16 Burst results for "Changes Big And Small"

Brian Mudd: Republicans Nationwide Need to Do Some Soul-Searching

Mark Levin

01:36 min | 7 months ago

Brian Mudd: Republicans Nationwide Need to Do Some Soul-Searching

"The timing to have this conversation about the generational divide Because while we continue to await states who still haven't figured out how the hell to count votes as we sit here and wait what the heck is going to happen with Congress And along with another pivotal runoff election in Georgia the exercise of some serious that I do mean serious soul searching for Republicans outside of the state of Florida is underway It should be Regardless of the final congressional result even if even if lags on holds on in Nevada and Herschel wins the runoff and Republicans have control of the Senate with 51 I'm sorry masters does not look like it's going to work out in Arizona Lake can still get across the finish line Carrie like can still be the next governor of Arizona does not look like the numbers are going to be there for masters So the path almost certainly is going to be lax old hanging on Nevada and getting Herschel across the finish line and runoff Regardless of any of that stuff needs to change big time And there needs to be a realization of what the hell happened here Where you can have such a just absurd president Whose wildly unpopular 40 year high inflation border crisis geopolitical crisis and how there isn't so much as a wave election

Herschel Arizona Lake Nevada Congress Georgia Florida Carrie Senate Arizona
Blake Masters: The Two Faces of Mark Kelly

Mark Levin

01:30 min | 7 months ago

Blake Masters: The Two Faces of Mark Kelly

"I mean this guy is spending a ton of money A ton of money is being poured in mostly from out of state dark money billionaires and dark money groups are pouring it into the state They're trying to protect this seat Now my sense of your opponent is he woke up about 60 days ago and realized he has a race on his hands and now all of a sudden he's tough on the border He's concerned about the price of gasoline and all the rest As he voted for every damn Joe Biden Chuck Schumer bill that comes across the table That's exactly right There's two Mark Kelly's There's campaign Kelly which is what we're seeing a lot of now He pretends to be a center right Republican All of a sudden he's been focused on the border He's concerned about inflation No no no Then there's D.C. Kelly and when Mark Kelly's in D.C. he just gives Chuck Schumer and Joe Biden whatever they want He lyrically votes to the left of Bernie Sanders So yeah look Mark Kelly's got a lot of money He runs a lot of commercials TV ads that lie about me TV ads that lie about his own record but I think people are seeing through it because Mark Kelly can lie all he wants doesn't change the fact that we've got a wide open southern border We've got crippling inflation the highest in the greater Phoenix metro in the country and officially 13% And we're seeing violent crime just rise under this democratic administration That's why people are going to be looking to make a change big time in November

Mark Kelly Chuck Schumer Joe Biden Kelly D.C. Bernie Sanders Democratic Administration Phoenix
Making Athens Neighborhoods More Evironmentally Friendly

Travel with Rick Steves

01:34 min | 2 years ago

Making Athens Neighborhoods More Evironmentally Friendly

"Let's start today's travel. With rick steves increase hosting the olympics in two thousand four forced that famously chaotic and polluted city of athens to invest in more pedestrian and eco friendly alternatives tour guides cars and pastas doris joining us. Now to look at what you can expect when you scroll the neighborhoods their city by the way we recorded this conversation before the pandemic shutdown international borders things very much. What's it like when you hear. An american. say athens used to be terrible today. It's changed big low. We are old enough to remember what you mean. Because i grew up in the nineteen ninety s where we had these serious problem with his cloud. Above athens was pollution cloud. Yeah but then a they introduce measurement which was not. All cars are allowed to enter the city center the yukon enter Based on the you and your license plates so this improves the today. Absolutely yeah and athens benefited a lot from. That's an apostolakis. There's more sensitivity for pedestrian zones. I think from syntagma square. You can walk downhill on on. What used to be a very crowded traffic street and now it's like a park weekly unification for q logical sites so he can start working starting from sedan west and you can make your way old down to get me. Cost the asking symmetry of otherness. It's beautiful walk without motorbikes. And there's this beautiful pedestrian sort of park. That goes to me almost all the way around the acropolis also the hill that the city is built around. That just seems designed for people and it's beautiful in the evening. It's beautiful in the day.

