36 Burst results for "Carey"

A highlight from 44 - Week 3 Recap

Ultraflex Football

05:02 min | 4 d ago

A highlight from 44 - Week 3 Recap

"Welcome to the Ultra Flex football podcast where we have fun with our friends while we talk about football. I am your host, Anthony Sutton. With me is Rob Green. Hello everyone. And Ryan Wheeler. Howdy everyone. This week we have our album again. And sorry for the really sexy deep voice, I just got my throat dried up right before we started talking there. Hello, hello. I didn't realize we were talking in deep voices today. Sorry, it's like I've been sick, my daughter goes to daycare and brings it home and gives it to us. This week our album is Daydream by Mariah Carey. So I'll just list my songs and then we'll go Rob and then Tony. The songs that I have to get in today are Fantasy, underneath the stars, one sweet day and open arms. Rob, what you got? I got Always Be My Baby, I Am Free, When I Saw You, and Long Ago. I've got Melt Away, Forever, Looking In, and then if you've been around for a while I don't know anything about music, so I've got Daydream Interlude, Stash Fantasy Sweet Dub Mix. Is that all one title? Tony. It's supposed to just be Daydream, I think the interlude is a type of song, am I wrong? I don't know, I'd love to hear him try to say all that. I know, you fit Daydream Interlude, Fantasy Sweet Dub Mix into this song. Got it, alright, easy, easy, well why would it be listed as the title? That's what they do on albums, I'm pretty sure an interlude is something, so it'd be like the Daydream Interlude. Do you want me to google it real quick, do you want me to vet this information right now? No, F it, we'll do it live, you ever see that one, the News Anchor? The what? You ever see the Anchor that says F it, we'll do it live? Yes. That's hilarious. Anywho, we'll work those in throughout, and then we'll talk about football right now, so let's go to football talk. Oh my gosh, it wasn't right. Let's go to football talk. Week three just wrapped up, starting to learn more and more about these teams, trying to learn a little bit who's good, who's not good, who's offense is good, who's offense is not good, and then same thing about the defense, so obviously we're going to talk about the Bills and the Titans to start with, and then kind of go out from there, so last week we started with the Bills, this week we'll start with the Titans. Don't really want to talk about the Titans this week. So what you got for the Titans Ryan, you got any defense about your offensive performance? Dude. See what I did there? Yeah, that was real smooth there. I know that someday in the future there will be one sweet day where the Titans aren't just god awful on offense. Are you sure? I think. That's the only reason, that's what helps me and allows me to continue to be a Titans fan is the hope that someday they'll be exciting to watch on offense. Their defense is usually exciting, but their offense, it's so boring to watch. If I have to watch Tannehill drop back and have the swinging gate left tackle, just here you go Andre Dillard, and we had whatever the heck his name was last year, Dennis Daley, he was somehow, I told myself at the beginning of this year, I said this offensive line can't possibly be worse because Dennis Daley was the worst left tackle in the league, and then Andre Dillard comes out and he's on track to give up like 35 sacks this year through three games. Is that bad? Is that bad by one player? Yeah, that's like twice as bad as Dillard was all at, or actually it might be three times as bad as Dillard was, I'm sorry, Daley was all year last year. I've never even heard of Dennis Daley, I just looked him up because I was curious. He's on the Cardinals now. Is he? Oh, that's unfortunate. I don't know if he's a starter or not, but he is on the Cardinals. Yeah, Cardinals have been playing pretty well, obviously they beat the Cowboys, but even the first two weeks they've been overachieving so far, where the Titans offense is probably underachieving or maybe exactly where you think they were, Ryan Tannehill.

Ryan Tannehill Ryan Wheeler Anthony Sutton Rob Green Dennis Daley Andre Dillard Daley Daydream Cardinals Last Week Last Year Three Games Dillard 35 Sacks This Week Long Ago Cowboys Three Times Ryan
Fresh "Carey" from Rollye James

Rollye James

00:00 min | 1 hr ago

Fresh "Carey" from Rollye James

"Income resident levels. in Cook County This plan every is resident a strategic has framework equitable that lays access out to our the digital path infrastructure to devices ensure and also tools released that a map showing are essential that in the most today's digitally economy starved and communities society. include The the near west county and southern suburbs. I imagine you know that So it -called includes peanut a Christmas stop at is the coming United to Center Chicago on Mariah December 3rd. Carey announcing Tickets go a on nationwide sale on Christmas Wednesday. tour. By the By the way, that song, All I Want For Christmas Is You, is the only song to have topped the Billboard Hot 100 The only holiday on song three separate ever to occasions. be certified as The song has sold 16 Diamond Florida million copies. It's the Republican It was a Congressman rare procedural Matt tool

A highlight from Conversations2 with Greg Bennett

VUX World

06:14 min | Last month

A highlight from Conversations2 with Greg Bennett

"Hi Greg. Hello. I tell you that you don't need an introduction, however there may be, sorry that's a terrible way to bring you on, now I've made you all shy, I feel that some people may have not heard of you before, which I find unbelievable, but it is possible, it is possible. I find it very believable. So Greg please can you tell me, or don't tell me, tell everyone else a bit about yourself. Sure. So I'm Greg. I founded and lead the conversation design practice at Salesforce. My team and I currently are leading the fray with all efforts around large language models and our product called Einstein GPT. We focus very, very strongly on prompt design, prompt engineering, and anything that we're sort of shipping in the product is being driven by my team and our prompt design process. My academic background is in linguistics, so a lot of what you'll hear about in terms of my philosophy and approach to conversation design and conversational interactions is driven by that academic foundation. Other fun facts about me, I, let's see, enjoy songwriting, so very much into the writing of lyrics, occasional with production, although I'm not very fond of my own compositions, very big pop music enthusiasts, so if you hear me make sort of pop culture references here and there, that's also the motivator behind that. Cool, and who's your favorite songwriter? Oh, hard question. I know, hard question. We're starting off with a hard question. Okay, in English, my favorite songwriter, and I think, so I think, like I said, I'm a very big fan of pop music, and so I think very much about pop sensibilities. Probably my favorite, oh, that's so tough, because I like a bunch of songwriters for different reasons, but I would say the one who I really am like just deeply, deeply impressed by as a pop songwriter is Mariah Carey. I think she doesn't get enough credit for her songwriting skills, and she can put SAT words into pop songs that make, and make them sound like butter. Like, you'd never know that the word disestablishmentarianism fits into a pop song so smoothly until she does it, so whenever I write a song and put a big word in it, and it sounds good, I'm like, all right, that's for you, Mariah. Yeah, cool. Yeah, she's, I mean, I think with all music, you know, it's like people feel passionately, so they either love or hate a lot of songwriters, but she, you know, the fact that she's a great songwriter, and also with that voice, she's got like five octave range or something, it's incredible. Yeah, exactly, it's, and I mean, she obviously gets, you know, the praise that she deserves for her pipes, and I think that I'd also like to sort of elevate and say, you know, let's give her some praise for her pen, too, because everything that she's produced, she's written, so it's great. Yeah, incredible, and Christmas wouldn't be the same without that song. It wouldn't, yeah, and how hard is it to write a Christmas song, you know, I mean, not often do Christmas, you know, new Christmas songs get added to the canon like that, so. Yeah, cool, all right, so you gave a solid answer to the hardest question, so the rest of this is going to be easy. Yes, exactly, and now I'm really ready. Cool, okay, so I'd like to start with a few easy ones. We've actually done one already, but I've got three more prepared, which I would love to hear your responses to, so are you ready to give me fairly succinct answers to these questions? Yeah. Cool, cool, so please, Greg, what's your favorite bot, and it can be any bot from any context? So there's a cartoon from, I want to say the late 80s, maybe even early 90s, called Outlaw Star, and it's this sort of space odyssey, and the ship that they fly is essentially sort of managed by this bot called Gilliam, and the reason why I like Gilliam is because Gilliam takes on, it's, Gilliam's very multimodal, so he takes on different shapes and can maneuver certain things in the ship, and I think it speaks a lot to being able to sort of associate a bot with something physical, so big time Gilliam. Excellent, I've never seen this, but I'll check it out. Yeah, yeah, cool, I've been watching Cowboy Bebop recently, and I'm getting really, very, yeah, similar, yeah, Cowboy Bebop, yeah, Cowboy Bebop is, like, from like a narrative perspective, just much better, much tighter. Outlaw Star is very similar in terms of the whole space odyssey theme, but the narrative's a little less tight. Okay, okay, cool, but yeah, it still sounds totally up my street, so nice one. Yeah, love it. Cool, and number two, please, Greg, what is the most useful thing you use at work, and it can be anything. My calendar, hands down my calendar, because I think without it I would be totally lost. I would miss meetings, I would be late to all my things, I wouldn't really know what's going on, so I think that my calendar is probably the thing I depend on the most to keep me where I'm supposed to be. Okay, and do you use, I guess, are we talking digital, or are you old school? Yes, digital, because it changes so quickly that if it were old school it would just be like a bunch of chicken scratch, and these days meetings will get added to my calendar, like 10 or 5 minutes before or as it's happening, or things will get moved around, so definitely Google Calendar to my rescue. Okay, cool, cool. I think, yeah, it's basically like, I think for everybody this is a fundamental now, like we have to be so tight with our calendar, and yeah, always in the background.

Greg Mariah Carey Cowboy Bebop Mariah Late 80S Salesforce Early 90S Three Gilliam Christmas 10 Google Calendar English 5 Minutes Five Octave ONE Einstein Gpt Outlaw Star Number Two
When It Comes to Makeup, Bethenny Frankel Is "Keeping It Real"

The Breakdown with Bethany

02:25 min | 2 months ago

When It Comes to Makeup, Bethenny Frankel Is "Keeping It Real"

"Also mentioned this morning that you have become like more well known in a sense from these ticktocks, these makeup reviews, these beauty product reviews. And when you were on the housewives and I could really see that. I'm going to ramble just for a second, because I do really feel like you validated a group of women that maybe felt invalidated by their choices. Like I bought Maybelline and Revlon because that's what I saw my mom use. And I couldn't afford your Giorgio Armani foundation or like the Chanel lipstick. And, you know, makeup is a huge part of like what your identity to be a woman. Right. That's what we wear. It's for the job interview that we want or when we're interviewing like our heroes, right, like on our podcast. So but from from your standpoint, I want to know why. Why what was the start? Like, why did you start with makeup? I didn't start. I just I didn't even mean to start. I just was playing around. But what you said, it's part of our identity. The thing is, it's really part of our insecurity. The to marketing us. Our insecurity makes us feel like if we buy the more expensive thing, that it's going to work better, not because. We're because we think it's actually better and it's not. So we actually think that that's how I'm going to look better. And I had Christopher Buckle do my makeup. And today he said that they're preying on insecurities. It's all just paint. So you can want the nice packaging. You can buy into all of that. But we are definitely being lied to. We are being marketed to. And I've normalized places like the dollar store and the drugstore because I didn't know. So I was walking in completely like everybody else. Just I have expensive makeup. I have La Prairie. I have Armani. I probably have a cup. I had a couple of Maybelline great lashes because that's what I buy at the drugstore. And I don't like spending money on makeup because I don't really wear it. And once I was watching TikTok for months, I was feeling like insecure. I don't have anything. I don't know anything. I don't look like them. I didn't consider the filters. I didn't know they were all filter and I didn't know they were selling. So I started comparing and I couldn't get over the fact that CoverGirl was the same thing on my face as the $200 stuff. And today, Christopher Buckle, who literally does Christmas's makeup, he does Mariah Carey's makeup, Blake Lively, Kate Chastain, Met Gala. He said to me, I he was shocked. He can't believe it. And he's he's I said, let me tell you, would you do me for the Met Gala? Would you do it if I had the? He goes, I actually wouldn't have yesterday. Today I would commit to

