible to make a good profit by acquiring items on making some kind of change or improvement and then selling those items to a new owner now. The chain improvement can be something substantial. You could be like overhauling the entire car. Let's say it can be maybe somewhere in the middle like a lot of furniture renovation is. it can't be purely aesthetic. In some cases you do run into situations like the dope from ryan where he found something and then thought about making a change to it but decided it's actually pretty good as it is in that case he paid a pretty low price borden was able to resell it for for a fantastic profit margin. So that doesn't happen all the time of course but you know as you kind of delve into this. Sometimes it does so. It's one of these things that everybody can do. If you're trying to figure out what's my next. How can i create a source of income. That is a good back-up plan for me. Something in this direction is worth considering. So i'm gonna leave you with today. Inspiration is good but inspiration with action is so much better.

Ryan Jessica Ryan Krones Facebook Christina Conroy Florida Lowe
Why Lionel Messi Wants Out of FC Barcelona

ESPN Daily

03:05 min | 3 years ago

Why Lionel Messi Wants Out of FC Barcelona

"Sam borden six years ago we were in Brazil together and my facial hair situation was not good. I mean that isn't what stands out for me Pablo but. I think I. Think we all have different memories of experiences. SAMBORN is a global sports correspondent for ESPN and kind enough to forget the unfortunate beard I grew for five weeks while we were covering the two thousand fourteen World Cup it's actually kind of funny right I mean now World Cup in Brazil Lionel Messi was a big part of the story there and obviously is a big part of the story today to. We got to see Leo Messi in a World Cup final Sam and you fast forward six years and I bring you here today because Messi announced last week that he wants to leave F c Barcelona after a nearly seventeen year stint. Tell me why this is a big deal. The obvious answer is that Messi is the most famous athlete on the planet may be one of the most famous people in the entire world. He is not just a generational star he is a star that defines a sport. When you talk about people that are known all over the world for being absolute craftsmen absolute artisans at what they do messy is that guy? Governor. From the magical. Curiel who knows? He's a little guy from Argentina, who is an absolute wizard with a soccer ball? Hey, just tonsure. RIP UP OF REASON A perennial. He's magical. He's calculating. He's one of the most creative players with sport has ever seen. I said. I think one of the things that has always made him even bigger than just. As, see and other sports these his diminutive stature, he's not a giant he's not the one of these massive bodies. I've been in front of him several times and I'm five ten and I looked down on him quite a bit. To me that's what makes him during and beloved by so many people is that he kind of Rome's among giants and somehow finds a way to succeed in a way that no other player ever has coming up with gold medal messy. He made Barcelona. The juggernaut that it is today and him moving on that say massive seismic shift, not just in soccer but in sports.

Lionel Messi Curiel Sam Borden Barcelona Brazil Soccer Facial Hair Espn Gold Medal Pablo Rome Argentina
Asian shares lower as investors await Fed chair's speech

Bloomberg Daybreak: Europe

02:05 min | 3 years ago

Asian shares lower as investors await Fed chair's speech

"As I said, Don't be stalling of it. Certainly in Asia today Isn't that investors really taking a pause to wait for what comes out of Jackson Hole? That symposium on the clear speech that people are hoping to get from the Fed chair J Power? Yes, you Borden run you. I say there is a lot of station ahead of the Jackson or symposium in cans and Daniel's unfortunate course this year will be a virtual rather than an actual gathering. And we have your own pal speaking tomorrow, and the expectation is that he'll discuss defense policy framework review and mainly the groundwork for a new strategy to speak faster inflation. I say it's not entirely certain how granular Powell's when it's the speech with regards to the results of the ventilation study. I say there is a growing consensus central bank may be leaning towards a policy that allows inflation to move past 2% goal to make up for years of undershooting that target And if we look at the fence favorite measure of inflation Corp you see, that's about one per cent over the past 10 years or so. And during that time, any prints that we've seen above 2%? I've been very short lived. I think the big worry right now is the most recent core PT print was on ly spot 9%. So is far Parson will And I say This is cause for concern for both the bond market and force then for policy makers. Those results. I'd expect how with this inflation backdrop and with the persistence of the pandemic to reiterate defence commitment to supporting it, Cock. I think he's going to states. The federal provides him this That will continue providing that could ultimately send inflation higher. I think I think this needed quite a cute as well. Roger material additional fiscal, sending us does nothing to be forthcoming. Congress doesn't mean we have to get it back together and work with the White House to put some sort of additional fiscal package together, so as a result, it puts a lot of pressure on said to underwrite the economic As a result, I think, inspect piles messaging, They're forced to acknowledge the down side facing us.

