35 Burst results for "Bradshaw"

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Guest Host Kevin McCullough on the New Way the Left Operates
"Had kind of this rolling conversation about this general idea of the new way that the left is operating. When I was a kid, 150 years ago, crawling around, I remember that my family, my father, grandfather on my mother's side, grandfather and grandmother on my dad's side too, all were registered Democrats. Grew up in North Texas, and Democrats at one point in my childhood had not taken a stand on the abortion issue yet. Roe v. Wade hadn't been decided yet. But as it did, and as the kind of fissure started in the country, I noticed that in my family it started happening. And it took my grandparents the longest to convert from being a Democrat to a Republican. I remember when I was, I don't know, nine or ten, my parents took me to volunteer at a local candidate's office. I helped stuff envelopes and stuff like that for someone who was running for our, I think our House Assembly seat. His last name was Bradshaw. I don't remember the first name, but I remember that. And I just remember that campaigns were always something that was a little bit of an excitement around our house. My dad would perk up a little bit when it was election cycle, and he would talk more about what was going on. And as we delved into the issues of our time then, I remember a voice coming on the radio by the name of Rush Limbaugh. And he had said at that time, for the longest amount of time, that Democrats could never tell you openly what they would actually hope to get passed and actually vote for. Because if they did, they'd never get elected anywhere. Think about it. I want to raise your taxes. Oh, okay, sure, I'll vote for you. I want to make our national defense weaker. Oh, okay, great. Why don't you open the border and let everybody in at the same time? I mean, this is the kind of stuff that if they went out and actually spoke about it honestly on the campaign trail, Americans would reject

The BosBabes
"bradshaw" Discussed on The BosBabes
"She has nice long, pretty, I don't know if it's black hair or dark brown here and she has a really pretty matching flower on the side of her head, which I love because I'm all about the chill, beachy vibe. So Shelley, we are going to before we even talk about the fact that you grew up in the California area. Let's just break the ice for the boss waves fanatics. One of your superpowers, if you could have a superpower, you said you wish you could freeze and unfreeze time. So let's discuss that. Okay, so I'm an old fart. As Carrie Bradshaw says, a hot old fart, but I'm an old fart. So back in my day, there was this show called out of this world. And it was like one of those saved by the bell esque kind of shows. And the main character she was half alien half human. And she could freeze and unfreeze time all the time. And I was just so mesmerized by that because not to bring the party down, but my whole life, I have this whole phobia about death. So for me, when I would watch that show and I saw that her powers were that, I thought it was so cool because you could control time and before someone dies before you. It's this whole thing. So that kind of just stuck with me after I saw that show back in the 80s because I was like, man, and then I kind of took it to the next level, and I'd be like, wow. If I really had this power, I would freeze time right now. And I would just imagine all the stuff I would do. I was like, one of my past time. Kind of in a way I've had this superpower. And you know, I thought it was really cool when you asked that question. I was like, man, I know what the answer is. That's freeze and unfreeze time. Super cool. Are you able to sort of talk a little bit about why you are afraid of dying? I know normally we don't talk about these types of topics, but I think it's so interesting. Did you have something happen in the past or you have bad dreams about it? Do you know where that fear might syndrome? Yeah, well, a big portion of my family and my mom's side. There was just a lot of toxic environments. There and a lot of it had to do with a game. I think my relationship with death at such a young age was these like gnarly things that happened that just shouldn't happen and it really messed me up. And I grew up in a Christian church and it was I grew up pretty in this strict household as well. So fear was really pushed upon me..

Daily Pop
"bradshaw" Discussed on Daily Pop
"I was fine, I could handle myself. Would you do it again? I don't know. I don't know. I mean, there's a season two with other housewives. I know a lot of people like this season one cast. It was exhausting. I can't explain. I bet. It looks like we're on just a vacation. Oh, no. I would say, is there a 20 minute I could take just to gather my thoughts so I can continue to like, there was like no downtime. You guys, Kyle's new movie, the house size of the North Pole is streaming on peacock, and now make sure you check that out. And if you don't have peacock yet, what are you doing? Just scan the QR code to sign up. It is so easy. Cynthia, you are a woman of many trades. You are in the movie as well, you make a cameo. It's so funny. Every time I come here, I'm actually in something that we're talking about. It's so funny. I actually read for the lead opposite Kyle. And they went with this other more experience. Talented actress. Okay. Does an amazing job? I'm sure. Yes. But it was so funny because for the rehearsal, we actually did for the audition. I did the same breath through the drink and my husband's face. He did the read with me. But yes, so but then I didn't get that, but they called me back and I ended up doing a housewife cameo. They do use some of The Real Housewives from different franchises to be a part of the movie. So I love that. I still was in the movie. You were in the movie. It was a family affair still. I love that. You guys, up next, if you want to dress like Harry Bradshaw, we have got you covered. Our expert is showing us how to get the sexy looks for way less. Harry party of three? The future is unwritten, because we're all at different stages of life tonight. Bring your a game. And just like that. After all the years. And all the changes. You are still you. Hello, lovers. Our girls Carrie Miranda and Charlotte are back and so is all the fabulous fashion of course. Maybe you can't afford their wardrobe but fashion expert malicious chateau is here to help us find the looks for less as always hello. Hello. Take.

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Vaccine Tribalism Is Poisoning America
"Hi, regarding Terry Bradshaw. It's tribalism, that's all it is. My tribe is great. Your tribe is terrible. I have to win. You have to be defeated and vilified. That's where the Democrats have brought us. I really think that last caller is on to something. That makes a lot of sense, doesn't it? It's tribalism. My side is right, your side is wrong. Your side believes in Therapeutics and preventative measures and your side might not think the vaccine is all that great an idea. My side disagrees so you must be canceled. Isn't it funny? How our side doesn't cancel them? We're not marching around demanding the scalps of people who want to wear four masks and get 19 shots. Get whatever you want to get. Put one in your butt. I've gotten the shot. Am I supposed to get canceled because I got vaccinated? Maybe I don't hear anybody telling me that. Oh, but Aaron Rodgers has to be canceled because he must not believe in the vaccine. This is such a mystery to me, but I think that last caller is right. It comes down to the simple concept of

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Terry Bradshaw Rips Aaron Rodgers, Accuses Him of Taking 'Cattle Dewormer'
"I feel sometimes we're living in just complete, crazy ville. I turned on the flipped on TV last night and watched clips of Terry Bradshaw. The NFL and analyst over on Fox lie about Aaron Rodgers taking Ivermectin. It's unreal. Poor guy can't even pronounce Ivermectin. Doctor Terry Bradshaw decrees that Ivermectin or Ivermectin, as he calls it. Is a cattle dewormer. Now it's not even a horse new warmer. It's a cattle do warmer. Before you know it, it's going to be a dumber for like for like bugs. It'll be a bug dewormer. Honest to goodness. There are things that to my dying day. I'll never understand. Aaron Rodgers goes from hero to goat. Oh, he didn't tell the truth about his immunization status. Who died and made you the keeper of Aaron Rodgers?

Scoops with Danny Mac
"bradshaw" Discussed on Scoops with Danny Mac
"The cowboys I mean obviously you're gonna to cover the cowboys in this market. But i think in my case he thought he probably would buy him a little coverage away. Because every time i would say something negative about the cowboys in the but on the rare occasions that i did he would call me like eight hundred dollars bad. You worked for the cowboys. No i know the no. I don't but that's how it started when when verne went to the network fulltime techs ran call and i think without question the only reason he called me because i was the tv guy in town and you know so. He auditioned be actually that first year. Burg left we all had like four five different people do it a couple of gates and it clicked i mean bradshaw eboni click and so they gave the job full time. The jones gave him along. Yeah i i. It's been an interesting ride with jerry jones. I think there was a day when when we might have been considered friends of that days. Long gone but but josie unique individuals. And i really respect this. No matter how hard you hit here no matter how much you say about him but the negative way you'll come back for more eight. You know he pops right back up. He added loves being on camera. Love being senator debts. But you know. I i don't know about you but i've had a lot of people over the years not you you know. You're you're too critical. You're smart aleck. I no. I'm not talking to you. And i'm like well that's kinda your job. I'm doing my job. You need to do yours and jones always comes back for more and i love that but i think this might summit up perfectly foyer They had big media party cowboys training camp this year. I made my last trip out there and there were a beautiful.

