35 Burst results for "Carlton"

Bloomberg Radio New York
"carlton" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"And like the Ritz Carlton, allowing her to drop out of school and be homeschooled so she can focus on her TikTok career. My name is Maria lacia. I am 42 years old. I feel like I'm 22. I have 6 kids and I'm the mother of Jenny papa. My amazing daughter, you know, I said to her, does it bother you that your daughter at the age of ten had 500,000 followers online, who were watching her do belly dancing videos. And she said no, it didn't bother me at all. She said she rivaled in it. In the back of my mind for many, many years, I was like, I'm going to be famous, but it kind of was like my ship had sailed in that sense. You know, and so I believe in destiny and I believe in manifestation, and I believe that rosalie is that. Just how does this type of fame happen? By the age of 13, rosalie and her mother really wanted to help her become a bona FIDE influencer. They wanted her to become social media famous. And the best way to do that, they thought was to fly out to LA and try and come up with a similar concept to the Hype House. For those who are listening, who may not understand what the Hype House is, which I assume is a lot of people out there. This was a mansion in California. We are the most popular TikTok stars in the world, would in America at least would live in ticket to film content and help one another's accounts grow. So there was a bunch of teenagers just filming tiktoks and this mansion in California. And rosalie and her mom flew out and

Bloomberg Radio New York
"carlton" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Swanky locations to film and like the Ritz Carlton, allowing her to drop out of school and be homeschooled so she can focus on her TikTok career. My name is Maria lacia. I am 42 years old. I feel like I'm 22. I have 6 kids and I'm the mother of Jenny papa. My amazing daughter, you know, I said to her, does it bother you that your daughter at the age of ten had 500,000 followers online who were watching her do belly dancing videos. And she said, no, it didn't bother me at all. She said she rivaled in it. In the back of my mind, for many, many years, I was like, I'm going to be famous, but it kind of was like my ship had sailed in that sense. You know, and so I believe in destiny, and I believe in manifestation. And I believe that rosalie is that. Just how does this type of fame happen? By the age of 13, rosalie and her mother really wanted to help her become a bona FIDE influencer. They wanted her to become social media famous. And the best way to do that, they thought was to fly out to LA and try and come up with a similar concept to the Hype House. For those who are listening, who may not understand what the Hype House is, which I assume is a lot of people out there. This was a mansion in California. We are the most popular TikTok stars in the world, would in America at least would live in ticket to film content and help one another's accounts grow. So there was a bunch of teenagers just filming tiktoks in this mansion in California. And rosalie and her mom flew out and decided that they wanted to make a Hype House for miners. She was only 13 at the time, so they wanted to create a similar concept with a bunch of 1213 year olds who had big TikTok following and all lived together in a home and build content. What they did is they actually sneaked into the original Hype House and filmed videos from the bathrooms and balconies, the places that her own idols had really immortalized on TikTok. And those videos went viral. This resulted in the Genie pop account really blowing up and unfortunately for the wrong reasons at that time. People criticized her for breaking into the Hype House for stalking the Hype House creators for stealing the clothes, one of these creators who had millions of followers said that she flushed his fish down the toilet. She denied all of this and said that akia taker had led her into the property, but that controversy really propelled her account to reach more than a million followers for the first time. And that taught her to lean into this bad girl persona to post content that's controversial that's risky that other people aren't posting. And she quickly realized that's the way to become an influencer. So after that moment, her content dramatically changed. And it became a lot more sexual and new window in her captions, her dance moves were more suggestive, her clothing was more

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
Asia Argento's Abuse of Jimmy Bennett Left Him Feeling Used
"According to my sources, I see a guy naked first and she was the aggressor at the Ritz Carlton in Marina del Rey. Not the other way around, where all of a sudden he was on top of her. And she didn't know what to do. Go look at all the videos of her on her Instagram and everything else, you tell me when there was ever a moment in her life, a gentle didn't know what to do. Yeah, fucking break. And how surprised would you all be if I told you? That the script they looked at that was gonna be a movie that I see was talking to Jimmy about acting in. Yeah, well, there was no movie. Nothing was ever shot. And according to my guy, all the nude picks and then that day happening to Jimmy and no movie ever coming to fruition and put them in a weird place. And as much as he liked fucking a movie star, he felt used. And thrown away, discarded, which is a term we hear a lot in the me too movement when women use it. But this 17 year old kid who had been a child star felt the same way, especially when he heard osea talking about how she was used abused and discarded. By Harvey. Well, he eventually stopped arguing with his mom all over his lost income. And one day he brought up to his mom, what happened in the hotel with Asia. And his mother, like I alluded to earlier, wanted money for what her son had been put through. She wanted justice. Don't get me wrong. But maybe money would suffice. And it was she who pushed him. And she led the legal charge and here we are.

AP News Radio
SMU rallies from 15 points down to stun No. 6 Houston 85-83
"Houston's twelve game winning streak is over after SMU rallied from fifteen points down to beat the sixth ranked Cougars eighty five eighty three Kenrick Davis scored twenty two points including a pair of free throws to put the Mustangs ahead eighty three eighty one with forty point six seconds remaining Michael weathers added a foul shot and scored fourteen of his seventeen points in the second half the Mustangs shot forty six percent against a team that entered the game allowing fifty seven points in just thirty six percent from the field Kyler Edwards Taze Moore and Josh Carlton each had seventeen points for Houston I'm Dave Ferrie

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
Search for Brian Laundrie Resumes After He Vanishes Following Girlfriend's Disappearance
"Morning the search will continue for a missing couple but the two are not believed to be together. Twenty two year old. Gabby petito disappeared during a cross country trip and now her fiance who is a person of interest in her. Disappearance is also missing multiple officers and the fbi Who are currently conducting a search of the vast carlton reserve for brian laundry. On friday. Northport police officers showed up to the landrieu residents said they spoke to the family at their own request for the first time since gabby petito was reported missing by her family.

AP News Radio
Rays Beat Tigers 5-2, Extend AL East Lead to 8 1/2 Games
"Dietrich Enns earned his second win in Mike Zunino it is thirty first home run is the Tampa Bay rays defeated the Detroit Tigers five to two ends to go over for opener Lewis head in the second and allowed a run on three hits in four innings of work Sununu's two run blast off reliever drew Carlton in the six give the race a five one lead when extends the rays leading the American League east eight and a half games over idle Toronto in Boston and trims the magic number to win the division to a Steve Kearney St Petersburg

Dr. Death: Miracle Man
The Investigation Into Dr. Paolo Macchiarini
"Paolo shared his ultimate vision using stem cells to regrow or repair. The body's organs. This incredible idea that i hadn't thought previously if you could actually make that become true would be fantastic innovation in the past busa had met his share of medical luminaries through other projects oliver sacks robert gallo who co discovered hiv. Carlton gadget sick. Who'd help discover mad cow disease. What paolo macarena was doing was if it was true. Just as incredible as those discoveries i wanted to go. Bt bring this story and see who was in the wrong what actually happened was powder genius. Or was he possibly soon. After busa went to get the other side of the story he reached out to each of the doctors who had made the allegations against paolo. That i didn't want to talk to me. A very fearful and Suspicious and afraid. Eventually one of them agreed to meet with them on a cold day. In february busa walked up to the door of an apartment building in central stockholm. Dr matias chorba show buzzed him. In and he rode the elevator up to his apartment in rang the bell true to form the six foot. One american was wearing a black sabbath shirt. He invited busa into the apartment and proceeded to tell him everything had learned. He had a really hard time believing what i was saying. Car basha was making some pretty alarming. Comparisons and i started telling him stories about joseph angola. Now sweats and medical experiments or what was going on at caroline scott. I felt that maybe they were paranoid that they were afraid of things. The magnified things that perhaps exists. I thought that they would claims where a bit outlandish and we talked for like two hours. And then my wife came home and she's a blonde swedish woman presses. Well and looks like a normal person and he asked her. If what i was saying was of all this actually true and she said yes. Yes this is is absolutely true. This is absolutely what's going on. And he said after meeting her that he it was. I found that he actually started leaving me. Just like benita. Alexander in new york boost the link fest resolved to get to the bottom of the paulo macura. Any mystery

The Fine Homebuilding Podcast
PRO TALK With Sustainable Builder Jacob Racusin
"Jacob. Thanks a million for being on the show. It's a pleasure to talk to you. Thanks for having me. So i learned about your company. Originally from your colleague as mma carlton and i talked to him an episodes to seventy and to seventy two. We talked about your business among other things but for folks who didn't hear it. Can you please explain. The new frameworks business model. And you have a unique company structure right. Yes we're we're worker owned cooperatives directly structured as an llc for those that get into the business side of things there but yeah essentially we are. We don't have any employees. We are all co owners. There's two tiers of ownership folks enter in his trial members. And then after you've been with the company Period of time and buttons with certain level. The new i could become a full full owner and Yeah lots of details in there. But essentially the structure of the business structure is such that everybody is is an owner that tiered ownership structure culturally that sense of ownership and collective ownership is is huge. I think that's where it's Experiencing lived his how that informs our culture and folks individual buy ins or collective identity around the success of the success of the group jacob. How how did you all learn or was it you who learned about this business model and what made you want to share the wealth with your colleagues instead of keeping it. Yeah it's a great question it's been why can't take that much credit one of the original members and so you know certainly a long long for the journey since the gecko. But i'd say ace has definitely been holding. The torch in terms of the identity is the identity around that is the business model. The original members really felt it was. It was the best way for us to achieve. Our goals may think just to be the most direct around it. I know i. I feel like i can comfortably speak for all the same that none of us really had the intention of being business owner sending. We have all various levels of entrepreneurship entrepreneur. nature some of us more so than others. But none of us really interested in owning accompany owning it individually That just wasn't really. This wasn't in our identity. Ethos other individually or as a group ends of the cooperative structure gave us the best honest. Just the best model for us to bring in really good people and work