Inflation Corp Daniel Asia FED Borden Powell Roger White House Congress J Power
Judge refuses to reconsider GM lawsuit against Fiat Chrysler

News and Perspective with Taylor Van Cise

00:25 sec | 3 years ago

Judge refuses to reconsider GM lawsuit against Fiat Chrysler

"Co. General Motors is still trying to revive its racketeering lawsuit against smaller rival Fiat Chrysler automobiles. But a federal judge in Detroit today rejected GM is bid to reinstate that case. GM had claimed had new information on foreign accounts You center alleged bribery scheme involving F C, A and leaders of the United Auto Workers. But Judge Paul Borden said the new evidence is too speculative to warrant re opening the case. GM quickly vowed to

GM Judge Paul Borden Fiat Chrysler Racketeering United Auto Workers Co. General Motors Detroit Bribery
Mind Over Body Cure

The Oprah Winfrey Show: The Podcast

04:53 min | 3 years ago

Mind Over Body Cure

"Well, we've heard quite a few people on this show and others claim that they have thought themselves well, even in the face of death, but what about those people who do get sick and do get worse and die. Are they being made to feel guilty for not thinking themselves well well. My guest today are on opposite sides of this mind over body debate. Doctors don't know why my first guest is alive Lynyrd, borden says He. He changed his attitude. Imagine summarize warriors fighting the cancer in his body. A month later, the cancer was gone my next. Gus was told she had eighteen months to live if she did not have chemotherapy for her breast cancer Jane, Griffiths says she refused the treatment ten years later. She is still alive. My next guest wrote one of the most popular mind over body bestsellers. Dr Bernie seagulls love. Medicine and miracles explains his experiences with. With what he calls exceptional patients who hill themselves in the face of death. My next guest is a doctor who totally disagrees with Dr Segel's philosophy Dr Shirley new says sick. People are being made to feel guilty if they don't heal themselves, and there is no proof whatsoever that any of this works Dr Newlyn is author of doctors the biography of medicine. My next guest got so tired of people telling him that his severe backache. Backache was his own doing because of a bad attitude and stress. He wrote a column in Newsweek. Magazine to complain about it. Meet Rabbi Benjamin Black and my last guest says when she was diagnosed with Lou Gehrig's disease, people wanted her to try acupuncture and Yoga and love to get well and Spain says she live as long as she can, but she is also planning her death. Welcome all of our guests to the show. Start with you. I'll start with you. Because is where we got the idea to do the show from that column that you wrote in Newsweek magazine. What happened? I suffered from a herniated disk and I was just looking for some sympathy. And, then I suddenly realized that there was a psychological change in our society. and. Everybody kept saying to me. Why are you doing this to yourself? You must be the victim of self induced stress. And what really got me upset was that I recall the friend of mine who had died of cancer. who was able to deal with the reality of sickness? But couldn't cope with the fact that throughout the last days people made him feel as if he was the guilty one because he didn't obviously want to get well strongly enough because he wasn't trying hard enough, and he would cry to me. Does this mean I'm failure? What I'm saying is that there's an extreme position today I grant of course that there's a great deal to mind body relationship I grant as well that there is such a thing as love, medicine and miracles. What I think is wrong is I believe is a rabbi that we pray for miracles, but we don't expect miracles and when they don't happen, say that anybody who isn't well must be guilty himself. Don't blame the victim. Victim. Do you think Dr Newland this is making? People feel guilty as they die well. There's no question about that. That's really not my problem with Bernie's propositions. My problem with Bernie's propositions has to do with the aura science that he puts around them, in spite of the fact that what he's actually done is to take an enormous leap of faith, which of course is the secret of it all an enormous leap of faith from certain experiments, which show something that we all agree on that. There is a psychological factor that involves the immune system I don't think any sensitive physician physician with any experience could possibly disagree with the concept that patient state of mind is very important in their illness. But along comes Bernie, and says poof. The mind controls the immune system direct quote, the only quote I memorized from the book burning so that I could use it today. There's no evidence of that, and as long as people continue to believe with their minds, they can control their immune system there believing something that they simply can't do. It's like getting high LSD and trying to jump off a roof and fly, but you yourself just said that it's an enormous leap of faith and suppose it does suppose it does control the immune system, but there is no proof that it does. It's not a question of there being no proof that it does or does not. It's a question of our already being so close to understanding the various factors that do control the immune system that we know that the mind, the conscious mind is only one small factor. What actually happens is that whether we develop immunity to something whether we can control the disease process has to do with three systems in our body.