Athens Rick Steves Doris Olympics Syntagma Square
Yu Darvish, Cubs became perfect fit over time

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney

02:34 min | 2 years ago

Yu Darvish, Cubs became perfect fit over time

"Now I wanted to ask you about this in it's a harder question to. Answer Two thousand twenty because we're it's not like we're in club houses and we can watch the body language and see players and how they interact with each other i. know in that first year that there were people in the cubs organization who felt like that darvish just wasn't comfortable with the group and it didn't have any do I. Personally I don't think with the other players on the team, but just he maybe was just the pressure of the contract where it felt like he was more of an outsider, not completely within the team realm what what are you seeing? What are you hearing more? So about that now? Get Away, I can relate it from my world reporting world. Is that first year it even though he speaks fine English, he used a translator all year with the media. Now he didn't use it with his teammates but. I think that was is an example of how things change in the second year last year he spoke English, his personality came out he he he got he got to know reporters like myself a lot better and then this year in Spring Training Boston he was like the class clown he was having a great time with us until things shutdown ironically or I guess that's the right word coming back from the pandemic only being able to zoom interviews he's been different. He's been back to being kinda quiet and back he's used a translator at times in the zoom interview so the other thing. Is. He's having so much success. You know how guys are in the middle of a great run they don't WanNa really talk about themselves so much, and that's all we're asking is about him. So things have gone a little quiet this year, but there's good reasons behind it but from year one year too when you're two to three, he changed big time and you might be right. It might be the contract I think coming off what happened in world series in seventeen with the dodgers really affected him as well big time, and then he comes to the cubs in eighteen huge contract big market. Diehard of bands everywhere expecting the world and you know he was also injured as it turns out so that first year was a mess and then slowly but surely he came out of his show that these interviews in English teammates got the no one better 'cause even in even in eighteen. Teammates I saw with Rizzo hanging out on the road and stuff like he was still tight with teammates but not the saint he wasn't outgoing now he's outgoing and that really is true personality. So it Kinda mimics what he's done the mount he's become self again on the mound as well as in the dugout in the clubhouse and with the media.

Cubs Rizzo Darvish Boston Dodgers
Georgia's Democratic Senate race is too close to call

AP News Radio

00:43 sec | 3 years ago

Georgia's Democratic Senate race is too close to call

"The George's curtain democratic may be going Senate up race on something which was we've plagued had to do without with voting for months problems now is too the close movies to call with more than after three quarters a black of out the of vote about counted three months Jon movie Ossoff fans leads can soon with about forty start making nine percent their way Teresa back Tomlinson to the theater roughly fifteen if they want percent to global and giant Sarah Riggs AMC amico says about it hopes thirteen to have close percent to a hundred the percent winner must of its get theaters more than worldwide fifty percent of re the open vote to to go the public on to the by general the middle election of next month which many and worry the agency will have that represents issues all like the theater the ones chain this says one the saw numbers will be with about voters the same waiting for other hours change big technical and small glitches as with well machines as for independence and many like Fulton but the landscape County voters will Sara be different Paxton than what we saying were used they to feel in the disenfranchised pre coded nineteen I era feel like AMC maybe it's intentional says it will limit that seating it's to promote so difficult social distancing to vote George's Republican figuring that secretary only between of state twenty is promising five and an investigation fifty percent of seats into issues will be made in some available counties I'm Oscar I'm wells Julie Gabriel Walker

Senate JON Teresa Tomlinson Fulton Landscape County Paxton AMC George Secretary Julie Gabriel Walker Sarah Riggs Sara
Movie theaters, shuttered for months, plan July reopening

AP News Radio

00:43 sec | 3 years ago

Movie theaters, shuttered for months, plan July reopening

"The curtain may be going up on something we've had to do without for months now the movies after a black out of about three months movie fans can soon start making their way back to the theater if they want to global giant AMC says it hopes to have close to a hundred percent of its theaters worldwide re open to the public by the middle of next month and the agency that represents all the theater chain says the numbers will be about the same for other change big and small as well as for independence but the landscape will be different than what we were used to in the pre coded nineteen era AMC says it will limit seating to promote social distancing figuring that only between twenty five and fifty percent of seats will be made available I'm Oscar wells Gabriel

AMC Oscar Wells Gabriel
Movie theaters, shuttered for months, plan July reopening