Thrivetime Show | Business School without the BS
"carlton" Discussed on Thrivetime Show | Business School without the BS
"Three o'clock. That is powerful now. This next idea. I'm not sure were you raised in a christian background. More of a secular. What what your religious background institutional christian if you will we were lutherans pretty about In what today i would. I don't want to scare people get scared me. The i call myself a born again. Christian means i have accepted. That christ is higher than i am an accepting him to be my leader and anything awesome is arrogant to ask you this because there is a bible verse that speaks about this concept called work as unto the lord and. I didn't figure this out too. I was about nineteen years at target and my boss horse told me clay. Somebody is eating of the pretzels. And of course. I was eating all the pretzels. I'm like i don't know who it is. It has to be you or someone on the shift because someone's getting all the pretzels. Well long story short. I was always late. I was always eating all the pretzels. I was always getting all the criticism always being quote unquote micromanaged. Then someone introduced me to the book. Think and grow rich which is not in the bible but it's written by napoleon hill and i decided to name my son by the way after napoleon hill. His name is aubrey. Napoleon hill clark and after reading that book i started getting into this crazy book called the bible and there's a verse colossians. Three twenty three reads whatever you do work at it with all your heart. As working for the lord not for ritz-carlton customers work work as unto the lord not ask for shareholders work under the lord not unto your manager. Since you know that you'll receive an inheritance from the lord as a reward. It is the lord. Christ you are serving. I want to ask you where do where where where do you get that. Where did you get that idea to take customer service to the next level and to revolutionize the hospitality industry will tell about that maitre deal who the mccreadie who said. Don't come to work to work. Come democrat accident but then go on being a christian. I look Jesus said love your neighbors ourself. Why would you not think that your guest or your employees or your neighbors. My goodness what a what a what an amazing thing love your neighbor is what missing who can say something about christ in my opinion and and and so dot had very much impact on me. But if you read my book you will also see a tell. A story about by another christian is santo battle. Some telling me some benedict. I'm sorry benedict in year. Five hundred roads to his ministries to his to his Monasteries and said when the customer minute guest moved adot that time travel has stopped in monasteries. For showed this when a guest arrived receive him and women didn't travel on receive him as if it was christ himself. And not only that. If you're on a fast break your fast and didn't have them so that they're not alone. But but i wash their feet now. If that is that is hospital. I cannot come close to that. But that's the goal to be as close as possible to care. That much is caring. I mean everything christ. It was the greatest thing of all is is laugh. My goodness you mean. Only for some people know laugh is to create a thing. Why wouldn't you love your guest. Why wouldn't you love your employees inter book. which by the way excellence. Wins is a great read. It's a no nonsense guide to becoming the best in a world of compromise. You talk about these four you write about. I felt like you were talking to me. Because i've watched her youtube videos. I'm reading and it feels like you're talking to me Paul jones for that by the way but in your book you talk about these four supreme objectives objective number. One you write is to keep the customer. What does that mean. i. If if i'm looking at what is creek company. Kirk company mixing every effort to keep the christmas to have that mr after they have to say what is it that i have to do to keep those customers but is it well. What you have to do is give that customer. The customer and stuff means says they get in the head and understand what they want what. They're really not mother-in-law told your or somebody's set aside in the plane or you know what your market tells. Should they want. That's what you give them number one. What company does number two. You'll find new ones number three. You get us money much money from the cosmos. You can't wait a minute. If not the cost of losing the customer doesn't mean shaft. Give him bodily you. You have to give value for everything you charge. End defect is guests. That is loyal. That means you don't lose your customers a lot. That's a loyal guest. That guest wants to deal with you and by other things that you produce because loyalty means nothing else but they have develop trust in you so did trust you become loyal and so every what has to be sure you make sure that they don't lose them so their lawyer do number two. You're newmont's number three you get them charge and yourself number four your work efficiently company but the key element here and nothing can interfere and make sure to cause the customer wants to come back and his lawyer again. Loyalty is nothing else but to develop trust in what you're doing i i want to Tap into your brain on this because you said something there that i don't think the listeners quite understand what you're saying you are talking about. Keep the customer and there is a guest. We're going to have on the show. Here is the bestselling author john ruling and he stayed in one of your hotels The one of the ritz carlton and he was having a guest of honor. Stay in the hotel. And he was going to meet him and he found out that his favorite Guest was a guy he's really trying to impress. He found out that his friend in his guest of honor was a fan of a certain clothing line and then he was. This is kinda when he had a startup. A baby business called gift allergy. So what he did was. He went into a department store and bought all off the clothes in that guy size the entire line the entire seasons line. He said he spent ten thousand dollars on clothes for this guy to impress this guy when he didn't have a whole lot of money. And he goes the ritz and he said. Can you guys help me display it like a retail store. You know like like like like a department store. And he said the ritz bellman said sure. Can you talk to me about the limits to which you would allow your team to go and house too far to go to keep.

Thrivetime Show | Business School without the BS
"carlton" Discussed on Thrivetime Show | Business School without the BS
"Guest his name is horst schultz. And i'm sure you're familiar with the company that he co founded in the company that he was once. The former president of the company is called ritz. Carlton hotel company horse scholtz. Welcome onto the thrive time show. How are you sir. I'm create and delighted. To be sir the ritz carlton hotel company has set so many benchmarks for excellence in customer service. Your name has been publicized and people know you for the success you achieved but could you start off at the bottom and share with us where you're from and cutting your background be cut before becoming the king of hotels ho- king of kings good. I'm actually not looking at all. I'm i come from a very small background. Small village in germany lived Individual was fourteen. And then i left and worked in a hotel. I had back my parents to work in a hotel which was very unpopular at the time but They've found the best job that could find the finest hotel which unfortunately was about one hundred kilometers away from home. But i so. I left a lift here in a dorm room with other kids. Starting to work a busboy. Meant everything at the time cleaning. Washing dishes It cetera et cetera. Helping for three and a half year half yes worked in the kitchen worked in a restaurant wrote in the in the housekeeping and so on and after that i left and brockton the truly i mean i'm not etcetera finest hotels in europe in paris and in switzerland or the american line from new england. And after that. I came to the us in nine hundred. Sixty four Some francisco working in the hilton hilton private club and and so on worked started. Ended up it hi-hit in and worked for ten years in high end. Start as a director food and beverage operations director rooms chin miniature vice-president regional vice president corporate vice president and then i was offered to start a job to start a new company to tell span construction both in atlanta and so the headquarters was not lanta about developers and and Financial people and needed somebody to run this new company. Tell business to run the credit with the promise. Dmed me to promise it the that could go top end and so i left say at the time my credit company hit and moved to atlanta and started a new company a year. Later your first tower and that the cameras caused and that's the story that is a lot that is your you. You just flew through incredible career. Let me reset your age fourteen. You just said that at age fourteen. You started working. Is that correct. That's correct yeah correct. Well it's not an untypical german way way of getting into a profession. You walk in that profession and once a week or two the to school relative to that profession down smart idea. That's a typical Trade korea in germany. I saw a talk you gave on youtube by the way. I've been watching way too many of your videos so i apologize for cyber stalking you so much but i want you deliver a talk and i was out. My kids had a cheerleading event and in kansas city and so the way shooting events goes kids perform for about three minutes and then the rest of the weekend. You're kind of you know hanging out at this arena. So i went back to the hotel while i was waiting for them to perform and i watched videos and one of the things that you said and i had to play it back over and over and over as you were comparing you were comparing your commitment to having excellence in work with your commitment to staying married. If i'm getting that correct could you please explain the parallels between committing to bring excellence and committing to stay married while it it. It's all i believe. Everything we do is a decision that we make not not not a pipedream clear decision. I met in marriage. I met a clear decision. When i got merit i will be in love with that woman for the rest of my life not just lover but be in love and i can tell you unequivocally i'm married. Forty years am totally in love with that woman but it takes work. It's not different than when you take a job jamaica decision to be excellent in that job job or whatever is in life decisions i can either just go to work or go to work to create excellence. I always say. I got a for two reasons. One is to create. Excellence in what i'm doing too is to be with my friends if they like it or not tim o. Friends if i have that attitude. I enjoy going there and create something. Why are we to eight hours. Whatever we are at work now you know in a leadership position as much more dollars but what it is eight hours wasted and just do function rather than whatever. The function is good. Excellent the dish washing or whatever. It is could excellence in that but the well how does a cop out well. It's a decision and decision on which you on neutral work on which you which you remind yourself all the time and this deal so it is not different mid anything ounce horse. I don't want you to Throw anything over the phone here. And i'm not. I'm not that satan needs an advocate. But i'm going to be the devil's advocate. Because i grew up really poor. I didn't start working on his fourteen but really sixteen is when i started my first thing and i am not a stranger of the sixty hour the seventy hour work week. I'm not afraid to get to work at for five or whatever. I'm also going to take care of my body and get sleep and also style five kids. I've been married eighteen years. So many people i see they say well the reason why i didn't get to work on time. They just didn't feel like it. And so they have so talk to me about your mindset of committing the excellence versus other people saying i just don't feel yeah but this is no different. I have friends of friends. A couple of years ago is good. Good friends and getting divorced. I mean of course when people who've been divorced it is a total friends and everybody gets divorces. It's import fall. And when i had to sit down i didn't understand their were for to purely for people. Good looking people. Friendly people won't be ba honorable people so i had to sit down with us from johnson. Said why why why it'd be fuelling. What are you waiting for feeling. I rather mega decision. What my feeling is wrong. Make it make a feeling make my decisions. Can you repeat that against sir. That was great. Yeah well i'm saying i really are that. Make the decision. What i feel rather than have to feeling decide what i what i do. How how who i am et cetera. Is this is. This is so unreasonable to even allow that to happen. You make a decision on them. You communicate with the the decision you have to fight against the feelings that. Try to interfere with your decision but it has to still your decision and the and the feeling. It's your decision and not did you. Your decision is it driven by your feelings that right. There is a a knowledge nugget that somebody needs to write down to put that on a t shirt. Many people today should consider getting a tattoo tattoo that as a tattoo. Now i want to ask you this because you worked very hard for fourteen. You work your way up. At hyatt and then my understanding is at gerald w blakeley he owned the one individual. Ritz carlton in boston. And he sold the the trademark. And the brand. To william b johnson who i believe was the largest owner of the waffle house franchises. My correct you owned about one hundred fifty hours in office buildings and the incident and also owns merita tells and are managed by marriage and and and holiday inns when he built to hotels which is supposed to become holiday inns he could not come to agreement at the time with all in us to the fees and cetera et cetera. When somebody recommended him to start his own hotel companies on brand that put on the surge. I came in high it. We then say it when we were he we acquire. I'd be a quiet name african we had a couple of names subiaco quiet and and But we said we'd be clear to have an existing name that already mixed sense that a people know it is a hotel and we we pursued to tell us a one hotel in san francisco and so tell and and he and and another one and and he came back and said the ball this also in in boston. We didn't like that because it was a tower hotel. It was terribly dilapidated. It was only four. Vehicle for monthly renders. All people live nor air conditioning song But the mark hopkins fell through so he purchased because it was a crib location and frankly the name everybody knew doctorates meant risk called mental. Even though it was not.