Kate Chastain Mariah Carey $200 Today Blake Lively Yesterday Maybelline Revlon Christopher Buckle Chanel Giorgio Armani Armani Tiktok This Morning La Prairie Covergirl Dollar Store Christmas Met Gala
Jerry Ford's Surprising Relationships & Decisions

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated

01:18 min | 5 months ago

Jerry Ford's Surprising Relationships & Decisions

"That was it. And I do want to talk about two incidents which are separated by hundreds of pages. The gridiron in 1976, Chevy Chase's roasting him and Ford just completely self deprecates it. We look for the audio and we couldn't find it probably not there. And then flash forward decades and Chevy Chase is a patient at the Betty Ford center. Jerry Ford here watching misses Chevy Chase and Betty Ford trying to fix the video camera and Chevy wants to intervene in the president says, no, let's leave that alone. That's a very funny anecdote, Richard Norton Smith. Well, so what, you know, what has that's one of the things people will discover that there was a relationship with Chevy Chase. A lot of the relationships, Hugh Carey, democratic governor of New York, who was sparring with Ford across publicly over New York dropped dead, the whole headline, the Ford never said. The amazing thing. You carry voted for it. Against Jimmy Carter. Hugh Carey told me Jerry Ford has never gotten the credit he deserved for saving New York. What she meant was saving New York from itself by applying a tough love policy. He lost New York State and with it he lost the presidency in 76, but it's one of the decisions that look awfully good. 30 or 40 years old. There are many. We're going to talk

Hugh Carey Jerry Ford 1976 Richard Norton Smith Jimmy Carter 30 Two Incidents Chevy Hundreds Of Pages Chevy Chase New York Ford ONE 40 Years Old Betty Ford One Of New York State Decades 76
"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

Design Matters with Debbie Millman

05:15 min | 5 months ago

"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

"Of amuse moving through you instead of by you. I talked to Rick Rubin about that recently who writes quite a lot about it in his book. Can you talk about the difference of the creative spirit moving through you instead of created by you? Well, I think it kind of goes back to what I was saying before is about I'll go I'll start with an intention and then if I'm in the flow and I do call it a flow because it's sort of you're not thinking about it. You're just your hands are doing it and you could be listening to design matters. Which I often do in my studio, but you could be your brain could be somewhere completely else, but you're figuring hands are going through the process and making something and I think when I can get in that zone, the things that I end up with at the end, I'm not saying they're always great, but they usually lead me on in a direction that I can then develop more and I think it's about paying attention to that divergence from your initial goal or initial intention that kind of allows you to sort of create in a more free flow sort of way. I love the space. Like when you're done, you go, wait, what? I just did that? Yeah. And also how much time has passed, that you have no notion of having passed. It feels like 5 minutes and it's three hours. Sometimes when I'm doing my research, I look up and I can't even believe that several hours have passed since I started because I was just so intrigued by what I was doing. But I do find in the making of things, there's a real distinct difference between something moving through you, which tends to feel much easier, and the work feels more relaxed, and something being created by you sort of more cerebrally, which always tends to me to feel more tortured, at least in my case. And I'm wondering if you have that too. Well, it is more tortured. I find that I will create a piece and somebody will ask for it again. And that's when I'm like making it, and I'm just reproducing. And that's it's a very distinct difference for me because I'm like, okay, I got to make this. I got to make that. You know, and I know the program. I know the steps, which is a reason I don't really like to do a production pottery. I don't want to make the same iteration over and over again. But I do relish the times that I get to just have a ball of clay in front of me and say, where is this going to take me? In fact, I don't throw anymore. I mean, I still have my wheel, but I just don't tend to use it so much because it feels mechanical to me. And I don't really want that element in the making. I'd rather do it with my hands and see the mark of my hands and it just, it feels freer and it feels more authentic. Yeah, it reminds me of something that Joni Mitchell said on one of her live albums. I think it was miles of isles where somebody yelled out for her to play something, one of her hits. And she was like, you know, nobody ever asked van Gogh to repaint starry night. I love joanie. It's so perfect. That's great. Carrie, the last thing I want to talk to you about today is longevity. I know you had a milestone birthday recently, a couple of years ago. I also had one last year, same group. Happy birthday. What have you learned about aging? Because you have been really open about your age and your experience. What have you learned about aging both from your experience and modeling and in front of the camera and from your experiences now making art? Well, I am just really grateful that I have my art at my age because I can do that at any age without judgment or and only will gain as from my experience and my my longevity in it. If my body will keep up, my hands are a little bit. Arthritic, but in terms of acting and modeling, I don't want to have to try to stay young. I don't want to have to try to be beautiful every time I step out or it's too much pressure and it makes me anxious and I'm really happy to have been able to step away from it and ceramics has allowed me to step away from it because my creative energies have been able to be focused elsewhere and not on my appearance. I just feel really fortunate that I have clay to engage me. It's interesting in the way that you've, whether consciously or unconsciously intentionally or just by accident created this arc of your career with so many different chapters doing so many different things that in many ways have all informed the subsequent chapters. Yeah, they kind of, without any sort of pre planning, they just sort of fell from one end to another, you know, I guess that's the way to do it is just to take it as it comes. And try to be open to the possibilities and say yes. Just trying to say yes to it all. I just had a very fortunate run. It's all I can say. I've been healthy and I have beautiful children and I like where I am right now in my life. And I wouldn't trade any of it, but I'm really happy to be where I am. Carrie Lowell, thank you

"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

Design Matters with Debbie Millman

05:03 min | 5 months ago

"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

"Learning from your mistakes. And it really just takes a lot of practice and a lot of experiments. You know, what if I put this here? What if I try that and no, nope, that didn't work, or that temperature was too hot, or this glaze runs, or that clay, body, slumps, or there are just so many variables that go into making something. And that's part of the joy of it. You just never know what's going to be a happy accident. And I learned early to take notes so that I can try and recreate if something does go well. You're never finished with ceramics, you know? That's one of the things I love about it is that there's always another possibility. There's always a different way to do it. There's always another test tile. There's always another glaze. There's others another clay body. It's endless. Can you talk a little bit about your color palette? It's very neutral, very white. What made you decide to take that direction with your work? The simple answer is is that I could get some really good white glaze that was working in my studio and I thought, well, this is working. Let me stick with that. But I also like the purity of it in my own home. I have a lot of white ceramics, and I also like the porcelain is a clay body that I work with often. 'cause I like its translucent, and it's elasticity. And if I were to put a color on it, it feels like it would almost mask it in a way that I don't want to do. I realize that now ceramics has taken a different tack in that everybody's like using a lot of color and globs and texture and things are very blobby now. I did notice that they're blobby and they're also flaky. Everybody's using that sodium silicate that looks like a riverbed, a dry riverbed. I am actually trying to move in a little bit more color because I was getting bored with the white and so I'm working with paper clay now, which is a clay body that has a lot of paper fiber in it. And it's kind of great because you can go really big scale. That's another thing I'm trying to do is scale up. But the white just always feels quiet to me. There's something about it that just feels serene. And often because my pieces do have so much going on with the petals and this stuff and the pinching and the piercing, the white sort of just kind of calms it all down. How have you gotten your ceramics to look so thin and delicate? I'm thinking particularly of the eggshells. Those I made a mold. I learned how to do plaster mold making of a big gourd, like a big squash. And then I slip cast it, but I slip cast it with a really, really thin layer. And I don't fill it up all the way, and I pour it upside down, and then the edges go the way they go. Yeah, they're so unusual. I mean, it's taking something that you either throw into a compost or throw away and making a piece of art out of an eggshell of what looks really, truly looks as delicate as an eggshell. It's magnificent. But you also are a part of a group of artists who use discarded gun parts to make incredible hand glazed candle holders and other ceramic wares. Can you talk a little bit about how that line of work came to be? I was approached by a woman named Jessica, who had this group called caliber collection, where she had initially started trying to raise money to do gun buybacks in communities that were, you know, had a lot of gun violence. And so she would go into the sheriff's office and buy everybody would get $50 to bring in their gun. So that's what a gun buyback is in the gun would be destroyed. And she would dealt a lot with different detectives and they would give her gun parts. She asked for the parts of the guns that had been destroyed, as well as the casings that had been found at scenes of crime, crime scenes, hello. And she asked me and a few other artists, if we would create something out of the gun parts. So I took the barrels, the gun cartridge, where there all the bullets go in and cast them and made them into candlestick holders. But we wouldn't know it was a gun part unless no. Yeah. Unless you knew it was a gun, but then we would sell them and a portion of the profit would go back into caliber collection for the gun buybacks. So ingenious, there's a quote on your website that I love and you state there's a distinct calling to lose yourself that is apparent in both acting and throwing ceramics, each are transcendent in their own way in the sense that something is always operating through you. And I've been talking to a lot of artists about this notion of this sense of amuse moving through you instead of by you. I talked to Rick Rubin about that recently who writes quite a lot about it in his book. Can you talk about the difference of the creative spirit moving through you instead of created by you? Well,

