34 Burst results for "Caplan"

AP News Radio
Judge: If news taints rape-trial jurors, Trump shares blame
"A federal judge has ruled that the civil suit accusing former president Donald Trump of rape will proceed as schedule next week. I Norman hall. Judge Lewis Kaplan rejected a request by Donald Trump's lawyers for a one month delay of the rape lawsuit filed by colonists E Jean Carroll. She wrote in her memoir that had happened in 1996, Trump attorney Joe taco Pino argued that Trump's recent indictment in New York on criminal falsification of business records charges had created such a wave of negative publicity that a one month cooling period was needed, but caplan said a portion of recent media coverage of the indictment was of Trump's undoing. Trump has made public statements about that case on his social media platform in press conferences and in interviews. I Norman hall

The Dan Patrick Show
"caplan" Discussed on The Dan Patrick Show
"So Brian schottenheimer was the offense coordinator. He was brought in, I'm told because he could coach hard hard coaching is not letting players get away with bad habits, forcing them to make certain throws. We're Wilson would like to run around and not take the first read and just try to make a spectacular play because that's the way he can be. Russell Wilson played the best ball of his career and wasn't even close. 20 passing touchdowns and just 8 games he was in on absolute fire. Pete Cal kind of sort of micromanaged the offense in front and shine heimer. And Pete kell parted ways after that season, despite how well Russell Wilson played for the first half. So Doug, that's the thing is part of it is because Wilson wants to do things his own way. There are plenty of throws that we're building to help Wilson this season. I'm telling you, it's less of a coaching issue. It's much more in the quarterback. And as you guys were talking about before I got on here, the contract is still on us. There's really not much they can do over the course of the contract. There might be a .3 years down the line where they go. It's not working and we're just going to take the massive cap hit, suffer through it, like the eagles did and look, the eagles got through it. The ones hit the 35 plus million. And they got through it and look where they are. Now, that is true. Let's ask about Nathaniel Hackett. And I don't know. I had bad feelings almost from day one. I remember the 65 yard field goal, then he had to go get a coach to help him manage the game. I mean, that's the first two weeks of your head coaching career. It looked like he was going to be in trouble from jump. Yeah, he seemed over match. To be honest with the heat, he got the job, just a couple of things here. He got the job largely because it was work with Aaron Rodgers. Rogers look every player needs coaching. I get that. But Rogers had already been developed. Now, what I'm told by team sources, they're really Kevin O'Connell, but Kevin O'Connell was coaching the Super Bowl and they made a decision not to wait for him. And then of course, Minnesota jumped in, they got him. So that was they got Hackett set of cloth Hackett. The longtime college coach and he did coach in the pro level. And they thought they were getting a guy who had been around a coach quarterbacks for many years and who could coach and get Wilson back on track here. Wilson last year was hurt. Let's not forget. The last good football Russell Wilson played, as I mentioned earlier, is the first F 2020. He's been on the downward spiral since then. The other coach dog, I'm sorry. I wanted to ask one other thing about coaching and let's switch over to Jeff Saturday and Doug and I were just talking about that situation. I think he's out of the running. I think it would be a hard, higher for Jim or say to hire him after what we've seen the last three or four weeks, which has just been embarrassing. The blow into 33, nothing lead. They're getting killed in the second half of games in the fourth quarters of games. Will he get this job? What's your gut or what are you hearing? No, he's going to get it.

The Fifth Hour with Ben Maller
"caplan" Discussed on The Fifth Hour with Ben Maller
"Look at it like if I was running a business at him. And I had an employee that was not putting the right work in. Why would I give them this massive contract? And so it's like the cardinals are doing two different things here. They're rewarding Kyler Murray with this massive amount of money. The riches of Solomon but at the same time, they're also admitting you're not really doing what you're supposed to be doing here. So it's very odd that they would do that. Why do you think they went down that road? Well, let's be honest about it then. I think you just hit on it. They obviously felt that they needed to hold them accountable in some way. Now, Marie, by the way, did not have to agree to this. And by the way, the big thing we should give a little to the teaching moment Ted study, which is the all 22 is paramount. Through quarterback development and caliber, by the way, it's been a solid quarterback. He's gotten better. He struggled late in the season because of the loss of Deandre Hopkins. That could tell their offense. But yeah, it's certainly not a great sign when you're saying, okay, if you want this deal, you have to create a certain amount of hours. And the way we want it done. Now, we don't, here's the question. Yes, we know the dictate study, but what did they not like in his response to, for instance, you know, you go in, you know, quarterbacks go in, they watch the tape with the coaches. And then did he not have good recall? Was he was he fuzzy on some of the details? There's got to be a reason that I think you hit on it. Why they felt they needed to put this in there. And that's the point. Well, and getting to the bottom of it though, 'cause you know, I saw earlier this week, cliff Kingsbury, a bunch of the players. And they're obviously towing the company line. They're saying all the right things about Kyler, but clearly there's a disconnect somewhere along the way. And I put him, I talked about this on my show the other night that Kylie was one of these guys and you see this probably all the time being in locker rooms, and there's a lot of guys that play football that it's not their passion. It's not their life's love. They just happen to be good at it, or they can make a lot of money at it. And I put Kyler in that category. I get the sense if it wasn't for his father and some of the people around him, he'd be playing baseball right now. And if it was up to him, he might just be playing video games. I don't know where football falls on the spectrum, but I put him in that category, is that a fair statement to makers that unfair? Well, it's a little bit unfair because we don't know exactly how much she puts in or what is first. You would have to be very close to his dad, by the way, has been a coach. So obviously it comes from a football background. We know about the baseball and his background. But they want a way to make sure that it's not like he was studying 80 hours a week. They put a minimum of time in, which he's going to do anyway. But I just, I'm with you, it is very curious why he and his agent, and another side of this, which is fascinating. His age at our core card also represents the head coach cliff kingsburg. It's just a fascinating scenario for the quarterback and the head coach to be working together and they have the same agent. Yeah. Well, I see that a lot in the media business though, right? These guys that have the same Asian get jobs and stuff like that. But I hear what you're saying on that. Now, I'm going to bring up the privacy policy in terms of conditions, especially to explain U.S. 16 rules we're currently wanting to make marketing message apply, or replace, stop, stop. The pandemic has been hard on all our kids. New studies show more than one in three children who started school in the pandemic now need intensive reading help. That's right, millions of kids in kindergarten through third grade in the United States can not read at grade level. Here's the good news. Your child can be reading in just 30 days guaranteed with hooked on phonics, even if your child has been struggling, hooked on phonics will teach your child to read in just 30 days guaranteed and right now you can get started for just $1, text the word grade to 32 32 32 right now, hooked on phonics is highly effective and incredibly fun, and everything can be done right from home, and in less than 20 minutes a day, for more than 30 years, hooked on phonics has been the proven learn to read program that kids love to use. Text grade to 32 32 32 and teach your child to read in just 30 days guaranteed text grade to 32 32 32 right now and get started for just $1, text grade to 32 32 32 now, text grade to 32 32 32. Sean Watson here, Adam, which is a dangerous point of reference because at the time we're talking, this is not been adjudicated. There's a lot of chatter that something's gonna come down. So in the most general of ways here, is the moment of reckoning, shall we say, going to happen here in the next ten days, this obviously airing on a Friday. So are we closing in on this, or is this just completely open in and this thing can drag into the regular season? I was told by a very strongly sourced expectant expectation to Robinson, the former district. Former federal judge, it would take at least two to three weeks for her to go over both legal briefs from the NFL PA side and the NFL side because remember she's the one who has to do it. And she has to make her decision and she's not going to rush through it because there's a lot of notes. There's a lot of information given by both sides. But the source said, it's a reasonable expectation. I'll take at least two to three weeks, which means at the end of July is when we could have an answer to answer your question. That's the best I could give you, because that's what I was told by someone I trust. Yeah, and there's been all kinds of chatter. And I'm sure you've seen it, you've heard the same stuff I've heard. Everything from he's going to get suspended for the season to he's going to get a very minimum suspension and some saying he's not even going to be punished at all. What have you heard that you believe is the most credible regarding deshaun Watson's punishment? I'm going to take a little bit of a different swan, but within what you're asking, the way that one attorney who's dealt with the NFL for years explained to me, he goes, look, if you look at some of these penalties have been reduced over the years, historical precedent matters. No matter how bad it looks for Watson on the surface, the NFL pick, particularly Jeffrey Kessler, who's the NFL's NFL team's attorney, who is won so many cases and some people with form of Thor means against the NFL for you, 'cause he's won a lot, and he's had he said that probably is reduced. Counselors are master at it. If he could find a way to get the potential suspension reduced, well, think of it this way. And this is also very, this is really interesting and important to note. And I don't know why the NFL PA agreed to this, but if there's two Robinson recommends, no games. It can not be appealed. If she recommends four, 6, 8, ten, it absolutely can be appealed. And that's the key here. And remember, then here's the key point that the appeals officer is the commissioner who is designated. And obviously, that person will be severely biased towards the NFL. That's the part I don't understand why the NFL here would agree to that. But there are give facts to negotiation that's a massive gift back. So just think about it this way. If Watson gets suspended, there's a very good chance it could be increased that decreased. But historically, if he gets off from this from the situation, it's going to be because somehow some way to Robinson felt historical president precedent was taken largely into account and quite frankly, be ignoring some very strong evidence that something occurred. Yeah, and this is an unprecedented situation. I mean, guys have gotten in trouble, right? We all know that over the years, but the volume, the number of accusers. So this is uncharted water here for the NFL and Roger Goodell and whatnot. So we'll see what happens with that. Now Lamar Jackson turned the page here, Adam. Lamar Jackson, I heard from my buddy in Baltimore that said, the ravens have offered Lamar Jackson, the second largest amount of money in the NFL, as far as quarterbacks are concerned behind the aforementioned deshaun Watson, but he hasn't agreed to the contract and I don't know how much of that is actually real money and how much of that is fake money and how much how much of that is guaranteed and whatnot. But if it doesn't get done here, does Lamar Jackson enter free agency or is he just going to be franchise tagged year after year after year like similar to Kirk Cousins was in Washington a couple years ago? Yeah, Ben, here's the situation. Carla was kind of like with kyla Murray. The courthouse did not have to do that deal.