Who Invited Her?
"carlton" Discussed on Who Invited Her?
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Who Invited Her?
"carlton" Discussed on Who Invited Her?
"Fisting remains to be really seen. Are you looking at me. Premiere on the show with all about yet. Because i'm not a fister. I wanted to learn a lot more about it. Because i have a lot of people that ask me questions about fishing. And i've been on some big podcast to talk about the stock. So i did an international survey pfister's and got some really unexpected responses about fisting general. You had just blew me away. And i'll tell you about that in a minute but when it comes to that some some of the sisters said no snaps back to normal the problem and then other ones said well yeah. I'm a little looser for a couple of days but over time it gets better and then some people say you know the older i get. It might be a little bit looser and then somebody else said well. Who the fuck cares. When i'm seventy five years old. I'm probably going to be you know having having accidents from time to time. Anyway i may as well have fun before i get there a so. Yeah i mean it depends. It depends how big you put. How big it is what you put up there. Yeah how fast you go. You know if it's a patient process you can get a lot of stuff up there as long as your patient. And i'll give you some tips about that later. I've got this tip that given to people around the world men and women that is fucking revolutionized their anal sex play. Okay really makes it so much better for the top and bottom a little exercise. I do call the but plot but but clock. Excuse me but clock so but clock. So if the amos's just a tight. Little circle of muscle skeletal muscle and that muscle is extremely pliable. If your patient so what you do is you. Stick your finger in about an inch and a half two inches and press over to the side at three o'clock and hold it there for about a minute and that most starts relaxing relaxing relaxing..

Who Invited Her?
"carlton" Discussed on Who Invited Her?
"That point depending on how your whole life is going So it's kind of useless at that point to get the vaccine if you've been exposed to it but yet those those vaccines are important. Been getting checked number. One thing that i tell people that people are shocked. Get checked where you play. If you if you suck a dick get your throat. You get fucked. Get your ass checked. Oh that's a good thing. 'cause going thinking i just got a punic. Yeah that does not sufficient to check for gonorrhea and chlamydia if you are infected in your or your throat. Yeah so and a lot of doctors don't even get that and it drives me nuts but the one of the great things about prep and if anybody who's on prep knows that you go when you get checked you they re throat this. Why but you do a pee test. You'll blood test. And boom god's between routine but a lot of people don't know and i love how simple you were that because I mean i love my doctor. He's great and but he's not worded that it's very clinical like anal sex. And so but i like if you play then get tested there. So it's easy to remember that. Yeah yeah yeah people yeah put you know. Put it back get tested wherever you play. Yeah oh this is a question. I think somebody assets since prep has been around as dr do you guys see a spike in s. t. is more now that people are on prep and not using condoms or is it has has it stayed about the same. There has been a spike in in committee in gonorrhea whether or not it's truly attributable bowl to prep is not using condoms is the big thing honestly. A lot of people that are getting treated or fit are on prep properly and getting tested. Every three months are doing a great job of kind of putting out the fire and knowing what their status is rather than just running around and just spreading it like wildfire because a lot of them don't really have any early symptoms..

Who Invited Her?
"carlton" Discussed on Who Invited Her?
"So that's again. That's a reality based harm reduction. Yeah yeah telling people to just go all right. Thanks but if you're gonna make sure that you can trust what people are saying because let's face it a lot of people who aren't very truthful about now no you're not. Yeah so wait for people in you had brought this up to two one one. Yeah it actually not heard of that and the national one of your videos. And i thought well. That's that's something. Great that should be promoted more and actually is very common in europe. A lot of people in spain and belgium and france germany used to win one so to one travolta is higher dose right. Yeah so if you take two pills of vodka it gets to your tissues fast enough as long as you take a pill every twenty four hours after that for two days so to an one one to protect you against hiv. If you're a male females that doesn't get or or trans folks can't get to the vaginal tissues in high enough doses saw so if you're not and that's another thing about with you it's something to consider is it's going to be less toxic in the long run if yet so if you if you're not that active so and you can plan for sex then. It's a really good option. You have to take it between two and twenty four hours prior to your sex so if you're like no okay. Thursday eight o'clock. And i know i'm going to be having sex tomorrow at four o'clock in the afternoon then. True vodka at two two pills travolta at that point twenty four hours at least before or no no no less than two hours before and then twenty four hours after each dose. Yeah is is very helpful. So like if you're only having sex once a month why take a pill that's gonna fuck up your kidneys for you know for the whole month. Yeah when it's two in one and you're only ended up taking four pills. Yeah rather than thirty one. that's true. Yeah yeah so. It's it's kind of an exciting method. It's not fda approved but it's world health organization approved and it's a very popular in europe and my friends my friend who's a madrid says. Yeah that's the way i take it to. Gosh okay. i've been completely fucking destroyed on social media for bringing that up. How dare you recommend as somebody take. Prep like that. Everybody should be on it this way. You know so there's always detractors no matter what but we're not all the same young people have different needs. Yeah absolutely so for people. Who aren't that active. It's a great way to protect yourself and since we're talking about prep i have a question for people who may not know out there if you.

Art Beauty
Keratin 101
"There's so many different treatments on the market that we hear about. There's brazilian blowout. There's karen there is all plexus. We're going to have them on in two weeks. But like i think sometimes it's like They all are like doing something with the hair. And we see the picture where the hair looks like an angry So the shaft is angry and then it smooth and its moods Out of the category. And we're for that episode to air in in whenever it does because carlton smoothing treatments are in a category of their own. I won't tell you that they are all different they all Slightly shift your curl pattern whether have frizz curl tank or wave. That's all going to be affected a little bit. A lot of it all depends on how long process it in how how deep in your stylus goes in. you can talk to your stylist. About how straight you want your hair for a little bit of body or if you just want that for his to be gone and still keep your curl. All of those options are available for you today. Where before we just had straight right now we have everything in between right. The number one thing that i would share with you is do not do this on a groupon. We say this all the time about beauty treatments. This is another one because you never know what they're mixing in the back they could tell you one thing and then do the

ESPN Daily
The Next Great Quarterback Prospect Is Someone You Never Knew
"Tim thank you for joining me man. Hey good to be here bobble. So i'm bringing you on for a specific reason and that is i don't know anything somehow still about trae lance. I feel like you could walk into the room. Sitting in right now. And i would not necessarily know if that is in fact trae lance. So how did you start your profile of this guy. Tim pablo it's interesting. You'd say that because you know it's it's almost like he was created to torment. Nfl evaluators. tim. Q. is a senior writer for. Espn whose profile of trae lance is on espn dot com. Right now. he's from an f. School even though he won a national championship he only had seventeen starts competition. He played against wasn't at the level of an sec. Or or a power five. So they're all these questions about him and yet the talent is undeniable character. Everything checks out and yet he is still this relative unknown. Just because of all these circumstances that include pandemic related cancellations the fact that he played one game in the last year. He's really a fascinating study. Because somebody's gonna take him very high draft and you get the feeling that they aren't going to be completely sure what they're getting. Yeah he is one of the top five quarterbacks in this year's draft him. Let's just start at the beginning here with young trae lance in marshall minnesota with his parents carlton and angie lance. What was his football career lake at marshall high school his football career at marshall high in a town of about fourteen thousand people at three hour drive west of minneapolis was very under the radar.