"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

Design Matters with Debbie Millman

07:55 min | 5 months ago

"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

"And I thought, um, I should like, I would like to do that again. So I signed myself up and I started taking wheel classes again and then I just segued over to the Greenwich house pottery, which is just a couple blocks away. Which is a big townhouse. It's devoted to ceramics, basically. And I just really got into it and never looked back. And then again, I was going on a lot of auditions and not getting anything. And I just thought, you know what? What gives me joy? What's it really making me happy here now these days? And it was just doing ceramics, not going up on an audition where I had to think about how I looked and I was old too old or anything like that. And it's just been the best thing I've ever done. It's just makes me really merely happy to do it. Yeah, you've talked about how the process of pottery gives you a sense of autonomy. You get to decide what you're going to do and when you're going to do it, whereas when you're acting, you're always waiting for somebody to hire you and give you the line street and then tell you how they want to shoot it. Can you talk about the evolution of your style? It seems almost from all the work that I've looked at of yours to have sort of been born fully formed. Like you just have this really unique, very original style that just seems to have been born alive the way it is. Well, thank you. That is such a compliment because I'm daily struggling with, I don't know if this is going to work out or I don't know how this looks and maybe that's the throat roll of an artist is just constantly self questioning, but it's funny during COVID. I started signing up for a lot of online pottery classes just because I wouldn't have to travel for them. You know, you could see all kinds of different artists sharing their work and you didn't have to be there in person, which was such a gift. And there's this one group called gas works in Brooklyn. And they do this thing called women in clay, and it's only women artists, and all of the artists were talking about their work and doing and doing instructional videos, but many of them were Native American or they were South American or they were Latin America, Latin American, and they all were talking about their indigenous art and how you really should make pottery that's based on your heritage. Because it speaks to you. And I was thinking, oh God, what's my hair? English French? So then I started looking back into old English and French pottery, and this is after I'd already been working for a while. This is only in the last two years. And I realized that the style that I have does sort of echo that kind of porcelain, more fine, refined, there's petals. There's details that then I think I was unconsciously doing it. I mean, at least that's my excuse. I don't know, but I just sit down with a ball of clay and let it take me where it goes, you know? Sometimes I have an intention going into it and think I'm going to be able to create this thing and then it will go off on a side road and it will be something completely different, but I think the best thing to do is just let it go that way and not try to not try to impose too much about my vision because I think you lose something on the journey. You seem to take a lot of inspiration from nature, very naturalist aesthetic, organic shapes, many of your pieces are adorned with very intricate detailing, often in the form of piercing or pinched edging, delicate petal assemblages, which are just stunning. You said that you find this odd because you've always seen yourself more as a tomboy. And so I'm wondering if what do you make of this sort of dichotomy with the style of your ceramics, which are so delicate and feminine and sexy? Thank you. Thank you. I've never called them sexy before, but I appreciate that. The bowls with the petals and side. Sort of stacks of metals off. The amazing bowls. Thank you. Those are the gazing balls. Well, I think it's the expression of that. It's that I don't express that side of myself in my daily life. I don't dress that way. I rarely wear makeup or heels or I am a tomboy in my dressing, I don't know if that's my Colorado upbringing or what, but I feel like my ceramics is the expression of my feminine side. It's the expression of the woman who makes the cooking pot or makes the household objects or adorns herself in flowers or I don't know, I'm also a very avid gardener. So they all kind of cross over with each other. I remember in the questionnaire, you had about in the print thing. Are you a religious? What is your is there an afterlife and what does it look like? And I think I wrote nope. Well, I have to preface that with as the daughter of a geologist, I never had a religious upbringing. I was always the worst was created in a 100 million years. That's the way it is. And that's what it is. And so I never really questioned that. But nature is my church, and I'm constantly trying to recreate it in my ceramics. If there was a worship that I have, it's worshiping nature in the creation of my ceramics. And that's why I'm always repeating flowers or floral motifs or I mean, flowers to me are just like the most amazing gift that we have and flowers and birds. Yeah, we wouldn't exist without them. I think we forget that a lot. Yeah. You work mainly in porcelain. And you've also used gold luster in the style of Japanese art called kintsugi. Can you talk about what that is? Kensuke is a Japanese technique that's made to repair a broken pottery. And they use this sort of resin to join the pieces and then brush gold dust over the top of it. So when you have a broken piece, it becomes even more special because you've repaired it and an adorned it even with the gold. And I often will have a crack or a breakage or something a mistake in my ceramics. And so instead of chucking it or throwing tossing it, I will put some gold luster on it to accentuate it and just sort of show the flaws. I think that's we all have them. We might as well embrace them. And instead of trying to hide them, you said this about pride and ceramics and I found it really fascinating. And I want to share it with you. Again, so that we can talk about it. You state ceramics has removed any pride that I might have in my abilities. Ceramics teaches you to let go of pride because there are just so many variables that can go wrong. There are so many steps along the way in the making and the firing and the glazing that you can ruin a piece. So you never really know what you're going to get until you've unloaded the kiln at the final firing. If you do actually come up with something you like, or that exceed your expectations, that is a moment of pride. And Carrie, I'm wondering, how do you manage all of the not knowing in the process of making something? You know, it's trial and error. It's time and time again, having things that don't work out and learning from your mistakes. And it really just takes a lot of practice and a lot of experiments. You know, what if I put this here? What if I try that and no, nope, that didn't work, or that temperature was too hot, or this glaze runs, or that clay, body, slumps, or there are just so many variables

"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

Design Matters with Debbie Millman

07:26 min | 5 months ago

"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

"Resurrected and you've made guest appearance on the reboot, how has the character of Jamie Ross evolved and what was that like for you to go back? Oh, well, it was painful in that Jamie's gotten older. And so Jamie doesn't look so good on camera as much as she used to. I just remember saying to the lighting guy, please don't give me a raking side light. Can you put some diffusion up there? So I wasn't happy about I wasn't happy about the way I looked. But also, I hadn't acted in a long time. Prior to that, it felt like ten years. And I said yes, because I knew Sam was doing it. And we shot some scenes, Sam and I, but they had never made it into the final show. So I was really disappointed that it didn't kind of live up to my expectations of what it was going to be. And you know, it's hard to what I learned is it's hard to go home again. The crew, the cast wasn't my cast, and I didn't know anybody, and we didn't have that sort of easy flow that you get when you've been working with the same people for a long time. So I realized that that's an important part of it all and that wasn't there. And I think that was as the first episode that the people that are the ongoing characters are still finding their groove. They hadn't found their groove yet either. So it was a good lesson for me and that I realized that I'm in the right place today doing ceramics and not acting. Interesting. Oh yeah, I want to talk to you about this around. So I just have a few more questions about your acting career. Iterations of the Law & Order franchise have been on television now for over 30 years. What do you think makes this show resonate so powerfully with people? I think that dick wolf hit on a formula that is really self contained in that you don't have to have watched the prior episode or the subsequent episode without getting the full story in that one hour slot. You know that you're going to get the full picture from beginning to end in that one hour. And that's powerful because you don't feel like, ah, I didn't see that one before. I'm not going to be able to watch the next one. You know, you get what you get in that hour. And you know the characters because you've seen them. You know, with Jerry would always have his little one liners a little quickie one liner and Sam would always have some sort of moral outrage about how the case was being handled. And we'd always have Stephen hill, God bless that man. He was a wonderful man. Sum it all up in one little line. It was dependable in that you knew the formula. And it was sort of unexpected because you never really knew we were going to win the case. There were a lot of times where we didn't win in court or the argument didn't hold. Or the perpetrator got away. And I think it closely hewed to how the law operates and how and how difficult it can be to prosecute somebody and come away with the guilty verdict and also one of the main reasons and I think it's been a huge success is that it's ripped from the headlines, you know? You could look at the New York Post and that will be the title of the next show. It's so interesting because the Law & Order main show, there was that anticipation of, will they be convicted or won't they? And there was often that big surprise at the end. That left you kind of breathless, whereas a lot of the other spin offs, there is a more satisfactory conclusion where the bad guys get caught. They get to come up and that sort of, I think, what makes Law & Order SVU. So sort of eternally successful is that you know, as gruesome as the crime might be, they're going to jail. Like they're getting caught and rich is going to beat the shit out of them and they're going to go to jail. There was a question that I asked you in the interview that we did for print magazine earlier this year about your biggest regret. And at the time, you told me that your biggest regret was marrying at 23 because to cut yourself off from many possibilities or moments when you could have been a better parent to your children or a better child to your parents and I'm wondering if you wanted to expand on that a little bit. I mean, you talked about leaving Law & Order for your daughter. Do you feel that you've had to compromise in life in any way in your career and in your family? I mean, the part about getting married too early and then being a better daughter or a better parent or we're two separate thoughts, I did marry at 23 despite my parents protestations. I thought I knew best and they were, of course, right, and I never should have done that. I did get to travel a lot, and I got to see a lot of the world with my first husband, but in retrospect, I really feel like I didn't need to get married. You know? Same. Mike was a 26 same and she live and you learn and that's nobody can tell you how it's going to go. You need to live it to understand it. So in terms of having to make sacrifices, I think it's really hard to have two actors in a family relationship. I mean, I then went on to marry two actors. And I found that I was the one more because I wasn't working as much like Griffin was definitely working more than I was, so I was the one that was home with our daughter more often. And then when I would get a part, I remember having Hannah with me, like, I remember going to Paris to shoot a film in Hannah came with me. Just because you're the mom and they want to be with you. So I really feel like I turned a lot, and then when I was with Richard, I definitely turned a lot of things down because we had our son and I wanted to be there with him. And Richard would go off and work a lot, and I would be home keeping the home fires burning as they say. So yes, I think when they say you can have it all, okay, maybe, but not at the same time. Yeah, I absolutely agree people ask me all the time. How do you do what you do? And I'm like, for most of my sort of career life, I wasn't married and didn't have children. I had a completely elastic life. Even being married now changes how much you can do and when you can do it. And I know as much as I sometimes fantasize what it would have been like to have children, I would not have been able to have the kind of career that I've had. And I don't know anybody that has it all. I truly don't. No, I think it's a myth. Or let me put it another way. I don't know any woman that has it all. That has it all and has great joy in it, you know. It's a real juggling act if you have it all. It's not a relaxing. A lot of guilt involved in the balancing of it all. Definitely. You're interested in pottery making and ceramics has been a through line in your life since elementary school and albeit more in the background until the last couple of years. It's since taken a major role in your life and you know have your own line of ceramics. You make porcelain objects, you make vases, bowls, plates, and more. What brought you back to this particular form of artistry at this point in your life? It happened because my daughter was looking I was looking for an art class for my daughter and I least to live down to the village on Sullivan street and there was a place called the children's aid society and they had some ceramics classes and I enrolled my daughter in it and one day when I went to pick her up, I saw that they were having adult classes.