AP News Radio
Massive Wildfires in US West Bring Haze to East Coast
"Numerous wildfires are burning in California forcing thousands of residents to evacuate and leaving others homeless god regret much we couldn't get out Tony Galvez and his daughter fled the Tamarac fire at the last minute and found out later their home burned down lost my whole life everything I've ever had except his family kids I got three teenagers John Bradshaw also evacuated his home I'm trying to find out you know the place standing or not meanwhile firefighters continue battling the blaze burning about forty thousand acres you spend a lifetime building places there have been a like a family home and and stuff like that and it's just it's heart wrenching I'm Julie Walker

The Thriving Dentist Show
"bradshaw" Discussed on The Thriving Dentist Show
"Immediately in your practice. We do run. These masterclasses a workshop. And they do sell out We're repeating this one. We did this one about six months ago and due to some many requests. We've decided to repeat it. So we'll be doing. It's it's new and improved. We always Improve these masterclasses but we've decided to do Do it again. Based on the number of requests that we've had for this one come join us on june seventeenth the second announcement that i have Has to do with are thriving. Dentis clinical tip. We have a returning guest Dr chris marchack chris prostate honest from pasadena. California in fact a highly regarded prostate. Most of you will know him. And he's going to talk about how to master Providing a provisional crown fabricating provisional crown lots of information that you can use some nice subtle tips That maybe we'll help you improve that process in your practice so now without any further ado. Here's dr chris. Marchack with the thriving. Dennis clinical tip. Hi gary this. Is chris check. I'm a process and pasadena california. And i am the host of clinical chats and the i love dentistry facebook group. It is a true pressure for me to share another clinical tip with all of your listeners. And i'm so excited that these clinical tips help your listeners worldwide. I'd like to share a tip with all of your listeners. Today that was shared with me. My really dear dear friend As we recall my brother from another mother he's also process it on us and the four fifty sutter building in san francisco Which you know as one of the Buildings that houses the largest number of dentists. All in one building is name as doctor. Tom jau thomas always mentored me with efficiency. My practice How i plan my time with the patient during the procedure. It's funny it's really interesting. He has figured out how long it takes to do every step and it crown preparation procedure from the time. It takes to give an injection the time it takes to talk with the patient to consult with them and make them comfortable to preparing the tooth..

The Thriving Dentist Show
"bradshaw" Discussed on The Thriving Dentist Show
"This is the thriving dentist show with gary tax where we help you develop your ideal dental practice. One that provides personal professional financial satisfaction..

The Sue Plex Podcast
"bradshaw" Discussed on The Sue Plex Podcast
"I just i just desperately wanna give that to live show. I mean i. I think that we're obviously we're going to be a rebuilding phase because And not just. Because of the pandemic of the pandemic is obliterated results of things i do think pre pandemic the scene inevitably was changing because next had launched an a. w. and and wwe suddenly thank you more of an interest in in the uk saying than ever before because of this recent success inside the structure of the scene was changing anyway again. I don't agree with people who are incredibly pessimistic and say l. The independent scene was dying as a result of that anything that's true but it was changing and now the pandemic will accelerate the the demise of some independent promotions would probably during out business. Anyway speaking out movement will have changed things Hopefully for the better in ways in the parliamentary stuff that happened in the last couple weeks was really important as well. So it's gonna look very different. And i think any of us know what is going to look like just yet but in that absence of knowledge kind of opportunity right because well those of us who work in it can try and rebuild it. That's a doctor. That's the challenge. Now i think is exciting. Challenge is the in the year ahead. Years ahead. The we rebuild and make an independent kuwait Echinacea in in some sense. I feel like the guardians of the of the same right as i wanna pass it on to comes next twenty thirty years later in a way that keeps alive. Keeps it really healthy. So it's all it's time to build something. The our industry can be proud of I'm talking when it's our. I'm talking about lots of us. Everyone from wrestlers to accommodate is the referees promoters. Those who are still here and still working in this industry have a challenge ahead but we also have an opportunity so awesome. that's some i can A company. I completely agree you that let's It's going to be all right well. I hope it's going to be great. And he's going to be something that we can pass onto the next generation entre present We'll we'll sake we'll see what next year brings. We'll sing with the brings separately. They dive a fig. We'll get into the end of time. Tell the world where they can find you on the internet tons of. Show yourself my friend prepared to tell you about that. You can find me I should be on twitter. At dave brad schule and facebook and instagram at dave eighty three and i have a website which is www dot dave Tv that's fantastic dive. Thank you so much for your time. Today it's been that pleasure..

The Sue Plex Podcast
"bradshaw" Discussed on The Sue Plex Podcast
"Knew it was. It was a big deal for me in the face. Point personal face would be something. The would be news to some some of my friends but it had really occurred to me. It was it was that implement any wider sense and then The reaction to it we just saw lifting that and and it might be so grateful actually for the people who really did have to be courageous because luckily twenty twenty one for me to be in a position to talk about my sexuality is a lot easier than it would have been in twenty eleven. Say and the reason for that is the been now been a lot of people in the wrestling in independent wrestling but in the major leagues as well have been much more open about essentiality taken that risk they put their head above the parapet and an donal that That really lays off for me. Follows a to do the same and my advice would be eaten again wrestling to anyone in any walk of life. If i feel comfortable the it was silent lifting to do that like it the way i described it was. It took a white of showers. I didn't realize was even on my shoulders. You know because. Like i. I kind of a ninety percent on this you know. I guess the main thing i hadn't done with a of people From my personal life flight pretty much done it. yeah. I underestimated how. How would fail. And it was yeah. It was incredible. The response was almost universally david. Lovely in welcoming. And it's i think it again might story it comes. Wrestling is positive mental health wise sexuality wise. How i've been welcomed. How has been able to have incredible experiences. I have so. I think it speaks well to our industry. The that's the kind of industry now. At least in the twenty twenties we working definitely I could united states is great and light and in fairplay t to you know leading choice. I in in both of these aspects of mental health and gb tq representation of. It's it's good to say and if you all is in today's in your onshore by any of these things in reach out in our reach out to made a dive to whomever you come with like you know you have friends who have a trusted joey. We not extreme. Now we know what we did Particularly lead there. And avoid you of fully and i hope no one feels uncomfortable with sharing on either those topics laden forward it in his business elsewhere. So that that. That's a sense. Shall we say on the end of that. Show how for For the rest insane in two thousand twenty one and beyond exists..

The Sue Plex Podcast
"bradshaw" Discussed on The Sue Plex Podcast
"That was a that was a wild summer as well. That was really cool. A really liking. What i'm doing now. I main undoing at the moment because a lot of the indies for a still running to them have crowds but i compensate the idea coventry. For w now. Which is these you talked about. Like progress in evolve is he w the Wwe network w. w is as. Well so i. I do all that stuff. We just in the middle of really interesting feud for their unified. Well title which is will be gums. Who's been the w champion. Full like a year and a half along rain ever. Maria's i lani who's a really big upcoming name of the european same night then feud over the tied up the really good matches recently which always production but still it's like is to be getting back to two cooling some wrestling where you when you watch it and you'll like this is like some world klaus stuff to be doing. It's just nice to be be back. So yeah it's hard to pick. But i mean that's good. Thanks get sick. So you've mentioned. W w was he no. Wnw done some bits over new ks wells joint shows and We're was aware it. And when i came on to the saints of the newer news was them starting up in germany. If you could other than whom you mentioned if you could pick someone else for people to come and watch. Wwe that defines w x w japan. Why real wwl real convey about the talent. Because it's where a lot of these guys. Low the known british guys who've ended up in in annexed. Uk avery wolter of ezekiel elliott dragon. Of many of those people. Serve is one of those places where you see buys now. And then they all the guys who will ruling an t or uk or wherever It's yeah it's pretty difficult to in one down. I would say this topic in terms of character..