The Fifth Hour with Ben Maller
"caplan" Discussed on The Fifth Hour with Ben Maller
"And you've enjoyed the shenanigans on the overnight show all the nonsense that has taken place. We had the great game show scandal involving Eddie Garcia and Justin Cooper and we're still working through that on the show. It was quite the week involving a regular caller Justin in Cincinnati in cahoots with Eddie and Cooper loop conspiring against me. But we're not here to talk about that. This, the Friday podcast, an opportunity, realizing that on the radio, we have a format which does not lend itself to interviews. I can come in early and tape a bunch of interviews. I know some of my competitors do that, but I don't want to do that. I don't want to do taped radio. I don't want to take part in that. It needs to be live. The podcast format, which is obviously on demand, is a much different animal. And that is the domain that we are in now, and the why not take advantage. And schmooze with some of our friends who happen to be NFL types today is an NFL thing. And the last couple of weeks have been NFL heavy weeks. It kind of pays the bills around here. And we are very excited to welcome for the first time to the 5th hour with Ben maller and Danny G podcast, a living breathing NFL insider. You've heard him on Fox Sports radio various shows over the years. He hosts his own radio show. He's regularly on NFL radio on serious XM. He's based in Philadelphia, spent a long time as an NFL guru at ESPN. He has broken many a story over the years, some of them big, some of them not so big. It's part of the job. And so without further ado, let's welcome in. Adam caplan, who joins us now on the podcast and Adam. I actually met you in Los Angeles at radio road. That was my maiden voyage. We had not met before. My maiden voyage to the Super Bowl, but I know that's your domain, right? You're there all the time. Yeah, good, Ben, good to be with her. Yeah, yeah, my first Super Bowl was out to the game was terrible. It was the bucks raiders. Okay. It was awful, but the week was phenomenal in San Diego. I'd have to say of all the super bowls have been to. It was the best week. Obviously, you can't beat the weather. The stadium was old, that's why they stopped having it there and a lot of the Chargers moved. But the week was fantastic. As you know, at any time you don't need a car to get around. This is well before Uber. It's a good thing because all the events were handled near the gas amp district in downtown San Diego. Yeah, for sure. But just being part of that event was great and meeting you in some of the other people that was wonderful. So you are an NFL insider. That is a very cool title to have among other titles that you own, is this something that you set out to do, Adam, or did you stumble into this type of job? Well, it's funny, as far as the title, let me just address this. I didn't want the title. They gave it to me at ESPN. We had to have it. Because you know in this business, you have to have some sort of title. I find it corny, but I'm like, all right, I understand. For those of us who cover the NFL full-time for a living, you're going to know some things that maybe the fan won't know or something that if you cover the entire league, so maybe the beat writer who's good may not know certain things I know. And I get it. That's just the way it is. So yeah, I started covering the league really in 2000. From an injury standpoint, I was known as one of the top injury insiders in the country. And then I just kind of transferred into not just injuries, but contracts and higher risk and firings and transactions and stuff like that. That's kind of what happens when you cover the leak from a national basis. When I work for Fox Sports dot com for a year, leaving up to the lockout 11, that's exactly what I was doing. So yeah, that's what I've done for the last 20 years or so. Is there a golden rule to being an insider? Is there something that you follow that's the secret? I would say Ben never stopped having a search for knowledge. You never know as much as you think you know. And that's kind of been a story of my career and why I got into it because I've grown up in Philly, I just felt like I was not learning enough. I want to know why did the eagles in this case because that's what I'm from that market. Why do they sign that player? Why do they trade that player? Why do they cut that player? Why do the coaches call that play? You know, yes, I handle a lot of transactions and movement in the league. But I also, as a fan, I love the game, Ben. A lot of reporters don't love the game. Unfortunately, they're just, they like doing it, but they don't love covering the league, but they may not love football as much as I do. And I wanted to learn about how you put together a game plan. Why did you call that play? Why is that guy benched? That was really, I would say the impetus in one of the big reasons why I became someone who was very interested. Was there a particular eagles team Adam that you fell in love with or was he just growing up, you just watched the eagles all the time? 'cause you're from that area. Well, what's funny about it is and I think you know this as an NFL fan. And someone who's been for decades. Just because you grew up in an era doesn't mean you're always a fan of that team. And no matter what sport it is, like in the NBA, I'm a Dallas magazine, although I love the Mavericks, I also love the sixers. I actually was a raider fan growing up in addition to being an eagles fan because I grew up here. Then at one point, they have to pick sort of you can't be a fan of two teams. I think when you're a family of NFL teams, so I want more of an eagle fan that is seasoned ticket holder, but what happens is when you cover the league, you stop being a fan and you particularly when you cover all 32 teams. The sand for rooting leaves you. What eagles do win or lose does not matter to me. It's just like that with all sorts of teams. I root for coaches and executives to keep their jobs because there's a lot of turnover, but it doesn't matter to me who wins or loses. Now, are you like me as a talk show host? And you do a radio as well, but doing the overnight show. I'm always looking for the story. I want the story. I want the radio. That's what I want. I don't necessarily care who wins or loses, per se. Obviously, you know, I gamble occasionally, so that from that part of it, I care. But I just want the great story to talk about. That's what I'm looking for. All the other stuff is like, oh, it's great and all that, but I want to know this story. And have you become that guy now? Because you've been in the media a long time. That's when you know you've crossed over. When you're just going for the story. You just want this story. Well, I'll be honest with you. So over time in my career, I've been reports that I've had where maybe I underestimated the magnitude of the story that I put out when I worked at ESPN. I don't really care how big the story is. I'm just after the story, the importance of it. Because I know it's important to anyone, we would drive stories by our reporting, no doubt about it, but I wasn't worried about sick of my chest out. Wow, I had a big story today. It was cool. But it was just about the information, getting it out and moved on to the next one. Now, this week, or recent stories, the calamari contract fascinating. And I know, you know, when Fox Sports ready, you guys have been covering it. That's as fascinating to me that that stuff's very interesting. I've never heard of a contract language because I've covered a specialized in contract reporting. People follow my career probably know this. And I've never heard of language in there for making sure the player that put it back studies. I've never heard anything like that. And by the way, that's a major sports talk radio topic. I get that as a sports talk radio host for over well over 20 years almost 25. Yeah, I'm big on big national stories like you are. It's just you and I may see them differently, what's more important to you, you might like, if you're a hot take guy, you may find something that somebody said that has something to do with the NFL, more of a hot tape where I look at it differently. Yeah, the Kyler Murray story is a ten. I'm right there. I'm right there with you. It is fascinating. If you have an employee, I

The Fifth Hour with Ben Maller
"caplan" Discussed on The Fifth Hour with Ben Maller
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Food Psych
"caplan" Discussed on Food Psych
"World a safer place for people of all shapes and sizes, including the very largest sizes. So thank you for reading the book. If you have or for planning to read it, if you haven't already, and I'm so grateful for all of you. And now without any further ado, let's go talk to Heather Kaplan. So tell me about your relationship with food growing up. Well, first, I will say I grew up with a lot of privileges, so I think it's important to acknowledge that. I'm white. I grew up pretty financially secure. I never thought much about money and we always had food in our House. I had one working parent and one parent, my mom who stayed home with us while we were little. So we mostly had home cooked meals and lots of different options. We didn't have a lot of restrictions in the house, but I do also very vividly remember growing up in household that was very health conscious. So I think I noticed an interest in health and a lot of talk about what was healthy and what wasn't from a pretty early age. And I think when I look back on it now, I'm actually surprised that we didn't have more restrictions in our household, but from what I can remember, we did have a lot of food freedom. We had treats every night and we had a home cooked meal that we ate as a family. We were forced to eat vegetables most of the time, but we all got over it. And the only things that I really remember kind of looking back on it with my, you know, with hindsight now is like, we didn't have a lot of sugary cereals and putting air quotes around like high sugar cereals, usually only have like diet, drink options, like diet sodas or diet cokes. And a lot of low fat everything, but you know, it was like the late 80s, early 90s. So we're par for the course. Yeah. So yeah, other than that, again, I think I when I look at early childhood, I do remember a lot of food freedom and having a quote unquote normal relationship with food. We all played sports, so we were pretty active as well. When I get into high school, I definitely remember pretty big shifts and I think part of that was my younger sister, she's about two years younger than me and she went through a growth spurt in middle school, so I was just starting high school. And suddenly it was like as tall as me, which was new and very lean and very thin and there were lots of comments about that. Many people noticed it and had something to say about it. And she was a track runner. So just really active and she started kind of changing the way that she was eating. Probably for reasons that are somewhat obvious now. There was a lot of attention on her body. And that kind of brought a lot of attention onto my body for my perspective. And this was mostly just something that I internalized. It wasn't really said to me. But we have very different body types, and I just remember in early high school becoming very aware of that, especially since now we could conceivably share clothes and we were, we looked similar in age, but I felt like my body was so different than hers. So that's kind of the first time I remember having a heightened awareness of that. And then throughout high school I put myself on my first diet around age 15 for reasons I could not begin to tell you. I really don't have any memory of what was going on in my head, but I was 15. I remember being a sophomore in high school and deciding that I wanted to try the Atkins diet. So suddenly, decided I wasn't eating carbs anymore, and thankfully I didn't actually know what that meant. So I remember like having M and M's for lunch one day or I was like part of my lunch and when I look back, I'm like, yeah, that was carbohydrates, but yeah, so I just remember shifting a lot of what I was eating and I don't remember how long this lasted. It doesn't feel like it lasts that long, but something that stands out to me is my parents briefly expressed concern but didn't really stop me from doing anything, not that I'm pointing a finger of blame at them. But there wasn't really anyone who said like, hey, why are you doing this? Or you don't need to. It's just kind of like, we're not sure this is healthy, but anyway, moving on. And so I remember doing that and again, it didn't last that long. I was like, this doesn't feel very fun. So if we're going to do this anymore, but then about a year later, I was in the summer between my junior year and my senior year of high school. I started reading a health focused magazine that I don't remember how I got my hands on, but then suddenly I had a subscription to it, so it's coming to our house every month. And my mom had like cooking lights and other kind of diety magazines around every once in a while. So I think I probably just picked up on that a little bit and then got interested in this magazine, which was geared more towards younger women, I guess. And started reading a lot and changing a lot of my behaviors. I remember being on a family vacation and deciding all of a sudden, I don't drink. Anymore. I just made that rule in my head. Out of nowhere. While we were on vacation in Hawaii, and I remember feeling like very empowered and like, okay, well, if I could do one thing, I could do something else. And we all know how that spirals. Slippery slope. Right, right. So my senior year of high school, I played soccer, you know, I was still an athlete, still very active, but I just remember making very slow conscious decisions to change the way I was eating. But I was still very kind of body conscious and had I would say pretty poor body image. Again, compared myself pretty often to my sister who was like tall and lean. And even though I lived in a small body and had a lot of thin privilege, I didn't know that or have the language for that at the time. And I just felt very conscious of the way that I looked. So made a lot of these kind of smaller decisions that eventually really piled on and suddenly I had tons of food rules and was restricting my eating and going into college. I became pretty anxious about leaving. I moved across the country and went to a very different school in a very different culture. I grew up in the southwest, and I went to school in the east coast. And I thought that would be great. I was very excited about it..