"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

Design Matters with Debbie Millman

07:36 min | 5 months ago

"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

"First get discovered in modeling? How did that first all come to happen to you? Because I understand it was really kind of a fluke. It was kind of a fluke I had a high school classmate whose sister was with an agency in Denver. And she said, you should really go in and meet this woman, Vicki light. It was the light company was the name of the agency. You should go meet Vicki. And I was like, ah, I don't know, that's really made me feel anxious. But I did go in and she said, well, you need some photos if you're going to do this. Here's a name of somebody you should go and get her to take your picture. Well, it turned out to be this woman and maybe you've heard of her before a photographer named Pamela Hansen. Yes. She was living in boulder at the time, and I went up there and made an appointment with her Pamela did all my makeup and shot me in these great photos and then gave them to the agency and they put them out there. Somebody from fours was on a talent scout, they came to the agency. They saw my photo, I got a call, I was at my house, my parents house, which is in the foothills of Denver, not in town, and they said, somebody from Ford's is here, they'd like to meet you. And I said, I'm sorry, I don't have a car. I've got no way to get there. I'm not going to be able to do that. And they said, well, you're really missing out. This is the chance of a lifetime. And I was practically in tears, but I didn't have any way to get into town. And my parents weren't there, and I didn't have a car. And then about a month later, I got a contract in the mail from Ford saying we'd like you to come to New York. This summer, when you leave when you're out of high school, I was about to graduate. So after much negotiating with my parents and I leaned forward on the phone with them, assuring them that I would be staying in her home and that I would and promising them that I would return to the university of Colorado for my freshman year. I was allowed to go to New York that summer. And that was my first modeling. And you really had quite an extraordinary modeling career you were photographed by some of the great fashion photographers of our time, Peter limberg, Bruce Webber, you work with Calvin Klein, Ralph Lauren, what was it like? I mean, this was really at a time when the art of modeling was front and center. You know, the supermodel era began models were seen as muses. And I knew that you were very much a part of that. What was it like for you to go from high school to the sort of world stage of modeling? It was a heady time. I have to say that when I first arrived in New York, I went to Eileen Ford's house for the weekend. She got a call that weekend saying that a model that she had booked for a job on Monday had been injured and wasn't going to be able to make it. And did she have anybody that could be a backup? So she had three other models there with her at the house. She brought us to this person's house on Sunday Night. And said, are any of these girls going to work? I was chosen. I was told to be at the airport at 7 a.m. the next morning. I literally just arrived at Friday night from Colorado, and I was back on a plane to four corners in the west. It's Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona and Utah. I was basically back where I had been a month earlier with my senior class doing a senior seminar river rafting trip. And that was just a weird circular moment of you think you're going somewhere and you're right back where you started, but in a completely different context. In terms of the supermodels, they sort of came just after me. I think of Christy turlington and Naomi Campbell and Cindy Crawford as the supermodels. And before that, in my era, it was more like Christy Brinkley, Janice Dickinson, but I did get to travel the world. I got to meet amazing people. But I always felt a little bit self conscious about it all. It's not my natural state to be front and center. Kind of posing. So I always felt a little awkward about it. That was something that I've always been working through. You never got any kind of headlines about what models and rockstars and so forth are often written about. It seemed like you've always been able to keep a really steady presence in your own life, as well as in your professional life. Did you have to experience a lot of pressure to be a certain weight or look a certain way? How did you manage through that? Well, I do remember showing up for a shoot once and I'd been traveling somewhere and I definitely put on ten pounds and my hair was sort of orange because I'd been in the sun and it just oxidized like crazy and the client took one look at me and looked at the photograph and said this is not going to work and I was fired right there on the spot. Oh my God that had never happened to me before and what can you do? You just have to I didn't go into a downward spiral or anything. I really have to credit my parents with giving me a really grounded childhood and my three sisters. We were all very close and still are and I just feel like that's served me in good stead in the sort of the crazy world of modeling. By 1987 you began to transition into acting. What made you decide to take that step? You know, it was just an audition that I got for club Paradise and my line was, do you have anything to smoke? I said, I've done that before. I can do that again. And the next thing I knew, I was often poured Antonio Jamaica and the shoot was went on for it seemed 5 months. It was a really long shoot, and Harold Ramis was the director and Robin Williams was the star and twiggy and Peter O'Toole and Jimmy cliff. It was the crazy Andrea Martin. It was all second city people. It was just a crazy big cast. And I was just a beach bunny, really in it. I was basically a model who had some lines. But it gave me a taste for that collaborative experience and when you're in a crew and when you're in a group and how wonderful that feels to be part of something bigger, where their skills and knowledge you learned while modeling that helped you make that transition into acting? Well, being open to being scrutinized or to be looked at or watched, learning how to kind of lose yourself in it. Not be always, you don't always have to be present almost. I mean, enacting you have to be more present, obviously, because you're exchanging lines, but in that role, especially there was just a remove because I was wearing a bathing suit that I never in my normal life would have ever put on, you know, really low cut and high cut on the hips and carry. That sounds like the definition of hell to me. Well, you're walking around with everybody's got clothes on and you're the only one in the tiny little thing. It can be intimidating. What advice might you offer to models and actors starting out about their careers? What do you wish somebody had told you at that time about that work? Just don't take it personally, you know? You're going to be rejected so many times for so many reasons that have nothing to do with you.

"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

Design Matters with Debbie Millman

08:20 min | 5 months ago

"carey" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman

"Carey Lowell welcome to design matters. Thank you so much. I'm so excited to be here. Carrie, is it true that your nickname is karaoke? Yes. Tell us all about that, please. Well, I sort of have this crazy, I listened to a lot of music, and therefore know all the words to all the songs. I got the nickname karaoke because whenever a song would come on, I knew the words. And it could repeat them pretty accurately. So it's just sort of a silly nickname I got. I was envisioning you in sports bars standing up and singing total eclipse of the sun and so forth. It's funny. I don't do a lot of karaoke, actually. That nickname was given to me by a writer friend Jonathan cot. Okay, well, well done. We'll name tag. Thank you. You were born in Huntington Long Island, but moved all over the world with your family until you settled in Colorado when you were about 12. Why were you moving so much and where were some of the places you lived? My father was a petroleum geologist and they were living in Tripoli Libya when my mom was pregnant with me. I have an older sister, Jennifer, who was actually born in Tripoli, but my mother's parents lived in Huntington Long Island, and so when my mom was due to deliver, they actually happened to be on leave in Huntington. And so I was born there and then I think I went back to Tripoli when I was about maybe less than a month old and lived there for a couple of years. And then we moved to Holland and I have another sister who was born there. Well, my father was working in the North Sea, and then we moved to Virginia and then Texas, where I have another sister who was born. And then we moved to Colorado when I was 12. And that's where my father still lives. And two of my sisters, actually. Your father was an award winning geologist. And I understand he co authored an article that defined copper models that became the standard reference for exploration geologists worldwide. Were you involved in any of the work that he did? No, only in that he used to take us on tours in Colorado on these hikes and we thought it was much rather anywhere else, but on this hike while he pointed out the geological structures to us. As an adult, I wish I'd paid more attention to it because now whenever I'm out in nature looking at formations, I'm thinking, okay, what happened here? I always see it from through my father's eyes. But I think you might be confusing my father, James Lowell, with another James Lowell, who was a copper, geologist, magnet. My dad did publish a textbook that was used for most geology college courses about structural geology because his whole area was plate tectonics and continental drift. Ah. Oh, I got really involved in a lot of these papers. Well, we'll have to investigate to see which James little, yeah, which that's interesting. You took your first pottery class in high school. But even before that, I know that one of your earliest childhood memories of being creative involved, finger paint, when you were three or four years old and I was wondering if you could share that memory with our listeners today because it's so visceral. Well, my parents bought us an easel. My older sister Jennifer and I, and we're only two years apart. So the easel had two sides and we would stand on either side of it and put up our waxy paper and just go to town. And I just remember these pots of red, blue, and yellow, and it was really an opportunity to stick your hand in and mush it around, and I just remember loving that feeling of the squeegee gooey, wet, you know, creation of it all. I love that. And I think that clay is has a similar tactile feel to it, but just that thing of just taking nothing, your hand and a substance and creating something out of it. It's magic. It really is magic and there's something so I don't know what the word would be. The word that I'm thinking of is essential, but it feels even more than that to feel the sort of warm paint or warm clay in your hands and have that ability to craft something from nothing. That's definitely sensual of for sure. Would you say that this is when your love of tactile things really began? I have always had this, I don't know if it's unusual or normal, but I've always had a thing about how things feel like I used to my mother used to put my hair and pigtails and she would always tie them with a satin ribbon, and I would always take the satin ribbon out and fold it into little ribs. And push it across my cheek or cross my lips. It was just like a total sensual thing. And I could even find the satin on the label of the seat belt. If we were in the car and I didn't have a ribbon, I would find it and do that. It's like a self comforting thing. I don't know. But I've always been very in tune to tactile things. You took your first pottery class in high school where they actually had pottery wheels, which I found so interesting. I've never heard of a high school having pottery wheels. What kind of pottery were you doing back then? Oh, at that point, I was just trying to get the clay centered on the wheel. I was very, it was the learning curve, you know? And I went to a public school in Denver, Colorado called bear creek high school, and back then, the arts were supported in public schools. So our arts class was a pottery class, and there was probably ten wheels in it. And we had a wonderful teacher and we had all just go in there and do our best, but my pottery back then was sort of a wonky bowl if I could ever get it centered. Do you happen to have any of that old pottery, those old pottery creations still in your possession? I don't I do actually have one that I hand built. That I actually look back on and think, that wasn't so awful. But I do have some from when I got back into pottery, because I sort of took a little bit of a break for motherhood and acting. I wasn't doing it so much when I was doing the James Bond stuff, but then when my daughter was born, I got it back into it. I love it. The James Bond stuff. We'll get to that shortly. At that point in your life, what did you think you wanted to do professionally? Was it going to be something in the arts? You know, I never considered that I could make a career in the arts. I came from a very academic family. My dad, as I said, as a geologist and my mom was a music major at wellesley, and even though that is in the arts, it's funny. I always thought that I needed to do something professionally. And I was always told that I'd make a good lawyer this by my mother who told me that I was very argumentative. That was my best quality to get that career. But looking back in hindsight, I so wish that I had pursued the arts then, you know, in the very beginning. When I took an acting class in college, it was the first acting class I'd ever taken, and it was just sort of an extracurricular activity. Nothing that I ever thought I would make a career at. You attended the university of Colorado at Boulder. And I understand that while you continue to pursue pottery, initially, I think your major was literature. It was. It was literature. I read a lot of Russian literature. I read a lot of French literature, not in French, in English, but it's so interesting. I minored in Russian literature, but in English translation, people are always really impressed thinking that somehow I managed to learn Russian and then have a minor in Russian literature, but I'm like, no, it was all in translation, but I still think it counts. Yeah, it does count. I was so into lehrman talk, leri minov. Yes. Yes. I'd love to. I loved that book. And then I transferred to NYU from bolder because I just did a single year at Boulder. I had been modeling that summer before I went to college, and then I went back to move to New York to continue modeling.

Madonna, Mariah music added to National Recording Registry

AP News Radio

00:44 sec | 6 months ago

Madonna, Mariah music added to National Recording Registry

"The Library of Congress has selected another 25 recordings of cultural or historical significance to be added to the national recording registry. I'm Archie's are a letter with the latest. For the first time, a video game soundtrack makes the national recording registry. It's the Super Mario Brothers theme by Koji Kondo, the list also includes the very first mariachi recordings from 1908. With a little touch of late among the albums making the cuts are Queen Latifah's all hail the Queen, Madonna's like a virgin and synchronicity by the police. Among the singles on the list are Mariah Carey's all I want for Christmas is you, daddy Yankee's gasoline, John Lennon's imagined Jimmy Buffett's margaritaville and Led Zeppelin's stairway to heaven.

John Lennon Koji Kondo 1908 25 Recordings First Time Mariah Carey Library Of Congress Jimmy Buffett Madonna First Led Zeppelin Super Mario Brothers Christmas Queen Latifah Mariachi Is You All I Want For Queen Singles Yankee
"carey" Discussed on Daily Pop

Daily Pop

02:09 min | 1 year ago

"carey" Discussed on Daily Pop

"Who cares? Let's burn it down. That light just starts to flicker. All right. It might must be the opposite for Mariah Mariah nowadays, and she's truly a megastar, does that come with its own complications? 'cause now she's in the hot seat, the driver's seat. She is the one that has to sort of pick suitors for herself that she's not just having to take care of. Sugar mommy. That's the danger. That's another thing. You don't want to. You want to take care of yourself, you want to be in a relationship that is loving and you guys share responsibilities. You don't also want to just be the person to have to take care of everything because you financially care. I jump in to pay for things more often than I should. I do. That's a good quality. Yeah, but then if you were to offer, I get like very uncomfortable. And sometimes I have to love allow people to help. So I have like the two, I have the two apology rule where I'd be like, let me know. Okay. You know, like, I'll try. And if they insist the third time, I'll let them pay because they're doing things like, I'm good, you know? This motion. Does that mean like you paid for dinner more often than? Yes. No. I know. No. It's with another guy who might, you know, I don't know, it's fine. Well, who asked me and then like last night I went on a dinner date, sorry, if you're watching this. No. But he went to the bathroom, and I paid. And I don't love that move. Classy. By the way, just really quick disclaimer. Take care of the check before the person comes back or give it to the houses when you get them. You don't need to fill out the tip in front of the also, it was kind of a good date so it was literally like, he's a friend, actually. So it was literally like, he's like, oh, I'll get you next time. That was nice. Right? You know, she means I was like, it was really comfortable because it's hard for me to be in a position sometimes where people want to take care of me. I have a hard time, but in Mariah's Carey's case. There's so many assumptions on who she is. And at this point, who's she gonna even date? Somebody hot. That's all that matters. She's still in, isn't she still in that relationship? Yeah, yeah, exactly. Yeah. Allegedly. All right, Madonna, from one icon to another. Madonna is causing a commotion with her latest YouTube video. She answered 50 fan questions about life, love, and lust. And you gotta just see it for yourself.

