8 Burst results for "Boutet"

Daily Pop
"boutet" Discussed on Daily Pop
"Month and her show inventing Anna is streaming now on Netflix. Talk about a pioneer that Laverne Cox. Yes. Honey, she is doing it. She is doing it. And doing it well. Courtney Cox has some regrets about trying to look younger. She says the filler she got in her face were a bad idea. And an interview with The Sunday Times, Courtney says you have no idea because it's gradual until you go, oh. This doesn't look right. I have one friend who was like, wow, no more. Courtney says, all her fillers are dissolved now. Would you tell your friend if they've gone too far? I think you have to. That's what a good friend is, right? They tell you what you don't necessarily want to hear. And I do think with Botox and fillers, there's two things that's scary about it. One is, once you start, you can't stop. Right. And then you no longer are comparing yourself to, you know, when you started, now you're comparing to the last injection that you got, and that's why I think people start to look a little crazy. Yes. So you do need someone to call you out. For sure. But this is what I tell people all the time. Okay. You picked that one person in your life that is not your friend, and when you see Jennifer and she's had too much done, you say to your friend, oh, if I ever get there, girl. No, you say Jennifer. Just say Jennifer. Oh, no, I got a friend Cynthia boutet honey. Let me tell you something, 'cause, you know, she's a regular worker. She's not in the industry. And I tell you, every time I do something, she's like, why are you doing that? That looks horrible. See, that's good. You need those people in your life. Yes. And there are some celebrities that do need to stop. Everyone needs a gay friend who's like not into it, but I will say. I love my Friends, but if something that they do is irreversible, there is no way you can say that to them. You have to just let it subside. All right. You just gotta be like, how do you not well? But luckily fillers and all of that does dissolve. So you can say, hey, maybe lay off. Next time. Yeah, next time. I thought she looks great with the fillers. I didn't think she had done too much. There are some celebrities that have gone their face stuff and it's too much. Like when you get the puffy right here and you put too much right here, just a little bit. But it's so funny because when you see Courtney Cox in person now, she looks much younger now. That she did with the fillers. It's like this crazy thing. I think fillers age you. And I think it's so apparent 'cause it's all just right in here and it just, I do. I think it makes a lot of older than you are. Your eyes get sunk in hand so people feel it right here. But the thing is, and I tell this to a lot of people. Just wear a tight ponytail. 'cause I got a little Botox every now and then I get a little. And I go with my girlfriends to get their fillers to make sure they don't go overboard. Oh, good. And when we go to this certain doctor, her name is nurse Jamie, I love her today. Everyone goes to her. Nurse Jamie never feels she's number. Where you need it. Like it's never like, she's like, if you have a problem here, she's like, well, I'm gonna put it here 'cause you're like, wait, wait, wait. What? And then you're like, oh, I don't like this right here. Should be like, all right, I'm a put it right here because then this will come here. It's crazy what she does. So if somebody ever just goes straight to the site that you want it, that's a red flag. Look at that. I go to Sam. I'm saying I'm a salsa. That's my guy. He don't feel nothing. He just go ahead, take the needle, pop it in my forehead, gone. Rambo's, it's time to go. You guys, we're out of time. We'll see you guys tomorrow. Yes..