Food Psych
"caplan" Discussed on Food Psych
"To be in the rebellious place and go through it. For most of us, it's really important to go through that phase of rebelling and really pushing the envelope in order to get to a place where we can make the decisions we truly want to make for ourselves, not for anyone else, right? In order to get to a place of full autonomy. So I'll share a little story kind of an analogous story from my own life here, which is that when I was 16 and 17, in late high school and driving, my parents were pretty strict about my curfew. I had a 1230 a.m. curfew, which was actually fairly generous compared to many people I know now, but at the time, a lot of my friends didn't have curfews at all, or if they did, it was later than 1230 and on a case by case basis and not a hard and fast rule. But for me, if I was home 5 minutes late, 5 minutes past 1230, my dad would be waiting for me with a mini lecture and kind of pacing back and forth and annoyed because he wanted to go to bed. That's why my car fu was 1230 because he wanted to go to bed, right? And he couldn't go to bed until I was home. And the later I was, the further after 1230 I came home, the more lecturing I got. And if I was really late, I would get yelled at and have some sort of privilege taken away. Being grounded or not being allowed to drive a car for a week or things like that. So what do you think I did with that 1230 car view? I tested the limits all the damn time. I stayed out past curfew. I left my friends houses with too little time to spare and sped on the road to try to get back, but it was 5, ten minutes late. I would totally blow it off sometimes and not call it or let them know I'd be late, et cetera, et cetera. I just really tested them in big and small ways. And then when I turned 18 and was about to go off to college, suddenly my parents decided, I think, through my mom's influence, honestly, that I didn't need to have a curfew anymore. I was 18. I was an adult. I needed to get used to setting my own limits and stuff. So they lifted the curfew. There was no more curfew. And so at first, I stayed out really, really late, or sometimes I didn't come home at all and just stayed over at friend's houses and really tested them on this whole no curfew thing. I was really not sure they meant it. So this was all not totally conscious, right? I can see this looking back now. But it was really testing the boundaries here. And then when I went to college and I wasn't living with my parents anymore, I really let loose. I went to parties and stayed out till two, three, four in the morning. I stayed out super, super late, most of the time when I went out and I stayed up really late, too, with my friends in the dorms. But eventually, after a few years of staying out late because I finally could and staying up late because I finally could. Something interesting happened. I started noticing my own desires to stay out or go home. My own tiredness and how it felt in my body, my own energy levels, and I started to be able to make choices based on how I actually felt. Rather than following some arbitrary rule that was set by an authority figure and someone outside myself. And I was able to start feeling in my body when I was ready to go home when I was tired. And I could also feel in my body when I was having fun. And when I wanted to stay out, no matter what time it was, right? So the times varied all over the map, sometimes I'd be exhausted and go home by 10 o'clock. Sometimes I'd have tons of energy and not want the night to end, even at four 30 in the morning or whatever. And so it really ebbed and flowed. Now obviously my appetite for staying out late has changed a bit as I've gotten older, which is often true of our appetites for food, actually, like our tastes can change over time over the years. And there's nothing wrong with any of that. Our bodies can change our preferences and desires can change. But getting back to this analogy, I also still definitely sometimes have those nights where I'm out with friends and feeling on top of the world and want to stay out, even though it's way past my usual bedtime. So the point of all this is just to say that when you're living under a regime of someone else's rules, when you're following the rules set by an authority figure, it's completely understandable to be drawn to do the exact opposite of what they say. And to feel disconnected from your own desires at first. But as you get farther and farther away from following those rules, you start to recognize what really satisfies you and makes you feel good. And sometimes that can take a long time and a lot of practice, right? Like it took me a couple years to really get the hang of noticing when I was tired and ready to go home and not just be rebelling against the curfew that I had had before. But eventually it will come. Eventually when you give yourself time and practice, you will start to notice your own desires and those will take over. And so Chelsea, who asked the question, I know that can be true for you with food as well. Just trust that your right where you need to be right now and try to stop second guessing things. Just allow yourself to have what pops into your mind what sounds good and you can decide whether or not it was satisfying afterwards and you can ask yourself the next time what sounds good and see what pops into your head again and just keep giving yourself the permission to eat what you want when you want the full unconditional permission to eat for any reason. Because eventually you're own desires really will emerge loud and clear, but right now try to enjoy the process of experimenting. So I hope that helps and if you want to submit your own question for a chance to have it answered on an upcoming episode, you can go to Christie Harris and dot com slash questions that's Christy Harris and dot com slash questions. And then if you want to ask.

Mike Gallagher Podcast
NYU's Arthur Caplan Wants to Unite Americans... By Treating the Unvaxxed as 3rd Class Citizens
"Listen to this guy. Arthur caplan is director of medical ethics at the NYU Grossman school of medicine. He was on CNN this morning. Check this out. Well, look, I want us to act as a community. I want us to act as a team. When you're fighting a war, you need all hands on deck. I don't want to reject those who still haven't done the right thing. I'll condemn them. I'll shame them. I'll blame them. But I don't want to exclude them. They've got to come around. We can't win this war. We're going to be talking about COVID this time next year if we don't get more people to do the right thing. So we can't write them off. We can penalize them more. We can say, we're going to pay more on your hospital bill if you weren't vaccinated. You can't get life insurance or disability insurance at affordable rates if you aren't vaccinated. Those companies should not treat us as equals in terms of what the financial burdens are that that disease imposes. So I can think of a number of ways in which we should say here's the stick, get on board. At the same time, we do need everyone. It's a war. You got to have all your troops unified if we're ever going to win it. Right, because nothing screams unifying the troops more than we're going to financially penalize you and treat you like some third class citizen. Yeah, that's a great, great approach, Arthur caplan. You're really on to something here. These people are nuts.

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
"caplan" Discussed on AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
"13 minutes in, I'm still railing about stuff that's going on. Well, let me get to what I want to talk about today. On the Patreon show, I talked about the fact that the movie fatal attraction, the paramount network is going to make a series based on the movie fatal attraction, and it's going to start Lizzy Caplan in the Glenn Close roll, I'm happy about that because I really couldn't find one thing that was attractive about when close and why a man would leave a beautiful woman like Ann archer to go and have sex with Glenn Close. She looked awful in my book. I think Lizzie cap was cute. I can see that happening. Did Lizzie Kaplan go on with Matt Perry for a while weren't they together for a while? That's all that always knocks the girl down in my book. If you're with Matt Perry, a serial drug addict and chain smoker and absolute alcoholic. I don't know if you're the girl for me. Not that I'm the guy for her, but that always makes me feel like, what the fuck did you see in him outside of all the dollars he brought home from work? Why did you want to be with Matt Perry? He was an absolute wreck. So in other words, if you meet an actor who can't remember three years of his work on a major sitcom, you think that's boyfriend material that scares me about Lizzie caplan. Now I'll come to find out she was a dating Matthew, but I think she was. I think there was a time they dated. Anybody who dated him if you're a woman, I can't accept it. Like, guys, you went to me. You meet this hot girl, you find out she was with Matthew perrie at the height of his drug addiction alcohol addiction and just being a pig. Would you think the same way about her? I couldn't. I just couldn't. Speaking of that movies that make me jealous like fatal attraction is one of those movies. If you're a woman you want to fucking kill the woman, you might kill Glenn Close. If you're a guy you want to shake sense into Michael Douglas, but they were movies back in the day that had to deal with sexuality and a husband and a wife and then being put to task with their marriage and I remember I couldn't see the movie unfaithful. Oh my God, the movie unfaithful with Diane Lane and Richard Gere. I forget which relationship I was just out of. I couldn't watch it because all I could think about was my girlfriend cheating on me with another guy. And if the other guy looks like Richard Gere, then you understand. And I love Diane Lane, so that was killing me. I still to this day have not seen the whole movie. Again, I can't watch it. But the movie that got me was indecent proposal. Do you remember Woody Harrelson and Demi Moore and Robert Redford? Let me paint the picture if you haven't seen it. Woody and Demi are David and Diana Murphy. Married high school sweethearts living in California, Diana's a real estate agent doing well. David's got an architectural design company. He's making their dream home and the couple invest everything they have in David's project and it's a beachfront property in Santa Monica. Construction begins, but then the recession hits and suddenly the wife can sell houses and David is without a job. And they're desperate need of 50 grand to save their land from being repossessed. So they go to Vegas and they figure they're going to gamble and win some money. Sounds like a great premise so far. To me, it's never been more gorgeous. Woody's like an all shots kind of husband, but you understand why she'd like them. At the casino, give me more catches the eye of a billionaire John gage played by Robert Redford who still looked goddamn good. David, Woody Harrelson is one in $25,000 in craps. And they were all happy about their winnings, right? And Denny assures him that she loves him regardless of the money. The next day they lose everything at roulette. So they're leaving the casino and they know there's a crowd gathered around this guy playing poker. And it's Robert Redford, and he asked Demi Moore to join him for good luck. And she makes a winning crap roll on his $1 million bet. And as thanks for that, he insists on paying for her and Woody Harrelson's hotel suite and interested that he saw her admiring in the window to casino. And they have a great night together. And then he offers a couple of million bucks to allow him to spend the night with her. But Willie Harrison refuses. And so did shit. And after a sleepless night, they end up agreeing to go forward with his proposal when he housing calls his lawyer. They prepare a contract for the arrangement. And he leaves her. He leaves to me more, his beautiful wife with this fucking billionaire. Of course, suddenly he's got a change of heart and he raises to stop them, but he gets there too late because they're leaving by helicopter. He can't do shit. I don't know why he couldn't call her, but he can't do anything. From there they go on to a private yacht and renford offers her a chance to love. You can cancel the dealer. You can go back to your husband. Which is a really cool move. It's a very suave thing. Listen, you want to back out back out? You know, you can return to your husband if he loses a toss of this lucky coin. But of course, Redford wins the toss with the lucky coin. They mean more laughs, they spend the night together. This movie was popular when I worked at newsday and I'd sit in the back with all the guys in the sparks to partner when the call stopped coming in and kind of like the last hour and a half we were like doing nothing. And one night, we started shooting the shit. And I worked with some guys who wouldn't marry for a long time. One that was a Mike can down. He was married a long time. A few guys were married. Most of us were newlyweds were single. And I said to my funny guy, Jewish guy, great guy. Said, Mike, how much would it take for you to let some guys sleep at your wife one night? Never narrates it, never gonna happen, I don't care, what the amount of money is no one's sleeping with my wife. Every married guy said that. This swept across the room. Really? No, I don't care why don't care what the amount is. No one's fucking my wife. I need quiet. Not even for a 100,000? No, not no way. A million? No. Everything's quiet. Two minutes later. Does the guy have to kiss her when he has sex with him? And we start negotiating. No, no kiss, but they're definitely having sex. It's a good 20 minutes of sex with your life $1 million. No, can't do it, can't do it. And then 5 minutes later.