Dr Bernie Seagulls Dr Newlyn Backache Borden Lou Gehrig Griffiths Newsweek Magazine Dr Newland Dr Segel Newsweek Rabbi Benjamin Black LSD Dr Shirley Spain GUS Jane Yoga
The Prestige Nolan

Filmspotting

06:32 min | 3 years ago

The Prestige Nolan

"From Chicago. This is film spotting. I'm Adam are and I'm Josh Larsen. Every magic trick consists of three parts first. Paul is cool. The pledge magician shows you sound olery columns bird or May that was Michael Cain right. We're done with the trip. That was Michael. Cain with some of the opening narration from Christopher Nolan's The prestige we revisit the directors fifth feature as part of our Nolan who've review this week in addition to that we're going to recommend to new films that recently came to the od the vast of night and the painter and the thief that more. Are you watching closely ahead on film spotting? Welcome to film spotting. Josh in an alternate timeline. We'd be spending this post Memorial Day weekend show singing the praises most likely of fast and furious nine. Oh Yeah I'm sure I'm sure we'd both be huge fans I haven't been keeping up with. What would have been released because it mostly depresses me. So this is to me after nine atom as the as the real fans would call it. Don't let Debbie here that that was supposed to come out because she'd probably forced me into a fast and furious marathon at home in memory of it instead. Of course we are talking about films new. Vod We're going to do a little golden brick spotting in this episode. Indeed there are two new films that meet the criteria for our golden brick or D- that's are overlooked or under unforeseen film of the year. Honor that we give to a mostly newer at least new to US filmmaker. We've both seen the new documentary the painter and the thief and I'm also going to recommend the vast of night that's a low budget sci-fi thriller that comes to Amazon Prime this weekend. Of course we're also pinning all our hopes of summer movie season on the theoretically opening tenant the latest from Christopher Nolan. Somehow the word theoretically there just seems so appropriate when talking about Christopher Nolan Anyway. That is still scheduled as of this recording anyway to come to theaters on July seventeenth seven. Seventeen chosen for being a gallon. Drome like the title of the film. Josh I'm sure that you knew that and we can trust. Christopher Nolan is GonNa try to be Oh so clever. Right yes now. A surprise. Our Own Nolan who've review which has revisiting all of Nolan's films is currently scheduled to wrap up in time for that July seventeen release otherwise all of this preparations going to be for naught. Joshua we need ten to get to the big screen in the meantime. We're going to get to his two thousand six film. The Prestige perform this feat in a manner and never before seen by yourselves or any other audience anywhere in the world. Odeon SELECTA is trees topnotch. You'd celebrate a real magician. Tries to weaver something you got something other. Magicians will scratch their heads over spoke. You have such a tweet as you're gonNA remember me for what happened. Just mentioned triggered overseen. I need to know how he does it. He has no. It's real every great. Magic trick consists of three acts. The first act is called the pledge every Great Christopher Nolan movie consists of three parts or acts. The first part is called the pledge. The filmmaker shows you something ordinary with his fifth feature set in late nineteenth century London. It's two rival. Magicians Hugh Jackman sophisticated. Showman. Robert in Jira and Christian Bale's committed professional Alfred. Borden the filmmaker shows you these characters. Perhaps he asks you to watch them to see if they are indeed real on altered normal but of course they probably aren't. The second is called the turn. The filmmaker takes these characters and makes them part of something. Extraordinary are period piece becomes gothic science fiction a meditation on the moral limits of science in pursuit of knowledge the consequences of obsession. Now you're looking for the secret but you won't find it because of course you're not really looking. You don't really want to know. You WANNA BE FOOLED. But you wouldn't clap yet because one of our magicians finally winning isn't enough. Our minds have to be blown. That's why every magic trick has a third act. The hardest part the part we call the prestige fairly early. In the film. Bordon's life Sarah played by Rebecca Hall reveals. He's going to be a father. He shows her the trick. That's going to put food on their table. A bullet catch which he performs for her to prove. It's safe like any of us. Observing great trick. She wants to know the secret and insist. She can't comfortably allow him to do it unless she understands the mechanics of it he relents she replies disappointedly once. You know it's so obvious Josh. Any rewatch of the prestige requires that you know the twist and equipped with that knowledge. It does all seem well pretty obvious like Sarah did that Lee disappointed or even more impressed with Nolan sleight of hand. I am really glad you asked this question because it helped me clarify a little bit. It helped me locate one of the reasons. Why and I'll stay at say at the front here. This is still topped here. Nolan for me really love this film. I think it's incredibly strong. But your question. Help me locate one of the reasons why. I might have liked it a little bit less this time around. And it's not so simple as knowing the twists or knowing the surprises because confession. I don't think I watched the prestigious since two thousand six and I had mostly forgotten how everything unfolded now. Yeah the hints and clues pieced together in advance in a way that I did not in. Oh six but it's different from not knowing anything so I was still pretty much in the dark as this movie began. So it's not just that I knew the answers. It's and I'm not sure it disappoints even in terms of its reveals but in comparison is something like as before we started recording. You had mentioned the six cents so comparison to something like that which we did revisit just last year And is another case where it it hugely depends on its reveals. Its twists turns. It surprises