KNBR Tonight
Voice of the Bison Jeff Culhane Speaks Highly of Trey Lance
"Hank, who is the voice of the Bison, North Dakota State Web trade, played Is with us and glad to have him. Jeff. Thanks for coming on. How are you? Hey, Mark, I'm great. Appreciate you guys reaching out and it's a pleasure of Sakia really appreciate being on the show. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, we're excited to have you. I think you know the average football fan. Is maybe still just starting the process of getting to know Trey, Lance and 40 Niner fans. You know if it don't Jeff, it's only been 45 days a year since they've realized Oh, wait a minute. We're in this Derby, so so tell everybody about Trey Lance. Well, I'll tell you what. Trey Lance is one of the more impressive young men that I've had a chance to cover and get to know and be around. It comes from a great family. In fact it father Carlton spent a short period of time I believe in training camp with the San Francisco 40 Niners after his college career was over at Southwest Minnesota State and Marshall, Minnesota. So there's a little bit of A brief connect there even though Carlton did not spend a ton of time in the organization. But Trey, you know the conversation about training. Lance is going to come back to his Experience that's going to come back to playing at the FCS level Mark, but I think what what stands out to me is one He checks all the boxes physically, and I've had the The opportunity to be around college football programs like the Brassica in West Virginia and cover power five in the Big 12 in the Big 10 and as he seen a C C And Trey. Lance has all the physical tools you need to succeed in the National Football League. But more importantly, mark He's a great young man. He's

Lace Out AFL Podcast
"carlton" Discussed on Lace Out AFL Podcast
"Go at some point. Sorry yeah Always mention eddie. Because he is on the list elegant was also same finished East korea calton. You'd have to he's lost. He's on the rookie league citra. Ucla three hundred thirty guys. Like if you say that to he when he first started like you're gonna play thread and thirty nine is one of the baseball was able to play the guide. You probably say about probably got okay and probably all the good thing about what you've just said he says that was you'll least. He's so young. those three. If not doing. But the hawks. I do have that luxury to a degree of working their way through the phallic excetera a move. I don't have to be rushed in other teams that we mentioned once jilong they might have to think about. Is this guy down profile. We have to rush these kids little italy when when we when they not ready you guys are in such a position that you've got so many young kids if negotiating it you know one or two seasons in much better position that guy full with other ones can just slotting underneath. Do their tom get their confidence for falling. The skills said i have to overrule them and weist weiss's for the bedouin but throw them to the wolves in the first couple of couple of years that you've got so that's that's why that you said that. Just let them develop. We let the he's developed. We think that because they're hardrock people they they rates curtain. Oh he's going to be has to be because he's work like that. You just gotta let the clock a wine. You can't just drink a red stripe while you've got to let it seat. You marinate flavors developed along. You do it more patient. Ya the beta the taste is gonna be and if it's the taste of apprenticeship while goodness will be. You'll be very very thirsty for more or whatever at twenty twenty one so from your perspective. What he you most optimistic about heading into the season. Most optimistic. I think there's going to be a genuine layer of belief within the group that they ready to take the next step. I'm very optimistic about our team. Moving from the backline. The backline is a really really strong lawn. I'm excited about the. The midfield is gonna mature. I think the forward line linemates somewhere. Because well. But i mean i'm excited for the painting. Drop moment for a lot of these players are really am. I think. I think that if they were well prepared pretty much. Exactly what you said. We've never really been in a position for the last six seven eight nine years where we can have. Young kids just develop before being thrown into games when they not ready and i think everything else around the club. He's he's well set up field. And therefore i think the on field is just the next thing and and follows. Football is really that next step a do have won t and you just mentioned that there is your is your forwards. We'll affords to kick enough of a school and if we look at it we've got casbah. This is at the moment. The ford set up. If i look at it sorry missing anyone. Just jumping casual mccaw so vanni galvan. You've been lock just sort of ran into at a. Is that group going to be enough chazelle. He's getting on. These are much more he's got lift mcgovern on kind. Even get on the puck. Harry will he's looking like he's getting these myths on it but he's gonna be fees number one he's going to get the number one defender. Which makes it difficult so vanni just seems to are now your gift to get your thoughts on him in once again. Gibbons jesus small top done expect much from unique bags every weekend overseas destroying beds. He's on as i say the wrong sort of thirty. Is there enough firepower. They from a j. I mean the guy on paper. It looks grim even looks grim for count support. Honestly you're right. You're dead right if you look at it just on pipe but the way we apply we we would not very traditional. We are very versatile. With the way we use players they A lot of them have to play into positions now. So that's why you see fishe jack. Martin gibbons a half old flank with moments in the midfield and we're gonna need gaza lotion. Crips that in with goals we're gonna need a an even spread. I think that's the kate. Harry iran and he's the number one player he needs to be pushing for what two goals a game that taught forward. You came forward So yeah. I think it's really going to be dependent on how well the game plan and the game style is because we lucked to play the richmond gang. Where keep it in the photo. Half pressure turnover score off turnover and went really traditional with that games. Research imply the kiosk bolt deliberate. Kyle's mole modern calvin. Many teams had apply. The coyotes bowl They they call the chaos bowl. I just it's skill especially for some changes. It's because now. Why do they love the fact that. I know where the ball's gonna come. We don't actually know where the ball's gonna go on the phone fifty minutes out. Oh through stakes place Horrible watch ways. The concerns wait. Where do your concerns like zero. Optimism is brilliant. We've got to get on the mock reality boston your laws. They're going to be some concerns. What are y'all's all the season mark concerns for the season are in the forward line mitch. Adorno areas at levi denied. We can rely on him harry six. We expect him to be good. But i still think he's got some maturity to come and he's gonna have a slip ups and i just don't think there is a cohesion between megyn woods yet we haven't we haven't clicked with that just yet in the grew teams really. Haven't i can live with the is in and now with their forwards again abate. And we get sucked into playing the recall Hospital just bombing long in for the best in relocating That's the worry is right there and the other thing i think uses a can lower Always really mindful of the coaching group. Mo- sorry the assistant coaches that we have. We developing young players. Well because i have question marks over the development of our young boys compared to other clubs look at sydney for example they young voiced saint to come in and i just want i play football. They ready whereas seems like most of them need more time so some concerns for show. We all i agree. Cd's just auto now. What is going to be something up in the water heck and i have to to just come straight out of the draft absolutely been on the weekend. The they're they're very much an nine club you look at him and you look at the listing and then just come and soon to do it every so often. What is it's going to be culture. It's just gotta be it's gotta be it's it's it's the mob which serenity it's everything that just makes it work there and if you could auto some of it on with you wholeheartedly. That just seem to do it and you just you just want to know what the sacred. So let's he's yet now you've got to laze gripe lie on at least you know you gotta be great to be drafted a simple as that. You must be able to play the game. But they're able to just slot the mean so easy. None of evolution on the body saw a look at a place. They've played many seasons. Roy i it's it's clubs at just struggled to get those. We'll draft draft seven draft ten kids. We won't get fought apply. They'll get seven. And they always data. And i gotta respect him. We really aires a lot of respect. Somebody else respectful to ease david teague as well too because he had to take the tight the raw live a good balsam nothing. Ball's gonna be a head outside. A bed paid.

Lace Out AFL Podcast
"carlton" Discussed on Lace Out AFL Podcast
"Vicinity. Who is one that just makes you got strep yourself east of this one. Yeah exactly shaw. What is bad. What is it about the fish man. That watts up is terry. He's got quick fate very quick fate. He sort of plays the game like he's playing. Colour judy's quick reaction times. He when you think is about to get pinned. He finds a gap to slide into Angle instagram bar. That says slow fate donate. He plays like that. If a bit of tech dogs does he just had just getting the are fast right now. I've asked me at one goal. I off but i'll just be over the preseason the hyphen every team's gotta hyphen your hyphen. Sam betrays satan. It looks like it must be starting to click for him. Last year was even on the thursday. Know that we just saw each seem to just get a little bit bigger. He's a little bit more once i- confident but he's got the ability to go one on one with people knowing that he has got the saws he's just not gonna get pushed outside. Is he another one that you can see. Hyper say that yell. Think he east hamis especially after eighty-one guys. What's that the spree It's tom isn't it. It is time top ten. Pick fifth season Pick six seminars. Gone onto the halfback law enough after sort of being drafted as a mead fuel slash. How fullwood so he's adjusting to this new role. I think there are a where taking a step back to go forward. Eighteen long-term are there's a little bit of patience needed with him but the potential and and that's the that's the hard work size his account because we say it all the time. He's lost dangerous word when it comes football potential. A lot of it as i. I've got to ask you about the gone forward that you recruited over i christmas but you you brought onto least actually alas playa that you brought on the oscar. Mcdonald's you just see him having a career best knowledge in front of goal the other night when he slowed with is too big majors because apparently album now going to be targeted game during the trial period. I'll be honest review after his first. Preseason game against essendon. I'd take notes during the game on what you just said. We cannot have oscar. Mcdonald's and within three weeks he's played a game come on kick two and a half. He's shot may up. I didn't say it coming. I can rely on it. But i definitely didn't say auditing humor law but just to know that there's a you'll have crack and that's the thing you you'll have a crack and you want those plays that'll have a crack. You can take the skill. But if the wills note they plays out of the goodness crisis. Colorado a few of the year on picked up the top end of china lawrence angolan for one that just went completely authorized. And you just couldn't do it as well. So if we have a look at the things that happened over that the season from twenty one to twenty you did lose one of my fire. He is one of the. I'll have a soft spot for three things. Long-sleeve jumpers and plies in the number seeks now bartha them basically looked like me or up. Because that's what. I used to run around dominating halfback for years but tied simpson or seriously. Every club would love to have a kite. Seem supply for with while he's at one that once again he's not under the right up but he's not he's not he's not up there he's not he's not he's not he's not crips he's not my automated but you've got to have people these because they the blood and guts the heart and soul of the team to have day that's that's a massive hall from a ladyship is big that somebody else now has to pick up just give some was how much is going into your club. Yeah he does. I mean even if you bring it back to local food. There's always that god that's played for many many many years at your foodi clubbers even into his fifties and sixties like his just always of the club and i think he's accountant man. I think every club needs one. He represents loyalty in the sport. Which makes it unique. He also represents a complete generation of supporters. Pretty much you know may my is twenty nine that generation of throughout the entire childhood Until now and unfortunately he played in a very whole time for the football club where everything was just design. It's not his fault that he was dropped into a bad situation. And i think he earned that respect we. I think because he wasn't the biggest player but he got the most out of he's body. I think he's earned that respect outside the the full of the football club and yeah not only will he. You know leave a hauling leadership on the field. But i think also teaches. The other players had to be accountant man. So there's another another story to it and and lucky mentioned the slaves. He's missed a slave who he's he's the two 2000s version of robbie flower right all the long slaves. Not not the biggest plug day but mark goodness. He was hot and salt and probably was the club's base for many years. But just never got to play in successful. Ain't gonna get you one fall. It was in these intolerance on a. That's that's seem to a degree. Heave is spun two or three years like the even when the days finished ninety seven. I fly a grandfather. The the next g. That's the sorta stuff that just makes you hit explode. It's not even from bob skilton perspective flight older guys and never applied a phone. All it's sensational plaza on forced. They just get back draw and he's legs. He's gonna live on a quick quick. I have a canes at all are usually role at mccain's questions uber. Now we're on the subject. Or i quit gainesville he was. He's will get hold of fame status. I f l yes now. it's on now. He's off the do i can understand. You want to prioritize those who win flag like get that perception. But i still think you'll find his way eventually. Strive on to ask but i'm just when when you add it all up. Someone like lenny highs getting e waste better for the reason that affect other nas car teams to getting an rick and he's perfect perfect addition to i think if you fly iva three hundred games. It's it's almost like an automatic to a degree because you agree. You can't find that many games for club applying. Afl if you if you haven't got something special. Yes yeah i think i think there's there's others that have gone into that you'd be. They wouldn't be from anybody if they might. Which is awesome. You say you go into the twenty twenty draft. You pick up a corey dude and a thirty seven pick up jack carroll at forty one and luke pox on the didn't have a c. Tube many draft picks because you use the mole on everybody else which is totally understandable and he thoughts Observations on on those three. So yes a corridor is Is a small forward who actually sponsor at blue abroad so reaping young kid from adelaide and we love him good family. He's gonna play football for us in twenty twenty one. I'm pretty confident in saying that we've needed a specialist small full for a while and that's kind of why you start saying cunningham and fish apply. Fold when they. They've been groomed as midfielders from from a young age yet. Cordova and small fold very excited that in very fast high forty jack carroll will probably just developed over the course of easily jelonim prospect at midfield is barmaids kid. I look pox Loving that love using the ability on not gonna say he eased home stewart but the why he plays the he throws himself at foodies. It gives you that. Tom stuart Flashing your mind. He's a very courageous intercept. Defend us a year locked out with those three boys. I think i hope that we needed. Especially because we need a specialist small forward the realities He's gotta.