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
Paramount Plus Making 'Fatal Attraction' Reboot With Lizzy Caplan
"Today. On the Patreon show, I talked about the fact that the movie fatal attraction, the paramount network is going to make a series based on the movie fatal attraction, and it's going to start Lizzy Caplan in the Glenn Close roll, I'm happy about that because I really couldn't find one thing that was attractive about when close and why a man would leave a beautiful woman like Ann archer to go and have sex with Glenn Close. She looked awful in my book. I think Lizzie cap was cute. I can see that

The New Yorker: Fiction
"caplan" Discussed on The New Yorker: Fiction
"Big now, not to know the difference, and that if he kept on insisting about that, she was going to talk to doctor caplan, because he probably had worms or appendicitis and something would have to be done. I felt that Bobby was going to start crying and hasten to explain to him again about nightmares. He had to realize that nobody loved him as much as his mother, not even I who loved him so much. And Bobby listened very seriously, drawing a tear instead of course he knew and got out of his chair to go kiss my sister who didn't know what to do and remained thoughtful, looking into space. That afternoon, I went to look for him in the yard and I asked him to tell me his aunt because he could confide everything in me the same as with his mother. And if he didn't want to tell her, he could tell me you could see that he didn't want to talk. It was too much for him, but finally, he said something like at night it was all different. He spoke about some sort of black cloth that he couldn't get his hands or feet out of anyone can have nightmares like that. But it was a shame that Bobby should only have them about my sister who made so many sacrifices for him. I told them that, and I repeated it, and he, of course, agreed. Right after that, my sister came down with pleurisy and I had to take care of things. Bobby was no trouble for me because small as he was, he could handle almost everything by himself. I remember that he would come in to see my sister and stay by the side of her bed without speaking, waiting for her to smile at him or to stroke his hair. And then he would go quietly out into the yard and play or into the living room to read. I didn't even have to tell him not to play the piano during that time, even though he liked you very much. The first time I saw that he was sad I explained to him that his mother was better now and that one of these days she would get up for a while to take some sun. Bobby put on a strange expression and looked at me out of the corner of his eye. I don't know..

The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"caplan" Discussed on The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"Background vigil. No doubt that's an interesting cholera. And he hit on the head when he said it just comes down to the individual because you could say about the young athletes now. Twenty two years on me heck. Nba you're still nineteen twenty years old twenty one years old making millions nowhere in the nfl. Twenty two twenty. Three megan megan. Sm blow it messed up with substance abuse. Now and some. Don't so is what it is. We gotta squeeze mark from sacramento on the odd couple of fox sports radio. He had to call on the anniversary. What's up mark what's going on what's happening guys to food. They no good yes. Duck man thank you guys made it. Man i just wanna to say happy anniversary and And real quick on the carter saying In a way. I think he has a point that to what he's trying to say i think is that no matter. What when you have a new system come in and when there's young kids and there's money involved and there's no guardrails in place is going to bring out that that dirty side of this that we haven't seen yet and that's always when there's money there's a dirty side to it. How much of it we don't know yet. That's that's something that is mark. I agree with that. But here's the other part. Is chris carter. Acting as if people aren't getting illegal money under the table now or haven't been in that. Hey you know what. He was getting illegal right. That's what i'm saying. So it's not just lightness. It was happening. Guys are getting money in college. No no doubt. And you know what i do believe. They're still little bitterness from some of the things that has happened in. Chris carter too. I think that plays in the summer. Things eddie staying now i do believe that. Yeah all right. That's our man. Mark man we appreciate you calling in one of our long time listeners and callers we got adam kaplan he always drops the knowledge on the nfl. On the i couple. He's next. But i be sure to catch live editions of the odd couple with chris. Broussard and rob parker weekdays at seven. Pm eastern four pm pacific on fox sports radio and the iheartradio app. he's bicarbonate. I'm dan fire and we have a brand new fantasy. Football podcast called. I want your flex twice a week. Every tuesday and friday we come up with new episodes. It's about only look back at happened. What you need to do at that minute and also look ahead of what's coming up in the fantasy football world. That's right dad every week. We're going to scour the waiver wire to find the pickups to turbo boost your fantasy lineup sit starts fantasy football players rankings to get you ready to dominate. The competition listened the flex by carbon and meet dan. Buyer on the iheartradio app apple podcasts. At wherever you your podcasts. This year the first day back isn't just for kids. Were all going to have a first day. Back families companies the whole country. But you shouldn't go back to square one. Let's embrace the lessons of this past year and move forward. Make our health a priority spend more time with loved ones and find everything you need at kohl's whether you're headed to the classroom the office or gathering with friends for kids then back to school. Coles has the latest looks from top active where brands like nike adidas under armor and more including backpacks. That's right. the kids will actually have to carry their books again so make sure they look good doing it for the grownups. Coles has beauty must have and stylish accessories you want because for those who have been working from home two days from being seen only from the shoulders up over so go ahead save on everything you and your family needs to move forward at kohl's or kohls dot com today. 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D mobile and metro by t mobile continue to support luck almanac all year long by investing in education engaging in hispanic focus recruiting three training and keeping connected. And we believe that. We are unstoppable after all night. Without the this. The couple. Chris rob coming to you live from the fox. Sports radio studios. Our next guest is a great. Nfl insider for fox sports radio series x m in our adam kaplan adam. What's is good sucking looking forward to this weekend. Scans we had a co quite an interesting game. Last night i going to the game. I didn't think much of it went up being a terrific game. What let's start there. Real quick dave gettleman gm. I think he has to be al. I mean when i look at that. It's five years in a row to giants and started owen to three with gettleman. I know he's been there since two thousand eighteen and then some of the draft picks that he's botched and in the coaching hires shurmur. And now you know. Judge who coach terribly last night. What do you make of gettleman. And if the giants are season.

The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"caplan" Discussed on The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"Lot of other things right. Yeah don't i mean just giving them advice on look. Don't spend this money all up wasted. Don't waste it like there's other things. What about investments. What about stocks and getting in that early doing things for the long term. So so so there's gotta be some money management and the pitfalls so you can play chris carter's thing and say this happened to chris. Carter doesn't mean is gonna happen to you but you should look out for these. Things absolutely absolutely are interesting topic. We want to hear your thoughts. A seven seven ninety nine or fox. Eight seven seven nine nine six sixty three sixty nine students student athletes untold amounts of money. Cause more harm than good. What are your thoughts. Eight seven seven nine nine sixty three sixty nine. Yeah turned away and chris rob the act of fox. Sports radio has the best sports talk lineup. In the nation catch all of our shows at fox sports radio dot com and within the iheartradio app search f. s. are to listen live. Hey it's me. Chris broussard. Summer went by fast. But there's always more time to catch up with family friends. In the last month i've had vacation stops in both martha's vineyard and play del carmen mexico and let me tell you one thing i did it. Both spots was sit on the beach. Put my toes in the sand and enjoy an ice cold miller lite miller lite is the perfect drink for just doing you know needs to fake it to fit in no matter the season. Grab your friends and kick back with some miller lite. It's always a good choice. Miller lite is a great tasting beer. That's been brewed with beer. Lovers in mind since nineteen seventy five and get this. It's only ninety six calories brothers. We know we're watching the midsection so next time. You're getting ready to enjoy coal with your friends go to miller lite dot com forward slash odd couple to find delivery options near you or you can pick up some miller lite pretty much anywhere that they sell beer. It's miller time celebrate responsibly. Miller brewing company milwaukee wisconsin ninety-six calories fellas and three point two carbs per twelve ounces. It's crazy how much we have to pay for outdated impersonal healthcare. Even crazier that we all just accept it. It's time to face facts. Healthcare is backwards. Luckily there's forward a new approach to primary care that surprisingly personal and refreshingly straightforward forward never makes you feel like just another patient backed by top rated doctors and the latest tech forward gives you access to personalized care whenever you need it. Using in-depth genetic analysis in real time bloodwork forwards top rated doctors provide you with in-depth insights to better understand your genetics mental and physical health. They then create custom easy to understand plans to help guide you to achieving long term health with forward you get unlimited in person visits with your doctor and access to care anytime via the forward app offer. One flat monthly fee. It's time to stop accepting backwards. Healthcare and start moving. Your health foreword visit go forward dot com today to learn more. That's go forward. Dot com tired of sitting in traffic for hours. Gas prices got you brian sham becoming bride diggers the joy back in your ride with metro and now introducing our first ever metro sales event. Save up to fifty percent on our most pocket of passes including daily weekly and even monthly passes us metro to go to work. Go to school. Go to space the smithsonian national errands base museum that choose metro for your next trip visit. Matar dot com slash sale. Hurry sale ends october fifteenth. Yeah he's deep he so dvd's calling up songs. That happened before he was bored. Not so he was gonna need when he did to freak with jail. Obviously but this is sisters leads rob. He's the greatest dancer that's right. This is i'm gonna say alex day sister sledge we are family that album seventies you say seventy seven. You notice the disco era. I'm just guessing that's a good guess. I must say. I'm going to say eighty eighty final answer. Yes no seventy nine seventy nine. That is seventy nine. That's the we are family. Pirates remember the pirates wanna championship. That will that's right right. We'll lose audio. Dave parker all those guys. Yes great times. It is the Couple and we're brought to you by discover card. Discover match all the cash. Back that you earn on your credit card at the end of your first year it's awesome because discovers accepted at ninety nine percents of places in the united states that take credit cards learn more. Discover dot com slash. Yes twenty twenty. One report. Do apply eight seven seven ninety nine or fox. We want to hear your guys thoughts on a chris. Carter starts on the name image likeness. All let's kick it off with dray in michigan couple fox sports radio and drake thanks for your support over these three years and my friend a man. Happy anniversary to you fellas. My i'm trying to figure out. Hey man you guys you know yes. Show the difference between journalism out on this. I don't even listen to watch sports the same well. Sports shows the same. 'cause 'cause which i didn't kobe was everybody else was just regurgitate stuff. Yeah i was keeping it fresh every day. Thank you. I really appreciate. That no doubt But i do know do they do have things implemented for these children but i do have a friend that works in the big ten school online and the school but even the early july Late july early august they was doing zoom calls. The kids parents coming about names like to perceived for and what companies to stay away from which companies are you. Okay what you can and can't do far as it was there jerseys and things right right like they are taking taking the proper steps. You know what. I'm saying to do that and i just wanna say man long as you all day man. I'm here so you know a couple of another three years and beyond baby thank you bye. Thank you brother. we appreciate that. Drake what about cannella in denver. One of the biggest odd couple fans. Chris i had wings with him in verdun. The all star game. yes sir. what's up but why what's going on. Rob how's it going chris. What a brother not too much they rob. I got your package in the mail today to thank you for that when you to wings or some i who pay couple gear. If you buy me some faith winds close undisclosed. I pay not pay for his wings. I paid for girls wings to all good all right. What'd you got your would say Happy anniversary man. You guys are the real deal But i think comes up to the personality and background. I think there's pros and cons to everything. And i'll just was them. I think like some of the pros Obviously you know they'll be able to help their families they'll be able to get into like bro time investments and they'll be able to travel and see the young age which is great but we all know is. Does the dog start to everything. And i'm not even gonna go into the drug thing but I think that the kids are going to go. Broke faster due to social media. I think they're gonna live beyond their means a little bit With all these followers that they have so. I think they'll go broke a little faster. They'll lose the edge for the game and then a couple more criticism like once you know somebody gets paid or they're gonna pay now Analyst and people in the sports market. They're going to start talking about. Oh look at his game now because he's got money and then last autumn oddity in the locker room. When you know one of your players and mac and cheese going home you know back to the room at the end of the night and you got money and you're eating well so i think automatically so there's a balanced to everything but like i said it all comes down to the personality and.