AP News Radio

00:43 sec | 3 years ago

Movie theaters, shuttered for months, plan July reopening

"The curtain may be going up on something we've had to do without for months now the movies after a black out of about three months movie fans can soon start making their way back to the theater if they want to global giant AMC says it hopes to have close to a hundred percent of its theaters worldwide re open to the public by the middle of next month and the agency that represents all the theater chain says the numbers will be about the same for other change big and small as well as for independence but the landscape will be different than what we were used to in the pre coded nineteen era AMC says it will limit seating to promote social distancing figuring that only between twenty five and fifty percent of seats will be made available I'm Oscar wells Gabriel

AMC Oscar Wells Gabriel
Movie theaters, shuttered for months, plan July reopening

AP News Radio

00:43 sec | 3 years ago

Movie theaters, shuttered for months, plan July reopening

"The a curtain Virginia may be state going troopers up on resigned something we've had after to do claiming without he for deliberately months now coughed the on movies a Mennonite driver to spread after a coded black out nineteen of about three months movie fans the state can trooper soon who resigned start making is Jacob their way back Kuch to the theater he has a connection if to they the want Mennonite to community global giant his brother AMC mark says it is hopes charged to have with killing close to a Sunday a hundred school percent teacher of its theaters who disappeared worldwide from a Mennonite re open community to the public in by New the Mexico middle of next earlier month this and year the agency suspect that represents Marco all the theater which chain was in says the the Air numbers Force will be about stationed the same in for Phoenix other change big the and Virginia small state police as a well trooper as for Jacob independence coach but texted the landscape market will be another different brother than what we in were used April to saying in the pre that he had coded ticketed nineteen a Mennonite era driver AMC and says deliberately it will limit coughed seating to on promote him social with distancing hopes that man figuring would quote that only between spread twenty five corona and to fifty a wedding percent he of seats was going will to be made available the thirty year old I'm trooper Oscar wells just Gabriel graduated from the academy last fall and was placed on administrative leave in may for an unrelated criminal investigation hi Jackie Quinn

Virginia Jacob Kuch Marco AMC Gabriel Jackie Quinn Mexico Phoenix Oscar Wells
As business trickles back, hotels compete on cleanliness

AP News Radio

00:54 sec | 3 years ago

As business trickles back, hotels compete on cleanliness

"The never current mind protests which hotel about racial will offer inequality the best price are some of a reminder the nation's large that past chains promises of are economic now competing opportunity over hygiene for African Americans that Hilton weren't it another changed big after chains similar are clashes changing their in focus the sixties to get customers the nineties back and hotels Ferguson are making Missouri visible into ID changes fourteen in the wake of the pandemic we've seen US with cities clerks set ablaze wearing masks over the decades pre packaged and yet studies breakfasts show black instead Americans of phase continue and to be disproportionately signs that promote cleaners left like behind ready clean African it red Americans roof inn earn and Hilton's only sixty clean two cents stay for every with dollar Lysol earned by U. a S. white hotels person are still black mostly wealth empty is just ten occupancy cents was to just every thirty dollar seven percent of white wealth at the end and of may blacks are it's no a drop more likely of forty to three own a percent home now from in the twenty same time twenty last then year in the early but with seventies some destinations professor starting Cecilia to open rouse up at and Princeton leisure travel says this on year the rise brings a perfect hotels storm are using inequality cleaning standards mixing as with a covert way to bring nineteen back tourists which is put and more possibly African get Americans a leg up on out Airbnb of jobs as service which workers isn't were standardized forced them to go to I'm work Jackie in front Quinn line professions while being more susceptible to the virus Jackie Quinn Washington

Ferguson Missouri United States Hilton U. Professor Cecilia Airbnb Jackie Quinn Washington Princeton
As business trickles back, hotels compete on cleanliness