The Sue Plex Podcast
"bradshaw" Discussed on The Sue Plex Podcast
"It was hard sometimes to to kind of keep finding things to talk about if you went also sometimes the notes provided about the story lines stuff we kind of and it's in spanish. Obviously so you kind of having to piece stuff together but again you skill so what you learn during that is essentially how to fill time how to talk nonsense. You keep the entry going when not much is going on when you know tightly. She'll what is happening. And so you just kind of learned that professionalism to Still sound like your income of the of the broadcast and find something interesting today in. That helps you out later because if fuel everyone does it if you're a commentator than sometimes you might be helpful imagine the sole e robot to say like flies out of your head and use your mind suddenly guys blank but always got something then. You can always just kind of out worse as the play by play commentator you can you. Can you know you kind of think of forgotten what i was about to say i can just reverted to actually describing the action in front of me while i think that brilliant point i was about to make you so you can kind of back and forth. But that's a skill is a skill and you learn from. I learned it from during damaged like a hundred hours of see amila Aaa new japan biter as well which was awesome. Yeah but to do a lot of that stuff in in post production sometimes only sometimes with With it helps. It really helps you live stuff as well because you have to learn out to keep going even when you've got really nothing to say. Oc at the back of that. You took a break because obviously you're doing your masters degree in florida. More memory says how was living in florida. Was that like wicked. Was it completely american. College culture these sales xabi. That's why i wanted. But i had. It's twenty eight then. I still haven't quite grown out of american college. Tv show well as i. I wanna live like that while. I'm still vaguely young. So i went into when degree i went to a big university florida. Which is one of the big southern universities. Huge american football team plays in stadium with ninety thousand fans. Every man i loved it it was just like it was the academic stuff was bit boring but like the the experience of being out there and believing that lifestyle for awhile was just was really. Yeah it was really cool. I will say that the florida climate is not really suited to a white english boy. Because i was just like why would find is hobbies incredibly humid. You'd find i. Would you know volcano a house. Party say that was two blocks from where i lived. I would show up. And i'll be sorry dripping sweat just from like a five minute. Walk to someone's house. Will everyone else least radio by droid raining. Outside ignores you're stupid weather is humid out of their vertu..

The Sue Plex Podcast
"bradshaw" Discussed on The Sue Plex Podcast
"Because it's real way to practice like you. Can you can obviously watch some wrestling on your laptop in your house and scream at two but it just feels so up. Go used to it now. Because i've done quite stuffing production production. Where you all essentially doing that but somebody who hasn't done that before it. It just feels so weird. Doesn't it by having it. You a commentating at you. Tv screen at and you probably haven't we've you Contact with so really. There's only way to rehearse in a proper meaningful way. Until so i went to mild issue for it just like well i'll just from out. He see what would come out in seattle. I interact with this team guy sitting next to and how it works and it was word well enough for me to get the job. I have no doubt that i would be utterly embarrassed by headed back you go. I'll save type somewhere probably days. I might have to be frank if you get to. This is that. I get to listen to yours. After they find mine they will sorts. That's f. so moving from i w didn't You're doing what regularly for after by wnw and you doing mentioning you during the post. Production siham l. common train new scientists. Now that was reason that christmas student transcription for that. Ready bay weiwei back. It's not so averred of some of the country from that house chris. How does how was that was mentioning. It was quite difficult to win. That transitions you've got the balance off of its like and he a move and here's another move up the how how was it. What should be comparisons between a live audience and or live show and this post production stock because i think people underestimate differences. Yeah the first thing is. If i wasn't doing it with like a headset with the volume from the type up like a pie. Then even though. I feel i was being loud when i listened back to it. It's very obvious studio. And i'm so. I feel like i'm talking if i'm in the library. One of the things one of the techniques. I learned very quickly. The if you're doing something in post production is i make sure i have my headset. I have the crowd noise on a pretty much not me not as damaging my is but you know pretty much really loud so it sounds so i feel like i'm in a Environment and that naturally makes you voice loud lies. You can sound slightly detached. Sometimes you know like sometimes when you get wrestling comment commentary on a wrestling videogame obviously it was just. It's just someone in a booth spouting off a lighter lions could remove from the action the there cooling we talk atkins video game like it can real life. Country is done. Invites production can feel at as well. So you do everything you can. Even though you're just sitting in a room watching it to make it feel like light and sound like to you. You're in that space that you die as a few live but not having with the stuff is the it's it's.

The Sue Plex Podcast
"bradshaw" Discussed on The Sue Plex Podcast
"United states. I forget nowadays. This is like new generation of wrestling fans whose whose memories from like. Twenty eleven onwards. Maybe yeah there's some people who think the even even austin in the rothko angle johnson is only stuff is like ancient history my mind People personal twitter guy throwing that that rocky looks like that. Dwayne johnson guys. They'd look alike for cates not room but oh bless you roy. It's a it's a it's an education to over. it's a is if you guys Listen today's will come before we will ever know what however every business your part the business you're end is who and what has come before you you'll learn good things and bad things you learn what to do and what not to do shall we say But yeah it's definitely an education than what system the network. If you've got the network seriously it's it's to- it's so good so much stuff there. So many more remember garden up will revisit in a wrestling. Shall we say a narender. Sparks off memories as well which is good. So that's how did this journey come from wembley and An to be involved in the british racing same and not in a why commentary. What what what was the spark with that. I did train briefly. Actually when i was eighteen. Just out of our school knows i. What should i do. Wrestling was still aren't away. The thing most obsessed with so i went to a school could nwa Look which is where. Several of the top names from the british wrestling from the loss at twenty or thirty years came from. I am not one of those i learned. I learned to have a bump. Like i do a rich look and i can color no way tie up on can transition into They will that stuff but then there led to a drop kick. Give a leg like more than a fills the ground at least athletic person. You'll ever meet so i learned. I went i went to Wwl academy impulse with a couple of times larger in that. The whole phase lost in about two months and then i realized i was. I mean it wasn't even in very good shape. I've never been much of a an athlete and then Soon after i went off to university see ya but university going vote in in student radio and was heavily involved with during weekly stuff with them and so the land house of ruled cost against have to speak. And be confident on aaron. Who will that kind of stuff then also finished university always been i kind of want to keep speaking into a microphone. You know. I enjoyed that inside i. What can i do getting into a real life boring job in london suit and tie at that point in amazon. Well if i did something combined wrestling road costing obviously the obvious conclusion to that full process was coming so i. I looked up a few promotions around london. Where back. Leaving the time. And found i w k which is way you were doing stuff as well and then awesome if i needed to compensate. They didn't stray away. Then we've been three for months. I did so. I have addition and before i knew it. I was sitting next to deny us the twisted genius of british wrestling. I color commentary and then when when the one lesson that you could share that dane has told yea.

The Sue Plex Podcast
"bradshaw" Discussed on The Sue Plex Podcast
"Going so we don't see stuff. I remember from the silver vision. Video is is warrior wrestlemainia. Six the huge ultimate challenge main event between two to talk a gun. I was always a worry guy not hiding guys. Well so that was seemed massive to me and then And then in ninety two. I went to slams wembley side so that's remains one of the biggest moments of my childhood does is on the floor wearing the twenty fifth row of when we ate him up for my dad tickets but like yet to be there for A warriors have idle game. I was more warrior than anyone to worry if vanna with But obviously in hindsight the brentwood of main event is what was phenomenal about it. But that whole era like A subscribe to the network can can look like just the weekly. Tv with will the squash matches against jehovah's and stuff. I could watch. Wwf tv from that for hours on and often do scrape is the network. And i pay a lot of people say moving. The peacock people little bit dubious about some of the bits and pieces. That i've seen online not personally experienced. Sakes we still have the network in the uk souls everybody but you know it's a is such a library it is like you can pull out so much nosy. Now with the european wrestling also been brought onto nice. He w and the the like i'm devolves and analysis as opening a lot people's eyes so la things especially people who may not realize like drew for example while he was before he turned up at the. Wwe will happen too many left and came back. He didn't just stop lesson. The became this person that you say today. I and i think he's going to be good education fans definitely. Oh i've by nine. The one of the new generation of talent who's who's coming through Said recently Twitter or something that they'd never seen austin rock from wrestlemania. Seventeen is a whole.

The Sue Plex Podcast
"bradshaw" Discussed on The Sue Plex Podcast
"Hello and welcome to another edition of the suplex perkasa. I hope you've had a good week. And we have got another edition of the pocus full year. I wonder how many of you need to make it through to two thousand eight and crouzols we. That was on that website. Wasn't it by one. use them but still. I had fun and enjoyed that this week. Though we all going to be speaking to the lovely very tall dave show about his pro wrestling commentary journey and some other journeys also been pre personally regarding his mental health and coming out so it is a different turn of events. I hope you enjoy sit back. Relax illness lovely sunny sunday afternoon and enjoy this. Episode of the suplex podcast. Hello ladies and gentlemen and welcome to another edition of the suplex pocus. I am here. We of the voices of british wrestling and european in my at mr david. Brancheau diana sarah. I grandma his lovely before we saw filming. We haven't we we way back..