This Morning with Gordon Deal
California's iconic redwoods threatened by climate change
"Now Rangers and conservationists are developing plans to better protect them at a that the world's tallest trees May not survive future places that are almost certain to come. It's a story by Jim Carlton reporter at the Wall Street Journal. Jim Take us through this. So Gordon the California redwoods are famous for being fire resistant when you walked through mural Woods, Humboldt State Park. You know these places with the giant redwoods. You can see the burn marks from fires of, you know. Hundreds of years ago. The big called canals. Oh, and the big question is, Can the redwoods survive? Today's mega fires? Firestorms? These are gigantic fires that they've never really seen before. They're fueled by the climate change. Basically, that means it's really dry. There's congested force conditions, etcetera. And so it's really a big question Whether these redwoods can Take a and we've We're getting some of our first big test now. Yeah, All right. So there's been, uh, you could describe it better but of greater frequency of Maura. Intense fires. In addition to the number of fires, I guess right in these trees have done okay, but there is concern. Right? Well, we just kind of a little bit of background. I mean of the top 20 most destructive fires and California recorded history like 17 have happened in the last 10 to 15 years. Um and we just had, you know the paradise Fire, you know, keep the camp fire that killed anybody people, So they're bigger. They're deadlier, more destructive and they're starting to hit the redwoods. Now they're only the redwoods are protected by fog along the coast. From about the big Sur coast of central California to southern Oregon. And there is a pretty wet forest. And so they know they don't get a lot of fire historically would be a few. You know, a small fire. Every few decades on, it would kind of burnout. Ah, lot of the brush and kind of leave the big crease alone. But that's what's changing. Now speak with Jim Carlton reporter at The Wall Street Journal. His pieces called California's plan to save its 1000 year old redwoods from wildfires. So

Latina to Latina
How Jenny Lorenzo Became the Internets Favorite Cuban Abuela
"Jenny. I'm almost have to admit not accustomed to seeing you as jenny. nobody else. Is that what you look like. I want to take a listen to the first video that you ever did. Hold up today. Go to pick up one three gilead of better sex for three going on meeting me gomez day metal supplement. Okay iressa on. And off for the love of god. So here's what's interesting. It's the first video that willa was ever featured in for buzzfeed but she insisted prior channel of mine called aggressive comex and a boiler was first introduced as a superhero Because this was a channel that was predominantly white male audience. I talked about video games and comic books and movies. Sifi strictly me being nerd and then at some point i did a movie review of the film kick ass and me and my writing partner for the show was to the cuban well because he knew that i kind of already did that sort of thing and so it was the same terrible wig that you do see in that buzzfeed video i think i through like baby powder on it to make gray and she had like this painted red mask over her eyes with like a fly swatter as were weapon and then eventually it made no sense for the channel. But you can tell that. I yearned to make this sort of content. It is interesting that something that is as big as a bulla takes that many iterations to get there like. I think there's a lesson in there for any creative. That is not necessarily that. The opening gambit is where you land now never being a nerd is as much a part of your identity and culture as being cuban. It seems did you see characters on tv or in media. Who has a latino nerd you identified with not really wasn't until recently that i started seeing that representation especially in a show like no spooky because these are a bunch of latino gods that are into the macab and they're a bunch of nerds and outsiders because that's a big part of me to what most approximated your own experience i would say. A lot of that was in black television. You see urkel you see. Carlton banks a lot of these like nerdy people of color on tv. Maybe sometimes says from that seventies show me. He had like a bit of a nerdy flair to him. I feel like latinos on tina's specifically were usually depicted as like very sensual loud colorful. You know things sofia vergara in modern family that was the typical depiction of what was and. So that's why. I had a hard time in the audition room. I didn't fit any mold of what especially miami casting paint a picture for me of what auditioning in miami looked like. It was a nightmare for me. I would show up and for those who don't know me. I'm like five feet pasty skinny little shits and he but then i have this like deep voice. No one knows what to do with me. So then i shopped to these auditions and they were usually little late sorta lottery or like colgate but then i would be up against women my age but they looked like supermodels and then there was me so then i just never felt like. I was sexy in us to sell toothpaste. I remember my very very first universal casting audition. It was for the florida lottery. And i had to be like this sexy. You're even an award. These like plastic clear stripper heels. I don't know. I don't know what i was thinking but i was nineteen years old. The silver lining of this terrible experience is that emotive issue to become a creator. I was tired of this. I was so tired. And then i did a couple extra work. Gigs was extra on. Burn notice and dexter. And guess what. I was scantily clad and tacky his hell because that's what they thought of people in miami. All of these shows always depicted people from miami in the same way and it always took place in south beaten always involve drugs and sex and violence. Which is another reason why. I'm working so hard today. To eventually sollers show. That depicts miami in a more authentic way so yeah it pushed me to go to school and learn how to do everything else on my own.

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
T.I. And Tiny Accused by 15 Women of Sexual Assault
"These two have always had a real messy marriage. If you watched any of their reality show years back, TI and tiny, the family hustle. You know what I'm talking about. But these latest allegations are the opposite of, well, there's more to it than just them having an open marriage. Those rumors have always been around. And if you're married to tiny, you better have an open marriage. You can not stay home and be with her. You can't. She looks like the grumpy old troll. I'm sorry. It's not one person who's turned on that show. I've seen these two together. And thought, yeah, yeah, she's a good-looking woman. I mean, well, anyhow, so so far, like I said, more than a dirty dozen of women at last count are accusing them of sexual abuse. They've come forward, they have accused the couple of coercing them into comprising sexual situations, having to do with drugs and money. One woman who remained anonymous, which is kind of, you know, they're right, anonymous. Anybody can do that. An anonymous woman talked about an incident she had back in Charlotte in 2016. She went to TI and tiny's hotel suite at the Ritz Carlton and they took away her phone and once she was there a bunch of Molly and cocaine was handed out. And only the people who removed their pants were told to stay. And she said she watched them drag girls back and forth from the bedroom to the bathroom to the living room. One girl was crying because she wanted to leave, but they wouldn't give her phone back so she could call an Uber. That's kidnapping it from that mistaken.

Talk Python To Me
Deploying and running Django web apps in 2021
"We're gonna talk about specifically Deployments on gangland we can go on and on about obviously all the intricacies of django. But i think suffice to say. I'm an educator on the on the board. In carlton's a fellow he's he makes the releases happen including three two alpha. Which just dropped today. And i guess you mentioned. Lts that's confusing to non django people so since having ellos carlton chango has a pretty rapid release cycle where it's every nine months or so so. There is three zero three one. Three two. This december i think carlton is four zero ev. One of those is a long term service release so that will last two and a half years so that is a three years. Yeah it's it's on. There's a link on the project site so that's a way that so django doesn't really have. It's rare to have breaking changes these days but the lts designed to help people who can't keep up with that cycle. Stay up to date that. We have a lot of podcasts and opinions about why should always stay up to date and it's worth it because that's one of the most things you because as carlton mentioned there's bug fixes constantly so it'll be three one three one two. They'll be three to go three to a month later or so. I'm a big advocate of you. Know if you possibly can get ladies major release so you hang out. Historically the longtime released was really the lts release was really important because there were breaking changes right in each major version of jangle. There were new things and it was difficult to. But that's not the case anymore. It's really easy to update so. I'm a big advocate of that. Now and then when i talked to fellow people in the django community. They're like well. You know. I work in the real world. And you can't keep up the ladies major budget so for those folks than you know. The lts is a really good option. Because it's once every three years you know it's coming you get six month window of overlap of supports. The old lts gets six months of security release after the release of the new lts. That's your window to update. Well i think that running and maintaining software built upon frameworks like django. It falls into two categories for me if falls into. Here's something that we have a team or at least somebody dedicated to owning this project and we care about its ongoing life and then we have the ones that are the oath. Please don't touch it and the oh please don't touch it is we've long since stopped developing that maybe the person who developed it left. But it's still important and we don't want to break it. It's working right now but if you touch it new break it you've now adopted it. You know what i mean like. It's that thing that just like if you break the build. Yes but but worse. 'cause it's legacy build so to me i feel like that. Please don't touch it. Side the lts make perfect sense for them. Yeah in tiny entirely the way. I like to think of it is. Is this a thing that you feasibly going to add new features to and if you feasibly going to add new features to then you should be on the latest matrix version. Because it's only once every eight months you need to allocate a day or two to keep up to fix download the new version. Run the test suite. See the deprecation warnings. Fix deprecation mornings. You know maybe you have to wait a couple of weeks for dependency to update and and then you can push board. And that's once every eight month that process and if you're adding new features if it's a live project ideally be there. Yeah there's something which you just need to keep running for the long run. You could do that much less frequently.