The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"caplan" Discussed on The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"Fifteenth. Fifteen minutes could save you. Fifteen percent or more. is that shakespeare. it's geico i hear. Yeah that. Shakespeare from one of his unpublished works would be not for awakening. May give it the other batteries for fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more no. It's from geico. 'cause they help save people money i hate to break it to you but geico got it from shakespeare gyco fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percents or more. Thanks for listening to the odd couple. Podcast be sure to catch us. Live every weekday from seven. Pm to ten pm eastern four to seven pm pacific or fox sports radio find your local station for the odd couple at fox sports radio dot com or stream. It live every day on the iheartradio app by searching f s. Are you're listening to fox sports radio. It is the couple we're coming to. You live from the fox. Sports radio studio so i guess we gotta do this every every hour. Yes chris get into it with this couple because you get into corny stuff like this and i don't. I'm into marketing territory. Always chronicle the things that happened in your life there we go all right. Thanks for it. It is our third anniversary as the odd couple and as you can see. We're excited all right. You can follow us on social media as well. Rob is at rob parker f s one or twitter and instagram. At chris underscore bruce hard on twitter. Chris bruce are sixty eight on the grant. We got adam kaplan. Nfl insider for fox sports radio and sirius xm nfl. He's always fun to have on in. They're wrapping up. This hour is what's my leave and this looks robbed from the title. I don't know where you're going with it but it looks like one that you've done before notice bit different. I'm going to send it to you. Is it just differs. Stores no different. It's different stores. Yeah yeah yeah but this is different products. So you'll understand it when you see it. Okay all right all right very interesting this next topic. We're gonna get into i. I think it's going to be a very interesting discussion for us and for our listeners. And you guys get the chance to call in and and comment. But chris carter hall of fame wide receiver rob you and i worked with him both at espn and here at fox. Sports and chris actually the position. And i'm holding now if first things first the morning show f s one. That was his original person. and yes. it was chris and nick right as the host and then brandon. Marshall replaced. chris carter and then brandon left. and now i've replaced brandon. I love chris you know. Great guy rob. I'm sure you know him. Well and i wish if nothing but the best but he was on a podcast or was it i'm sorry untold stories is the name of the podcast. It was on bleacher report with master test foxy and as the guys named mashed hostile and he was asked about the new name. Image likeness rule in college sports. And here's what chris carter had to say about it. Let's replay racking trouble. You think i'm we'll get into the things. I was doing this. Allow me to do more of it and we would just smoking. We just a little bit and just when cocaine people start smoking Rocking it up and people would just start putting it in marijuana and they blew. My mom unfortunately started. When i was at ohio state to me. It's not about the money. I do believe that there is a way that we can compensate but given young people. Unlimited amounts of income is not the best thing. I'm not happy for the guys guys eventually going get their money. I'm gonna have to be for women benjamin at tick tock. These things seldom set like yes. They can do it the right way. Let's see them right now. In terms of how to navigate to space now being able to monetize like. I would say that they're really no experts in this area and be very careful. The universities can recommend to the athlete. A business or something that they can go to but people don't make mistakes. This is new territory. People are going to make mistakes but Thinking that young people are going to be better off with money and without it. That will be interesting to watch all right. That's chris carter. Who as i said was an all american. Wide receiver at ohio state went on to have a great hall of fame career in the nfl and now as a broadcaster and ride for those. That might not know. Chris had a well chronicle drug problem. Yes for much of his. Nfl career he dig it clean and is cleaned to this day. So that that is obviously tremendous has a really story of overcoming for him but he said it drifts right there that he started at ohio state and what the point he was making was that he signed when he was at ohio state. He signed illegally with a couple of agents when he was a freshman he signed with. Lloyd bloom a- and norby walters. Those were the agents that he signed with as a freshman and he said he was making so much money. Might not seem. I turned us. They gave him fifteen thousand and then ten five hundred a month. That's a lot of money back the chronicity. There's a lot of money today for a college kid but that was in the eighties as you in the eighties. I was working shoe store as a stock boy. Making two seventy five an hour. A lot of service. Yeah no no. That's trying to say. Is that back then. That was a lot of money that was that was playing ball and it was only division. Three but in nineteen from eighty. Six to ninety rob. We will be on campus for a week around christmas. Because you know. We're playing in christmas tournaments. And all that and they will give us what they give us a hundred and twenty dollars and you thought were weak and you cut a week and you're like what two hundred and twenty dollars right but a whole five days or whatever it was you had to. You had to spend wisely but anyway. Chris said that that.

The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"caplan" Discussed on The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"Sports radio worship wednesday classic right day. Tom right their last little topic. Before we get out of here. Jason smith mike harmon on at the top of the hour. I'm airtours he's vj husky. Vj car scurry richardson. Busy couple months. Obviously we know what happened at the olympics but a lot has happened since then. I'm going to throw it over to you. let you set up. What has happened because we're talking to break your very clearly passionate about it. It's a wild topic to dig into. Yeah michika richardson. Who is the reigning record holder in. Ncwa women's one hundred. She broke a record over forty years old decided that she was ready for the pro level. And what to the olympic trials. Everybody knows what she did in the olympic trials. She is running the six fastest time which is not the six at the time anymore but it was then get into the trials then she gets into the trouble with marijuana test and then everything falls apart from there. She does the good morning america video where she looks very uncomfortable. Swaying back and forth can't stand still then that leads to a couple of tweets while the olympics going on the olympics are going to miss me The games won't be the same then. Smile bones has Simone biles has her moment so instead of her reaching out for support she jumped right on. Make sure she puts it back on herself. See i'm human then. It leads up to the race. Last saturday against the world champion and the olympic champion in the one hundred thompson. Harare from g may guy Who ran a ten five four second fastest time ever to flow joe's tin four nine and afterwards after finishing ninth and talking a lot of trash leading up to it. She showed very little in my opinion. Humility sportsmanship To quit by dropping out of the two hundred and she just keeps put in her foot in her mouth up until recently last night our night before last miss alekseev felix was like the goddess of women's track by the way guys. Alyssa phoenix more track medals than anybody in us. Track history surpassing. Mr carl lewis. So she says that. We need to put our arms around her. We need to support her in response to that shqarri..

The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"caplan" Discussed on The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"Going against your out here in the west now. He's in kelly. He's got a great coaching staff. I think you know. I said before the show with you i think mcveigh's slightly overrated as a as a play caller and a game manager and head coach but a love the weapons. I love his arm. I love his moxie. Does the same guy that that stayed in a game dislocated shoulder broken collarbone or whatever. It was through a game winning touchdown pass stuff like that. You just can't measure that is just inside of a guy. He has that thing that's just inside and in a playoff game when they need a play. You have a quarterback that you know has the big arm. I don't care if you ain't been in a moment. Sometimes you got to be in the moment. You know what. I'm saying to actually be in the moment. He hasn't been here. We don't know what is going to do if he gets to conference championship game. We can't just write it off at all. Well he's never been there so he's not gonna play a good. Yeah there's always quarterback that's gotten to their first conference championship game in wonder their first conference championship game. So i think he has all the tools like i said. I've been a fan. So i'm gonna stick by that. I like them in the conference championship. Game is just whether i got him playing the packers the bucks so did you say that he has moxie and see. What did you say something about. Moxie and confidence. Yeah i think he's got he's got a ton of moxie he's got a ton of of people call arrogance our confidence our moxie or you know a grapefruit. Whenever you the reason i bring it up this these stats are via bernie fratto our good friend straight out of vegas bernie bernie did pre and post game with the detroit. Lions matt stafford is ten and sixty five against teams with winning record. Now that's fine. It's fine it's fine. Because that's what the lions i told. You have to incorporate that. I'm not letting that rye just like if you had to play for the bengals just like if you had to play for the browns. Let's let's stop acting like he was playing for like the giants are san francisco or the cowboys he was playing for the detroit lions eighteen. Who went winless. Not once but twice right didn't go. Then they go with a thirteen percent win percentage against teams with winning records. Listen i'm i'm not listening to get the numbers that's fine but when i still do put on the tape i'll watch a guy who played a lot of good football also too and i'm going to hinge on that way. Everybody else wants to hinge on the bad stuff. I'll be the guy that says you know what i'm out here in la. I don't like you know. I'm not a fan of but you know what i'm rob one squad this year it'll be out here for the rams i'll do the home team thing out..

The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"caplan" Discussed on The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
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The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"caplan" Discussed on The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"I think some people are missing so yeah he obviously has reason to now understand this it. It's so awkward. Remember they report. Tomorrow they start practice on wednesday right The quarterback and the veterans reporter Some of the injured veterans report over the weekend. The the deal here is this. If it's so awkward. I don't even know if they i don't know how they practice him. It's just being that we you know. Most people think that something's gonna happen with suspension. Or there's a pay leave at some point. Then the other thing is here. Look the dolphins in he. Eagles want this player okay. Particularly the eagles eagles have had tremendous interested in this player since the middle of march. I don't believe they backed off at all. I think they've been monitoring they've done a lot of homework. They've gathering information particularly in the legal issues. See what what they could find out and what they tried to carson wentz jalen hurts was the late second round pick. They do like him but the guy that they really like. The apple of the with watson but as you guys bring it up the legal issues you know. It's the thing that they have to ask themselves. This is what a general manager game. And i'll just explain this to you. And i think it's really interesting because the way this guy looked at it. Look if you're going to try for a guy like this when you find out things you were not aware of. Because he's had a stellar off the field history in terms of charity. And all that by making the face your franchise do you. Are you proud of him as your quarterback it my business wise monetarily for jerseys and everything that comes along with marketing for your football team are you. Are you proud of having to face your franchise..

The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"caplan" Discussed on The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"How you doing guys glad to be back with the just getting ready to hit my training camp tour on a couple of days here and lots going on. It's amazing healthy day before players report things change in the national football league. Listen i did it have to take this long with no packers air rises. Was he just making him sweat chris. It's really interesting. 'cause i twenty. I had a funny line to guy. There's a high-ranking nfl academic break friendly with. And i said he's done such a great job of tweaking. The general manager. Brian gruden to the packers. it not showing up for the first time. It's an off season program. The the veiled comments well look in the last three to four weeks. It sure seemed like he wanted to play. And that's kind of the feeling with a lot of people but quite frankly until this deal is done or it's really gotten steam over the last week. I don't know four or five days. Cocker's admitted that they've tried really all off season. They haven't trying to get given to whatever he wanted. And this deal that. Espn reported once it gets done. It's going to be very very unique. And as i understand it It's going to relieve a lot of his questions that he had and the blue one thing. He wants us his freedom because if he's not happy he wants out he was not happy. I'm told last year. I had a scoop a couple months ago That he went over to the during game he went over to the defensive huddle for an opponent didn't get in it but went over to and said quote i want out according to a source with one of the teams that they played a think about that during team. That's unbelievable never heard anything like that. But yet but yet. Chris the guys. I don't know how he doesn't mental standpoint but this guy's unbelievable so they look they wanna win. That's why this is happening here that you don't put up a lot of stuff for a guy who's not great and he's great. He's going to be back talked about that. This is not adam what you want on your resume as a general manager head coach that you couldn't satisfy the mvp league all right like you. Just there's no way sure. Nice it it it. And you know what rob. I'm hoping that this gm gouda cruise learned a little. Bit about How you deal with star players every star players different. You've got to treat them as stars. I don't care what he thinks. The thing that you could just go to aaron rodgers during the draft hair. Just to let you know. We're going to draft a quarterback carrying might be true. He didn't even need to tell us. Look we're gonna draft quarterback in the first round. Are you kidding me. And being with this guy good. He's been with forever like he doesn't know that that riders might have a really tough time with it. I mean i don't know what planet he's on. I knew this. I don't even work for the team. Might no no no doubt about adam. I mean and we saw the reports that rogers wanted guten coons out. So what type of concessions is that gonna be. I mean obviously not getting fired itself. But what's the is..