The Mason Minute
Using Celebrities (MM #3609)
"The with kevin mason mentioned last week. I was a little disappointed to hear that super bowl ads. This year won't include coca cola pepsi. Budweiser still a lot of advertisers. It took them a while to sell the advertising but they got it done but from everything. I've read this year. More companies are going to be using celebrities than ever before make sense. Celebrities are pretty easy. You got to pay a little bit more. I guess to get the bang for the buck. But everybody's gonna talk about the ads with celebrities in them now. I haven't seen any ads so far. That just heard about some of the ads. I know we'll farrell is going to be one. I've seen a teaser from gm. Mike myers and dana. Carvey look back to wayne's world and guess parody commercial ashton kutcher and his wife mila kunis are in a commercial for cheetos. I think we've shaggy the singer. Michael jordan matthew mcconaughey. They're gonna be in commercials to as are of course sports stars terry bradshaw peyton manning ally manning marshawn lynch all going to be in commercials together. So obviously we're gonna see a lot of celebrities this year. A lot of big stars in the long run because of this pandemic. You wanna make sure you're talked about and that isn't always so easy.

The Mason Minute
Using Celebrities (MM #3609)
"The with kevin mason mentioned last week. I was a little disappointed to hear that super bowl ads. This year won't include coca cola pepsi. Budweiser still a lot of advertisers. It took them a while to sell the advertising but they got it done but from everything. I've read this year. More companies are going to be using celebrities than ever before make sense. Celebrities are pretty easy. You got to pay a little bit more. I guess to get the bang for the buck. But everybody's gonna talk about the ads with celebrities in them now. I haven't seen any ads so far. That just heard about some of the ads. I know we'll farrell is going to be one. I've seen a teaser from gm. Mike myers and dana. Carvey look back to wayne's world and guess parody commercial ashton kutcher and his wife mila kunis are in a commercial for cheetos. I think we've shaggy the singer. Michael jordan matthew mcconaughey. They're gonna be in commercials to as are of course sports stars terry bradshaw peyton manning ally manning marshawn lynch all going to be in commercials together. So obviously we're gonna see a lot of celebrities this year. A lot of big stars in the long run because of this pandemic. You wanna make sure you're talked about and that isn't always so easy.

The Mason Minute
Using Celebrities (MM #3609)
"The with kevin mason mentioned last week. I was a little disappointed to hear that super bowl ads. This year won't include coca cola pepsi. Budweiser still a lot of advertisers. It took them a while to sell the advertising but they got it done but from everything. I've read this year. More companies are going to be using celebrities than ever before make sense. Celebrities are pretty easy. You got to pay a little bit more. I guess to get the bang for the buck. But everybody's gonna talk about the ads with celebrities in them now. I haven't seen any ads so far. That just heard about some of the ads. I know we'll farrell is going to be one. I've seen a teaser from gm. Mike myers and dana. Carvey look back to wayne's world and guess parody commercial ashton kutcher and his wife mila kunis are in a commercial for cheetos. I think we've shaggy the singer. Michael jordan matthew mcconaughey. They're gonna be in commercials to as are of course sports stars terry bradshaw peyton manning ally manning marshawn lynch all going to be in commercials together. So obviously we're gonna see a lot of celebrities this year. A lot of big stars in the long run because of this pandemic. You wanna make sure you're talked about and that isn't always so easy.

Xtra Sports Radio 1300 AM
"bradshaw" Discussed on Xtra Sports Radio 1300 AM
"15 20. So the one that I that I get to it might be interesting is 1984 The Joe Montana. Let Sanders go 40 Niners against the Dan Marino leading Miami Dolphins. That's that's one that actually feels like maybe and nobody has ever position. Marino is the goat. Now we say that in terms of talent, Yeah. He doesn't even have a championship. You always defend Marino. Yeah, You're right. My home's 25. He's already got one. No, no, That's right. That's a great match is not going to be one That Zack has is compelling. Is this one? No Montana in 1989 versus John Elway with Broncos. That's another one. Um, that's good. John Elway versus Brett Farve. 1997. Elway was older, but that he gets those Brady. Yep, and then you have Kurt Warner Tom Brady. I mean, Curtis great. He's a Hall of fame. I love him. We love We all love him, but I love him. But he's not the greatest of all time category, and that's really it. You know what I mean? There's there's a bunch of potential matchups with Bradshaw. You left out a bunch with Terry like going against. Yeah, But do you think Terry Bradshaw was Fran Tarkenton? Nobody deserves meant. I know, I know, but he was, but he was Fran Tarkenton and I said, I said one, Roger stole back. Actually, no, that was I don't think you said Bradshaw. Yeah, they played twice. Actually. Terry Bradshaw, Bradshaw, Bradshaw. And maybe I didn't. I didn't think I mean, I know they played. I didn't. I didn't. If you said in my bed, I just didn't hear you say it. Yeah. So Bradshaw Bradshaw, installed back played twice, Actually, what I'm saying you got it and again, Bradshaw's numbers early. He was riding the bench. He was a pic machine nowhere near the gold. But Of four time champion and it's not many of them. Yeah, just to throw me the hopper. This is special stuff. Kids. That's that's basically what taking are saying. This is incredibly rare special stuff. Like Imagine, even if you wanna make it specific to the student to a C to a specific we're done that I get it to a specific position and not just to go to the sport. Imagine of Bill Russell played a seven game serious against whether you think it's shack or Arkema, La Jawan or David Robinson or whomever you believed to be. Good to Kareem. Of course, like the best center. You can isolate it, and it's just It's the most glamorous position in sport and one guy still trucking. I read today that we had Bruce areas on the show the other day that I read today that, Bruce said. That you know what it's not out of the realm. The Tom Brady gets an extension. So here we are. It's almost like we're attaching a finality. You know, we can obviously win this game and get another chance. But it's almost like maybe on some level. We're assuming that this is the final dance for Brady in the Super Bowl. Maybe we shouldn't assume that, But what if you win? Do you think he walks away? No, no, I think he's playing no matter what. Because if he pulls out and they win, he's still gonna ease in Boulder. He's saying that still got it. I'm the man, I'm still going right. If he plays poorly, he's gonna be driven by that this offseason. All Now I know the system now, you know, I know the coaches are now more report. Let's go. That was an aberration. But you know this work. It's tricky from the homes and this is where Tony Romo's was 1000%, right. You already lost too many conference championship game. We're gonna hold that against because you were kid, but but it's on the resume. And by the way, the Patriots went on and won that Super Bowl against the Rams. Yep, as he usually does long as it's not the Giants and that if you lose this super will not saying he will, but if you lose the Super Bowl now it's a conference championship. The penultimate gamed and then the final game. It's going to be tomorrow. Most point is gonna be very hard for him to legitimately ever. I don't care what he does the rest of his career to jump past Tom Brady, even if he is better. Brady. The only way the only way to do it is improbable Beatty and that's when 12 Super Bowls, you know what I mean?.