Happy Mama Movement with Amy Taylor-Kabbaz
"boutet" Discussed on Happy Mama Movement with Amy Taylor-Kabbaz
"Of empowerment of using your voice speaking up all of these Not common there. How do you feel about your role and your vision. How do you feel about it when. Close your eyes and see it. I have to say when women come together. Wonderful things happen and having these conversations. He's not an easy thing but each is very important. And i feel is that i just need to continue with having these conversations i need to me speaking about i move. It's a huge huge. And it's not going to open up. Jack's like that following day footsteps following the breadcrumbs and be able now to grow and having that drives to grow. That is how i feel is very very important to be able to listen to remain going through to be able to connect you know like myself i used to do networking. So i really really love to network. We still so many people. And i'm really grateful for the support of memorizing the women who are who have been there so that imports. I'm seeing is having the conversations and just getting to trust the process as Oh what can we the memorizing community by this year and in the future years due to support this vision of yours. What do you need by practically and emotionally to be able to do this. That's a beautiful question in. He know the support. That gordon has been tremendous in watch. I would love or memorizing when we come together and support wehrley con event. Each can't be in small rate. Each can create a huge huge impact for us here in kenya. And i think that is or to memorizing easy about. When i close my eyes i edition all the women surrounding rounding me and when the memorizing keen real come together. It's going to injuries. Purport mama lever peaking boutet if someone is reeling to donate if someone is reeling to share about my story that is Each will begin in in more women are going to come together own going to be standing beside each other and we are going to all take custody tab for it so that is the watch. I would love fault memorizing. Keep every single one of us cry. We were all in tears. Because i'm speaking for everyone. That's okay i'm standing with you on the other. The other side of the world we standing with you. We want this vision to rican. Feel that this is the way we can create great impact great impact in so many different women's lives. It's just mama gladys everyone just comes in and they can get baby clothes and they can get period products and they can talk about the birth or they can get what they need from this place. That really is what the stop putin into your or your beautiful. you know. my story has been really really something. When i look at back because might transition happened last year and i really really hard to do the enola. I had to do that. And i believe that when we come together we can also inspired me to do the same for themselves. It's not easy. I know everyone here can relate about the fast time you know. They were hearing about my trust in. I think it. It's just this huge amount of energy that consumes the end. You're like why haven't i've known about this has been so that is my vision to be able to inspire women look inside them to new superpower so yes we are going to together and we are going to rise. We are an pain. I wholeheartedly agree in the comments. I think memorizing needs to make gladys our official international spokeswoman and send her around the world. Yes that you passport ready lettuce you're gonna stand on stages around the world. Can i also just add what you were just saying. And i know if. I may speak about myself here for creating this training has been moments of being king and jane. You and i've had very in depth conversations about this. He's this white western problem like as much crescent something that resonates with us because of the way alcohol. Cia folks about motherhood and womanhood or does it actually have the potential to connect with women no matter where they are and what they're going through way. Dr acid talks about and teaches. It is yes it does just as adolescence affects every person on the planet no matter where you are and how you grew up so too does metropolis. If you became a mother. Bought gonna try and cry too much here to have connected with you gladys and to have seen and heard for jane that actually. Yeah it does it makes just as much different and you get the same response hauled. Didn't i know about this. I thought it was just me whether you're in kenya all.

My Seven Chakras
"boutet" Discussed on My Seven Chakras