Christopher Nolan Josh Larsen Michael Cain Nolan Sleight Adam United States Sarah Chicago Paul Amazon Hugh Jackman Odeon Selecta Debbie Joshua Weaver Borden London Christian Bale Robert
Interview With Vivian Nava-Schellinger

Cafe con Pam Podcast

08:59 min | 3 years ago

Interview With Vivian Nava-Schellinger

"You grew up in Texas yet. Groping Al Paso Borden Rave and educated. Most of my life in El Paso. And you're an attorney right. Yeah I'm a non practicing. What do they call it? Here's the a recovering attorney guests Sosa? Oh turning bed definitely were trained attorney but then decided to do something else live took them in another direction or they changed the direction. But yeah interesting but you have an interesting story because you're Atlanta so you had the trajectory F- like where you wanted to be. When did you decide that you wanted to become a lawyer? Oh my God you know. It's funny because I when I hear people say oh I you know I was in college and I didn't know what I wanted to do or a dotted and I totally can kind of picture what that feels like but for me my earliest memory of thinking what I wanted to do with my life was to be an attorney. My mom went to law school. I Inner Family College. Grad first-generation scholarships all of the beautiful academic story. I do think that a lot of Latinos do have that we may be you know. We highlight but just not enough sometime. She really lead that example for me and showed me that law school was going to be a place that wouldn't necessarily teach me how to be a lawyer but would teach me how to think like one and I think for me even at a really really early age I wanted to know what it would like to think critically about things and not just accepting that they were and kind of go along with your day. Maybe that came a lot from my parents. My Dad was in federal law enforcement. You know there was always like the other layer of why people did what they did and there was also that layer of I get there was all around me always to not only immerse yourself in your community but to protect it so I think at a at a really young age again like I said I don't I can't put it like a like an age on it because I don't remember not wanting to do that for you an only child. I have a sister. She's about five years over five years younger than me. But I will say that I think Mike variances as an only child for the first five years of my life I think they were enrich in a way because my parents did wait a very long time actually to have meet my parents. Mary fifteen years before they had the right. And then that's unheard of now in a sense. Maybe maybe a little bit more right but even then right nineteen eighty six. When I was born my parents had already been married for fifteen years. They had traveled the world. I guide was in the FBI. He was one of the first Chicanos you know Mexican American to get into the academy among the first and actually got into the FBI Academy with J. Edgar Hoover was retiring. So I mean that how far back back goes then you know I think that whole experience in and of itself was really again be too like parents. That were pillared for me. Guide me in this direction and so also say that I think as an only child for the first five years of my life. I had a real great sense of duty to what I needed to be doing with my life so I almost feel like. I grew up kind of quick in terms of knowing that there had to be something bigger than yourself and so having a little sister and I don't WanNa get choked up because you know we can kind of go into a little bit about. She's just kind of warrior to me but having a little sister for me became a sense of duty so yeah I think those are things that the kind of circle around my story if you're sharing and I think your story is awesome because a lot of times what is Brown people that had different generations. What generation third third. I'm second generation Alpaca win on my mom by Third Generation. On my dad that we've been Pessoa longtime were crosstalk rate do Mexico This lake right there. Yeah what it is right there so we haven't been in a while but we used to go every Sunday. You know we Goethe's Mikhaylo. I guess my parents will now know that I went on