InnovaBuzz
"bradshaw" Discussed on InnovaBuzz
"That helps helps me learn how me get exposed to new ideas and thinking. That's a great raisel era absolutely horrible and on also member of audible and have recently got onto script which has a similar model awardable except that it's unlimited For the monthly fee. You don't know limited to just the one book. The problem there is that. I ended up having this collection that i've saved into my into my favorites and a when i want to listen to something on the choices. Which one do i choose now. Yeah the paradox choice. Or i know what's the best way to keep a project or a client on track. Stop the project by defining what success looks like and continuing legal about how going was achieving. That don't really matter. it's am. I getting closer to achieving what success looks lot. Love it her. I'd start with the end in mind and make sure you get yes can get the end. Yeah okay and what's the number one thing you think. Anyone can do to differentiate themselves set standards and then we'll pass them. What i mean by that is if you have a standard that everyone of the organization is responsible for the cleanliness of the organization will pass the piece of trash on the ground and guide them out this job next stoop down and pick it up sit set standards and then dot will never accept less than those standards. It doesn't mean you have to be perfect because Highly that doesn't mean you have to be perfect. But you have to have a relentless pursuit of that stand and that will get you a constantly relentless pursuit of standards a love it. So thanks jason. This has been really wonderful now. Where can people find out more you and the work you do and maybe even getting touch inside. Thanks for what you shared today. show so. My website is jason s brancheau dot com. It's really important that they remember the in the middle age esperanto dot com otherwise. I'll end up a real estate company in california. So jason s brad show dot com. And if you listen to jackson. S breteuil dot com slash. Sign up elsa. Get the first two chapters of my book. it's all about seen yet is essential to customer play experience pot. Compliments and of course that is also the best way for them to keep after date with older news Including had details of my next book which is coming out in pretty. Well that's exciting. So what's that hookah bat Fighting off experienced management but really focused on how experienced management can be used to grow and scale and organization. Okay we'll keep arrow app for that and of course we'll have links in the show notes to those posts that you should now. Do you have any parting. Advice to die for elyssa. Yes absolutely and it should not be surprising that i'm going to say. Stop a habit of listening and reviewing customer feedback and sharing that feedback with anyone in your organization that is responsible for making decisions. wonderful or i finally. Who else should i get on the show. And why oh well there you go I would certainly encourage you to look at Fill 'em john's fill is a one of the best selling authors On amazon and an audible in the last decade He really has his way of helping. People communicate more effectively and effectively and efficiently and re framing the sales process from being a transaction to a one of creating connection and a relationship with a customer that enjoys beyond the style. Sounds like a really good fit Thanks to that will get an introduction to fill from you. You know him personally feel introduction and reach out to him and bring him on the show as well so thanks so much for sharing all your insights with us today sharing. It's on with us to digest of really enjoyed. This love geeking acrobat things. Hey see cenex exceed x. Mind to make sure be careful here because we do have a clean writing. Yes we need. We need to keep it. Yeah yeah and yes. I thanks for all if sheds generously today. Olivetti's for the future. I look forward to the new book and stayntouch. Thanks very much for having me. I'm shy help. You enjoyed that. Really engaging and wonderfully informative conversation with jason and took something away from his episode jason's passion for an intense focus on customer and employee experience. Certainly encapsulates the idea of making marketing. Human i really liked the three lenses of. He's human connection model. I'd love to know what you took away from jonson's episode leave a comment below the blog. Post which you can find that in over biz dot c. A forward slash jason bradshaw that is jay s in b. r. a. d. h. i w. all lowercase owen would in other biz dot. Co forward slash jason bradshaw. You'll also find contact information there for getting in touch with jason as well as links. He's website his book. It's all about sex his social media pages and the other resources we spoke about in our conversation today. Nephew lock this episode. Please do share it with two other people that it might help. There's so much wonderful information that i'll share on every single episode and i'm on a mission to get that into the is of anybody who might find it helpful so tag me in that share and thank you. I'll reach out to you with a special surprise. Jackson suggested that we have a conversation with author and business. Expert phil enjoyed on a future in of a buzz. Podcast episode. so phil keep an eye on your inbox for an invitation from us to the end of a bus podcast. Courtesy of jason bradshaw tune in again to the next episodes of the over buzz. Podcast where we've got even more fantastic guests lined up including innovation and lean startup expert steve weinstein and motivational speaker and entrepreneur. Scott mason. Thanks for listening to this episode. Mike sure you subscribe to the show to be reminded of new episodes. It's free to subscribe lieber review. If you like even with that i'm asking you to leave a review because because other people find shower got inova biz dot. Co two joint him marketing. Transformation community and excess. A free gift. My team and i made for you. It's the marketing mazda mini class. Wanna give you everything you need to. Transform your marketing. Indoor human senate relationship trumka's whereas engine until next on on your stress from enough of his remember. Be awesome and keep invited..

InnovaBuzz
"bradshaw" Discussed on InnovaBuzz
"Hi i'm can stress from overseas and really excited to welcome to the of podcasts. To die from very close by relative to many of my other guests sydney. Australia jason breteuil from the power of six. And no one gonna get dirty today that as nc exit. Explain that a little bit more as we go along. Jason is a keynote speaker. He's a coach and an author focused on business. Growth through experience management. Johnson is also the chief customer and marketing officer of volkswagen group australia. Welcome to another bus podcast. Jason it's great privilege to have you as my guest. And you're gonna. It's great to be on the podcast. Thanks for having me on now see x. stands for customer experience on. I'm guessing and i know that you'll really passionate about helping. People serve their audiences better on dry their business managing those experiences through engineering good experiences. So what is it that actually drives you. He has Sex is the acronym are used for customer and employee experience. And certainly i think you listeners. at the double tadpole App to make sure. They had the right to iraq. Podcast with that opening. Have but thank you look at the edge. A nice dotted my very first business selling a range of telecommunications and computer hardware and software and at fourteen Allots part of that was driven out of the desire to get new shiny object Mom and dad could advisable me. But i grew up in narrative family and without neuronal grandparents and so when i was interviewed a foot in years of age. I said that. I couldn't compete on price because you know i was listening to working out of my bedroom. I wasn't buying in bulk. But i could compete on service and over the decades that have that have taken place since. Then since humble beginnings i've been able to grow my career. I've been up to grow a number of successful businesses at half others grove and businesses growing through an absolute commitment to delivering and experience that is worthy of our reputation worthy of sharing worthy of storytelling. And i fundamentally believe that the way businesses will grow and scale in twenty twenty and beyond. He's true an unrelenting focus on customer employees grants of every direction should be one that have spilled loyalty and advocacy as opposed to adjusting transaction If we rely an create businesses around transactions that's easy to disrupt someone who can always find a foster way cheaper way to do it but also feeds into these notion that people aren't required in his yet. I know you and i both Bites that would agree that people are essential to business and and certainly essential to Familly it'll stop an nvidia Experience that we create for how customers are now at eighteen minutes now wonderful. Thanks for that explanation and is said a few triggered the that kind of might me think well you know. There's a really good fit here because where all about making marketing human again. And it's about you know let's not abdicate to allays wonderful high it tools that we have which Great when used correctly but people tend to abdicate to them and take out that human experience so that human connection that relationship pot and the other thing that you mentioned there was moving away from just being transaction and that. So i love that and i'm seeing more and more that people talk about. He experienced economy. He experienced marketing. So heavily mike sure that these just done become buzzwords for the next decade. I'd because it's starting to be talked about. I hadn't noticed them before. Maybe it's just my you know. Perception is projection thing design on paying attention more to that kind of stuff. But how can we make sure that we're actually doing that. How can we integrated into our culture rather than just kinda talk about well. You know you talk about buzzword. Bingo i can i can remember. There was an entire decade. Not that long ago. Where a company's talked about becoming About employee engagement and of course now we say employee experience and they different things but very similar at the same time And i think that that happens when people focus on what sounds goal versus doing actual work and you touched on marketing making marketing human again in my book. It's all about six at ca six. I talk about customers employees measuring their experience across three lenses. One of those lenses these a human connection. And i fundamentally believe that those customers those team members that are loyal and that advocate for you have developed a human connection with eliza actions and what i mean by that is not the every transaction has done by us but that that the human elements that value like trust absolutely rainfalls for every transaction and through every interaction. And so i think the way that we move towards his not being buzzword bingo he's to have really strong processes at embedded in organizations that are designed to amplify the voice of the consumer. The voice of the employee and not focus has many organizations to on the score. Metrics now if i think every organization or every major as asian around the world and many small to medium businesses mesa customer satisfaction net promoter skull. Something li- chat. The school doesn't matter if you're not actually reading what drawings that school and so if you fundamentally building a crow says of listening to your customers listening to your employees than making the decision. I think you'll have made strides to making marketing human again making organizations human again and really putting at the high of every decision. What matters most. And that's the people that you says. Yeah i love that. I have not focusing on the the matrix as a primary driver and if you do look at the metrics understanding why why why is that net promoter score for example going up or down. What's contributing to that. Part of the net promoter score. I mean it's a little bit like on social media where people talk about. I've got five thousand followers on linked in or i've got Connections or i've got Ten thousand locks on this one blow post unless there's some sort of relationship happening that's leading to a conversation that it really is. just a number is knit. Yeah well you know. I can remember the time when you would in a marketing report talk. About how many fellows you had and what was the reach of a post to and of course now. Everyone's looking at what's the engagement of people engaging of sharing of a commentary. And i think that engagement is about being human. If people are interacting with contention that digital social media sites then the content is not adding. And it's certainly not happening business crock because it seemed gauge meant that leads to growth. Not just purely you know taking out a full page ad which is basically what you doing social.

InnovaBuzz
"bradshaw" Discussed on InnovaBuzz
"Customers and our at team members.