Mariah Mariah Mariah Carey Madonna YouTube
Jim Carey Is the Only One Making Sense About Will Smith

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch

01:30 min | 1 year ago

Jim Carey Is the Only One Making Sense About Will Smith

"Of all people, Jim Carrey. Who normally is an asshole extraordinaire. And so, esoteric, you can't understand a word. He says, Jim Carrey made a hell of a lot of sense the other morning. On CBS with Gayle king. Maybe his STD medication finally been prescribed right. But Jim Carrey had something to say about Will Smith's behavior at the Oscars. He's sitting there with Gail king and he said he was sickened by the standing ovation Will Smith got. This is big guys. This is a guy who's made a $1 billion for Hollywood, a white guy. Talking about the black guy who's made a $1 billion for Hollywood. And Jim Carrey had the balls to say, I'm sickened by the standing ovation. And then this is even better. Hollywood is just spineless and mass. And it really felt like this is a really clear indication that we aren't the cool club anymore. You know what? Jim Carrey is just made the most sense of anybody I've heard from that part of the business in many, many years. He's right. I've been preaching this for years. They ain't the cool club anymore. He also said that Will Smith should have been arrested. But then Gayle king points out, well, Chris Rock declined to file charges. And Jim Carrey said, he didn't want the hassle Gail with so true.

Jim Carrey Gail King Gayle King Hollywood Will Smith Oscars CBS Smith Chris Rock Gail
Christmas Music (MM #3929)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 1 year ago

Christmas Music (MM #3929)

"The NASA minute. With Kevin mason. Throughout my career, I've spent a lot of time dealing with Christmas music. Most of it being country music because it worked in the country music industry for so long, but also working with adult contemporary formats, middle of the road, music formats. I know a little bit about Christmas music. And when it comes to the end of the day, I still prefer hearing the classics. What's now considered ancient Christmas music? From people like Andy Williams and Dean Martin and Mel Torme and Nat King Cole and all that stuff that I hated as a kid. Around my house, we used to hear all that music all the time in the 1960s and 1970s. And by then it was still old, but there's something about going back to it and the feeling it gives me to this day. Sure, there have been great Christmas songs. Some people would say, since the 1960s, I'm not even going to talk about wham or Mariah Carey, or Michael buble, or any of the Christmas music that's come in the last 20, 30 years, but give me the old stuff. And I know I'm not alone because I've got friends, probably of the same age who were the same way. There's something about the holidays and that old time music. They really put you in the mood.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Mel Torme Nasa Andy Williams Dean Martin Nat King Cole Michael Buble Mariah Carey
Christmas Music (MM #3929)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | 1 year ago

Christmas Music (MM #3929)

"The NASA minute. With Kevin mason. Throughout my career, I've spent a lot of time dealing with Christmas music. Most of it being country music because it worked in the country music industry for so long, but also working with adult contemporary formats, middle of the road, music formats. I know a little bit about Christmas music. And when it comes to the end of the day, I still prefer hearing the classics. What's now considered ancient Christmas music? From people like Andy Williams and Dean Martin and Mel Torme and Nat King Cole and all that stuff that I hated as a kid. Around my house, we used to hear all that music all the time in the 1960s and 1970s. And by then it was still old, but there's something about going back to it and the feeling it gives me to this day. Sure, there have been great Christmas songs. Some people would say, since the 1960s, I'm not even going to talk about wham or Mariah Carey, or Michael buble, or any of the Christmas music that's come in the last 20, 30 years, but give me the old stuff. And I know I'm not alone because I've got friends, probably of the same age who were the same way. There's something about the holidays and that old time music. They really put you in the mood.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Mel Torme Nasa Andy Williams Dean Martin Nat King Cole Michael Buble Mariah Carey
Mariah Carey Sends Her Vindictive Mother Far Away

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch

01:30 min | 2 years ago

Mariah Carey Sends Her Vindictive Mother Far Away

"But now comes where the Mariah finally sold her mother's longtime house, but upstate New York, 750 grand, some nice amount of change for all mom and she put her mom. She put the old battle action and assisted living facility and some of you are going around just buy her a smaller house or a nice condo and live near it. No, no, no. You don't even know why. Let me tell you something. Mariah and bought this house for her mother in north Salem. I think in 1994, for like $400,000. So it made a decent profit. Four bedroom three brands from blah blah blah. Actually, it's sold earlier this month for 757 $157,000 more than $250,000 in the initial asking price. So, when word got out, people wanted this house. But in the past year, Mariah has moved, her mother relocated her mother to West Palm Beach to live in an upscale senior living home, and at the whole time the house sat idle for a year before listed for sale in June. So she's moving to a nice 5 star assisted living residents, nurses are gonna wait on her hand and foot, but it's still a million miles from everyone, and there's a reason why. Carry Mariah Carey is always called her relationship with her mother a very complicated relationship. And when I say complicated, I mean hateful,

Mariah North Salem New York West Palm Beach Mariah Carey
"carey" Discussed on What’s Wrong With Wolfie?

What’s Wrong With Wolfie?

03:34 min | 2 years ago

"carey" Discussed on What’s Wrong With Wolfie?

"You could try to someone that isn't necessarily into jim. Carey doesn't surly wanna see that cap comedy every five seconds. It's weird that this should be the most grounded of the three but it kind of weirdly is and but now it just didn't didn't click with me and Originally came out. I got more of a kickout. Thanks i think on a on a on a rewatch. It's a weird one other than i am. I might watch again and actually changed. That was one time on my phone on a train which doesn't always necessarily do it. Justice is very issue film. Say at probably didn't do any many favors burn. I'll be interested what you guys think especially chris. He's a little on the opposite sides of the coin to degree prepared to me gifts crystal it. It's kind of a well also hasn't is with mix because i think the thing that might Interest it moves so swiftly Light you're literally for one into our to our to another without having a chance to solve like it just literally. Bronze locker paint by numbers. Films just happens. Have jim carey in the middle of it and left mouse growing up as a kid offers a great film when he should watch as another east of like you realize how Like one dimensional. It can be sometimes and other. What are we watched recently It didn't have the cohesive the domine Have this is weird to me. Because all have fond memories of it and i always say never revisiting while and it was fun. Ns great the music was fantastic in jim carrey's performance fantastic buffing all of it together just kind of needed. It needed something that was missing That would be interesting. I'm cliff sorry. chris yeah just misses missing something but it does work and it doesn't work is it's it fifty two. You have simmons laos. I the out the free. This is my favorite now. If i was to say. I've got night you of son and when i was i say to my wife was They're never put us to watch over spray. These movies again the one that he went. Oh can i watch. That view. was the mosque now. I actually i mean agreements that he has obviously started life as a comic book which was a lot more graphic To say the least eighth. I think that it has that comic book movie style. The scott so as you said it's of ski seen by seeing by seeing by same almost iq of reading a comic book yet by slide by side by side by slide and actually coming down to the basis of gymnasts. I think the out she out of the free. This is best acted because you know he. He does savings row. He comes on later on tonight. Four to do more serious roles but actually as it kiss he plays he plays deadpan..

Carey jim carey chris jim jim carrey simmons scott
The 'Berries and Cream' Trend on TikTok, Explained

ICYMI

01:48 min | 2 years ago

The 'Berries and Cream' Trend on TikTok, Explained

"Just in case. You haven't seen this yet. We're talking about a kind of creepy kind of charming little dancing ladd. Who sings about berries and cream and has completely endorse old tick-tock. Well that little ad is obviously benny from the boxcar children. Benny one of the bucks for children has a very big obsession with berries and cream. Much like all of our listeners. Here's a note from maria says okay. I've not been on and maybe a day and a half and now everything is berries. Increase cream slush. Little ad helped that spelled h. a. l. p. i feel like i'm too old for tick-tock yet still young enough to use that spelling help maria. That's that's a really excellent way to describe microgeneration halley by email said. Please help me with the little lad. Why is it over my sap. What does it mean is it a simple of our collective spiral into madness. All these questions are very pressing meet wants us to explain why they saw the berries and chromatic talk wants two weeks ago and now therefore you pages berries and cream mashed up with my chemical romance and mariah carey and frankly before we go any further. Now that i know it exists. I simply need to hear what berries and cream and mariah carey mashed up sounds like berries and cream knew it was coming. It's still brought me joy. That's the thing about these mashups. Is that whenever you see them on your sap it's always someone being like. Who made this audio and so you know something is coming and yet. It's always just a delightful little