AP News Radio

00:54 sec | 3 years ago

As business trickles back, hotels compete on cleanliness

"The never current mind protests which hotel about racial will offer inequality the best price are some of a reminder the nation's large that past chains promises of are economic now competing opportunity over hygiene for African Americans that Hilton weren't it another changed big after chains similar are clashes changing their in focus the sixties to get customers the nineties back and hotels Ferguson are making Missouri visible into ID changes fourteen in the wake of the pandemic we've seen US with cities clerks set ablaze wearing masks over the decades pre packaged and yet studies breakfasts show black instead Americans of phase continue and to be disproportionately signs that promote cleaners left like behind ready clean African it red Americans roof inn earn and Hilton's only sixty clean two cents stay for every with dollar Lysol earned by U. a S. white hotels person are still black mostly wealth empty is just ten occupancy cents was to just every thirty dollar seven percent of white wealth at the end and of may blacks are it's no a drop more likely of forty to three own a percent home now from in the twenty same time twenty last then year in the early but with seventies some destinations professor starting Cecilia to open rouse up at and Princeton leisure travel says this on year the rise brings a perfect hotels storm are using inequality cleaning standards mixing as with a covert way to bring nineteen back tourists which is put and more possibly African get Americans a leg up on out Airbnb of jobs as service which workers isn't were standardized forced them to go to I'm work Jackie in front Quinn line professions while being more susceptible to the virus Jackie Quinn Washington

Ferguson Missouri United States Hilton U. Professor Cecilia Airbnb Jackie Quinn Washington Princeton
As business trickles back, hotels compete on cleanliness

AP News Radio

00:54 sec | 3 years ago

As business trickles back, hotels compete on cleanliness

"The never current mind protests which hotel about racial will offer inequality the best price are some of a reminder the nation's large that past chains promises of are economic now competing opportunity over hygiene for African Americans that Hilton weren't it another changed big after chains similar are clashes changing their in focus the sixties to get customers the nineties back and hotels Ferguson are making Missouri visible into ID changes fourteen in the wake of the pandemic we've seen US with cities clerks set ablaze wearing masks over the decades pre packaged and yet studies breakfasts show black instead Americans of phase continue and to be disproportionately signs that promote cleaners left like behind ready clean African it red Americans roof inn earn and Hilton's only sixty clean two cents stay for every with dollar Lysol earned by U. a S. white hotels person are still black mostly wealth empty is just ten occupancy cents was to just every thirty dollar seven percent of white wealth at the end and of may blacks are it's no a drop more likely of forty to three own a percent home now from in the twenty same time twenty last then year in the early but with seventies some destinations professor starting Cecilia to open rouse up at and Princeton leisure travel says this on year the rise brings a perfect hotels storm are using inequality cleaning standards mixing as with a covert way to bring nineteen back tourists which is put and more possibly African get Americans a leg up on out Airbnb of jobs as service which workers isn't were standardized forced them to go to I'm work Jackie in front Quinn line professions while being more susceptible to the virus Jackie Quinn Washington

Ferguson Missouri United States Hilton U. Professor Cecilia Airbnb Jackie Quinn Washington Princeton
As business trickles back, hotels compete on cleanliness

AP News Radio

00:54 sec | 3 years ago

As business trickles back, hotels compete on cleanliness

"The a never current founding mind protests member which of a hotel popular about racial Grammy will offer inequality winning the best group price has are some died of a reminder the nation's large that past chains promises of are economic now competing opportunity over hygiene for African Americans one point that Hilton two weren't has died it another changed big her publicist after chains similar said are she clashes changing died of cardiac their in focus the sixties arrest to get in Los customers the nineties Angeles back and Anita hotels Ferguson pointer are making Missouri says visible if it wasn't into ID for changes fourteen Bonnie in the we wake never of the pandemic would we've have heard seen US of the pointer with cities sisters clerks set ablaze wearing masks Persib over says the decades pre it was packaged Bonnie and yet who studies breakfasts after leaving show black high instead school Americans of wanted phase to leave continue off from and to singing be disproportionately signs in church that promote and cleaners go pro left with like their behind sisters ready clean African it two red of whom Americans roof were inn already earn and married Hilton's only sixty and even clean had two kids cents stay at the for time every with dollar Lysol the gamble earned paid off by U. a S. the white group hotels went person on to are record still black mostly hits wealth like empty yes is we can just can ten occupancy cents I'm so excited was to just every jump thirty dollar seven and percent slow of white hand wealth at the end and Bonnie of may blacks pointer are it's was no a drop sixty more likely of nine forty to three own a percent home I'm now Oscar from in the twenty same wells Gabriel time twenty last then year in the early but with seventies some destinations professor starting Cecilia to open rouse up at and Princeton leisure travel says this on year the rise brings a perfect hotels storm are using inequality cleaning standards mixing as with a covert way to bring nineteen back tourists which is put and more possibly African get Americans a leg up on out Airbnb of jobs as service which workers isn't were standardized forced them to go to I'm work Jackie in front Quinn line professions while being more susceptible to the virus Jackie Quinn Washington