Rush Limbaugh
Trump Returns to Palm Beach
"Not keep now former President Trump in office and he continues life in Palm Beach County, where his visits created traffic nightmares around his mar, a Lago resort. We'll make this work really easy. People are, they won't even know what difference. Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw says. That's because Trump will have a smaller security detail. Now, some roads near the resort will stay closed until Monday with

Joe Pags
"Sex and the City" gets new chapter on HBO Max
"Is getting the revival treatment at HBO. Max. The new chapter is titled and just like that, and we'll star Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis came control who played Samantha Jones in the original Syriza is not returning. The revival will follow. Carrie Bradshaw, Charlie York and Miranda Hobbes as they navigate love and relationship in their fifties. Syria's will consist of 10 half hour episodes, and it's set to begin production in New York City in late spring

Z Morning Zoo
'Sex and the City' returning without Kim Cattrall
"You're going to get it back Sex and the city coming back at least, HBO Max, Sarah Jessica Parker confirmed on Sunday. She's returning to TV as Carrie Bradshaw in a sex and the city revival for HBO. Max. Truman Instagram. I couldn't help but wonder where are they? Now? HBO Max All confirmed that Cynthia Nixon, who played Miranda Kristin Davis, who played Charlotte will also be back. Not coming back Kim Control who display Samantha Jones on the show. She's been very vocal about her decision not to return to the show and her in Syria just probably not going alone. Yeah, And like I said, I don't think there's any surprise. No, that really theory. Revival Fire Carrie Miranda Charlotte as they navigate their fifties, and it's set to begin production in New York in late spring. Another week another Nicki Minaj lawsuit

Weekend Edition Saturday
California's beloved Albany Bowl closes doors for good
"Has forced us to take more of our social and recreational activities outside, But one activity that has to be played indoors has been especially hip. Hard by the pandemic, and that's pulling Quds. Nina Sparling has more AH, fun. 10th birthday party meant one thing to me in 2000 to a trip to Albany Bowl. I didn't think that would be the last time I ever tried for and the mist a strike at the East Bay Institution, Albany Bull announced it has closed its doors permanently last month, making it the sixth Northern California bowling alley to shutter in 2020. Bob Thomas, the executive director of the Northern California Bowling Proprietors Association, says the pandemic has devastated the industry. And this was heartbreaking to see people that have known to leather have the business is kind of taken away from them. Most of the 250 odd bowling centers in California still plan to reopen one stay at home orders or lifted, but it's been tough for the mom and pop owners that run many of them. Molly Bradshaw owns the Mission Bowling Club in San Francisco. So we lost half of our business is about more as a result of coded a P P. P. Loan Captain. Mission balling afloat for several months, but that money ran out in October. Rachael has had to pivot to offering take out food, she says. That's not sustainable, You know is the finger in the dam and the water is it's never stopped without an injection of federal aid. She only has enough saved to keep the place open for three or four months. I mean, a Sparling KQED knows

The Business of Esports
Hogger Is The Latest Character Coming To Heroes Of The Storm
"Kind just lead off with the biggest news story of possibly the year. Any sports okay. I thought last week you'll ever what i thought last week. It was the biggest ever. No this is it. We've had a lot of biggest weeks but this week may be the biggest of all because this week. Here's the storm. Got a new hero for the first time in like i can't even count. They literally just released new hero. There are people at blizzard. Still working on this game a parent apparantly. They literally they were like released official. Not some rogue employee's official. They started listening to the podcast. There like that kid. William really likes the store and we gotta give him a new hero and bam. They're literally like out of nowhere. You had no idea new hero. His name's hogger. He's a knoll he spins around. It's awesome so if you ask me how my week was. I think i just told you like leg world of warcraft harder. Well if warren bradshaw gary. Everyone's making jokes about like like his voice lines. Let me tell you how. I escaped storm wind. Keep you know how like harder is is one of. I would say if not the while hold on. I don't wanna go too far. It's i would argue top three memes ever okay. So leroy jenkins number one. Yup leroy jenkins is number. One number two is next ramos. Blood not like the play harder number two because harder river to. It's the first real like elite that you kill right. Yeah paul i. I know that and so it was like like the looking for group. Hogger is like you wanna mean at like level. Sixty in classic. Wow that's that's that's what you put out there right or you want or do you want to. You know you want to grief other players. You go and just cam poker. Because they're trying to kill him to finish whatever quest they've got and he just stand around the spine and one shot him. You know it's that hogger yes. It's that auger interesting You know nobody really knows. Like i mean these new heroes like they always seem overpowered at launch. You know i played him. I actually thought he was underpowered. But i think that has more to do with me being absolutely useless at the game despite playing it nonstop for six years so i felt like it just died off time when i played him but it doesn't matter at this point they could put a mouse mouse trap and a piece of cheese in the game and i would buy like i'd be like this is incredible when you actually have spent money on the game. Now oh my god. Yes so many like side like this new content. I bought the hair they released today by the are paul economic incentives. Like if i want them to keep releasing new heroes. I have to find out how. I still don't believe that. This is some official project at blizzard. I really believe it's. It's like two rogue employees that that that oxygen is paying behind under the table. Maybe maybe we should be quiet about. Maybe they've just survived because like nobody's notice there unlike closet somewhere somehow escaped eight. Hr shutdowns and it's like randy from what was it office space or whatever. The is just their house. We can keep developing. I it we hit. It has a very big user base. That game like it's not league level. It's clearly large enough for them to continue resources to some extent and look if they're shutting down starcraft that they're continuing to do lots as much as we mean about like. Oh la william. You're so weird to like that game like it added an audience. It's just not a huge audience but it's big enough that even a company like blizzard still invest something on it. So i mean i would assume on. Its own like i. I don't know how blizzard internally looks at projects right but do they. Are they sophisticated enough. I mean i'm sure they are but the question is do they break out sort of a pnl for each game. Right is simple enough to do that. Or is there so much intermingling of resources at the company eight possible. I cannot believe they do not have a pl specifically for that game at least on the revenue side cost side might be a little harder to attribute because you borrowed an artist here you re use an asset. Their pets like i. I have no doubt that the games are run as pretty strict individual. Pnl's with relatively high control that the must be profitable right to keep going. Yeah the the big question that kills things like this and organizations is hugh rationalizations right. This is why like coke and you know what is it. Clorox or old household price continuously cycle out brands. despite the fact that there are actually quite successful. Like if you. And i started one of those brands like this head. Skew rationalization is big driver of overall profitability. And big business says and that sort of what happened to starcraft right gut skew rationalized. Essentially i bet you for the investment on it it was still profitable. The question is could you put those dollars somewhere else and have a higher return. Could you put that management attention somewhere. And so i think it's interesting that the storm clearly. They're not scared to kind if they need to. They killed these sports scene right. It was dead until the cc l. But it is interesting that like you know they have. They don't skew so again. I think it speaks to. The game is a lot bigger than i think. People realize i mean. I just like to kid about it because it's a funny meam now. It's like our our top. Names are dumpster. Fire cures to the storm. What is lindsay's nickname. That's like our three or three like

The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
Pittsburgh Steelers win 19-14 over the Baltimore Ravens
"Pittsburgh nineteen baltimore fourteen baltimore. Of course i mean is coming off. They hardly could practice for the past week or so they deaf. They didn't have lamar jackson they had to start. Rg three robert griffin third. And we'll get into him later but hit. He was horrific horrific although he did have one. Nice run my goodness talked about a fall from grace but anyway he was bad but the steelers won and now rob. They are eleven. Oh and i gotta give props to mike tomlin. He remember a few years ago. It was all the rage was to rip mike tomlin. He's shaky he'd had no it. He's doing he told him about terry. Bradshaw said he had pom-pom gotta leader

WTOP 24 Hour News
Washington DC Teachers Rally Against In-Person Instruction
"Yesterday D C. Public school teachers rallied against in person instruction set to start next month. It happened outside of Woodrow Wilson High School in in the midday at the rally, Teachers said that the November 9th return of pre K through fifth graders will not be safe. NBC four spoke with teacher Tina Bradshaw Smith. About her concerns. I love mother things I've been teaching for 30 years. I love them to death. But I can't teach when I'm dead. D C. Public schools. Reopening plan includes medical grade air filter scheduling and enhanced social distancing