a much earlier. Age or other reasons like yeah I mean you know. If they're sisters idiot are truly just a pair and it's a beautiful beautiful beautiful experience. I think to grow up in such a place and yeah I mean I grew up going. We go eat on Sunday. We go get groceries. We'd go you know we needed to get something framed. We need cowboy boots. I mean that's just what you did and for me as a child again being third generation it was never a fear or or an oddity right like some people who are really far removed. It's like Oh you know. I went to Mexico holder world and I feel like for me. My parents made a conscious effort. And one thing I've been mentioned. Is that my mom? My mom the first before my sister was born. I can remember her speaking to me. Entirely exclusively in Spanish and then my father spoke meaningless so we would be in the car or sitting at the dinner table and my parents were talking to me and both languages and I was responding in in bold thirty sometimes singlish finish though the code switching with like lit was happening And then I would go to school and you know in English and coming home and seeking Balto. It was always again living in a border community. You learn really quickly that or you know. At least that the border is a lot more fluid than what people want to make it Because that's how we you know growing up in a border town how you live your life. You're always weaving in and out language Culture Food Flavors. Balkan totally and one thing that I see that is it's beautiful I love it. Is that even though? You're third generation. You're still letting you're still proud of your culture in. I think we begin. Give that back to your parents and grandparents. They kept that in you because I've met a lot of people especially in Texas. Actually that they just went opposite direction because of all the hardship that their parents and grandparents went through soup could us your parents grandparents for instilling that culture and to keep you close to it. Yeah yeah all added that you know my two grandparents so one was a citizen in one with not and both of them though are were World War. Two veteran and the one who was yeah and one was in Japan and one was in Europe. So my mother's father my GRANDPA Korol. He actually obtained his citizenship because of his service in World War. Two you know. He was seventeen years old he was living in in quoted and he saw that they were signing young men up to go to war and he had a job in El Paso but lived in wanted like many people and he signed up and he wanted to protect the country that he felt gave him a lot. He met my grandmother who was a US citizen in with born and raised in El Paso met her at a party and wrote her throughout his entire time away. Furthermore and when he came back he married her in. He obtained citizenship. And I will say this. Is The true story. Anybody who's part of the family really knows this story but I think it's really it resonated with me especially now and and just in the time that we're in what he. She laminated his paper so that he could carry them with him at all Because even after his service than even after he became at that ascend I mean he probably couldn't count the years and the Times in which he was stopped and asked for his papers. My Mom clearly remembers the time she was probably in college where he asked where he could. Laminate something and when my mom Helped him do that to realize quickly? It was his papers so bad to me just really when you need a reason to believe in. Why the American dream as as much a part of our dream as let the nose first generation pregnant bird one hundred may be. I always think about that among other story. 'cause for me that was that that's a really powerful thing to be both proud and beautiful right and I think that that you know that hasn't changed for a lot of people. Oh my gosh so powerful quote you there because we live in this were proud of gooey are and because many people here have not explore their country they were brought young and so they especially we still have a lot of people living in the. Us times we live in living that fear and at the same time. Loving the place that you your end. It's it's a hard copy to exist