The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"caplan" Discussed on The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
"You know with with the way that the team other teammates look and you know what i'm just chris you know it's like it's business like you gotta figure it out and make everybody happy but you can't look totally week invulnerable and i think that's what they would have gone if they gave into aaron and everything he wanted so i think they save a little face. Aaron saves a little face right and both sides can can work with this and then you see what happened. You know muslim is this roy. I'm not surprised at all though. I'm no no no no but did it have to happen at the last year. You know that that's the way you get things done. Chris the moved deals. i mean. they don't want him a big contract extension like it seems like they. You know they were going to visit him. I mean maybe he just wasn't he wanted to make them sweat. I mean we've all public comments where he was non-committal. Maybe i made him sweat. I think you're right. I think that was part of it to let them know you eft up. You know what i mean. And and i'm. I'm gonna make you squirm for this. I'm gonna make you squirm and feel bad and and go through it or whatever and he had it from this standpoint. What was great for him. You notice coming off an mvp ear. He arguably other than his quarterback rating. Chris for the previous year. He won the mvp right other than that. He had an unbelievable season number. You saying yeah we're going to have undoubtedly. Yeah i mean the only reason. I'm not saying it was as best. Even though some people think it was is back rating was was was better. The second time he won the won twenty two. I mean it was. Yeah it was like new all time record tom right so this one is a loose shade lower..

Monocle 24: The Foreign Desk
COVID-19 vaccine distribution faces logistical challenges
"Hello and welcome to the foreign desk. I'm andrew mullah my guests today sarah wheaton and dr arthur caplan sarah wheaton chief policy correspondent for politico europe. She joins us from brussels. And autho kaplan is professor of bioethics at new york. University's school of medicine. He joins us from the woods of connecticut. This first part of the show. I want to talk more domestically about what. The responsibilities and duties and possibilities are in terms of vaccinations and how domestic governments go about organizing them the second part of the show. We'll talk more about the global picture. But sarah i'll start with you not withstanding the united kingdom which is actually proceeding with the vaccinations at a reasonably impressive clip. The non uk european countries. Actually being too slow by half they'd seemed to have got off to a very sluggish. Start indeed and it's causing quite a bit of domestic problems around the block and as well it's also calling into question european union's unity in fact. There's a huge blame. Brussels faction basically saying that the eu was too slow to buy doses compared to the united states and the united kingdom on the other hand. You also see that many countries including germany. Which has been one of the most vocal in criticizing. Brussels is not doing a very good job of getting the doses out that they have. is it. just a question of polaroid if you will if we focus on one specific example you look at a country like the netherlands which would appear to have every imaginable advantage. Where doing something like. This is concerned. It is geographically tiny eddies rich. It is well organized you would think vaccinating. The netherlands would be relatively straightforward. Is these things go and yet one. They have barely started and to the government has picked this moment to resign on mass over. Something else entirely right. I think it's really fascinating if you look at the databases that lay out. How countries have been doing with their vaccination. There are some things that show number of doses administered per one hundred. And there's not an obvious pattern so again sort of make sense that you can. Denmark are doing very well but then you have italy. You have spain. You have slovenia and lithuania in the top ten whereas you have big wealthy countries like germany and france and the netherlands as you mentioned doing quite poorly and each country is a precious snowflake with a health system and the value said that really drive this so one of the factors in the netherlands. The case in many countries is at one point. It looked like the astra zeneca vaccine was the front runner that was both the cheapest and the most logistically simple. It doesn't need kind of special freezing transportation so i think the netherlands was a country where they were more banking on that particular shot being the one that was available so they didn't think as much about how they were going to be doing the logistics for a more complicated marnie vaccine in germany. They say actually part of the issue is that germany has many different health insurance systems. And so the data about who actually qualifies for this vaccine is not consistently available whereas in countries like spain and italy. You may be due in certainly in the united kingdom where you have the national health service you have various centralized data system author another thing that countries have had a long time to think about is the order in which they roll the vaccines out. Obviously who gets it i. You can't vaccinate everybody the same week. Does it strike you that. There's much in the way of interesting or indicative divergence in in who is prioritizing. What here in the uk of call us where credit where it's due to the government as we were saying they're doing quite well. They started out with old people. Care homes people with chronic illnesses which might make them more vulnerable. Is that the smart thing to do. I wonder myself with a more thought. Should be given to vaccinating. People like retail workers bus drivers refuse collectors. Delivery people the ones who have to interact with the public and the ones without whom society really would grind to a halt. Yes well we spent an announcement of time in the us arguing over who should go first. Who should go second new should go third lots of categories federal advice flying around about prioritization. But we learned a couple of things once. The vaccine went to the states. They all decided their own priorities. So in some parts of the us prisons and prison staff are being vaccinated in other states. The governors have said no. We're not doing that because they don't like prisoners basically even though that's a high risk population and could be a place where the virus easily spreads back to the community. I've talked to a lot of people who run group homes for intellectually disabled people in nursing homes or care homes but out in the community. They're getting no supply they got forgotten. So i'm lis- despite lots and lots of arguing if you had a clientele of down syndrome individuals. Their death rates are six seven eight times as high as everybody else but somehow the prioritization list so we did spend a lot of time arguing but now we have fifty states with fifty different policies. We've seen a little cheating as a result because when you don't have consistency people start to say that. I'm not gonna follow the rules. So we have people who are rich. Flying to florida to get in line to get vaccinated. Florida per usual doesn't seem to care exactly who's supposed to be a priority. The lord help us to even vaccinating canadians. Their her down there snowbirds so that's causing tension among the locals. But here's the take on less than than i learned. It's great to have these arguments. About who goes i. If your logistics don't work it doesn't matter what your list is if you can't get supply out to the meat packers of the delivery. People are wherever if what we do. Is we send the supply to hospitals and nursing homes or care homes as we've done here that's where the vaccinations occur and those institutions will just vaccinate their employees high risk. Or not is. That's where the refrigerator is. As sarah said it's hard to handle stuff. They're not gonna go running down the street looking for the next category person to give it to so logistics as much as ethics or laying out priority groups drives distribution

Monocle 24: The Foreign Desk
Vaccine Rollout Strategies Vary Between Nations
"Welcome to the foreign desk. I'm andrew mullah my guests today sarah wheaton and dr arthur caplan sarah wheaton chief policy correspondent for politico europe. She joins us from brussels. And autho kaplan is professor of bioethics at new york. University's school of medicine. He joins us from the woods of connecticut. This first part of the show. I want to talk more domestically about what. The responsibilities and duties and possibilities are in terms of vaccinations and how domestic governments go about organizing them the second part of the show. We'll talk more about the global picture. But sarah i'll start with you not withstanding the united kingdom which is actually proceeding with the vaccinations at a reasonably impressive clip. The non uk european countries. Actually being too slow by half they'd seemed to have got off to a very sluggish. Start indeed and it's causing quite a bit of domestic problems around the block and as well it's also calling into question european union's unity in fact. There's a huge blame. Brussels faction basically saying that the eu was too slow to buy doses compared to the united states and the united kingdom on the other hand. You also see that many countries including germany. Which has been one of the most vocal in criticizing. Brussels is not doing a very good job of getting the doses out that they have. is it. just a question of polaroid if you will if we focus on one specific example you look at a country like the netherlands which would appear to have every imaginable advantage. Where doing something like. This is concerned. It is geographically tiny eddies rich. It is well organized you would think vaccinating. The netherlands would be relatively straightforward. Is these things go and yet one. They have barely started and to the government has picked this moment to resign on mass over. Something else entirely right. I think it's really fascinating if you look at the databases that lay out. How countries have been doing with their vaccination. There are some things that show number of doses administered per one hundred. And there's not an obvious pattern so again sort of make sense that you can. Denmark are doing very well but then you have italy. You have spain. You have slovenia and lithuania in the top ten whereas you have big wealthy countries like germany and france and the netherlands as you mentioned doing quite poorly and each country is a precious snowflake with a health system and the value said that really drive this so one of the factors in the netherlands. The case in many countries is at one point. It looked like the astra zeneca vaccine was the front runner that was both the cheapest and the most logistically simple. It doesn't need kind of special freezing transportation so i think the netherlands was a country where they were more banking on that particular shot being the one that was available so they didn't think as much about how they were going to be doing the logistics for a more complicated marnie vaccine in germany. They say actually part of the issue is that germany has many different health insurance systems. And so the data about who actually qualifies for this vaccine is not consistently available whereas in countries like spain and italy. You may be due in certainly in the united kingdom where you have the national health service you have various centralized data system author another thing that countries have had a long time to think about is the order in which they roll the vaccines out. Obviously who gets it i. You can't vaccinate everybody the same week. Does it strike you that. There's much in the way of interesting or indicative divergence in in who is prioritizing. What here in the uk of call us where credit where it's due to the government as we were saying they're doing quite well. They started out with old people. Care homes people with chronic illnesses which might make them more vulnerable. Is that the smart thing to do. I wonder myself with a more thought. Should be given to vaccinating. People like retail workers bus drivers refuse collectors. Delivery people the ones who have to interact with the public and the ones without whom society really would grind to a halt. Yes well we spent an announcement of time in the us arguing over who should go first. Who should go second new should go third lots of categories federal advice flying around about prioritization. But we learned a couple of things once. The vaccine went to the states. They all decided their own priorities. So in some parts of the us prisons and prison staff are being vaccinated in other states. The governors have said no. We're not doing that because they don't like prisoners basically even though that's a high risk population and could be a place where the virus easily spreads back to the community. I've talked to a lot of people who run group homes for intellectually disabled people in nursing homes or care homes but out in the community. They're getting no supply they got forgotten. So i'm lis- despite lots and lots of arguing if you had a clientele of down syndrome individuals. Their death rates are six seven eight times as high as everybody else but somehow the prioritization list so we did spend a lot of time arguing but now we have fifty states with fifty different policies. We've seen a little cheating as a result because when you don't have consistency people start to say that. I'm not gonna follow the rules. So we have people who are rich. Flying to florida to get in line to get vaccinated. Florida per usual doesn't seem to care exactly who's supposed to be a priority. The lord help us to even vaccinating canadians. Their her down there snowbirds so that's causing tension among the locals. But here's the take on less than than i learned. It's great to have these arguments. About who goes i. If your logistics don't work it doesn't matter what your list is if you can't get supply out to the meat packers of the delivery. People are wherever if what we do. Is we send the supply to hospitals and nursing homes or care homes as we've done here that's where the vaccinations occur and those institutions will just vaccinate their employees high risk. Or not is. That's where the refrigerator is. As sarah said it's hard to handle stuff. They're not gonna go running down the street looking for the next category person to give it to so logistics as much as ethics or laying out priority groups drives distribution