Talking Biotech Podcast
The Unfortunate Casualties of an Anti-Biotech Attack
"Today is a really special podcast is an amazing guests that we have that takes us back to the time when the tenor towards genetic engineering was very different back around the turn of the Millennium I. Guess is the turn of the century two two. It was a little bit different field before the Internet really took over the defamation of scientists and career assassination, and those opposed to technology took on other means to solve their problems. At least to. Agitate and we'll talk about that today in an event from two thousand and one and we'll talk more about that in a second speaking with doctor, Toby Bradshaw A. He's a professor emeritus in the Department of Biology at the University of Washington and thank you for joining me today. I really appreciate you being toby. It's a pleasure to be here. Yeah this is really an interesting point in history and I remember when this happened. And in a kind of kind of fell into the background a little bit, but let's set the stage if we go back to two thousand and one. What kind of work were you doing in Merrill Hall at the University of Washington. Since the mid nineteen nineties, I have been working on the genetic adaptation and growth in hybrid poplars. They're fast growing tree. News all around the world, but heavily in the Pacific northwest up to produce. Hebrew products primarily so I was involved with. The early molecular genetics research, including M Gino Mapping. And ultimately identifying traits that were responsible for faster growth, which I had a basic interest in, but which of course the temp companies had a commercial innocent. And where you're working with genetic engineering, or were you really just dealing with hybrids myself? I was only producing hybrid poplars through traditional cross pollination methods that have been used for centuries in in poplars around the world I was also collaborating with Steve Strauss. At Oregon State University on some preliminary work to genetically engineered trees, four different growth form to produce more would in a smaller land area, but I myself had never still have never a genetically engineered a tree. And really the facility that you were working at. It isn't on the campus, right? It's it's the center for Urban Culture and what are the kinds of things that were being done there well. It is technically on the UW. Campuses at the very periphery separated from the main campus by the Union Bay Natural Area A place for I enjoyed bird every day on my walk to work, so that was a nice interlude. Of every day, but the other kinds of work that we're going on at the Center for Urban Horticulture included a restoration ecology primarily for wetland restoration, understanding a plant succession after the eruption of Mount Saint Helen's in nineteen eighty was conservation work for rare plants, going on so rare plants in Washington be propagated for reintroduction into the wild, and that was a particular focus of my colleague I'm single ride card who you will hear more about later and the graduate students in Undergrad who doing their own research, their work on a wide range of topics, including for example how to? Have, urban gardens produce more food for people who otherwise might not be able to afford a fresh vegetables, so it was. A typical horticulture center I, think it most universities where there was a mix of basic research applied research in outreach up to the public in the form of extension. And, so it doesn't sound like this was the you know the the center of the universe of Monsanto or something I mean this sounds like a really practical extension oriented center that had significant roles in community, and and and even just in the regional agriculture's that's. Is that more what it was about yes? Oh, the University of Washington is not a land grant university. It's not an agricultural school. School, in the focus at the UW has always been a basic research and the center. For urban horticulture included in its mission, some applied research and quite a bit of extension and outreach up to the public, so in that way it was different from much of the rest of campus in its mission, but by no means is the University of Washington on any kind of center for plant biotechnology now. It isn't now. Yeah. Good basic biology know basic science and a lot of really good plant people there, but it's Can you give me a little bit of sense? Outside the University of like two, thousand, zero, two, thousand and one, what was the environment like a genetic engineering in your perspective and in your area of the country? What was really happening? Then in that environment, it was an interesting time. The first genetically engineered crops that were planted on a wide scale, had only been in production for less than a decade, so as a relatively new technology on the commercial sector, perceiving though scientists and people who keep up with science for familiar with the progress of genetic engineering. How it was eventually applied in agriculture, get caught a lot of the general public by surprise, and as everyone who's familiar with plant biotechnology knows that can sometimes lead to misunderstandings. And worse at the the first inkling that I had that anyone might be opposed to the kinds of research that I was doing was just a couple of years before in nineteen, ninety nine, when Seattle hosted the World Trade Organization meetings and I had some of my. Poplars. That were growing in pots out in the back forty behind the. Urban Horticulture. Cut Down by vandals during those WTO protests mean. As often happened to these kinds of things at my mind. The damage done to my plants was fairly minimal. Because these are poplars. Cut Him off. They just re grow the we. That's how we actually propagate them through cutting, so it had zero effect on me, but at the same time they went through and cut down all of the older seedlings that a colleague of mine was growing for re, vegetating streamsides in Alder. Don't re sprout after being cut-backs. Again it was one of these ready fire. Aim moments for an activist who really didn't understand. Even the species of trees that they were looking at i. mean did a lot more damage to someone else's research than to mind we might. Research was essentially funded by the wall critics,

COVID-19: What You Need to Know
COVID-19: What You Need To Know
"This is an ABC news special. Kobe nineteen what you need to know here is. Abc News correspondent. Aaron Katersky as this school year nears an end. Parents wonder about the start of the next academic year. We'll schools welcome kids back. What will the classroom look like or will there still be online? Learning the answers dependent part. On what the virus does to kids and how kids transmit the virus. The World Health Organization said over the weekend that children appear to be less capable of spreading corona virus than adults. The comment came from the. Who's chief scientist? Sumio Swaminathan who appeared on the BBC? What we have seen in countries where schools remained open is that they have not been big outbreaks in schools and where there have been seen associated with we defense. A lot of people gather not in regular classrooms and it's often been associated with Donald who's had infection and who spread it so it does seem from what we know now that children are less capable of spreading it even if they get infection and certainly are very low risk of getting from the Z's for more on what all of this may mean. We're joined by Dr Edith Bradshaw Sanchez. A pediatrician and professor of pediatrics. At Columbia University. What do you make of her comments here? I think some of the reports that we're seen in the comments that were seeing from the. Who are definitely reassuring. I just want more data so a number of things have gone into into these comments from what I understand and there are countries that have opened schools Germany Denmark Some parts of Canada in those countries are not seeing big outbreaks of covert nineteen in children linked to schools which is reassuring but we just need more data. These countries have also done a variety of things to keep kids safe in school Germany. For example we've rent reports that they are having children self test every four days and given a green sticker to kids test negative and allowing them to walk around the school without a mask on some schools are taking temperature. Some schools have introduced a variety of social distancing in hygiene techniques. So so when we look at this at these reports and we we look at the lack of outbreaks linked to children after they were allowed to go back to school. It is reassuring but we have to remember that there are measures that these countries have taken and that we don't have all of the information yet. Really the bottom line is can. My kids hug their grandparents. Yeah I think that's such an interesting point for a long time and longtime in the cove world is a few months for a long time. We've been thinking about children in terms of the risk that they pose to adults. We've been saying okay. Well my kid goes back to school. Can they? Then come home and bring me the corner virus or bring the current virus to to grandma and GRANDPA if they visit in now. Not only. Is it that that is very much too little consideration? But now we're starting to learn for example that there is a new rare but serious complication of covert nineteen seems to affect children very differently than an affects adults. And now I think that the conversation starting to switch to what is the risk to children themselves from Bo Bo from going back to school. What's the answer? I wish I had it but I just don't know we just don't know there are reports for example right there. There is a report of a child. I believe from England who was in the French Alps and then went home. Was In contact with seventy two people that child himself tested positive for current a virus. None of the seventy two people. He came into contact with tested positive. So that was reassuring but then we had another report of a six month old whose parents had couvert nineteen and the child had to be cared for in the hospital and so they were constantly testing this little baby six months old and he shut the virus at very high levels for sixteen days. The data so far has been mixed in. I think that's why it's so important that we collect more data in children and the NIH as you probably have heard launched a study at the beginning of May to follow two thousand families to try to answer this question. What exactly is the rate of transmission? What exactly is the risk to children because we just haven't been collecting the data yet. Pediatric Multi Symptom Inflammatory Syndrome. What do we make of that? Does it matter whether it specifically connected to cove it as the CDC seems to suggest that it is? I do believe that it is linked to covert nineteen. And I'll tell you why. This new syndrome seems to have some characteristics of Kawasaki disease but it also has some characteristics. Overlap toxic shock syndrome. And I'll explain very very briefly Kentucky Diseases and inflammatory condition. It is cost by inflammation and then the the blood vessels in the body are affected. Ultimately different organs can be affected. The one that we worry about is the heart children present with fever with the red. Is the rash The swollen hands feed swollen. Lymph nodes some of the same symptoms that we are now seeing in this new condition but the difference one of the many differences that we're still learning is that these children were presenting with the new syndrome also seemed to have some of those symptoms from toxic shock. They are very sick when they present to care. They sometimes have low blood pressures and signs that there multiple there's multiple organ systems that are affected. And that doesn't go with Kawasaki. Disease it also here before cove it so we can of spectacularly Why are they testing? Summer testing negative for the antibodies and the virus itself. And that is absolutely puzzling. But I think at the end of the day you just sort of have to take a step back and think okay well. Even if it's not linked terrific can't prove it yet for some of these kids remember them majority are testing positive. And where was this before cove