Third Generation Attorney El Paso The Times Texas Al Paso Borden Atlanta FBI Sosa I Inner Family College J. Edgar Hoover Fbi Academy Mike Pessoa Mary Grandpa Korol
Dr. Michelle Ward Deep Dives on Psychopaths

Dr. Drew Podcast

10:25 min | 3 years ago

Dr. Michelle Ward Deep Dives on Psychopaths

"Shows got a PhD clinical neuropsychologist Euroscience psychology from USC Earlier she study mres murderers and non murderers to identify the structural differences in the brain separate them into two groups and these types of murderers. There's an impulsive type in predatory type and in the impulsive type. They have reduced function prefrontal cortex which makes sense the part of the brain. The brakes puts the brakes on our stupid behaviors. But tell people what psychopathy is and how how they would identify that Oh. Psychopaths are so much fun. So psychopaths in some ways are more evolved than the rest of us. What well okay. Maybe that was a little liberal with my insofar as they function without the burden of guilt and without the burden of empathy so they can do all the little nasty things they WANNA do all their goal driven behaviors without feeling bad about it. I thought they did have much in the way of feelings at all many of them so some of them do I mean some of them can feel. They certainly feel a lot for themselves. Yes yes and they can fall in love they. They don't love a person like you and I might live somebody but it's they just don't feel bad and in it's actually a biological phenomenon like they literally do not have. Oh sorry they don't have the parts of the brain that are associated with empathy are malfunctioning in these people. So of course. It's really bad because if the goal driven behavior is criminal you get yourself a little serial killer right so it seems to me like the people with psychopathic genetics or biology. A childhood horrible abuse. That's how you get these terrible things right if you get nudged in that direction. So it is thought that psychopathy is inherited but not just like one gene O. Dad's psychopath sons a psychopath. It's not like that. It's it's a cluster a jeans a combination. So you'll see it in a pedigree in a family but not necessarily one generation to the next but when it pops up it's it's different and you know it Wa- and there's different flavors of a to Gary. What was James Fallon's podcast? Irvine professor that was doing studies on psychopathy and he was looking through the controls and his family and himself in the controls all of a sudden. He found psychopath amongst the controls they went. Oh my God. This probably got in wrong pile. He takes off the tape and it's him and so he looked in his family. And he's related to Lizzie borden and has multiple generations of people that killed their family members. Nobody else always family members. Okay but if we're GONNA kill someone who makes most Matt sorry not you? You wouldn't do it but but you're right. That's what some of the most intense emotions is. Is that sort of a typical psychopathic pattern. Now family do they have something to benefit? So when ever you're looking at a murder and you have a a suspect who you think is a psychopath. What was the motive? They don't okay. Some of them can kill for thrills but then they're not killing their family members if they're killing family member it's because they want something money or something typically yeah and so it seems how what percentage of population psychopathic tendencies. Okay you're not going to like this one out of every one hundred of us so one percent one percent and so when he it seems like whenever I see murder television shows or whatever here about core chose it seemed like they attorneys are always taking the position that this is a psychopathic. Because they're like oh he just wanted the insurance money so we offer his wife's like that's not a normal behavior now now and usually those are more layered. That is a very convenient explanation for a jury so everyone goes to because you have to have motivation. Juries do not like to convict unless there's motivation but sometimes there's not when you were talking earlier about impulsive killers. Yes those are the people who usually have bad functioning. The prefrontal CORTEX in a bar. Fight the kill the guy they get in a fight with their girlfriend or their wife and they kill them but if they happen to have an insurance policy forget it. They're going to say it's the insurance and it was a psychopath and it was premeditated but sometimes it's not so the it's always frustrating. The distance between the legal system and the reality right So psychopaths are one of the population. How would you know if you have in your life? We've talked about this before so you you know when they just behave in ways. You can't imagine unless you're a psychopath yourself. And then you're like what he's just like normal. And so GARY WHEN. I asked if he would push his son off the bridge in the trolley experiment as Adema Dr drew show and he was surprised that I was mortified by that. That's prize you. Did it surprise me that that I was mortified? Now okay you were mortified to. I was not surprised. Maybe but I was. But I can't get to where you can get to a HA. That's it sorry. Go ahead not calling him a psychopathic. You know it when you see it. It's different now. We have to say most. Psychopaths are pro social. They're not killers. They're not serial killers it's a small percentage of that one percent. You've already called the more