Maria Ladd Benny Halley Mariah Carey
"carey" Discussed on Even the Rich

Even the Rich

07:49 min | 2 years ago

"carey" Discussed on Even the Rich

"We're headed toward fall. The weather starting to cool down just a little bit. And i gotta say i love a change in season especially if it means. I can start actually wearing cute jackets and sweatshirts again. Oh god say. I love switching things up. But you know what's not changing. Our love for hard seltzer. The first hard seltzer with antioxidant vitamin c couldn't agree more ritchie's if you haven't heard us talk about it before antioxidant vitamins. E is extracted from the osceola cherry. A super fruit. That has thirty times more vitamin c per cup than an orange. Yes so i mean. There are plenty of hard saulters to choose from of course but with eight bold and delicious dual fruit flavors antioxidant vitamin c. Busy makes the choice a little easier. And it's a lot tastier i gotta say. I love busy. I was just telling you how i insisted on packing it in my car for moving back west The watermelon flavors are just summer in a can and I could drink them all day. I don't i have a job but it is a wonderful way to lake. Just relax at the end of a hard day and even an easy day. I love it and i feel like this is also very exciting. That they've recently launched four. Lemonade heart seltzer flavors. Which love lemonade including strawberry. Lemonade impeach lemonade. I'm so excited for those enjoy. True refreshment with antioxidant vitamin c. Upgrade your heart seltzer too busy to find out where you can purchase busy. Go to visit hard seltzer dot com slash rich. That's hard seltzer. Dot com slash. Rich must be twenty one or older. Football's right around the corner get in on the action with dr king sportsbook and officials sports betting partner of the nfl and with the nfl. Returning draft kings is giving new customers. Two hundred dollars in free bets instantly when you bet one dollar or more on any football game. Listen up because you don't want to miss this download the draftking sportsbook app now and use promo code art nineteen to receive two hundred dollars in free bats when you place a one dollar bet on any football game and get a free shot at a million top prize with your first deposit. That's promo code art. Nineteen for a limited time only at draftking sportsbook and officials sports betting partner of the. Nfl must be twenty one or older new jersey indiana jolie new customers only minimum five dollar deposit and one dollar wager. Required one per customer restrictions apply see draft kings dot com slash sportsbook for details gambling problem. Call one eight hundred gambler or an indiana one eight hundred nine with it. It's the summer of nineteen ninety-five and mariah carey is sliding down deeper and deeper into her massive bathtub at sing-sing she's been working her azoff for the last two years trying to find a way to feel like herself. She wants some space. Some freedom but feels like tommy's got her in one of those ninja knots. That just gets tighter and tighter. The more you wriggle and mariah feels like. She's down to her last move. The one thing. She still got some control over her voice. That amazing voice that got that audience connected so excited and right now out there in the world. Outside her bathtub battle royale is underway over that voice mariah climbs out of the tub and checks her phone nervously. Still no calls ever since that concert and schenectady mariah has been way more vocal in the studio and not just when the record light is on. She knows what she wants. She knows what her audience wants. And it's not what tommy wants at all tommy's hell bent on keeping things as white and poppy as possible. Curly italian hair cut off jeans and daddy's button-down okay. Please never say gatti's button-down again but mariah doesn't want to play that role anymore. She wants to be herself all of herself. And that means more hip hop. She's looking for her. Sound a sound. that's true to who she is on the inside and she's reached out to new collaborator for help. His name is russel. Tyrone jones of the borough of staten island or as we all know him all dirty bastard mariah asked him to do a rap feature on her new track but he's been flaky and noncommittal he's like it'll happen if it happens and since then nothing not a word mariah's worried he thinks she's too soft to pop to white. She wishes she could just get on the phone with him and explain. That's not who she is not really but it's been radio silence so mariah's slips into her white silk nightgown and climbs into bed as quietly as possible. So she doesn't wake tommy. The bed is massive. Which is good. Because they're a million miles apart right now but justice mariah's head hits the pillow. The phone rings. she jumps out of bed and grabs. It and the news is amazing. Odbc just showed up at the studio. The rap happened just like that. Oh i know it did introducing dirty doggy mariah's ecstatic and lets out a little whoop tommy stirs in bed but honestly mariah too excited about the odbc score to think about tommy. So she tells the studio guy to play the rapper her over the phone down and dirty rhymes of odbc start busting through the receiver and mariah falls. A seriously bad ass move. She puts it on speaker love it. Odbc spits out rhymes like me and mariah go back like babies with pass fires whereas like a kid on christmas morning screaming and laughing and jumping up and down on the bed. This is the music from her teenage years. This is where she's been to take her music for years and it's finally happening after the rat finishes mariah looks over to tommy is head is cocked one side. And he's got a look on his face like he smells something disgusting he says the fuck is that i can do that. Get the fuck out here with that. I can do that. okay. I can just hear it. Now come on fellow old white men. Let's do some dadgum him. Hop diggity the next tommy rallies the other suits at the label and they all tell mariah this rap with od is going to throw her fan base into shock. But mariah's not going to let them tell her what her fans want. She knows better than anyone. She's right when the single comes out. It's a huge hit point for mariah because this is honestly one of my faves. Yeah our girls getting stronger. She's getting louder she's reaching down deep but what she's finding. There isn't pretty mariah's in the studio late at night scrawling lyrics for a new song in her notebook. She's been working all day songs for her upcoming album daydream and they have names like one sweet day but tonight she's writing lyrics for her alter ego. Bianca and bianca isn't sweet. She's more in line with the angry white girl. Rockers blur hot at the moment. Singers like atlantis morrissett shirley manson from garbage variety. Nbc's these women because they get to be messy in their music their style their emotions while mariah feels like.

mariah tommy seltzer Nfl dr king sportsbook indiana ritchie football Tyrone jones mariah carey jolie gatti mariah falls Football new jersey russel
"carey" Discussed on The Higherside Chats

The Higherside Chats

06:42 min | 2 years ago

"carey" Discussed on The Higherside Chats

"Cdc work on sugar and obesity and diabetes and health. And so we're really just again trying to expose things that maybe are companies. Don't want out there. Yes sir seemed to be a range of things you guys focus on. But that is the connective tissue is. You're going after the the big companies out there. I saw stuff about bill gates investments in agriculture which you mentioned earlier the sugar lobby in artificial sweeteners. so several issues that are important to this audience. I hope they do check it out. Yeah and it's important to say that they companies that we have highlighted or the corporate interests or the organizations have really tried to shut us down. And i've worked really hard to do that. And there are again internal documents that show that so if there are people out there who want to support us we would welcome that. Yes cheers and in terms of social media links. your website future projects. What should we tell them about following up on this if they want to keep tabs on what you have going on. Yeah so well. Us are tk dot org and we're also on twitter and we have a facebook page. And then i'm on twitter myself. I love for people to follow me and engage. I tried to put breaking news documents up there as much as i can. That seems to be way to get him out. And my own website. Curriculum dot com. You can see articles that have written. I write for the gardy news outlet as well fairly regularly see can guardians in international news agency and host. A lot of information there so Lots of places to follow me your check it out and i welcome. My website has my email and phone number. And i welcome inquiries and news tips and things like that so please reach out and on the your story phone number now. That is bold of you. That's dedication but yes you also do have a high quality twitter feed rare to see these days but it is there a lot of good information i learned. Just perusing that so keep up the great work. I really enjoyed both books. You are extremely knowledgeable in your niche and we are lucky to have you fighting the good fight and thanks for stopping in to talk to us today. Best lock take care out there. Well you're very kind for having me back at you. Thank you right on. And boom goes the dynamite. What a dedicated and amazing journalist kerry is just so impressive. If you ask me. I know some people might think that when you consider the full totality that is the thc iceberg. This is not as deep as some of the more out there things we get into. But i've been looking for creative ways to poke holes through the common phrases here in these days without over focusing on it directly these almost evangelical declarations to trust the science and the steam. That no matter what unethical or criminal activity accompany has been convicted of in a crisis. We just got gotta acquiescent. Follow their advice. They're the experts. Criminals are not when we really do know it's all tainted by their own incentives and we cannot trust the compromised media to report on things accurately a lot of people acknowledged the greed and the cutthroat business practices. But i guess they have a belief that there's some magic line that doesn't get crossed and sciences science and data's data and that's neutral but another thing i wanted to remind people of obviously is how toothless arbitrary fda an epa approvals for safety can be in. Today's world. I wish it wasn't that way. Without regulation at probably be worse but we need some checks and balances to keep the corporate people out of the regulation department when these companies are willing to spend billions of dollars to capture everything. You've got to be pretty vigilant. And we're not. I think we've learned just how easy it is to control the narrative around certain things when a company is committed enough as kerry said the tobacco industry. Playbook definitely still being passed around. And you got to be pretty dense to not see all these factors in the case of monsanto and wipe assayed because it's a pretty glaringly toxic example yet people still buy it because it's at home depot so it must be okay that said all of these themes to me are very important in today's world and with today's dominant narratives and conflicts of interest. I would hope it would be a natural progression but at the same time if you're actually presented with the information on how many midwesterners the lawn or a garden or still using roundup. I'm pretty sure you'd be shocked. By how many have it in the shed right next to the lawnmower on the blow up kiddy pool so we do have a long way to go but today we talked about a template template that i hope more people start applying to other situations and industries. But hey i just lead the horse to the unchlorinated. Water can't make anybody drink. Although the sad state of everything definitely makes me want to but as journalists as an expert in her area carey is so high level. We also recorded this. Just before this recent foia document released that offers even greater evidence fao funded gain of function research on corona viruses. In the wuhan lab. But i'm sure her organization. Us right to know u. s. r. t. k. Dot org is all over it because it only further confirms the perspective she offered on that whole situation. When talking about non-life investigations that. Us right to know is currently involved in. I've heard two recent glyphosate pieces of news as well one being this emerging data that biofuels being burned and getting into the air is a huge problem because they use glyphosate soaked corn for a lot of the biofuel and you really shouldn't be burning that or breathing it in summer even saying it's a major exacerbated of cova symptoms obviously we had a lot of people trying to overlay five g. coverage areas with hotspots. And honestly i just think it's industrialization in general cities are.

twitter bill gates Cdc obesity kerry diabetes facebook epa fda monsanto fao carey Us
"carey" Discussed on It's Been a Minute with Sam Sanders

It's Been a Minute with Sam Sanders

05:03 min | 2 years ago

"carey" Discussed on It's Been a Minute with Sam Sanders

"Glitter does not sparkle the world moves on mariah carey. Her career takes a few years to recover but everyone including mariah tried to forget about glitter flash forward though seventeen years and then everything changes for that album with the justice for glitter campaign. What was that. The justice glitter campaign in late. Two thousand eighteen a group of mariah carey fans which it should be noted call themselves the lamela because mariah carey refers to her fans as lambs and her leading the flock are glittering shepherd. So they come together on twitter and decided that glitter has been maligned for far too long and so they mobilized to get glitter to number one on the album charts and the way that they do. This is someone put together. Someone who is a massive mariah carey fan puts together this very elaborate listening schedule of all the mariah carey albums so that people can get you know really in the groove before they start listening to glitter all the time and through that it started picking up steam mariah carey tweets about it. And then it goes to number one glitter soundtrack. Back in the top ten tagged justice widow. Lamle thing that's really interesting about. This is that it wasn't the anniversary of this album. It was just. It just happened very organically over twitter because her fan base decided that it was time for people to be able to hear something that she really tried to bury for a long time and that in the cultural consciousness wasn't as well known as anything else that she had done. And the reason. I find the story of glitter so interesting because it shows how much mariah has remained important even as the music industry has changed. And she's still been able to come out on top in many ways in spite of all the changes and how much the internet change what it means to make a hit you know. When mariah carey was walking into her glitter phase. There was a very sure fire way to guarantee a number one album and a number one song..

mariah carey mariah twitter
"carey" Discussed on Even the Rich

Even the Rich

02:03 min | 2 years ago

"carey" Discussed on Even the Rich

"At wondering dot com slash survey. This is episode one of our four part series the emancipation of mariah carey. We use many sources when researching are stories but we especially recommend the meaning of mariah carey mariah carey with michaela. Angela davis. I'm arita skidmore williams and brooks different. Dennis hensley wrote this episode. Kate young is our associate producer. Our senior producers. Are natalie shisha and ben gray. Our audio engineer. Sergio and rica's sound design by james. Morgan are executive producers. Are stephanie jen's jenny. Lower backman.

mariah carey mariah carey arita skidmore williams Dennis hensley mariah carey Kate young Angela davis michaela natalie shisha ben gray brooks Sergio rica stephanie jen Morgan james jenny Lower backman
USA's Allman Wins Gold in Discus Throw

AP News Radio

00:52 sec | 2 years ago

USA's Allman Wins Gold in Discus Throw

"J. Carey took control of the women's floor exercise Monday in Tokyo final score of fourteen point three six six the top the podium to take gold earlier Monday USA gymnastics announced that Simone Biles will take part in the finals of the balance beam Tuesday fell real men won gold for the U. S. in the women's discus a top throw of sixty eight point nine eight meters I feel really thankful that to have a really solid first there but it just became of of St it became a game of staying mentally tough and and just going with the flow American women also made it to the podium I believe great silver in women's seventy six kilogram wrestling crystal Palmer bronze in women's three meter springboard diving Sarah Robles a bronze in the women's eighty seven kilogram weightlifting class the four time gold medal U. S. women's soccer team will play for bronze after Canada knocked them off the semi final by a score of one to nothing I'm Jonathan

J. Carey Simone Biles Gymnastics Tokyo USA Sarah Robles Palmer Wrestling Soccer Canada Jonathan
Jade Carey Secures Gold in Floor Exercise at Tokyo Olympics

KTLA Morning News

00:18 sec | 2 years ago

Jade Carey Secures Gold in Floor Exercise at Tokyo Olympics

"Spoiler us. Jim. Miss Jade. Kerry has taken the gold in the Olympic floor exercise final that when helping us stay in the lead Team USA has the most medals overall with 61 21 gold. China has 59 total medals, 28 gold and their season third with 50

Miss Jade Kerry JIM Olympic USA China
Will We Still Use Masks When All the Mandates Expire?