The Lead
Super Bowl LV: The Goat vs The Future
"Well a ref- last time. We talked to you wild card weekend with six playoff games over two days and you pretty much didn't have any time to eat or sleep this weekend. We only had two games both on sunday. So is your home. Look by comparison on a weekend like this much cleaner. I can say that and not only do i have time to eat. I have time to cook. I'm very excited. That's awesome well. Let's start with the early game. The bucks beat the packers. Thirty one to twenty six tampa bay went up twenty eight to ten in this game. What was the key for them building on this big lead. I think a lot of it's just the pressure they were able to produce the packers reduced to having lucas patrick and billy turner on their offensive line and it gets shaquille barrett and jason paul. There really isn't enough. I mean they're used to having a top three offensive line in the nfl. In fact both of those teams are and without that aaron rodgers is under pressure much more often that affected a lot of throws and of a lot more often than we typically see second and eight jerseys. Jason pierre paul. I think that was a big part of it. But also i mean as many times as tampa bay receivers willing to drop the ball. I mean they are better receivers than the packers have in that secondary in that easy pretty good secondary. A huge storyline throughout this game was also the bucks on third down conversions. What did you see from them. So well under pressure a lot of it is just the packers third down defense was just not very well designed and this has been a typical problem for mike patton and his defenses. And i think the that the buccaneers kind of organised out of their game plan around what they would expect to see on third down and so you ended up seeing like for a brief period of time. They had one hundred percent success rate on third down and like a ten percent success rate on first and second down it was kind of nuts. But yeah i think for the most part. They anticipated some blitzes. This saw man coverage they decided. Hey you know i. I think that chris godwin. Or mike evans can beat this guy and this guy was usually kevin king but they were able to win a variety of throughout the game especially on third down where i think things were just a little bit more predictable for them in the second half. Tom brady three interceptions on three consecutive possessions. Third down to brady throws it under pressure. The packers failed to convert the last two of those into any kind of points. How we're the bucks able to hold that lead after three turnovers. Some of it is the individual talent of the players that they've gotten a secondary thing. Carlton davis is really put a stamp on the nfl especially in the postseason. But he's going to be one of those rising players to watch next season that will be identifying and he's played very well but i think some of it is just to have an enormously fast defense and i think was the kind of got a feel for what the packers were attempted to do offensively. They just had a better understanding of what needed to be done. We're the players needed to be in how to hit those landmarks because they weren't really being ton of their defense. From a schematic perspective. They were just kinda getting to their landmarks. a lot. faster. Whether against the runner of the pass the defining play this game was packers coach. Matt leflore making the call to kick a field goal on fourth and goal from the eight yard. Line down by eight points with just over two minutes. Left and tom brady on the other side of that ball. Instead of going forward here on fourth and goal makes this a five point game again really surprised by that decision joe. I thought that they would go for it on fourth down a reef where you land on this decision by matt leflore not to go forward on fourth down. I think it was a really bad decision. And i think you know based off of what my twitter timeline is saying. That's fairly universal agreement. Interestingly wasn't as strong analytical decision to necessarily go for it on fourth down versus kick. And i think you take a look at some of the calculators that are out there and you know it was better to go for it than to kick it. But given the fact that they had three timeouts plus they were ahead of the two minute warning. There's a little bit more time than you. Typically anticipate so from an analytical perspective. It doesn't seem like as bad of a decision. But honestly i think that you take into account some of these situational factors like the fact that the packers have the best red zone offense. Nfl history as far back as her. Dagoes which i think goes all the way back to like. Thank you ninety. I think that plays a role. I think the fact that tom brady is on the other side of the ball with a bevy of weapons and a healthy offensive line. I think that plays a role. And i think kind of every additional bit of context that we add to this decision makes those analytical models a little bit more often favor of going for it instead of kicking that field goal because they needed to have those two scores. It just doesn't really make a lot of sense of the was

Reggae Lover
"carlton" Discussed on Reggae Lover
"Yeah, man. I mean there was so many things that were spoken about. I felt like I was listening to like an elder a relative wage. No, I'm saying dropping history, you know, I mentioned earlier in the intro, you know something that really really surprised me and the thing that surprised me. I don't know if you guys caught it off the conversation or if you remember he spoke about not really liking his voice or not being able to listen to his own voices is so crazy that for decades, you know, there's a conic voice of Reggae music, you know, he didn't even listen to his own stuff man like that. That's to me is like shocking First Recording in 1978 wow wage and he you know, not really listening to his own place things, you know, just things are not happen. You do not happen that you know some of the office or accidental tracks that became hits. My favorite part is probably in addition to like the whole, you know the way he's able to storage All while singing But when he talked about singing off-key on purpose. Yeah, you know what I'm saying? And sometimes just leaving a track with like leaving a recording with just one track one, you know, just delete vocal just the main vocal like, you know, I'm saying like he's on some stuff that I don't know. I just appreciate it. I appreciate it. Cuz I know we've talked about this before a guard. Yeah. Yeah in reference to music and how sometimes it doesn't matter if it's off Ki ya or BEDA off Temple or whatever. Sometimes it's just it's just a Vibe can't really describe a site as visceral. You know what I'm saying? Like it's just it just attacks your pleasure sensors in your brain and technically may not be right. But yeah, like my soul is there that's the thing like and now they have technology tax. She you know, if you believe it or not like just like how they have the auto-tune they have things that make you sound out of birth. That you know, that's that's an effect and it's just really whatever you feel Works. What however your you want to express your art form. And I mean, it's great, you know and these things even though he's back in the late seventies, you know, he seems very youthful and we barely touched on the surface of like his business Acumen, you know, that's that's another thing that we always talk about, you know wage, you know, making sure that his his publishing and everything is right because as he said, you know, it doesn't matter if a producer whoever doesn't pay him. He's going to get his money. Yeah. Yeah, that's amazing because we talked about this in reference to the young artists that are now putting their careers together and trying to get a bus trying to get a break trying to you know, break out across overnight ever get a name for themselves like you talk about this in reference to 20 20 20 21 artists nineteen-year-old twenty-year-olds, but here are somebody else. you know in the early stages of his career decades ago had the foresight to take care of these things now, we also talked about how Unfortunate it. Is that many of his peers and even his Elders did not take care of their business the right way, you know, they didn't know they didn't have them guidance. So now they're upwards in age and unfortunately, they don't have anything to show for all this hit music that they may have sang, you know, all these performances that they've done on in some systems and made a name for themselves that's gone around the world, but they don't have anything to show for it, you know monetarily financially net worth, you know, Legacy wage like financially. Yeah, man, and sometimes I have to wonder, you know, maybe there's a question for another show or another topic. You know, I've noticed like the artists that are up in the States and Canada and Europe, you know, they tend to have that business taken care of. Well, you know some this I guess there's a major assumption, you know, well some of the one off Swear, you know back in in Jamaica. Maybe not so much. Yeah. And I'm sure there's some people in Jamaica. I mean not even some I'm sure there's artists a good amount of artists in Jamaica. They also take care of that that stuff right? But yeah, it seems like of the artist that just spoken to it seems like you know, UK America Canada, you know, they they seem to be doing okay even even though not being as not not having as much notoriety, you know, as of late that's just my observation observation. I could be totally wrong though. There is some truth to what you say about like obviously, you know, you've talked about in touch on some of the people that seem to be really doing it the right way in terms of handling the business and then there's some others where you just walk, you know, it's just question mark m n well I would say this what a season that's so far. You know I'm saying we've had well, I mean last season, you know dead. Grammy-nominated no, Maxi priest this season grammy-nominated Whalers shinehead, you know major recording artists Carlton Livingston Elder Statesman, you know, I put him right up there with the likes of you know, Johnny Osbourne, you know, another Studio One artist. So while we gotta keep this up man gotta keep up the Vibes. Please continue to share the links to the show as we explore this amazing gift this reggae music. Yeah, man and definitely check out I guess, you know music online Weatherby Spotify YouTube wherever you stream content, you know, like like we said, you know shine that has some new stuff out Cults and Livingstone know he has his catalog out there. He's got the podcast coming out exactly podcast coming out, you know, the Wailers, like I said, Maxi priest, you know, all these artists wage. I'll go out support them by this isolated. Yeah, tessellated how I'm so caught up on some of the foundation. You know, I forgot about the new shooter, you know what I'm saying? No shout-outs tessellated man, you know continuing to do it up for the next Generation. You know, I'm saying and I know we haven't well we had Lila on you know, I'm saying so but shout out to entire indignation wage, you know, I'm saying Collective because you know, the definitely, you know, leading the new generation right now, you know saying so yeah go check out all these things check out our playlist off on Pandora, you know, I'm seeing shout-out to Diego check us out on Pandora. We have the playlist going on a lot of stuff going on man more to come. Yeah also shots out to ReverbNation. We worked at ReverbNation on a campaign last year where we ran a promotion on their Network. We gave artists on ReverbNation the opportunity wage. Be featured on a regular of a podcast in this season. So over the upcoming weeks and months of the show. You're going to be introduced to some brand new boss sore brand new to you possibly. Yeah, and we're going to take it like fully Global. So we're going to be talking to people in different strategic locations and get a glimpse into the the reggae music in their part of the world women. Look out for that ReverbNation bigger. Yeah, man, that's you know, yeah. Thanks for listening. Check us out next week..