Missouri Bonnie Persib Hilton Oscar Professor Cecilia Airbnb Jackie Quinn Washington LOS Ferguson Gabriel Princeton
Protests for racial justice continue for the 9th night in Seattle

News, Traffic and Weather

01:20 min | 3 years ago

Protests for racial justice continue for the 9th night in Seattle

"From Capitol Hill in shoreline to downtown Seattle in west Seattle the crowds came out today to continue protest to fight for racial equality and justice unlike a week ago today's protests have been peaceful almost exam phone reports only are at three different demonstrations at each one we saw parents marching in hand with young children one location we saw doctors and their white lab coats and healthcare workers in their squad everyone coming together to show their support for change big crowds pushing the stock to excessive police force for some like tear has Haley a medical assistant at Harborview Medical Center it's personal I got two sons and I worry about my kids from Harborview Medical Center to city hall thousands of nurses doctors and people in the health care community March to demand justice to be standing up for justice as that of an occurring towards minorities and black black lives lives in in particular particular their their signs signs show show their their concerns concerns police police Mylan Mylan is is a a public public health health issue issue and and so so is is racism racism about about seven seven thousand people turned out to city hall on the Saturday with little police presence at the actual demonstration I'm impressed and I am proud to be part of the Turner it's call Moses and phone reporting

Seattle Haley Harborview Medical Center Mylan Mylan City Hall Turner Moses
Coronavirus For Kids, And The Science Of Soap