evolves so the pro social psychopath may actually be a significant benefit to the world. That's right a leader and sometimes a benevolent leader. They run banks. They run companies. They just don't have anxiety and they don't have to worry the stuff that other leaders worry about. That's right they can push the button. Yeah do we do. Who Do you think say amongst the president's unless thirty years who have had maybe assocham social psychopathy? Okay I do love him but I think Bill Clinton might have been a psychopath. I'm not alone in that. Thought HE HIS. All of his goals were benevolent but he seemed to be able to function without really looking back and he goes shave. No guilt shame. Now go and how do you know? He wasn't just a severe narcissist or is there a difference nicest can feel guilt and empathy and remorse and those are really important shames. A real top one for them for narcissist well because they're super insecure so shame as resetting. They're allergic to it right. So how do we know about bill? Clinton allergic to shame yeah well. Narcissism is very high factor in psychopathy. But you have to have the hallmarks which are lack of empathy remorse guilt. Those are the ones that you really need in order to reach that criteria of psychopathy and so Clinton didn't feel guilt for the stuff he was. Did you see the the Clinton Affair Series Documentary Pretty Interesting? You've told me to watch for sorry. Well right to watch all the television to be fair. He gives a lot of assignment. You have to killing eve that you must watch for. The life of me cannot understand how this man has time to watch the amount that he he doesn't sleep. He drinks a cup of coffee. I mean Part of it but but no no no I mean look what I go home more often. I watch television. I'm not criticizing whatsoever. I walked I watch as much. Tv as you may be alive. I don't know how you have the time to watch all the all the documentaries and the stuff online and stuff you in the pods you keep up on. I listened to every single podcast at well over one acts and I watch most most things that I'm not watching for pure enjoyment. I will watch at others. Those ready to okay. How much sleep do you people need? I need seven hours. I do I can get away with less but seven is five but I never get tired of you get more than seven no more than Nyein Guitar. Okay but nine eight right. Seven is sort of my number these. So why would you take that well okay? It's not a real study. It's Michelle study but I have this theory that people who sleep longer ended up sleeping not as deeply and and they they actually don't have as much energy throughout the day officiously it's anecdotal make sense. I mean there is definitely oversleeping is called sleep inertia and you can. You can have like still be kind of tired during the day after sleeping too much. Yeah that makes sense but those of us who ran on anxiety all the time you get yourself all hyped familiar with that very nervous right now. Okay so which reminds me the psychopaths really having society. Do they know not in a way that you want them to so one thing that's really important and we can measure this in psychopaths versus non psychopaths. Think about when you get scared before. You're doing something big. Let's say your ZIP lining I don't know if the heights are scary for you or you're going on air. Your heart starts racing. You start sweating. You know the fight or flight. You get this autonomic response psychopaths. Don't get the same autonomic response that we do so if you tell a psychopath look. I'm going to shock you in ten seconds. Here's a screen watch countdown. So they're they're watching the numbers go from ten to one and they know they're gonNA get shocked. You don't see those increases and you have your electrodes on them and their polls Fischer's that's right pulse doesn't increase than they don't sweat more. They don't have the skin response from. They can a dupe a lie detector test Oh easily easily is that why they're not admissible but so I was like okay but does that happen after. They've already been psychopaths. I mean. No one really knows when you start measuring with. Are you psychopath? Are you not so we looked at psychopathy? Nine to eleven year olds and we did it in twins because we wanted to be able to isolate. How much is jeans and how much environment? How did you get the referrals? Well this was at UC. So when I was a graduate student we ran the southern California twin project so we went through. La USD matched birth dates and last names and came up with thousands and thousands of twins and we divided them by dental confrontational. Because identical twins. Share one hundred percent of their genes fraternal share fifty percent. So they're fraternal. Twins are just brothers and sisters born at the same time so if identical twins are more similar on any given behavior indicates strong genetic underpinning. So we did we. Would we learned that psychopathic traits did have high haired ability? But the other thing we discovered is that that phenomenon of not feeling anticipatory. Fear not getting nervous before something bad is going to happen exists when they're nine to eleven years old before they've committed crimes but done. Gary Georgia with their brains now. Well we did electrophysiology. So we did. We measured waves. But we didn't do scanning so it was interesting to me that it's the chicken or egg that this biological phenomenon happens before they have an opportunity to go out killing