The Big Story

01:55 min | 2 years ago

Will We Still Use Masks When All the Mandates Expire?

"Jordan heath rawlings. This is the big story. Dr mitsukoshi hori is a professor of schumann university in japan. He's currently working at its overseas campus chaucer college and canterbury in the uk. He has a phd in sociology and has studied the history of mask wearing in japan. Hello professor horry. Hello hi before. We talk about eastern versus western views on the practice of mask-wearing. Maybe you could just go way back and explain. When did public mask wearing for health reasons originate. Yes three shows. It's only tonight's in the west. The practice of muscle building was by the carey out in the especially medical institutions across the west also in japan. I think the musk willing was popularized during the spanish flu onto make then i think public. Musk willing encouraged in the west Both in europe on the north america in the case was a ban it was introduced to the japanese authorities during the time at the practice commodity carried out in the in the west. Then his authority impetus Japan so that was kind of the footage of mosque wearing and after that pandemic past. Where did the practice remain in. Where did it vanish. It remained in japan. But somehow it's disappeared in north america and europe and i stood on though why disappears. So that's the kind of you know the big mystery. Probably we need further research on will and that's

Jordan Heath Rawlings Dr Mitsukoshi Hori Schumann University Japan Horry UK Musk North America FLU Europe
Yellen Outlines to Congress Emergency Measures on Debt Limit

RMWorld Travel Connection with Robert & Mary Carey and Rudy Maxa

00:30 sec | 2 years ago

Yellen Outlines to Congress Emergency Measures on Debt Limit

"Keep the government from an unprecedented default on the national debt, which currently stands at $28.4 trillion Yellen, warning a default could cause irreparable harm to the economy and the livelihoods of all Americans. Yellen says her actions will buy time until Congress can pass legislation to either raise the debt limit or suspended again for a period of time. The debt limits been suspended for the past two years, but goes back into effect. July 31st. Number of new Covid 19 cases across the U. S has tripled in the past month.

Yellen Congress U.
Kraken Kick off Expansion Draft by Taking Bruins' Lauzon

AP News Radio

00:29 sec | 2 years ago

Kraken Kick off Expansion Draft by Taking Bruins' Lauzon

"Carey price remains property the Canadians after the crack and passed on the net minder in the NHL expansion draft instead Seattle selected Panthers netminder Chris trigger and gave him a three year ten and a half million dollar contract Seattle took on to become attracts selecting flames defenseman mark Giordano and islanders forward Jordan Everly other notable players chosen early by the crack include lightning center Yanni Gordon maple Leafs forward Jared McCann Bruins defenseman Jeremy Lauzon was the first player taken by Seattle I'm the ferry

Chris Trigger Carey Price Seattle Mark Giordano Jordan Everly NHL Panthers Yanni Gordon Maple Islanders Jared Mccann Jeremy Lauzon Leafs Bruins
Picking Carey Price would be bold, risky (and chaotic) move for Kraken

Schopp and Bulldog

00:18 sec | 2 years ago

Picking Carey Price would be bold, risky (and chaotic) move for Kraken

"Frank Sarah Veli reports today that Seattle is investigating Carey Price's injuries and ownership has given GM Ron Francis the green light to select price if he wants to. Year. LeBron reported last night. Price will see a doctor in New York this week regarding any issue that could require surgery.

Frank Sarah Veli Ron Francis Carey Price Seattle GM Lebron New York
Lightning Strikes Twice: Tampa Bay Repeats as Cup Champion

AP News Radio

00:25 sec | 2 years ago

Lightning Strikes Twice: Tampa Bay Repeats as Cup Champion

"For the second straight year the Tampa Bay Lightning are hoisting the Stanley Cup Ricky Ross golden scored the only goal of the game of the second period to give the lighting a one nothing win over Montreal at Amalie arena gold in the university of Vermont products took the gold most people past and stretch Carey price of the Canadian school sending the near capacity crowd into a frenzy lighting up under our proposal as he was named the Conn Smythe trophy winner as the playoffs Most Valuable Player I'm John that the pre

Ricky Ross Golden Amalie Arena Gold Tampa Bay Lightning Canadian School University Of Vermont Montreal Carey John
Canadiens Beat Lightning 3-2 in OT, Avoid Stanley Cup Sweep

AP News Radio

00:45 sec | 2 years ago

Canadiens Beat Lightning 3-2 in OT, Avoid Stanley Cup Sweep

"Josh Anderson scored his second of the game in extra minutes and the Canadians avoided lightning sweep Monday night taking game four by a three two score that has managed to shut down the lightning's power play unit during a four minute my interests as the captain Shea Weber late in the game for high sticking penalty carried over in overtime and Tampa Bay only managed four shots Anderson's first period goal marked the first time the Canadian strike first in both territory in the series we didn't want to end it tonight in front of our fans you know we we expect to go to camp tomorrow I think everybody in the locker room death the difference in this one Carey price returning to superb form blocking thirty two of thirty four shots the lightning will look to win the final on Wednesday night in Tampa L. A. Larry here in Montreal

Josh Anderson Shea Weber Tampa Bay Anderson Carey L. A. Larry Tampa Montreal
"carey" Discussed on Sexy Unique Podcast

Sexy Unique Podcast

07:24 min | 2 years ago

"carey" Discussed on Sexy Unique Podcast

"Sell TVs with audio is pretty dumb. So listen to me. Joel McHale show. We want is great looking TVs with our favorite features like the quality of Dolby Vision IQ. The smarts of Android TV and the vibrancy of quantum. Color. TVs like the Hisense you led series visit hi since. Com and see for yourself Hisense let's get real. I've been plagued with balcony and I've been dealing with it for so long and have tried so many things to treat it that I've kind of accepted that it's just going to be part of my journey and is some sort of like karmic curse that I need to work out metaphysically because when I tell you I've tried everything. I mean it like I've taken prescription medications. I've tried over-the-counter topical creams before the opportunity to work with apostrophe. I was literally about to buy anti-dandruff shampoo to that I saw in like a YouTube video where the YouTuber put shampoo on her back to clear up her acne, like that is how desperate I am to do anything to get rid of it. But thankfully, I found something that actually does work, they prescription treatment from apostrophe. The sponsor of this episode apostrophe Is a prescription skin care company. That offers science-backed oral and topical medications that are clinically proven to help clear acne. Apostrophe connects you with a board-certified Derm, who will create a personalized treatment plan that is perfectly tailored to your unique skin, all you have to do is fill out their online quiz about your skin goals and medical history. Snap, a few selfies or pictures off with your acne areas and your Derm will create your customized treatment plan, apostrophe treats acne, and they can also help you hit other skin care goals like reducing redness wrinkles and not even dark spots. I chose apostrophe because I needed to do a dermatologist visit anyways, and the fact that you can work with apostrophe and need a dermatologist and get a treatment plan. All on a line was so much more appealing than trying to figure out who takes my insurance. Go to the office, have the appointment, fill the prescription come back home. It's just like it eliminating all the time. Is annoying things about having to go to the doctor. I loved apostrophe because it was amazing to know that I was being treated by a real dermatologist who was board certified, which is something everyone should look for in a Doctor Who's treating cosmetic issues. And the fact that my plan was tailored to, my specific needs taking into account. All the other treatments, I've tried and coming up with a new plan, was a great apostrophe has such cute packaging and branding. I'm so excited to get mine in the mail. Apostrophes approach to treating skin issues really aligned with a lot of treatment Thursday and reading about online. And so I'm just so excited to get my box and start my journey to hopefully a back me, free summer. I have a special deal for all. Heads. You can save $15 off your first visit with a board-certified dermatologist at apostrophe, when you use the code, sup, this is Jim. Only available to my listeners. So you better get started by going to apostrophe, and click begin visit, then you use the code Step at sign up and you'll get $15 off your Dermatology visit. That's a p. O s t r o p. H e, use that code to get your own knowledge e visit and save $15 and we thank apostrophe for sponsoring the podcast. Ladies in their wigs are really doing a disservice to cinema because I watched Angelina Jolie's recent film. What was it called? Those who wished me dead, which was truly Camp. It was, it was, it was weirdly libertarian, why did you get weird? Conservative Vibes off a bit like these city folks flee into the country and what Vibes I was picking up? I was just I could not get over like the fact that the most beautiful woman in the entire world is just working Montana. Just Manning that station bar. You know, I was like, is anyone else seen this bitch? Also she was real thin. She needed to gain like at least twenty-five pounds of muscle to take on a role. Like I was also like she's getting struck by lightning I'm certainly not once but twice dose she gets struck by lightning twice and dead. In the beginning, she uses like hanging with the boys. Drinking beer, good beer. Parasailing off a truck. Yeah, she's there. Like you're going to do it? She's like, I'm going to do it. She was like, watch me it's like life. She's wearing insane wig. Well, at first, I was like, okay I could buy her being maybe like in the witness protection program. Like she's some like agent that like, but I was like, oh, it's salt, this woman does not belong. Like it's one of these things is not like the others. She she refused to get into character sheet over. Yeah, I really think that they greenlit the movie, based off of her being attached. And then she showed up to work the first day, like, the producers were like, okay, so, like you're going to work out, right? And like, you probably need to bulk up and like, we'll get you this trainer and like, and then she showed up to work and was like, I'm going to wear this wig and that's it. And they were like, always, she would literally waste fifteen pounds and is wearing bang wig dead. Like a wig that is so unfathomable to me. And also, a wig that just is like stiff, bang hair the entire time. Like, as she's running through Woods that are Ablaze, she's getting little higher pushed and Creeks shot at stabbed. Like the wig remains until just a chunk of it burns off. And the blaze she also has just a chunk of a wig missing. She also has inexplicably the scene when she watches the children burn which was very unclear. Yeah, it took me a really long time to figure out what her damage was. Found her in that in her fire here. I was like whether her she's drowning in her coat she literally to walk and do this job. She's literally drowning in her fireman outfit and she's and then at one point, she goes off and she has time to put her doesn't have time to save him, but she in that moment when she could have just saved the kids, she has to put her hand on her mouth and go. Can you hear Purple. Listen to turquoise. What's the sound of a rainbow? Let's get real trying to sell TVs with audio is pretty dumb. So listen to me. Joel McHale off. All we want is great-looking TVs with our favorite features like the quality of Dolby Vision IQ. The smarts of Android TV and the vibrancy of quantum. Color. TVs like the Hisense you led series visit hi since. Com and see for yourself Hisense let's get real..