But Why: A Podcast for Curious Kids

10:02 min | 3 years ago

Coronavirus For Kids, And The Science Of Soap

"You may have been hearing lately about something called Corona virus. Or maybe you've been hearing about Kovic. Nineteen many of you have been affected more than just by hearing about this new illness. In some regions and countries. Lots of things have changed. Big events like football or soccer matches concerts and community events have been postponed mosque. Church and synagogue services have been cancelled and schools and places where adults work have been closed. It can be confusing or worrying when normal life changes. If you are feeling a little concerned you should ask the adults in your life to help explain things but you should also that things are probably feeling confusing. And maybe a little overwhelming to your adults to most of us haven't been through something quite like this before and going to take all of us being calm and following the best advice of health professionals and our local leaders to get through this together today. We're going to answer questions. You've been sending us about corona virus in an effort to make sure you are informed and prepared not scared. We're putting this episode out. On Friday March Thirteenth Twenty twenty. The global situation is changing very quickly. But the information. We're going to give you today pretty relevant. Whether you're listening the day we put this out or maybe a week or two later or perhaps even later and as things continue to change you can continue to send us questions. You think we should answer. Let's start with corona virus. What it is and what Kovic nineteen means we asked Critique polly to help answer your questions about this virus critique it is an infectious disease doctor. Infectious diseases are illnesses. That are caused by a microorganism. Getting into your body micro means small so something really small. You can't see it. Some infectious diseases are passed from one. Human to another by insects. Like mosquito others are passed from person to person in other ways like by one person. Coughing or sneezing and another person breathing in those cough droplets. In the Air Dr Critic Acapella works on Infectious Diseases and she's actually one of the leaders of the Infectious Disease Society of America so she thinks about contagious illnesses a lot and she's been helping a lot of politicians health officials and others think about this new illness. That people are so worried about so she was really glad to get a chance to talk directly to you to kids about the questions. You have islanders. Henry I'm eight years old. I live in Oxford. Ohio and my question is why did the current ivars happen? Hi My name is Isla. I live in spokane Washington. I'm eleven years old in my question is what do scientists know about the corona virus? Hi I'm Evelyn. I'm seven years. Old From Kirkland Washington. And I'd like to ask what is the corona virus. What exactly is a corona virus? We keep hearing this word corona virus. What is that? Karma bowl is on part about large family of germs called viruses chronic viruses infect animals and some infect people so the one that is causing the big outbreak right now is one that index people and sometimes when this happens it can cause infections of our lungs also cause fevers coughing and shortness of breath. Hi My name is Nathan. I am five years old. I live in Washington and lie. Question is why of a different take of other current viruses. That kids might be familiar with if if we've gotten a cold. Is that a corona virus. Yes quarterback most commonly called what we think of as causing the common cold so people have had probably a corona virus already in their lives. If they've had the sniffles coffin. It's not allergies. If they've had a cold viral illness they may already have had a corona virus. So why are we concerned about Cova? Nineteen the disease that's caused by this new corona virus. Hello my name is Waitin' Four and a half years old eleven in Pennsylvania. My question is was the coon of why was bad. Hi My name is advocates are the venture cargo. I am five years old Miami Kelly. I'm an elephant Chicago. How did the corona virus become so powerful so toby nineteen is what we call a novel coronavirus and what the word novel means is that it's new and that people have not seen it before and that's why it's called? Colgate nineteen the coast and for Corona. The D. I. Vin is Virus Disease In nineteen. Because it first appeared in people in two thousand nineteen and because it's new and people haven't seen it before it's making people very sick. Is that because because people haven't seen it before none of us have developed any immunity to it. So we're more likely to get it if we come in contact with it because our body has no built up way to try to prevent us from getting it. Because everybody's never seen it before. Yes that's one reason so the bodies have never seen it before We don't have any way for our body to recognize and develop a immune response to it so none we can get very sick and that is one of the reasons we are so concerned about it because we have seen that some people Who can get this disease? Get very sick. You said that that lack of any immune response is one reason. Are there other reasons why humans are likely to get this one or why there's concern about humans getting it? Well one of the reasons we get concerned about humans getting it's not. We've seen that people who are older when they got it tend to get more sick and that is one of the reasons we are so worried about it. My name is Tara and I'm turning eleven and I live in New York City and my question is how do viruses mutate? Hi My name is Millie and eleven New Jersey and I was six years old and my question is. How did the current virus start? Where did this disease come from? We aren't exactly sure where the disease has come from. Belli's one thing. We are still working to understand but we do know that there are lots of viruses in the world and based on our best guess right now where other chronic illnesses come from we right now think that it may have come from bats and there may have been some sort of intermediate host and from there came to humans however that has not been confirmed yet and they are still working to identify where it came from so it may have come from an animal animal's could have had this before humans ever got it and somehow transferred from animals into the first humans who got it absolutely correct. How does this virus spread in people? Virus spreads mainly from people either sneezing or coughing by their droplets. So that is why it is important if you sneeze or cau- to cover your mouth so you can't spread it to other people if you cover your mouth with your hand while you cough and then you put your hand down on your desk or your table or hold hands with your friend. Can you transmit the virus that way? Well sort of so if your hand has a virus on it and then you touch your hand and then your hand to get scars on it and your friend than touches the mouth or the nose order is than they can give themselves the virus if they don't wash clean their hands before they touch their mouth their nose or there is so it's very important to wash your hands before touching your face and critique. Oh we mentioned a minute ago. That people who've had a cold have had a corona virus. What are the symptoms of this particular corona virus covert nineteen so the most common symptoms of this corona virus? Or going to be things that make you not feel very good so a fever a cough and feeling tired and having maybe some muscle aches. Those are the most common initial symptoms. You're going to have when you have this

Corona Washington Infectious Disease Society Of Fever Twenty Twenty Kovic Critique Polly Soccer Football Chicago Spokane Henry Oxford Cova New Jersey Ohio New York City
Big Changes Are Coming To Chuck E. Cheese

Tim Conway Jr.