Reggae Lover
"carlton" Discussed on Reggae Lover
"Podcast. This is Camilla Wanda and I'm a guard what app keeps thanks for listening to another episode of Regular of pick up to our listeners tuning in live right now via a nicer radio Eminem big up to everybody listening all the Digital streaming platforms across the world. That's right. It's all about you as Thursday kitchen to reggae lovers worldwide. And today we are joined by a special guest and man the interview that we had the conversation kind of blew me away a man. Definitely Elder Statesman definitely out say ranked one of my favorite conversations that we've had. If not then a favorite conversation now that we've had on the podcast so far. That's that's big. It's big special guest today is Carlton Livingston iconic voice khong Livingston, there's some surprising things that he said during this interview. I guess we'll talk about it on the other side. Yeah, man, let's go ahead and try Through the Jungle with chalice and our hands off. I hope somebody gets that reference. Hello, Wanda and a guard here with Carlton Livingston. Welcome to the program GIF tongues. Give thumbs Brazilians give tongues. Yeah, man. You are out in Brooklyn. Yeah. I'm out in Brooklyn off at this point over in Bed Stuy. All right word. I guess that's Tidewater died. Cool cool. Cool. Thanks for linking up man. Definitely a pleasure to talk to you and as wanted to singers some of our favorite music, you know, I'm saying that's for the invitation appreciated, you know, and don't know so let's get into the talking a little bit about life history because I know it's a very rich and wealthy history. You're out of Saint Mary in Jamaica. Yes. Yes. I'm from Gale sent Mary from what I know. I know that you originally started out in the sound system building a sound system. Is that correct? Oh, yeah when after I came to live in Kingston, In the early seventies, I was going to Vox our Comprehensive High School in eastern Kingston and I was calling me at no estimate and there was this other guy that we know the the vassal and we were all going around this man by the name of Earth toilet, whichever AM radio station in Franklinton. So we went around with it and learn treated like building amplifiers and stuff like that. And then in the process, we just decided several going to start us on our system. So we built our answer some they won't forget about the small preamplifier and we start with 12in speakers. Like what about 3 bucks? I would start to play song system. Now. We're young players like with 21,000 to basically business done. I'm saying that was yeah. I probably earlier than that. So you talking about building your own amps speakers. All that. Yeah, that one I think we had just left Vox our Comprehensive High School after about four years and then I went to train store that was in that process, you know, it was cool with our money home. So some along the way Mister early Twilight airports little speakers and you know complicate things and Airport sort of stuff. So I'll be available on because it was a transmitter engineer with r g r and okay, so you would you know, tune the certain things for us that we didn't know I was starting to blow some system wage board nineteen eighteen nineteen twenty year olds. Can you describe like what the scene was like in terms of the sounds that were out playing.

Shut Up I Love It
"carlton" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It
"Number two <Speech_Male> is <Speech_Male> A gangster <Speech_Male> movie <Speech_Male> like <Speech_Male> it's a <Speech_Male> underworld gangster <Speech_Male> type movie number. <Speech_Male> Three is <Speech_Male> almost <Speech_Male> the same. Two <Speech_Male> and four <Speech_Male> is also in the gangster <Speech_Male> territory fifth <Speech_Male> was a true heist <Speech_Male> movie. The rest were not <Speech_Male> heist and even from <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I could talk forever about <Speech_Male> the period series <Speech_Male> clearly but even <Speech_Male> he movies after <Speech_Male> five <Speech_Male> they go. <Speech_Male> They don't go into <Speech_Male> highs territorial. They <Speech_Male> change john right. <Speech_Male> So that's what. I really like about <Speech_Male> that <Speech_Male> series. Anyways <Speech_Male> they don't stick to <Speech_Male> one type of <Speech_Male> Movie <Speech_Male> but <SpeakerChange> i think <Speech_Male> it is similar because <Speech_Male> you had all these stars <Speech_Male> coming together. There were <Speech_Male> big stars <Speech_Male> some of them. <Speech_Male> Maybe not <Speech_Male> big in the united states <Speech_Male> at the time <Speech_Male> but <Speech_Male> big stars nonetheless. <Speech_Male> And i'd say that's <Speech_Male> a ten <Speech_Male> big ten <Speech_Male> for fast five <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> This is an eight <Speech_Male> ocean's twelve <Speech_Music_Male> eight. I think <Speech_Music_Male> it's still. I <Speech_Male> love it. <Speech_Male> It's really good. <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> I <Speech_Female> don't wanna leave carlton. i'm <Speech_Female> pleased because he's gonna text <Speech_Female> me. He's <Speech_Female> gonna make fun <Speech_Male> of me. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> It's good <Speech_Male> it <Speech_Male> isn't bad. I don't think <Speech_Male> there's much <Speech_Male> to pick apart about <Speech_Male> this movie. It's very <Speech_Male> fun. i'd even watch <Speech_Male> it again. I think if <Speech_Male> anything it's just <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> may maybe <Speech_Male> the <Speech_Male> I don't know there's <Speech_Male> really nothing bad to <Speech_Male> say about it. I just don't think <Speech_Male> it's hard <Speech_Female> to me <Speech_Male> the number one. <Speech_Female> yeah <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Well that leaves <Speech_Female> us with the most important <Speech_Female> person of <Speech_Female> today's <Speech_Female> date. <Speech_Female> Because i don't want to name <Speech_Female> today's date and then <Speech_Female> this podcast is not evergreen. <Speech_Female> Why would i <Speech_Female> ever do that. <Speech_Female> Carlton gillespie <Speech_Female> where. <Speech_Female> Whatever <Speech_Female> i just said. <Speech_Female> Let it go and tell me <Speech_Female> what <Speech_Female> is your deal <Speech_Male> with the <Speech_Male> scale. And how <Speech_Male> do you want to <SpeakerChange> deal with <Speech_Female> the <Speech_Female> likes <Speech_Female> well because nobody really <Speech_Female> likes the scale. Excuse <Speech_Female> people usually <Speech_Female> don't like the scale but <Speech_Female> we love the scale. And <Speech_Female> i let you <Speech_Female> do your scale the way <Speech_Male> you wanted <SpeakerChange> to your scale. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Well <Speech_Male> i'm definitely. I'm <Speech_Male> going to rate this. Because <Speech_Male> this is <Speech_Male> ocean's <Speech_Male> twelve <Speech_Male> i'm going to rate this <Speech_Male> on a scale <Speech_Male> of twelve <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> for obvious reasons. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I like <SpeakerChange> that. <Speech_Female> And <Speech_Female> that <Speech_Male> i <SpeakerChange> let you do <Speech_Male> whatever you want. I compose. <Speech_Male> I don't <Speech_Male> understand it all <Speech_Male> about the movies you <Speech_Male> guys compared to two. <Speech_Male> It makes zero sense <Speech_Male> to me <Speech_Male> if anything <Speech_Male> i would use <Speech_Male> to me personally <Speech_Male> like the director. <Speech_Male> The most direct <Speech_Male> comparison is <Speech_Male> which movie is similar. <Speech_Male> Tone <Speech_Male> has ocean has <Speech_Male> similar cast <Speech_Male> into <Speech_Male> the story. <Speech_Male> Ocean's eleven <Speech_Male> so i'm gonna <Speech_Male> use that so i'm <Speech_Male> gonna say oceans <Speech_Male> some of the <Speech_Male> ocean's eleven <Speech_Male> to me <Speech_Male> is a nine <Speech_Male> because <Speech_Male> it twelve. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> No <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> no we are. Are <Speech_Male> we already know where this <Speech_Male> is going to go. Because he teased <Speech_Male> it out. But continue. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> ocean's eleven <Speech_Male> true to me is <Speech_Male> nine just in the way <Speech_Male> ching like <Speech_Male> it chains <Speech_Male> genre. <Speech_Male> It played <Speech_Male> with played <Speech_Male> around with the reality. <Speech_Male> So i'm <Speech_Male> going to give ocean's <Speech_Male> twelve <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> thirteen <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> on <Speech_Male> a twelve point scale <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> all who <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> not to say <Speech_Male> that it's ocean's <Speech_Male> thirteen <Speech_Male> because ocean's thirteen <Speech_Male> is a two <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> on that twelve point <Speech_Male> scale <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> trial <Speech_Male> tried to <Speech_Male> you try and understand <Speech_Male> all that <Speech_Male> listener. <Speech_Male> Yeah <Speech_Male> go digest <Speech_Music_Female> that.

Shut Up I Love It
"carlton" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It
"That's that's seven different. It's it's a very before we've seen it's a different movie. And i don't think i need that. I don't need it to be that but the movie does not give us anything but the bare minimum to be like okay. He loves her and she loves sam and it's good that he reunited her with her father dave poker together in the end. All have fun. If that doesn't spell out true love you. i don't know what does joe it doesn't earn it. It's so paper thin but again. I think if it added more to it would lose so much of the stuff we do. Enjoy the movie. Yeah cast of twelve stars which is tough. Yeah it's kind of like when people criticize and game and the other vendors one for certain things. It's like well again. This is a movie with eighteen characters even allowed to criticize with films. I heard like you. You won't get thirty sense to like the dungeons if you increase is and scientology almost never do it on this. Podcast almost never criticized. That's another podcast. You guys. that's right. Well it's it's worse than episode but Okay great. I think we've covered like but what i want but i want to hear more from sony. Everything being rushed out of here. Is there another. You have another guess after me. Is that is going to ocean's thirteen after this. Is that once you all night with us. talking about. Ocean's twelve sasha's just pain indexes slowly rising. So i do start slowly few losing feeling in my leg but i. It has nothing to do with me environment. I e yeah you just said. I'll take what can look look recovering from surgery. I grace and i want to talk about this film. So carlton please. Sasha is in Not in the hospital but she's pretty much hospital downstairs in her house. She's not allowed to see her beloved dogs because dogs jump on broken legs. It's the whole thing. It's very sad. It's a sad sad world. Hey the world is suffering way. More than i am right now but nobody is suffering more than carlton wants to talk. Some more by favorite movie called ten. What do you want to know. Just want to talk more about george. Plenty brad is is that so much. There's not enough people talking about them. We all okay. So i but i wanna know from sasha like what questions. Yeah out the mood. There's no but no this. Generally this isn't to be like or like. Why am i watching this any of it. Because somebody didn't see eleven. I know why you're watching it because you value my opinion and i said just watch and true. Yeah how do we is doing this. Podcast i wanted to get a little in your brain. So like azure watching it. I'm just curious what what are the main things that you're like where you like..