WIOD Programming
Florida will start to reopen May 4, but for now Miami-Dade and two other counties won't be included
"Three South Florida counties will not join the rest of the state in the reopening process on Monday Palm Beach county sheriff ric Bradshaw plea for patience continue to go by the rules and hopefully Dayton power will do the same thing it will not too distant future we'll be back where we need to be able to be part of the of the of the phase of he says healthy people should get out this weekend and enjoy recreational activities that I've reopened in most areas of Palm Beach Broward and Miami Dade counties

What I Wore When
Emily Nussbaum: What I Wore When I Interviewed at New York Magazine
"For the most part all the women on this podcast were handpicked by me. On behalf of Glamour Women we find fascinating or nostalgic or brilliant or just women. We Wanna get to know a little bit better emily. Nussbaum was at the top of the list. Emily is the television critic for the New Yorker where she's worked since two thousand eleven and in two thousand sixteen. She won the Pulitzer Prize for criticism. Her voice is authentic and accessible and she's been described as a singular writer in two thousand nineteen. She released her first book. I like to watch arguing my way through the TV revolution. The book examines the changing landscape of television while effectively defending it as a medium with taking seriously it includes essays on everything from buffy. The Vampire slayer a show. That's been pivotal emily's life as well as the Sopranos Vanna Pump. Rules scandal true detective and sex in the city. Emily also tackles the question of whether a viewer can separate art from the actions of problematic creators in a timely me to ask a when I asked if she'd be willing to be a guest on the podcast. She seemed genuinely surprised saying she doesn't really consider herself a stylish person. I explained that the goal isn't to only feature quote fashion. He says that would be so boring. I'm so glad she agreed because our conversation was good so good in fact that we ran out of time and had to wrap it up just as we were digging into one of my favorite topics. Carrie Bradshaw not to worry. Though she still had plenty to say. I also asked emily to give her professional opinion on whether my mother and father were absolutely terrible parents for letting me watch twin peaks at nine years old which he happily did. Here's our conversation so I want to start by asking you. Which is what everybody that comes on this podcast. Which is what are you wearing right now? Oh I hadn't thought about this I I'm wearing black pants That fit well. Which is the difficult thing for me with pants. and I'm wearing some sort of gray tank top in a black sweater and a necklace that I really like that. I bought it a museum shop. That is where I generally buy jewelry And I don't remember where I got these things but they're kind of distinctive simple silver earnings during your earrings a lot. Yeah I like the erase striking. So I'm wearing good jewelry but I'm wearing completely neutral. What you wear to New York office kind of thing which is a black sweater and black pants. Oem Wearing kind of Nice sneakers wearing these these sort of Weird Green Corduroy Sneakers Love Them. And because the name of the PODCAST is what? You're going to talk about what you were when you interviewed for Your Job at New York magazine so I think this was around Two Thousand and three or two thousand four and at the time I was working as a freelance writer and I was writing for places like The New York Times magazine and doing both short pieces and long pieces. But I mainly thought of myself as a writer and Adam Moss who had worked at the Times was the new head of New York magazine and he was hiring new staffers and he called me to see whether come in and I thought they were gonNA call me to be a writer there which frankly and tells a different kind of clothing. 'cause writers are often shrubs But he actually wanted me to come in to interview to be the editor of the culture section. It wasn't something that I was sure I wanted to do. I was very ambivalent about it so I sort of winged it when I went in for my interview in a way that I don't normally for things and I'm convinced I got the job because of the clothes I wore which is true of almost nothing else in my life but I somehow put together an outfit. That was stylish showed my genuine uncaring about whether I got the job which is often the right combination for a situation like this and it was more stylish than I actually am so what I wore is dark blue jeans that fit right in for the period were sort of the right style gene because at the time they were kind of they had that sort of low weight but for for whatever reason I was actually pulling it off. Because I don't really have a body that works that great and that kind of jeans but I had good ones but the main thing is I wore. I had a a blue crushed velvet sort of waistcoat jacket that I had bought vintage that had silver buttons and my mom had given me these actually quite nice low ankle boots that were kind of a brownish yellow alligator skin or something that had stacked heels wouldn't stacked heels those two items actually looked good like they were distinctive. Strange Somewhat Bohemian. Downtown things and wearing pants always gives me a stronger sense of authority in a situation like this. I think I normally would have gone to a job interview honestly wearing an alien skirt a simple top jacket to try to look professional. But I think partially because I genuinely kind of didn't want to get the job or at least was doing it. I know that sounds almost disrespectful. 'cause it was such a good job but I was ambivalent embitterment about becoming an editor instead of a writer. So there's this part of me that was just like whatever like I didn't really rally right so I so I sort of magically managed to hit on this outfit. That kind of looked made me look way more downtown selective idiosyncratic and actively stylish and a young woman way and it went in and I have to say and like The other thing is Adam. My old boss and Hugo Lindgren. Who was also interviewing me They are guys who actually care about fashion in different ways and I walked in and I actually saw that they liked my clothes like this sounds stupid but the dumb way in which I was like. I've hacked this because so many things are stupid first impressions and there was this way in which because I looked kind of free wheeling and like I'm matched the part or something that helped anyway. I did get the job and initially said that I would take it for three months because we were just putting together the prospectus of the magazine and then ended up staying there for many years and Adam is an incredible boss. It all worked out. I never dressed like that again. I was GONNA say if he was hiring me in any way as you know perhaps delusional suspected that I was just sort of acting a role that worked for the job interview after that. I did not wear good clothes to the office. I did try to dress up a little bit. I went on a shopping trip with my I think he was. We were dating. I married my husband who's very stylish and has great taste and we were living in the West village and we went for this walk down. I think Greenwich Avenue had a couple of different shops and so I went out and I sort of went on a shopping trip to try to buy a few items. That seems like an editor at New York magazine would wear these items. When did you buy do any of the things were because I don't know brands but I bought some things that were kind of medium pricey and seemed like statement things I was never able to use them or put them together? But I do remember the first day I went in the office. I mean my entire impression of an office like that was like thirteen going on thirty hundred percent. I so I was trying to. I was trying to raise my game to ROM COM level which remind notion of medium also. Yes exactly the truth is I mean. People dressed in black in New York and a lot of people who are in fashion dress very neutral and the one time I ever wrote about fashion. I was really struck by the fact that I was like wait. This is not made up of butterflies like this is a lot of thirty to fifty year old women wearing black and like simple expensive chunky statement hearings or something. It's not a situation in which people are trying to stand out. Visually so are wearing off the runway necessarily says gallons and no. I think that's what people think of fashion back. I'm trying to remember what else I bought. And then at one point when I early in having that job I also attempted to have power lunch as a sort of a joke with a friend at Michael's and midtown because he's like a fun thing to do and on the way to that. I bought some bought some clip on earrings. That had on the way to the line. Yeah on the way to the lunch. I literally was like I'm GonNa like it but again it was sort of as a joke because my friend and I were like. We're now like media. People are power lunch area. They they were like strange. Chunky rhinestone earrings with red and blue stones in them that were round clip bonds rather than dangling or they were sort of you know punch in the face upper east side ish food jewelry of some kind so I remember. I stopped at the store. So those were my power. Close is basically what I'm saying for New York magazine. Are you somebody? Now that considers yourself AH shopper. No I actually don't like to shop. My husband likes to shop though so I often will go shopping with him and he will pick out things that are good and he's responsible actually for some of the best things that they own because I mean we'll go to a vintage store and he'll pick out something that I personally wouldn't have picked out because I'm just a highly pragmatic shopper. I just I find it boring. I don't like going through the racks. I don't like spending money and I also don't like searching for bargains so I'm like the worst combination of ten no India and I and I don't really enjoy changing and changing rooms and trying various things on and all of that kind of thing but I do like having some nice clothes so I go either with hammer or with my son. It's actually fun. I used to shop with my son when he was a little younger and then he would read things one to ten so that was fun. That's does he do that now? Yeah I mean he's he's we haven't gone shopping in a while I mean and also he's he's about twelve now so I don't think when he was eight he actually he's. He's much more interested individuals than I am so he he had a lot of opinions but he's also very enthusiastic so pretty much. No matter what I tried on. It was from eight to ten. So that's a good person to shop