"And from there, it cascades into better immune function, all kinds of things that just come from this pace, which is called the hearts resonant frequency. So anyway, maybe that's enough about breath rates. You know, like what I'm breath holding is another important one. There's holding in and there's holding out and there's a boutet test. How long can you hold your breath out? And they say that if you can't comfortably hold your breath out for 30 seconds that is an indication of something I figure what they say. But yeah, so holding in, holding out, slowing it down. Okay, here's an interesting one that I'm just finding out about. I met a, I wish I had his book here, doctor. I'm madam recently. He's a long story short. He's doing this really interesting research on saliva. Have you ever noticed that when you do best practice or mantra practice get all this saliva in your mouth? I have to swallow. And what he's finding is that there are some interesting significant chemical changes in the saliva. That's about all, you know, I can't articulate much more about it, but that's another measurement that sort of cutting edge and there's yeah, I think maybe that's enough. That's definitely very, very fascinating. It is interesting how we are able to use such different measurements and systems and devices to measure things like our breath volume or maybe the rate at which we are breathing. And like you pointed out in general, the slower we breathe, the better it is for our health outcomes compared to breathing faster. There was one story I heard where the ancient yogis, the Rishi is from thousands of years back used to a lot of times, look at nature and observe the different animals and what they noticed was a correlation or maybe a causation between breadth times and how long an animal could live in the notice that maybe rodents and rabbits were most of the time breathing really quickly. And so they live shorter whereas if you see an elephant and maybe a tortoise really slow you don't even notice that they have breathing. And they do tend to live longer. Maybe not all of it is translatable, transferable to humans, but in general, like you pointed out, what we're noticing is, if we breathe slowly, 6 seconds per 6 times per minute is 6 seconds in 6 seconds out two seconds. If I breast format. So yeah, yeah. And I also tried to maintain that or to even decrease that even more. It takes some practice. Yeah, and you know, in modern terms, I think what they were talking about was the faster you breathe, it's usually because your sympathetic nervous system is increasing and tone. You know, it seems obvious to me that the reason that globally breathing rates are increasing is because of chronic stress, chronic sympathetic, nervous system dominance. That uncertainty worry anxiety stress. Those are all labels for different flavors of sympathetic overstimulation. And by slowing your breathing down, breathing more calmly and rhythmically and that pimps down the sympathetic of our stimulation, stimulates your parasympathetic because, you know, there's somebody lifestyle diseases that are attributed caused by chronic overstimulation of the sympathetic nervous system. And even back, I don't know if you're familiar with swara, swara yoga, Suarez from Orlando is sound, right? I'm not worried about surah yoga in particularly. Suarez yoga is this branch. It has a lot to do with which nostril. Alternate nostril, you know, eat a pingala, the nostril dominance changes during the day. And in sora yoga, it says that if you're right nostril is dominant too much of the time and right nostril is associated with sympathetic parasympathetic. Even back, I don't know how many thousands of years ago that was. But even then they were saying if you're right nostril is dominant, a certain amount of time. Basically, you don't have long to live, or I'm overstating it. But that you're going to get sick. Something's bad is going to happen. You're going to that it's not good for your health. And of course, I'm sort of making this up. But I think that that was their intuitive understanding of that.

The Paul Finebaum Show
"boutet" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"Thank you. Roman Harper. And we are thank you Roman. We are heading to the break. We're live in Athens on a gorgeous summer day, fall comes tomorrow morning. It's going to be colder here, but right now, it is beautiful. Homecoming weekend. At UGA. You are listening to the Paul finebaum show podcast. And we welcome you back. It's great to see all of you. We are live in Athens just about not just about exactly 24 hours away from when the dogs take on the catch here tomorrow. Molly McGrath down in Baton Rouge, another huge game tomorrow. Molly always good to see you. Look quiet there will not be tomorrow when this game begins. How are you and what's going on down there? Hi Paul, good to see you. I was wondering if you've booped noses with ugga yet and your time in Georgia. I'm about to go see Mike the Tiger after this, always a big fan of a live mascot. But things are going well. I actually just stepped out of my meetings with at augeron and he was surprisingly very upbeat, very positive. He said, this is the best week of practice, his team has had all season. So they're looking forward to this game tomorrow and nothing can get a team up more than a rivalry game. He talked about the fact that these two teams absolutely hate each other and his team is really excited for this one. So it seems like they're staying positive here in Baton Rouge. Molly, I know you're