WTOP 24 Hour News
Medical Experts 'Fustrated' by Slow Vaccine Rollout
"Sounding the alarm over the covert vaccine rollout so far at Brown, University renowned pandemic expert As she's Joss says he's incredibly frustrated by a slow rollout asking on Twitter. Did we not know the vaccines were coming states ever see fewer doses than initially expected? Jaws, blaming the federal government for not working with them on delivery over the weekend. New York University's Arthur Caplan was also worried. We've got to get on the ball here, a virus relief bill President Trump signed Sunday includes $69 Billion for vaccine distribution, which Josh says will help. Meantime, Vice President elect Kamila Harris got her first vaccine dose this morning and urged all Americans to follow when their turn comes SOCCER

AP News Radio
The Latest: Health workers cheer as EU starts vaccinations
"Many doctors are bracing for yet another post holiday covered nineteen surge as millions traveled for Christmas Dr Arthur Caplan is with New York university's Grossman school of medicine I think we got a dark period to go through with more details more infections and more hospitalizations and with these variants of covered nineteen showing up it's more important than ever to wear a mask very likely that the new strain will spread all around the world I think we can slow it down and it's important to do that so we can study it and understand it I think many people are panicked that it's got a much higher transmission rate and that is something to be concerned about Kaplan adds he's been told that the vaccines will cover most mutations I surely after

Up First
If approved, UK to start controversial Covid vaccine challenge trial infecting patients
"Researchers are preparing for a step toward finding a corona virus vaccine a particularly terrifying step it's called a challenge trial and it means you give the vaccine to people, and then you expose them to the virus to see if the vaccine works. Channel trials are used to test vaccines for diseases like typhoid, cholera and malaria. The difference here is that if new vaccines for those. Illnesses do not work there at least ways to treat the people who've been infected for covid nineteen. Of course, there is no cure and treatments are still limited. So a challenged trial raises some real ethical concerns. Arthur Caplan is a bioethics professor at New York. University School of Medicine. We don't fully understand the Cobra virus we're going to give it to people intentionally make them sick. What if there's a death? What if there's long-term disability? What if things go really soured for the subjects? As, just GonNa look like an ethics catastrophe researchers in the United Kingdom? Still think challenge trial is worth it and they plan to try one

Babes and Babies
The Doula Life with Interview by Jess Gronas
"So, just kind of. All these different snippets I feel it kind of led me to to wear with the Dula stuff in it was just the last. This last year that I started doing it fulltime I always did it kind of part time taking on birth here in their bouquets making many as adults is really hard. When you're starting out starting out a business, you have to find clients you are. A you know. Especially, if people have kids, you need to find child care and for me it was like, okay. Even if I find some clients enough to pay my bills I still have my job but I can't just call out of my job whenever I want when somebody goes into Labor you know so I would kind of take on like. Last year I. Think. I did five like I took like five birth rate. Need you have to be available? Twenty four seven, right. So. But I still needed a fulltime job. I was living downtown Chicago rent's not cheap saving up for a wedding. So. So I, just kind of dabbled in it and then it was. This. Last year that unlike. Okay. I'm going to focus on the podcast in on birth work. So In my thing with the podcast too was I wanted to empower women through storytelling it education people to listen to the podcast. was into different experts in different topics in different stories, women who have had different experiences so that you don't feel isolated in motherhood or in your story so that you can still feel and be a part of community and with the educational aspect it's fun for me because I'm learning but also so people know their options you know that. I've never thought about. Birth control display like we recently did an episode with Natural Family Planning which I've never done but I'm like it sounds really cool I don't know how to do it. So spun talking to somebody who that's what she and her husband used for eight years. Then she used it to get pregnant and through the process she wanted so much broader body about her cycle and her healthy ben in. So it's just kind of fun hearing from different people. To that you know okay if me and my husband after this baby, we don't have a kid. For a while. We have. Never considered this before, but maybe it is an option or now I know more information about this one thing. So that agonists make a better decision for myself and my family. Yeah and you've got a lot of awesome experts on the show in powerful women earn hiring women as well. Just sharing their story I've loved that What made you I think like I wanNA. Create a podcast. I. Mean it started. I it was something I wanted to for quite a while and then I partnered with a couple of other people for the first year a bit and they were new moms I worked as a Dula. So it was like, okay. You guys can talk about your mom experience in all kind of be the Dula on the show. And then after a year, it was just kind of going our separate ways and I'm like I really want this to be empowering. You know I want I don't want to necessarily be about. US just talking it's like I. Had the opportunity to do it on my own, and that's when I created miraculous Mama's it was like a little over a year ago. I'm like I really want this to be. To. Really dive into that community to really. Like for me it's it's it's nice to get people from all different walks of life form. But may focus wasn't like. Just, get somebody famous on which I felt like it kind of wants full or in now it was like, okay. But what are they gonNA talk about like what they offer Get somebody, who has experienced source story to share and Sony really wanted to turn it more educational and bring on more experts and specialists. So it was cool because I gotta talk to one of the top infertility doctors in the world he lives in Chicago they went downtown to his office than he so cool Bryan, Caplan, and. Actually Madame my work when I was working downtown. So There's just a small role in like your podcast. So it was it was nice to then be able to. To focus on. Just the learning part because. Although like do are concerned Labor experts. So when you're in labor, we know how what your body's doing, what it's going through the signs to look for when there are different interventions that happen were there to bounce the ideas off of you to talk about okay. Are you comfortable with this? Like are you do need a minute to think it over like Salat? You've blake when the doctor comes in and it's like, okay I think we need to do this. Now you have to give an answer nuclear what kind of I need a little bit of time to think it over and figure out what all my options are so but I'm definitely not an expert in other fields. So it's nice to be a part of this learning process case than. Right when the started a just gotten married and I'm like, okay no veto I wanNA start a family soon. So I wanNA bring on tons of people so that I can learn so that we can be prepared in new so many other women. Were on that journey as wall.

Safe Money with Bill Carter
Should you buy the new iPad Air? Here’s how the iPad lineup compares
"And this week, Apple is refreshing. The lineup the new iPad air sports and update a design that more closely mimics the flagship iPad pro. But digital trends editor in chief Jeremy Caplan says it still looks familiar. It's been 10 years we've had an iPad and today's iPad looks an awful like like like the iPad from 10 years ago, he says. A real change has come from the tablets faster processor, a 14 ship, which is their newest, fastest best ship, It's gone. New five nanometer process. She's got billions of transistors. This is good because it is so much faster. The AI Roscoe now features a fingerprint reader in the power button. That's really, really interesting it underneath your thumb works just as well. That is a lot more his ability for a device like that, like it I've had it comes in five colors and starts at just under 600 boxes. Standard. IPad also gets a new processor that one starts at $329 detect Friends of Alex Stone,

Science Talk
COVID-19 Vaccine Ethics: Who Gets It First and Other Issues
"US government's. Warp speed is ambitiously trying to create test and licensed vaccine for covid nineteen in less than a year compared to the five to ten years typically needed for a new vaccine. The program is borrowing strategies from a crash effort undertaken in the nineteen fifties against polio. Arthur caplan was seven years old when that paralytic disease which had been terrifying parents nationwide came to his town. Last. People. In America. Get. Polio in the Boston outbreak of nineteen, fifty seven, that's where I'm from. Saw Kids in our loans on kids die in the floor. It's one of the reasons I got interested in medical ethics. The Polio vaccine developed in the fifties it saved millions of lives and brought us tantalizingly close to eradicating the disease altogether. But in the haste to produce them researchers and manufacturers occasionally made mistakes and crossed ethical boundaries. Experimental vaccines were tested on intellectually disabled children, for example, as well as millions of people in the Belgian Congo and the Soviet Union who were not given the option for informed consent that today we consider indispensable. Medical ethics come a long way in the past sixty, five years. The World Health Organization has already set up a working group on ethics and Kobe Nineteen of which Kaplan is a member. They have started thinking through many of the tough questions ahead as companies race to test experimental vaccines, and we hope eventually ramp up manufacturing of those who succeed to billions of doses. Worldwide these questions include how can we make sure vaccine trials don't exploit people or enroll too few participants from black native Latino communities who are disproportionately sickened been killed by this disease who will get approved vaccines I and who will pay for them and what if anything should we do about vaccines being sold on the black market? The most immediate questions involve large-scale clinical trials those trials will take months to produce results. Can says, one reason is if I give you the experimental vaccine. Then, I have to wait for the. Virus in nature to infect me to see whether I'm going to do better than a group that didn't get vaccine usually have a placebo control group were you don't give them an active agent and you sort of monitor one against the other. If, you're waiting for natural infectivity with Kobe we have a problem because the Degree to which the becoming infect is very slow. So you'll notice that people are starting to recruit subjects for trials right now in hot spots, they may be looking at Brazil. They may be looking at Atlanta it could be looking at a region of the country that has. A A big outbreak. But at the same time, morally we have to try and tell people who sign up for vaccination studies they should not get themselves infected. So it's a sort of moral catch twenty two, you can't really. Encourage people to be reckless and get themselves. In fact, an the problem is you're probably not going to take sicker people because it makes it difficult to assess whether a vaccine is causing an adverse event or an underlying illnesses causing events. Most of the people who come into these big vaccine trials are healthy volunteer still they're younger. Is An effort underway. In the NIH sponsor trials to try and get more diversity ethnicity and race but a lack of transparency in who is being selected for the vaccine trials has raised concerns that historically underrepresented communities may once again be overlooked. Kaplan says that the preference for healthy volunteers is also one of the reasons that vaccine testers probably won't turn to one otherwise logical place to recruit participants prisons where corona virus has been running rampant, you can't use a vulnerable population because you worry that they can't consent. They're gonNA try and say I'll do it because they want to get out of jail or get parole the other main reason why Is prison populations usually have two or three underlying diseases. I know MTV everybody's at the gym looks such Arnold Schwarzenegger. But in fact, hepatitis HIV drug abuse is a bunch of reasons why they're not a best subjects for for any beginning studies

Von Haessler Doctrine
Coronavirus cases in Georgia up to 42, 1 death; state creates site for reporting numbers
"One death in Georgia from corona virus in forty two confirmed cases now governor Bryan Caplan as morning news earlier discussing the state's preparations for the virus he says that they are preparing for all scenarios we're definitely have the ability to test more than we did will have double the capacity on Monday so Kim says you can expect a rising cases here in Georgia as more more people are being tested in the coming days the red cross an urgent need for blood because of the outbreak nearly three hundred red cross blood drives have been canceled across the country it's the coronavirus irony can mix all with the American red cross here in Atlanta telling me that Georgia has missed the opportunity collect over two hundred units of blood she fears a shortage without more donations they're asking and donations from anyone who is healthy here in Georgia to