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How Man City Became Banned City

The Lead

02:38 min | 3 years ago

How Man City Became Banned City

"It's so big. And it's so impressive in in the fact that we're talking about and the fact that you know news stations across the world. If I lied artem you know from Friday night on woods is because I think the size of of city or the clubs are being banned from the Champions League before and Galatasary Turkish slogan AC. Milan Daping Bam this while Icy Milan. This season banned from the Euroleague. I think it's probably the fact that it's Manchester City. And also the factor the other two mentioned we kinda bound for fallen foul of the rules and spending a bit too much but this one. This is more about the seat. This is a club with a long history since eighteen hundred ninety four. This club has been at the very core of a city. That's proud a city. This allowed a city. That's always stood out from the crowd. A club foot all of Manchester. But it hasn't historically been one of the top clubs in England. You know the the sort of long been seen as the second team in Manchester. Yes the modern era. The modern era in English. Football is the Premier League and Manchester United Hopping Kings. Becker again. Nobody will dramatically traveling ninety nine hundred nine. They won the double in two thousand and eight for a lot of years. Manchester City weren't in the premier league. And even when they were they. Were very much an also ran Kanda team. So you know that goes to show the fortunes but really everything changed in two thousand eight when he was purchased by new owner. Toss a little bit about. She commenced or After the show up in Minnesota a chain is a member of the Abu Dhabi royal family. He's the Deputy Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates. And he's the half brother of the current president of the United Arab Emirates. He sits on all kinds of borden bodies including the Emirates Investment Authority on the Supreme Petroleum. Council it sounds some Laaksonen over an Bolom say these worries love me collected. He owns the Abu Dhabi united. Which in two thousand and eight bought Manchester City and his mouth sprawled into not just Manchester City but New York City Melbourne city stakes in and China in. Uruguay gives you a bit of an idea of this guy and I suppose the the influence that he he's not regional and now beyond

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Borden Dairy Files for Bankruptcy

Arizona's Morning News

00:19 sec | 4 years ago

Borden Dairy Files for Bankruptcy

"Center Borden's has become the second major U. S. dairy producer in as many months to file for bankruptcy protection dean foods did the same thing in November Borden's is citing the popularity of plant based milks over cal Jews for its financial struggles Borden's and dean's controlled thirteen percent of US sales for milk

Borden Producer Dean Foods Dean United States
Borden Dairy Files for Bankruptcy

First Light

00:10 sec | 4 years ago

Borden Dairy Files for Bankruptcy

"Borton has filed for bankruptcy is fewer people are drinking cow milk is the second major U. S. dairy company to do so in the past three months dean foods filed in

Borton Dean Foods
Borden Dairy Files for Bankruptcy

News, Traffic and Weather

00:17 sec | 4 years ago

Borden Dairy Files for Bankruptcy

"Borden is filing for bankruptcy protection the second major U. S. Derry to do so in as many months American refrigerators are increasingly stock with dairy substitutes like soy and almond milk hammering traditional milk producers like Morton which was founded in eighteen fifty seven the arts Anders komo

Borden U. S. Derry Morton Anders Komo
Dallas-Based Borden Dairy Co. Files For Bankruptcy Protection

America's Truckin' Network

00:36 sec | 4 years ago

Dallas-Based Borden Dairy Co. Files For Bankruptcy Protection

"News changing dietary habits cutting into the profits from some of the nation's oldest and largest dairy Borden has filed for bankruptcy protection it's the second major U. S. Derry to do so in as many months with more Americans opting for plant based milks over cal juice dean foods the nation's largest milk producer filed last November the two companies controlled about thirteen and a half percent of U. S. milk sales last year Borden's tried to revive business by bringing back its iconic mascot LC smiling cow which first appeared on milk cartons in the nineteen thirties it also released new products like gingerbread

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