down there to cover what happens once the kick-off happens. But everyone knows players are, I don't know how to characterize some are injured, some are just simply not playing. And then the fewer around coach, are you picking up anything just in talking to him, body language? I know he's pretty emphatic that he's the coach. Yeah, you know what's interesting, Paul, I've never actually sat down in a production meeting with at augeron, and I asked everyone around me afterwards. I said, is he normally like that? Because his energy was up here. He was so high energy and so positive and everyone said, yeah, he's just like that. So we saw a normal coach O. He was very, you know, measured and I think careful with answering questions about his job security, but he was mostly positive, and I spoke with his players this week. And I spoke with a guy like Damon Clark, who has been calling different team meetings and has been calling the team together. And they want to fight for their coach and they want to fight for each other and at osha on even brought his team together on Monday and talk to them about all of the things swirling around this program and how to kind of block out all of the outside noise. So he's approaching it with his team and talking them about it, but they're staying positive. And he's seeing a lot of fight in this team and players are telling me they want to fight for coach and this coaching staff. Aside from his situation, the number of significant players starting with stingley a couple of weeks ago, this week, we saw ricks and boutet. It's really I mean, it's hard to characterize the importance collectively of these players. Yeah, it's crazy to see how many injuries that they've sustained. Guys have dropped like flies. You look at guys like stingley and Eli rix to all American corners are not going to be playing most likely for the rest of this season. And that's one of the things that the team met about on Monday and players met and talked to each other and said, let's make sure we're not jumping ship, okay? Those who are here are going to keep fighting and going to keep playing and they look at this game against Florida last year as kind of a turning point for this program and they were able to go on and finish the season above 500 and they're looking at this game as another opportunity to turn their season around. And also you look at guys like boutet. I mean, it's hard to replace a player like him, but they have a lot of young guys who are up for the opportunity and we'll see how they respond tomorrow, but there's no question this team has been absolutely decimated by injuries, but players are meeting and making sure that they're not jumping ship and that they're still locked in and bought into what they're doing. They solve a lot of games left to play a ball. Before you before you get what are your plans? I've never asked this of you before. What are your plans with Mike the Tiger? With Mike the Tiger, I just want to go see what he's up to. I've never met Mike the Tiger before. I love a live mascot. My producer was joking with me that I could go into the cage because he's a domesticated animal. I don't think I'm gonna do that. But I think it'll be interesting to see him and maybe draw some parallels to this LSU team, you know, caged animals, a team with their back against the wall. What kind of fight are we going to see out of them tomorrow? And if you think Tiger versus gator Paul, who's going to win in a match between those two animals, it's hard to tell, but that's the good thing about this matchup is that you never truly know what's going to happen. You saw what happened in this game last year with the shoe and LSU winning and defying the odds. I think the lower ranked team has won four out of the 5 four to the last 5 matchups. So you truly never know what's going to happen in this game. Molly always great to see you. Thanks so much. Molly McGrath live at Tiger stadium and we really appreciate that. Let's grab a call or two here before we head to the break and the more guest to come Jay is up next. Hey, Jay go right ahead. Hey, Jay. Paul, they treat me all right over and hasn't. I haven't seen much other than the fans and the fans are fantastic. Well, good. In here, I called three, four weeks ago and I discussed for you a little bit about the balance between the conference. And other than Georgia and South Carolina George the top South Carolina built at the bottom do you think it says about as balanced as it's been in a while now? Yeah, because you think about it this way, we thought Missouri would be a contender and they're not, but Tennessee is playing significantly better. So I think you have a tradeoff there. Kentucky has exceeded everyone's expectations. At this point, I think the Easter with the exception of two teams is very competitive in the west. Yeah, I mean, I don't want to, right now, LSU would probably be probably is the worst team in the west and whoever it's all we would say that. Let me long-term Alabama fan, but I won't express something to my fellow Alabama fans..