Brett Winterble
China Will Admit International Experts to Assist with Research and Help Contain Coronavirus Outbreak
"On Tuesday as case counts rose Chinese authorities agreed to allow the World Health Organization is an international experts to China to assist with research and containment of the virus it's not clear whether how that will affect the quarantine orders the virus so far has infected five thousand people on four continents that was after it was first detected a late last year end of last year in Wuhan China five cases have been reported in the United States including two in southern California Chinese containment measures could theoretically prevent infected people from introducing the virus elsewhere in the country or the world the virus is believed to be spreading from person to person to coughing and sneezing the information on this is involving on an almost daily basis the question is what is your level of concern in December cases of a pneumonia like illness began amount in Wuhan a major city in central China Chinese authorities who sequenced the virus learn it'd never been seen before but was genetically similar to severe acute respiratory syndrome you knew that is sars that killed eight hundred people worldwide back in twenty oh three in an attempt to contain the outbreak Chinese officials last week began sealing off highways in closing bus and subway systems and will on a city of eleven million people locked down orders have since been expanded and now apply to fifty million people across seventeen cities there in China John my gory has been mostly confined to the past week to his apartment on a Wuhan university campus where he teaches English you can leave the grounds to a single gate if he is wearing a mask but most friends are unwilling to meet up because of fears of falling ill nearly three thousand corona virus cases have been found in who obey the province of which will hide as the capital recent stores in the bustling city the seventh most populous in China largely deserted it's a ghost town now said more gory an American who's lived in Wuhan for six years warnings were used back during the black plague in the Middle Ages according was implemented in West Africa in twenty fourteen during a ball outbreak prompting cries it it's inhumane to track people and infected area while waiting for a fatal disease to run its course though a ball is far more deadly than coronavirus the people left in Wuhan other cities are still likely to feel like they're kind of being left behind as Guinea pigs or or maybe they're developing resistance to it I don't know that's the thing we don't know we don't understand this but we understand one very important thing China is an authoritarian government the Chinese as a culture tend to be more community oriented willing to do things for the greater good than Americans notes Arthur Caplan a New York University bio ethics professor so they're they're more on it even though they are a up in a store tarian state they're more about the community than the selfish Americans are check still any restrictions on freedom will be a touchy thing here in the United States here public health officials often refrain from using the word quarantine so as not to store a backlash remember a nurse flew into Newark airport was quarantine because officials said she had a bola she with the help of the ACLU then sued Chris Christie so should be for and that's the big deal right because the ACLU will soon allow people coming from Jack the people who try to want to commend the ACLU will happily say bring bring the corona virus in America because that's you know that's social justice white people can't trust people in the progressive left because they don't have any sense of decency your dignity and I'm sorry to have to break that to you but that's just that's just what it is so the question is what are we going to do don't sit here and be like that's it over their problem because it's a it's a it's a lot of places problem it's in Europe it's in Asia we got some cases in the United States in fact I read a report earlier today said there are four thousand African students who are studying in China over and we'll on at the university system they want to go back to Africa what do they do the Chinese keep them grounded there and we'll Honda they keep me grounded there in China they sent it back to Africa with this can now become a pandemic that spreads I don't know very it's very scary to understand what the outer limits of health care The Outer Limits of of of dealing with illnesses like this really are every six governments got the answer the government is nothing but force and a treasury government has no answers that's what you have to remember while the media is obsessed with impeachment this is going

Mac OS Ken
Apple debuts featurette for upcoming Apple TV Plus original 'Truth Be Told'
"Apples giving viewers an extended. Look at truth be told that's the apple. TV plus series. That tells the fictionalized I story of a true crime. podcast apple insider says Cupertino Streamer has released a feature at for the show uploaded to apple's dedicated Apple Apple. TV Youtube Channel. The peace as the three minute feature at for truth be told has the stars of the show explaining their characters as well as hitting it where where the stories of each will go as the miniseries plays out two decades before the show starts influential journalist. Poppy are now used. The power of the pen to have a sixteen year old tried for murder as an adult. He was found guilty and went to prison now. PARNELL's not sure he was is guilty and start sticking back into the case. Actors featured in the feature at include Octavia Spencer. Aaron Paul Lizzy Caplan and Brett. Cullen a number of producers also turned up including producer and show Creator Michelle de Tremble the feature at is available now now on youtube the series hits Apple. TV plus on Friday the sixth of December

Encyclopedia Womannica
STEMinists: Lubna of Cordoba
"The story of a woman who you may or may not know about but definitely should each month is themed and this month. We're talking talking about. Stimulus women who accomplished incredible feats in science technology engineering and mathematics today they were heading back to Tenth Century Cordoba to the Islamic enlightenment in Spain are stem in east of the day was a brilliant polymath herself and also so help to foster one of the greatest intellectual environments the world has ever seen. Let's talk about Lubna of Cordoba very little is known about Loubna's early life including the issue was born but historians generally agree that she was a palace slave girl of unknown but likely Christian origins. This would not have been unusual. Andalusia as slaves played a major role in the economy me there and were commonly found in the Caliphs household slaves were often considered much more loyal and trustworthy than the Caliphs own advisers. There's some point in her youth. Lubna earned a fairly considerable education in mathematics reading and writing poetry and philosophy well. This was likely unusual for a slave records show evidence of one hundred and seventy women scribes in and around Florida that time who are responsible for making copies of important and valuable manuscripts so educated women were part of the Andalusian Cultural Afric Lupus talents were recognized early and she was soon promoted Immedi Orrick rise up the palace ranks. She eventually became the main palace secretary and -scribed at the enlightened Calif.. If I'll come the second this essentially made her his closest personal adviser Cordoba the capital of Morrish stain was already one of the great cities of the world and a major tourist attraction of the time for its incredible beauty and enlightened attitudes as such it was a well-funded kingdom and I'll have them the second like his father before him was heavily focused on fostering and open intellectual atmosphere to dry in great minds loop. Noah's a great intellectual in her own right and as personal secretary to the Caliph she played a major role in bringing together famous thinkers fostering. I'm not seen in Cordoba and curing which areas of study received the most funding and knots attention LOUBNA's own intellectual interests were vast cost including poetry calligraphy and philosophy but she was best known for her incredible knowledge and skill as a mathematician multiple multiple sources attest to the fact that she was a great mathematician who mastered the highest levels of math in her day in Luke knows work is a scribe she was not merely a writer and translator she also annotated and commented on the book she transcribed and translated she was responsible entrepot for copying many important texts including works by Euclid and archimedes eighties and she wrote her own commentary on those works too the her work has been destroyed. We know that Lubna advanced the work of the classics with the help of a major technological advancement the number zero and the concept of zero had eluded the Greeks and its invention allowed for the simplification of complicated computations loop no was reported to have been so refund of math and so interested in popularizing these new easier methods of calculation that she would regularly teach Andalusian children the principles of mathematics matic's and multiplication tables while walking in the streets at Porta her great interest in math also meant that mathematicians were held in particularly clearly high esteem during all calm the seconds rain according to the Great Andalusian historian when it been box you all Lubna mastered the writing and Science of poetry and her knowledge of mathematics was broad and great and she has mastered many any other sciences and there was no one nobler than her in my Tallus Lubna died in the year nine eighty four tune in tomorrow for the story of another incredible Stamina St- special thanks to the one and only Liz Caplan my favorite sister co-creator tomorrow.

Encyclopedia Womannica
STEMinists: Mary Kenner
"Hello from Wonder Media Network. I'm Jenny Kaplan and this encyclopedia will Manica in case. You're just tuning in. Here's the deal every weekday. We're telling the story of a woman who you may not know about the definitely should each month is themed in this month. Were talking about Stamina's. Women did incredible things in the fields of science technology engineering and mathematics. Today's stem was a prolific inventor created the first sanitary Napkin pioneering product for women's health. Let's talk about Mary Kenner. Mary was born in Monroe North Carolina a small town near Charlotte in one thousand nine hundred twelve father Sydney Nathaniel Davidson and is an incredibly inventive man who encouraged those same traits in Mary and her younger sister mildred. Sydney was an inventor himself and patented a pants pants presser in nineteen fourteen. Mary's maternal grandfather was also well known inventor his most important contributions attract color light signal for trains Though Mary received a good education she didn't have any formal scientific training instead with she and her sister were constantly encouraged courage to come up with creative solutions for problems. They saw in everyday life. Mary moved to Washington. DC got married and started her own Floral Laurel business that she ran throughout her life in her free time she kept inventing in Nineteen fifty-six. Mary put together a formal formal patent application for the first sanitary belt. She hit apparently invented while still in her teens. This was a major step forward forward in giving women a better way to handle their periods while tampons were available at the time they were considered. Indecent and pads wouldn't become available until nineteen sixty. Most women were still using cloth or rags and we're limited in their ability to leave the house while menstruating Mary. Sanitary sanitary belt was a major improvement. It was made of Elastic straps that held the patent place once the belt was secured by safety pins women could easily wear it under their clothing without feeling limited giving them back a significant amount of freedom a company interested in manufacturing this new invention had contacted Mary about purchasing it but as soon as a representative met her in person and realized that she was African American. The interests suddenly disappeared it took. Mary decades to file the patent on her own in the interim. Mary kept inventing things to help. In her everyday Friday life in nineteen eighty two she patented a toilet roll holder that easily provides the loose end of the role and in Nineteen eighty-seven patented an ingenious shower wall and bathtub mounted back scratcher. Mary also invented special attachment for a walker that included a hard surface office TRAE and a soft pocket for carrying items. Mary sister mildred with whom she remained. Very close throughout her life was also an inventor. Milton was a professional singer who eventually had to stop working when she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis mostly confined to her home in Washington. DC Z. Mildred invented a board game meant to teach family relationships and help children understand their place the extended family she called it family family traditions and received a patent for the game in one thousand nine hundred eighty neither military nor mary ever made much money from their inventions but but that didn't stop their desire to make the world around them a better and more convenient place before she passed away in two thousand six. Mary Kenner filed total of five patents. She's remembered not only for creative problem solving and entrepreneurial spirit but for stalwartly addressing a major women's health issue with intelligence and compassion even if abject racism meant. She never got to see her product on shelves as always we're taking a break for the weekend tune in on Monday for the story of another incredible stem inist special. Thanks to my favorite sister this your co-creator Lizzy Caplan talk to you on Monday.

The Norman Goldman Show
Chrissy Teigen Invades Target With New Cookware Line
"Seventy two tomorrow, cloudy eighty four currently it's eighty four and it's mostly cloudy at the mytalk studios. This is a mytalk dirt alert update a quick look at what's happening in entertainment dug up a lot of good dirt on mytalk. Mytalk. Learn. We have a local celebrity sighting. Chrissy Teigen is in Minneapolis. Again. She showed a picture of herself husband John legend, and what are their children at a target meeting? That's all to launch launcher new collaboration with three Taylor called cravings by Chrissy