Joel McHale Angelina Jolie $15 fifteen pounds YouTube Thursday Jim Hisense first twice Montana one hi since. Com at least twenty-five pounds Android first day Dolby Vision once one point things
"carey" Discussed on Rap It Out

Rap It Out

08:26 min | 2 years ago

"carey" Discussed on Rap It Out

"Hey let's welcome y'all today a very special episode. This time with a rapper. Today i'm going to be branching out. I'm here with a very special excuse. I'm sorry song as often as a head world. Hi guys. Bradley producer from texas. Us us and i go to berkeley boston. Oh wow that's incredible and kudos for because ing really wanna go to college. One day really won't fire it is. It's daunting in the beginning. But it gets fun. Really great place to meet be berlin socialize and all of that only yes god happy gets anyway so now right now to go back in time pretend Going back years ago a couple years ago and we're glad to the very beginning so how the drain with music star for you okay. So my journey with music been pretty interesting. 'cause i was actually forced into it when i was five years old More my mom just dragged me to this indian classical music class and since from an indian south indian family. This is something that a lot of south indian kids of forced to do is just joining indian classical music class and i. initially. I hated it. I hated the de-jure. I used to cry before going to gloss everyday but then eventually i think i started developing this love for music. The more i started to learn the more. I was getting fascinated by it and a whole my whole experience with indian. Classical music just gave me this daft. An understanding of music that i feel like i wouldn't have gotten by doing any other kinda music and then also made me feel very connected to michael and yeah. That was i. Guess my first connection that. I had with music and the first the first moment that i experienced a sort of love for music and then i learned the keys for the while. I did all these trinity exams for that and yeah offer that there was just no looking back. I started writing composing soon after i got into learning production trying to produce my own songs. Not the best at it. But i'm learning and it's been such a fun johnny with music and i don't think i'd have it any other way file. That's really fascinating. That's that's incredible thank you. I'm just really fascinated by the way you start out like forcing bike first of all. I couldn't believe that your mom like pushed him into music school. Like i could not manhattan being put going to music school like debts that that's insane personnel. That's my pants. That's my parents for you too. Yeah for sure but On the good no. I really in my your interest in music and i'm really really happy for you can't wait for god has for you. Yeah me too. Thank you so much that so sweet of you. Glue deserve one hundred percent thank you. Am i got a advertising. Asked the question. What inspires you the most. I think My life circumstances any sort of emotion that i'm experiencing at a given point of time is my biggest inspiration for creating anything in life. I guess my inspiration is just going. I'd say my inspiration. Is the people around me. My pants my friends inspire me the become a better person and i think that also deflects in my music in the kind of music tonight. The i feel like overtime. My music is definitely become emotionally immature. And yeah oh sorry. I'm just taking a breather. I'm sorry that's on farro than the answer. Usually people say of certain person their parents or they say a minimum heard them about times. They say Arneses that's the first time. I heard something that's deeper. I mean at the end of the day right. Music is about emotions. And i really enjoy taking an emotional expedients dissecting it and building stories around that i think that is really fun and it does really inspire me to create a world like motion is a world of its own. You know what i'm saying and there's so much to get inspired from each and every emotion. I definitely feel the in. That's how i feel a lot when it comes to songwriting. That's how i feel when. I write lyrics when bars when i when i when i pick beads amount produce i think. Beat the Those lyrics good chance to feel the emotional. That i'm like you're in the situation yourself. Yeah yeah but if i actually showed you what i wrote you give a controversial can feeling like something's telling you something. Some some definitely music celebrates. Could you repeat that again. That's what music celebrates for. Sure you hundred percent rap has given me a chance to go beyond without. Yeah i rap has given me a bigger picture than i could ever think as a singer or pop artists grab give gives you like a whole new perspective and everything. Yeah yeah.

today Today Bradley texas berkeley boston tonight michael five years old johnny one hundred percent hundred percent first moment manhattan berlin indian first each first time couple years ago Arneses
"carey" Discussed on MyTalk 107.1

MyTalk 107.1

02:12 min | 2 years ago

"carey" Discussed on MyTalk 107.1

"And Steve Patterson. You like Huey Lewis and the news? This is the beat beat. Okay? Yeah. Mariah Carey is revealed that despite the difficulty of being locked down for much of the past year The pandemic has somehow been really good for her voice. Oh, just because she hasn't been saying much local rest as it works exactly, she said. The whole in covert thing, she said, not having to sing for my supper and travel around and not getting the proper amount of sleep. Um easy on sing for your supper. Your could Chilean air We not act like you are. The next meal is dependent on you doing one more round of one Sweet day featuring Boyz Two men. Your money isn't some liquid. You know? Donna, you need to have up. You need to have incoming money. No. If you're Mariah Carey. Yeah. You don't get to say singing for my supper. You don't Yeah, she says she has to. That's their own fault, right? Severe money, mismanagement. That's the case. Anyway, I love Mariah Carey's music. As you were saying, Anyway, she says that you know, taking that stress away takes away Ah lot because Sometimes when she stressed out she was on a quest. Love, I guess has a podcast and he was asking her. How she You know how she accesses that whistle register of her voice. Yes, And she said, you know what it can come and go depending on how stressed I'm feeling in any given moment, she said. If I'm under pressure, it's always screwed up. Every part of my voice is screwed up. Which might explain why we seen some not so great performances from her. As far as life performances. Over the past. I don't know. Five years or so sure. Yeah. And she says, You know if I'm not feeling stressed, you know, everything is fine. Huh? Is really amazing. How did you figure it.

Mariah Carey Huey Lewis Steve Patterson Donna
"carey" Discussed on Pantheon

Pantheon

05:22 min | 2 years ago

"carey" Discussed on Pantheon

"And that's really mariah. Got her start. Doing background vocals for brenda. Who then brought her to like an industry party where she brought her mix tape to. She'd been working with with a guy. Ben margulis is his name and they had she had her little tape and she's there's a bunch of dudes that like you know powerful label executives and that the story is that timing matola like step forward and like snatched. The tape out of her hand was like i'll take care of this. Let me look in kind of didn't give anyone else a chance to look at it. And he listened to it like almost casually in the limo out of the party and then had to like turn around. Get me back to that party. You have to find this woman in seiner. She had already left the party and became like a cinderella thing where they had to track down this this woman. Who has this insane demo tape with a lot of the songs from i'm curious d- yeah it was. It was a good amount of the stuff that ended up on that first self titled album. That's kind of how the career of mariah carey started is that she was this. I mean the voice. I think was apparent on those demos and so was she. When all of that was going down she was probably nineteen. Yeah she was like eighteen. Nineteen at the time. How old was she. When she and tommy mottola got married a few years later. How old was he's anybody. Twenty three a good twenty years older than her kerr so her relationship with tommy mottola kind of defined the kind of first few years of her career. Because not only. Was he the head of sony records. But he was also. He became her boyfriend and then husband. And you. can you definitely see a departure when they're Relationship starts to fizzle out or blow up depending on how you wanna look at it but the music does start to change. Because i think he had her in a very specific box. Yeah and that she was. you know. Middle of the road ballots and safe and for everyone. But as i said and also especially with more success she got to have more autonomy and then as she went away from tommy she got to have even more. I think as you progress from her first albums to throughout her career you see kind of the deeper artists awakened out of the safe ballot deer. And that's not necessarily to take anything away from those early songs which some of them are are still very popular in have their own merits but she definitely blossomed into. I think a true artist. I agree i think she once she came into her own. I think that's when she really became like the superstar that people were really taking notice of her. And i think that's when she cemented. How great of an artist she was. And then i also think she's also very important when it comes to hip hop music which is another story but i think she really is like an anchor for pop stars to go that urban route. Oh yeah i mean. I think true crossover appeal if you will. You know like she was able to do it. She was able to change the style of production used in her music. She was able to be the person who saying hero. Also the person who sang the fantasy old dirty bastard remix. There are so many different things in things that we've already brought up and make sure we don't gloss over but those first few years and albums she did not tour because of a number reasons you know and it's expected of an artist that time to release an album and then go on tour to support the album and then come back and do another release but she had chosen to take a different approach. Which was you know those first few years there was an album every year whereas you know by the time of this identity at the self titled and emotions came out one year years. Yeah what is it. An eighty nine and ninety nine ninety and ninety one. Yeah i think she also knew that the songs that she had to perform live if she did do a concert where would be extremely taxing but she also got a lot of blowback because of that people just thought she was a studio musician and that she couldn't do it live. And that kinda spurred what you'd mentioned before the unplugged performance which was she had done live performances on the grammies and stuff but it was really a moment for her to say. I can sing live. I'm a. I'm a real singer. I'm not just like a studio creation. And that was i think. That's a huge turning point in her career and her comfort of the jackson five saw. I can't remember which will be there. I'll be there yeah. I think.

tommy mottola Ben margulis matola mariah brenda mariah carey kerr sony tommy jackson
"carey" Discussed on Pantheon

Pantheon

03:41 min | 2 years ago

"carey" Discussed on Pantheon

"Tell me everything joe. How long has she been eligible. No i mean we'll get to that but first brittney i would love to know your personal relationship with her music and you know sometimes you like to start if you can even remember the first time you heard mariah carey. I honestly can't remember the first time i listened to mariah carey. I feel like. I just had mariah always in the background my life like i just always heard her music. I remember watching her music videos on the box which was like for the young. Don't it was like mtv. But not mtv and so. I just always was impressed by her vocal abilities. And i think by the time that daydream came out. I remember looking at the artwork. Or whatever i can't remember what it's called but learning that she would write and produce her own. Music was just like a huge deal for me. And i am not saying that that takes away from any artists that doesn't write their own music or producer. But i think mariah doing that. I think she doesn't get credit for how incredible she is as a lyricist. And as like just creating the melodies she has. It's just it's unbelievable. She's written some of the most magnificent songs of our time. I'm trying to remember. I remember the music video for some day because it had kids in it. And i was young. And i'm like i'm gonna kid about me. It's like how you know when you like. When i was into like i was very very young when new kids on the block was out and so i was like cool. I like the youngest member of new kids on the block. Because that's the most likely person that i could ever date. I'm like what. But like i remember. It's like that where. I remember seeing that music video. Because it's like the little girl in the overalls and she's in school and the boy doesn't like her and then she does. Some cool dance moves in a mike blossom hat and you know. And then mariah's they're singing to her and she's feeling better. Are you pinpointing that as your first moment. I'm i just. I vividly remember seeing that video and connecting very strongly to it because there was a kid. Isn't it also remember the video for emotions it's like amber tones. And she's just singing beautifully and that's a great song. I recently reconnected to her. Mtv unplugged two or three years ago. I just was like man. I gotta get back into the the glory days of mariah's beautiful. I mean it was like one of her first live performances and stuff and she sounds so nervous and humble. We're starting to touch on different moments of mariah's career. But why don't we kind of especially for our listeners. Tend to be more rock focused. So i think it would be a good idea and we can all we can all chime in with with different memories but if we kind of go through mariah's career she started very young you know she was a teenager and moved to new york city with her brother to try. And get a record deal. She was working on. Chris recently with brenda k starr. Yes the comic. No no. i was thinking. I'm thinking of brenda. Kate who's the hell's case kesar. I'm thinking of brenda k starr as like a comic. Like in the sunday funnies do. There's there's a comic strip called brenda starr career okay. I'm not like totally off base. Then okay but.

mariah mariah carey Mtv brittney joe brenda k starr new york city Chris brenda Kate brenda starr