GSMC Social Media News Podcast
"boutet" Discussed on GSMC Social Media News Podcast
"It's red carpet. Fashions are widely photographed reviewed critiques in emulated. Which as we see on social media. The museum is close to the general public on the first monday of may due to the gala occurring. So okay each year. The event has a theme and includes a cocktail hour and a formal dinner during the cocktail hour. Guests arrived to walk on the red carpet tour the year special themed exhibition and be seated before the dinner party that includes entertainment from the preeminent entertainers of the day the theme not only substituted for the annual exhibit but also for the guests who attempt to dress to uphold the theme of the year oftentimes causing runs on certain fashion themes among the world's leading fashion retailers. Sometimes such as in twenty thirteen the theme given is considered unclear or difficult to follow because it does not provide a clear stylistic directive while other times such as twenty fourteen the may the theme may be far more challenging for one gender so there's literally so many teams to name. I'm gonna kinda just like skin this. Listen pick out ones. That i think are cool. Man and the horse was nineteen. Eighty-four theme the theme of my breath year. Nineteen ninety nine. rock style The sponsor for that year was to me hill tommy. He'll figure timmy. Hove tommy hilfiger Let's see in the co-chair of outlined will was anna winter. Tommy hilfiger in aaron louder K ooh in twenty fifteen. It was china through the looking glass. Oh for this year. It was about time fashion and duration. Sorry that was a long pause. I took i discussed the themes are so interesting. Like what two thousand one it was. Jacqueline kennedy the white house years. And i can see how that would be hard for. You know more people dress more masculine. I can see how it would be a difficult one to Follow i have to feel like there is one for princess diana. I could be so wrong though. I'm not a yeah. I probably am wrong. I feel like. I just saw her name somewhere. Okay anyway we can see the. The mecca is for the high society famous rich celebrities however this year all of the lux that the celebrities wore were kind of iconic. So we're just gonna go ahead and talk about some of these so starting with mickey palmer. Her high neck dress was covered in sparkles in her harris. Kind of like teased out. It's as palmer. Who co hosting the vote. Livestream for the event Moved wore a grey sheath dress designed by sergio hudson. The sparkley gown had long sleeves in a daring keyhole back in. It's like kind of like a brownish gold. Kind it's pretty. I really like emma chamberlain. Who is a youtube star. Which is funny. Because youtube star is can afford to be at the macau ama- chamberlain's asymmetrical dress was covered endearing. Cutouts in it really was chambliss. Metallic designed by louis vuitton dipped into a v neck line before flowing back out into a triangle stomach cap. The miniskirt flowed into a side. Train on the right side in the back of the dress dipped low chamberlain. Who is a co chair of the twenty twenty one gala pair to luck with gold shoes and jewellery. That is alana. Glazer embraced multiple prints with her met. Gala luck the boutet bodice and skirt ugly of the glazers nude floor. Length dress were covered in abstract shapes. That created an army pattern effect. That sentence was literally such a mouthful for dramatic feathered long sleeves. A keyhole completed dress. In a winter's oscar de la renta drafts was covered. Head to toe flowers the gown had a high neckline in its form fitting bodice flowed into a tiered trumpet. Trumpet skirt mea. Dennis where a blue stella mccartney jumpsuit with sheer cutouts in. It looks like an active gear. It's as dennis completed the look with coordinating shoes. She kicked off the night of performing gymnastics routine on the red carpet in. That is a heck of a way to make an entrance congresswoman. Carolyn b maloney war address with equal. I'm sorry made for made of equal rights for women at penance period. The multicolored josh was covered with a cape made of individual pennants that side equal rights for women on it. Maloney carry a purse that said e. r. a. Yes voicing support for the ratification of the equal rights amendment timothy shamanee accented his all white suit with a black collar worn in converse the hater ackerman sue had cropped jacket and loose pants and a white turtleneck and socks accented look chevrolet or chaumet who also visited the twenty twenty one matt gala taibbi look together with his converse high tops. Amana gorman looked a striking and a bright blue dress. The strapless veira wayne dress had a high low skirt and was embellished with Light sparkles she prep address with blue. She's in carried. A book on the red carpet in the book is also the same shade of louis redrafts. Dan lefties custom j. W. anderson ensemble had multiple messages on it the custom off. It looked like it had a globe on the bodice. At first glance with the map forms the shape of two men kissing over size sleeves pants embroidered with a map and black boots covered in golden bella schmitz and flowers completed the look levy repaired the outfit with cartier jewelry nicole pelts channeled marilyn monroe a pink dress while brooklyn beckham. Were simple.