Shut Up I Love It
"carlton" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It
"The which is what they did in number one which is the whole. The whole reason clooney goes through robbing benedict is too. So here's the thing. Okay so everyone loves ocean's eleven right but ultimately george clooney rob's terry benedict still hundred sixty million dollars. Yes to convince his ex his ex-wife to come back and and meet up to. That is one little camera that catches terry benedict giving up his money or excuse me giving up test to get his money back. Which number one. It is ridiculous for her. Just realize that in that moment that oh my god. I can't believe i can't believe the owner of three casinos care. This much about is money over me is just ridiculous and is a bad so people are like. Wow i can't believe in this one brad pitt. Whole ruse so he can get catherine zeta jones back. But that's exactly what happens in ocean's eleven and they even say you know when they're in the jail jail cell he like was it worth it and he says was pets and so they're basically saying like these are always about something else. It's whenever about female right exact. Well it is interesting because of course somebody trying to get rich. Some dushi guy trying to buy another yacht. It's such a like it's not something that we all can relate to but all he wants to win. A girl is a classic. Storytelling you know. goal goal for protagonist. So the thing with this movie those you don't even really know that for one until the end and then to for me. You don't really get the feeling that their relationship is strong. Because your first introduction to the character does brad pitt. Leaving them the like. I understand why he's leaving them. But the optics are bad right like she's about to this about the buzzer he's dna. Yeah yeah and i. I never get the i never see a scene where they like really love each other and i believe this kisses her in the morning. So that's something. It's very thin to me. I don't necessarily mind it. Because i think the movie. I don't give a shit about that part. I just wanna see all these characters be fun and they do but it is like pretty thin. Where am i wait. Did they even belong together. Like you've shown me nothing in all these characters last vaccine show that they're in love but it's because he's a thief just like her father. That's why it doesn't. He was running down the street from the cops. And she's like i like that. That's like it's been there that it's incredibly thin to where at the end there is no there is no catharsis for me of like oh good. They're they're together. And you don't give a shit. I also don't give a shit about her long-lost bother looking that she's hanging out with the father like with this fucking asshole. No but the thing is that's really sweet on the surface. The movie doesn't earn any of that. Because you don't necessarily care about the father you don't even meet the actor until ten minutes bill ten minutes it but that's the thing that just the movie tells you all these things but it doesn't really earn the weight of that low milquet so let me ask you this though. If the movie was the movie was reframed in the beginning which is this is about a woman whose father was the greatest deep of all time and it setup where she's going to try and track him down and she's going to try she's going to try and re- reunite reunite herself with her father and they're gonna get out all the excess baggage. You can't tell me that both of you would have tuned out immediately and been like yeah..

Shut Up I Love It
"carlton" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It
"Thing right yeah. So let's talk a cartoon which you describe this to louis to look at it okay. So in the end of the film or towards the end A bunch of the gang gets busted matt damon don cheadle and scott caan Are kind of the last. Three to kind of keep this russo. So basically they're trying to keep up this ruse that they're trying to get this faberge egg they need to get inside. They figure maybe we can get danny. Ocean's wife who is played by julia roberts to be a lookalike for julia roberts and the closest faberge egg so they can steal it and this is i know a lot of people get upset about as well but in a world where in ocean's eleven where brad pitt is teaching young hollywood stars how to play poker for no reason where he's running hotels and he's friends with tofa. Grace like this type of stuff i think is to your point ballsy but i also think it's just to me it's it's making fun of itself You know what i mean and like the ridiculousness of that scene is so crazy like if they had played it straight than i think it would have been awful for me to watch but instead like no. This is ridiculous but then again isn't every heist movie ridiculous. Sure so. I know it's a it's a tone question and directing question probably me like soderbergh was one of the few people who pull it off but what to you. Carlton viewer makes this Like would makes you feel like they're making fun of it. Like what are those elements that you like the the clearly being meta about it. Like i definitely have dancer for that. And i don't think it's necessarily the directing so what is the cast. This is a movie that again. you can't separate it from its cast. And the fact that it is like a bunch of stars. It's like it's grotesque. In how many stars there are in this movie and they know by the second one they know that. Like that to have george clooney and brad pitt alone in a movie together is like thank you. That's what i'm saying. That's the ridiculous senate right. These are these are not real. Theme watch was the leaves. Do not look like this. Yeah and so basically when you have cast habit this is the next step of that. Cast as being like and we fucking know they're stars. We know this is julia roberts. You know it's julia roberts. You came to see this movie. Because it's julia roberts so we're gonna literally make her julia roberts exactly so. I think that's where it's like. The whole the tone comes from the cast existing in the form that they do so. That's why it like it does work. I think if you didn't know who any of those people were the stars like you you know in as watched it or something. That joke wouldn't work. There wouldn't be very interesting. And i think if like julia roberts was the only star in it and the rest were like people. You didn't really know. Or thomas jane or like you know that we're just hit friend of the show but not quite now thomas. Jane might be a bad show. He's he's back but Then that joke wouldn't work either. The joke works. Because it's george. Clooney bruce willis is not in it in is in it after that. But you also have to- for grace playing till for grace like you'd mentioned before it's like it's a movie that is saying we recognize that you're looking at movie stars. You have someone. Like matt damon. Who like that's jason bourne right there. And he's playing this almost nervous anxious guy. I'm trying to be the leader..

Shut Up I Love It
"carlton" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It
"That was a helicopter dropping me in to tell you shut up i love it. I am joe. Cabrillo here with sasha filer. Welcome everybody to our podcast. Thank you for listening. This is a podcast where we invite a very special guest to talk about something. I'm degraded underappreciated. Maybe something that people forgotten bogged because it hasn't been around on their minds for like sixteen years. I don't know could be a movie. That's kind of well known. I don't know. I'm revealing the topic of today's podcast. What are you doing that. Could we have today in the room. We have a writer producer. I mean he's just such a great dude. I can talk about him all day. He's kind of a genius and many direct like renaissance kind of guy. I don't know he's he's like already not pleased with me. So he's going to yell at me at some point going to yell back at him. Welcome carlton gillespie. Hello.

Family Financial Focus
Boston Police Sergeant Placed on Leave After Body Cam Footage Released From May
"Investigation after body cam footage of the George Floyd protests in the city surfaced. Carlton Williams reference Then some of the protesters of sergeant is bragging about hitting people with his car. Seemingly intentionally. The officer is on administrative leave the conjunction of Jupiter

WBZ Afternoon News
Boston Police Sergeant Placed On Leave
"Is on leave now, after some body cam footage depicting alleged police misconduct went viral WBC's match, Shearer has more. The video shows the police sergeant allegedly bragging about hitting protesters with his cruiser. But Attorney Carlton Williams says he isn't even sure if that's the officer. That's on leave. I could show you three sergeant such to be on leave in that that video. video. Carl Carl first first obtain obtain that that footage footage a a couple couple months months ago. ago. Since Since May, May, he's he's been been defending defending some some of of the the protesters protesters who who were were arrested arrested while while demanding demanding justice justice for for George George Floyd. Floyd. An An assistant assistant D D A. A. Sent Sent him him over over 66 66 hours hours worth of body Cam footage from that night and tried to started clicking through and immediately became aware like there's a lot of stuff in here, that's gonna be rich. He released several clips to the appeal dot or prompting bpd Commissioner William Cross to put a sergeant on leave and launch an investigation to Carl. That's not enough. Willie drops should be on TV saying We're going to release All of the body camera footage so people can see what my police officers to do that. Shearer WBZ

WBZ Midday News
Boston Police Sergeant Placed On Leave
"Say an officer is now on leave after some body Cam footage depicted alleged police misconduct when viral here's more from WBC's match year video shows a police sergeant allegedly bragging about hitting protesters with his cruiser. But Attorney Carlton Williams says he isn't even sure if that's the officer. That's on leave. I could show you three sergeant such to be on leave in that video. Carl first obtain that footage a couple months ago. Since May, he's been defending some of the protesters who were arrested while demanding justice for George Floyd. An assistant D A. Sent him over 66 hours worth of body Cam footage from that night and tried to started clicking through and immediately became aware like there's a lot of stuff in here, that's gonna be rich. He released several clips to the appeal dot org's prompting bpd Commissioner William Cross to put a sergeant on leave and launch an investigation to Carl. That's not enough. Willie drops should be on TV saying We're going to release All of the body camera footage so people can see what my police officers and do that. Shearer

AP News Radio
Brewers' Williams, Mariners CF Lewis win Rookie of the Year
"Hi Mike Rossi reporting Seattle mariners center fielder Kyle Lewis sweeps the vote for American League rookie of the year Seattle mariners center fielder Kyle Lewis has been voted American League rookie of the year Louis pulled in all thirty first place votes in balloting by the baseball writers association of America Lewis is the twelfth unanimous rookie of the year the American League joining a list that includes Carlton Fisk Derek Jeter Mike trout and Aaron judge the twenty five year old Lewis batted two sixty two with eleven homers and twenty six RBIs in a fifty eight game pandemic shortened season the National League rookie of the year as Milwaukee brewers reliever Devin Williams hi Mike Rossio