01:12 min | 3 years ago

Big Changes Are Coming To Chuck E. Cheese

"Chucky cheese is the big news right now big changes big changes at Chucky cheese you know a lot of people like to take the kids there right should be an age cut off the I don't like when fifteen year old to run around and I was gonna say they switch it up no kids now I I don't like the fifteen year old kids running over the four year old kids you know running around I'm like that all right here you go Chucky cheese big changes ladies and gentleman but there is a of the giant dancing now said Chucky cheese appears to be over the company is undergoing a sweeping rebrand they're getting rid of all its human sized dancing animatronics replaced with an interactive video dance floor also disappearing the famous play tokens rides and games with L. feature play passes that are pre loaded toddlers will also have their own play area and hopefully they'll be able to get rid of smell as well it's a great shot dead shot at Chucky cheese was that a BC that's a great great shot man that is right over the bow toddlers will also have their own play area and hopefully they'll be able to get rid of smell as well

BC Chucky Cheese Fifteen Year Four Year
Is 5G safe? (The 3:59, Ep. 575)

The 3:59

04:18 min | 4 years ago

Is 5G safe? (The 3:59, Ep. 575)

"The. Welcome to the three fifty nine or about your chain actor, five Jeep promises to radically change your lives, giving us a lightning fast connection potentially powering everything around us. But there's always been a lingering concern about five and cellular signals general. It's really the concern about whether or not, this is actually dangerous after all uses higher frequency radio airwaves five particular will require a lot more cell towers around you that's making people really nervous. So we had our own Maggie ridden breakdown this issue. And well, it's complicated. Technically, all this radiation, really any heat that we give off considered radiation, but cell signals including five G don't fall into that spectrum of harmful radiation, that would actually breakdown, your yourself something like something you'd find with an x Ray or a nuclear power plant, so no studies found a direct link between cell phones and cancer or fertility or any other kind of health issues. But there's a big but is that the World Health Organization sort of left open the? Ability that are f- signals are causing genyk critics say that. They're just haven't been enough adequate studies to prove that science. You need a lot of studies, you need to have different variables taken out of the equation. You can't be like okay, all we're going to do you're going to be subject to five waves, as opposed to WI fi, microwaves or any of those other items or even other people who are radiating heat. So there's lots of different factors on this. So it's just flat out scientists take a lot of time to figure this out, but at times, figured out, sixty will be here. Right. I think that's the big problem. I think this is an issue had with cell cell phone service generals. We don't have five note tests on by the time we do have the network to get those adequate tests were already years into five G exposure, and everyone sort of moved on. Right. And so, yeah, there really isn't sorry, say there isn't a clear. Answer is whether or not it's dangerous. We get we only know that it might be. Yeah. Maybe not I'm leaning towards probably as dangerous as four G bribing, assuming four. Gee is dangerous. That's the thing right there. No say's have really conclusively linked four G to anything. And so the World Health Organization has left open calls it a potentially carcinogenic cereal. But they also say coffee and pickled vegetables and also heard burnt ends can cause. Yeah. All kinds of different things that can be related to cancer or at least be connected to a next up YouTube may face fines from investigation by the Federal Trade Commission, according to the Washington Post YouTube is already reconsidering changing big Elms of service, including the algorithm that recommends what you watch next part of this bigger bait scrutiny over the, you know how it manages content, whether what the balance is between freedom of speech versus potentially harmful content, and this particular case is talking about the child the Coppola where it comes to collect data from children under thirteen without parental consent FTC had an issue with tick tock tick tock that musically. And they actually settled for a s- fine of five point seven million dollars, which at the time was the largest finally settled, if the FTC is looking into YouTube, and they have to figure out kind of some kind of settlement of Suming, this kind of violation of this law, this kind of settlement might be very, very, very, very large. Yes. If, if I boy, seven's a drop in the bucket for for you to take talks a small. Company, probably a bigger blow for them. But yeah, you can imagine this fine would be a lot more significant. Last-minute Mitee, study out says that it can use to figure out how pizzas made is keep breakdown, how this would work. Yes. So this, this. It's using neural networks and what it does taking this giant collection of images of pizzas from Instagram. What this tool can do it can deconstruct piece from layer to layer, two layer two layers can figure out the topping the cheese, the sauce and the way it was the cross was cooked. So that seems a little bit nuts. And I was looking at see what other applications are in the study, they mentioned this could be good for salads, hamburgers sandwiches, but other applications outside of food would be digital fashion shopping assistance shirt, under that blazer. What's at teacher weren't under that shirt scary? But also useful, potentially essentially, I've of casino Chang actor. Thanks.

Youtube World Health Organization Federal Trade Commission WI RAY Washington Post Suming Coppola Five G Four G Seven Million Dollars