POLITICO Playbook Audio Briefing
"boutet" Discussed on POLITICO Playbook Audio Briefing
"Presented by amazon. Good morning playbook airs. It's friday august thirteenth. I'm riggleman of all in. And this is your politico. Playbook daily briefing yesterday brought the long delayed release of the census bureau's redistricting data. It's mostly granular. Demographic numbers used to redraw political boundaries for the next decade and while it'll take some more number crunching before data's ready for primetime our very own campaigns reporter expert in redistricting zach malta. Loro writes in with some big takeaways takeaway number one. The country's diverse americans who identify only white are still the largest racial group in america but the percentage dipped below sixty percent of the country's population. There was a significant increase in the number of americans who identified as multiracial. Little over thirty three million americans. That's up from nine million back in twenty ten. At least some of that change is being attributed to how the census bureau asked questions on race this time around takeaway number two. America's more urban metro areas grew by nine percent over the last decade human is more than half of county saw their populations shrink. New york city remains the country's largest city. Even though everybody who left new york was legally obligated to write a think piece of boutet take number three. We're getting older. The country bouvard lost decade but at a slower rate than in decades past. And we're getting older. As a result almost seventy eight percent of the country is at least eighteen years old. There's ten percent more adults this decade than the last decade. And there's a one point. Four percent decrease in the number of children. Read into this what you will. The fastest growing metro area over the last decade was villages and florida. We have sack whether the initial numbers showing a more diverse and city centre population was good news for democrats but he passed along. This note of caution. I would say it is probably too early to speculate. Even if generally democratic demographic groups are growing and generally democratic areas of the country are growing republicans still control the redistricting process in key states. Politicos burgess ever checks in with the handful of republican senators. Who have yet to whether they'll run for re election next year. Delay dumb won't be helpful to the gop of any of them actually do call it quits topping. The list is wisconsin's ron johnson. Burgess writes johnson's decision. In critical swing state won by president. Joe biden is one of several inflection points that could reshape the battle of the senate majority in twenty twenty two in total five. Senators haven't made up their minds yet on whether to retire for republicans and just one democrat. Patrick layhee of vermont. The gop is already defending senate. Seats opened up by retirements too in the battleground states of pennsylvania north carolina and three juby stronghold ohio alabama missouri. Senator mcbride had this to say. I would guess that three out of the four republicans would end up running including johnson did add that chuck grassley from iowa special case considering his age of eighty seven years put. I know what i'd be doing. It'd be back on the farm. Picking weeds elise doing something. I would not be here. Although republicans are increasingly favored to win the house next year. Further retirements would undoubtedly complicate their path. Back to power in the senate. Here's what's up in washington today. It's indeed a summer. Friday in dc. Ten am president. Joe biden will receive the president's daily brief at one. Pm biden will depart wilmington delaware to head to camp david for the weekend. The senate and the house are out today. One last thing before we get out of here nobody on capitol hill. Got much sleep this week. The senate passed its infrastructure. Bill stayed up all night in a vote a rama and provided for shadowing for the set of fights yet to come as our own rheinlander. Put it this week. Threat of a government. Shutdown possibility of america defaulting on. Its loans to stop that blackberry. Fire off mayoral re tweet. Put on some ellum. Fao one of them went to my high school by the way it feeling very twenty eleven. Right in politico's jennifer schulte's breakdown. What's ahead for congress. Listen subscribe to goes deep dive for more on those stories and what's bringing in. Dc right now subscribe to the playbook newsletter that's at politico dot com slash. Playbook are music is composed by brake master. Cylinder editor is mike sampler. Ginny has politico senior producer audio. The executive producer and head of audio does irene makuuchi. I'm rugged one of all and have a lovely summer friday. We'll see first thing monday morning. The federal minimum wage has been stuck at seven twenty five an hour since two thousand nine in the same time. Food and beverage. Costs have increased. Eighteen percent transportation costs up sixteen percent. Housing costs up. Twenty three percent and medical costs up thirty. Two percent in two thousand eighteen amazon introduced a starting wage of at least fifteen dollars an hour for all. us employees. A new independent study found that amazon's wage increase produced a two point six percent increase in the average hourly wage among other employers in the same market. Learn more at about amazon.

No Stupid Questions
"boutet" Discussed on No Stupid Questions
"Super of persuasion. It's interesting because he says that he wrote the book influence so that we all of us civilians could be hip to the tricks that professional persuaders use but he will freely admit that his book became a sort of bible for professional persuaders including sales people. Marketing people political persuaders. And so on. So i do think that the popularity of that book and the aftermath of it illustrates the real issue here which is any tool whether it's a superpower or a computer program or a knife or fire any tool can be used for good or ill and you have to think about how it will be used and how much freedom you want to give people to use it. I like what you are saying. I also by the way love the new version of influence the original version of influences. Why became a psychologist in the first place outta here true story. When i was in high school. I took a summer school class on psychology. And i remember this one study slash story about a jewelry store mistakenly increasing their prices right. They'd had all this jewelry that wasn't selling in the instinct was put it on sale right and instead through miscommunication the sign in the window actually raise the prices by a lot and then everybody couldn't wait to get this joy because it must be great. It's so expensive. And i remember hearing that when i was sixteen. Seventeen years old and saying this is the coolest thing ever now. It took me another sixteen years to figure out that that means i should go a phd. But i never forgot that and it to meet distilled the magic of the science. So if you hadn't read that story in that book what would have been instead. Do you think you would have just pursued the superhero life. Become wonder woman something like that. I would try to become invisible. Know but i will say this. I wouldn't want the superpower to persuade anybody of anything. But i might enjoy the superpower of teaching anybody. Anything you're right. That could be used for good or for ill but that to me feels like most use cases are for good and not for bad so that is a very good answer and a very pro social answer and it doesn't surprise me coming from you because you're good and pro social person. Let me ask you one last question about it though. Would you say that. The gap between education generally at the moment an optimal education in other words. Superpower education is larger than or smaller than the gap between persuasive ability on average and optimal persuasive ability. Persuasion superpower. I would say stephen that by far There is a much larger gap like grand canyon sized for education so the headline here is penn. Professor says educators are terrible. Is that the from this. Penn professor says that we should try to be super about education. Okay i'm going to say that you do not quite yet. The power of headline writing. But you're well on your way. No stupid questions is part of the freakonomics radio network which also includes freakonomics radio. People i mostly admire and the freakonomics radio book club. This episode was produced by me. Rebecca douglas. and now. here's a fact check. Today's conversations. Stephen says that blood pressure readings in a doctor's office tend to be much higher than elsewhere among patients who exhibit high blood pressure at a doctor's office fifteen to thirty percent of them may have what's called white coat hypertension or high blood pressure that occurs during an appointment with a physician but not in other settings put the reverse effect is also true masked hypertension occurs when patients display normal blood pressure at their doctor's office but a higher range in other settings according to the national center of biotechnology information the prevalence of masked hypertension lies between eight percent and twenty percent of untreated adults and up to sixty one percent of treated adults later angeles says that behavior changed for good has not yet begun its philadelphia initiative since the recording of this episode. The project has launched a total of thirty six vaccinated. Philadelphians will win. Cash prizes up to fifty thousand dollars totaling nearly four hundred thousand dollars in giveaways also angela wonders if any popular superheroes have the power to heal in fact quite a few marvel characters have healing powers. Wolverine was able to resurrect himself after being torn in half by the hulk. A superhero. who also self. He'll thanks to his mutated cells and dead fool can cure his own cancer although not well enough to keep from being disfigured by it there are fewer superheroes however that can heal others but marvel characters elixir and archangel have disability outside of the marvel universe. The anime superhero sailor moon has the ability to completely hill characters who have been hurt by her enemies power. Finally angela has a few questions about the ring of guy. Cheese and stephen can't remember the full story although he comes pretty close in plato's republic and unnamed ancestor of guy geez not guijiang himself is a shepherd in the service of the king of lydia. An earthquake creates an opening in the ground where he finds a bronze horse and a corpse wearing a gold ring. He takes the ring and discovers that it makes him invisible. This specific story doesn't clarify. How or why. The ability helps them to seduce the queen but seduced her. He does and then as stephen recalls he kills the king and takes over the kingdom so not great pr for invisibility and a pretty solid argument in favor of stevens. Invisibility is evil theory as h. g. Wells the invisible man and of course. Jr lord of the rings however marbles. Invisible woman seems to work against the spirit as a co founding member of the fantastic four. The invisible woman dedicates her powers to super heroics and scientific exploration but to be fair she can also fly. That's it for the fact check. No stupid questions is produced by freakonomics. Radio and center are south includes alison craig low. Greg rippin james foster joel meyer tricia boba zach. Lipinski mary to do brent caps morgan levy emma terrell lyric boutet jasmine clinger and jacob clemente. Our theme song is and she was by talking heads special. Thanks to david byrne and warner chappell music. If you'd like to listen to the show ad free subscribe to stitcher premium. You can also follow us on twitter at msu underscore show and on facebook at ns q. Show if you have a question for a future episode please email it to ns. Freakonomics dot com. And if you heard steven or angela. References study an expert. Or that you'd like to learn more about you can check out freakonomics dot com slash ns q. Where we linked to all of the major references that.

Run It Again
"boutet" Discussed on Run It Again
"Panic setting in i could see panic setting in early and i think it was typified when whenever the chiefs would make a big play. Tyron matthew made an interception guy tip ball interception huge play thought because that's what can see named the ball and now they need a big play and then it was taken away because of a penalty a hold in the secondary and then and then of course matthew now he starts unraveling later on. I knew then it was probably down on the sideline in those situations. It just didn't like even first. Half the sideline always liked to watch by language in wants. People on the sideline were some was up. Something was now. I have a question for you. Yeah i thought. I read or heard that because tampa was down there in their home situation that they allowed kansas city to come down a couple of days before the super bowl. So miss out on all of that superbowl stuff because it cohen that makes sense anyway but yeah i think that's what they did. I think he traveled like way game so they spent their time up there in kansas city. He hadn't for this game they went down. Played it so it was more. It was less advanced. Speak for tampa by a huge advance. For example you have in your own bedroom practice facility. It's just a home game. You're right now. You're right and i thought about that too in now you know you. Typically you've got so much going on in the fanfare and all that it can be distracting environment. So sometimes it's good to keep your team away from all that but in this case that that didn't that's not what's happening this is covert. There's you don't have that going on now. So i don't know Run game. I gotta give some props out to leonard fournette. Here's a guy. Mike that i i don't know a couple years ago. His his career was all done. Seemed like he just. He couldn't settle in. He was kind of a good news. Bad news guy You know had some upside. We know that because of his time in the league but for some reason he just couldn't find a home in be settled. And i'll tell you down the stretch here these last two games when it counts the most. This man has come up. Big not a lot of yards last week against two weeks ago against the packers and the championship game. But in in this game this guy had eighty nine yards. Eighty nine yards rushing and they were key yards in touchdown. He just turned out big. I think he's still young player. I think you what is he. Twenty six or like that. So yeah something that. Yeah he There's a little bit of maturity thing there and i think When he got their personality. I know this may sound corny but the personality is so strong with a gallic. Tom brady and expectations that his preparation. And how approaches practices verbal boutet. It can't help but run off and just rub off on everybody in the focus i think is different from and it's like he's been drifting than all of a sudden he gets to spot were. Oh okay that's how you play this game. That's how you compare in. I think probably you know. The relationship there with the coaching staff was probably better for him than where he's been. Yeah no that's right. Yeah in a couple of guys were antonio brown. You know we were there. Were people that were claiming antonio brown was clinically insane. Coming into the season now. He's got a super bowl ring but isn't that the way life is in the nfl. One minute one minute. We're we're trying to figure out why. Tom brady call a time that he didn't have as times winding down in chicago right. One minute. bruce arians is calling out tom. Brady one minute we're talking about..