36 Burst results for "Charles Manson"

Bloomberg Radio New York
"charles manson" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Manson Family is being recommended for parole Michael kassner has more Patricia krenwinkel and the other followers of cult leader Charles Manson were convicted of murder for the 1969 killing of actress Sharon Tate and several others and for the murders of businessman Leo LaBianca and his wife rosemary krenwinkel is now 74 years old and is the longest serving female inmate in the California prison system On Thursday state prison officials said krenwinkel has been found suitable for parole the decision still has to be reviewed by the parole board and by the governor I'm Michael castner A South Carolina dog named pebbles now holds the record for the oldest dog in the world The toy fox terrier from Taylor's was awarded the accomplishment at the age of 22 years and 59 days old her owner Julie Gregory says pebbles is like a wild teen who loves to sleep during the day and is up all night I'm Brian shook And I'm Charlie pellet At Bloomberg world headquarters The S&P 500 Index has broken a 7 week losing streak this week rallying 6.6% Best week since November of 2020 Liz young is head of investment strategy at social finance This is not a time when you try to chase and call a bottom call a peek call an inflection point because honestly inflection points are happening daily Liz young of SoFi but for investors one of the big questions is inflation has it peaked or has it paused Lori calvasina is head of U.S. equity strategy at RBC capital markets So look economics team has been optimistic that we were going to get some moderation So I would say that we're in that moderation camp and that even if we haven't absolutely seen the peaks that it's still coming and the trend is going to be more favorable going forward Lori calvasina of RBC capital markets at palumbo wealth management CEO Phil palombo told us he's concerned about a potential recession on what that might mean for equity markets The peak to 12 drawdown on average is 35% Somewhere around there So there's definitely more room to go in terms of where we could pay the potential EB Phil palombo the CEO of Colombo wealth management so stocks rallied as economic data confirmed consumer demand remains strong and inflation is cooling The S&P 500 Index rally two and a half percent today on lighter than normal volume ahead of the holiday weekend all of the 11 major S&P 500 industry groups advanced S&P up 100 points today the Dow is up 575 up by 1.8% NASDAQ rallied 390 up 3.3% Global news 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quicktake powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries I'm Charlie palette This is Bloomberg This is masters in business with Barry riddles on Bloomberg radio My special guest this week is Adam Parker He is the founder of tri variant research previously he was global director of research and U.S. equity strategist at Sanford C Bernstein He was the number one institutional investor ranked analyst in semiconductors before he became Morgan Stanley's chief U.S. equity strategist and director of global quant research Adam Parker welcome to Bloomberg Thanks Thanks for having me here I've been looking forward to having this conversation for a while and I have to start with your very interesting academic background You have 3° in stats not just undergraduate at Michigan but a PhD from Boston University and in the middle you got a master's in biostatistics at UNC Chapel Hill tell us about that Yeah well back then statistics wasn't as cool as it is now So I didn't know 30 years ago I was going to turn into all the rage and that everyone was kind of one of major in data science and analytics I was always more of a math guy and I liked having problem sets and then going and playing sports and I didn't want to have to read chaucer or whatever all the other miserable people were doing So kind of motivated me to be a little bit more analytical So but the question that raises biostatistics is where you always planning on a career in finance or was that you know that was more the biostatistics department was in the school of public health at UNC and applied statistics applying that age to mostly medical data But it was more about learning analytics and programming and apply it to anything So my PhD thesis was about missing data in a healthcare setting but as you know missing data exists everywhere including a finance So it turned out to be pretty applicable So how frustrating is it to you to see either newspaper headlines or social media where people just lack a rudimentary understanding of basic statistics and probability You know I think the big challenge is as you know because you're good at this is taking things that are somewhat complicated and then making them sound like they're simple and explaining them to everybody I think the average intellect of people watching and reading mainstream media is still in the junior high or high school level So that's what you've got to resonate with I romanticize the investment community is slightly above that but it probably is less above that than you think Right So I will talk about tri vary it a little later I love the name I wrote a Bloomberg column years ago Single variable analysis is for soccer So something like that And so I have to talk to you about your name Of course But with all that stat background how did you get to Sanford C Bernstein You know in those days I finished my PhD in the late 90s I had some buddies that seem to be getting rich on Wall Street and I.

Stephanie Miller
Fresh update on "charles manson" discussed on Stephanie Miller
"We are on a fast track to an omnibus bill and it is difficult to oversight champion when house Republicans haven't even sent a subpoena to Hunter Biden. make So it's the hard to argument that oversight is the reason to continue when it sort of looks like failure theater, failure theater, Bonnie and Clyde are doing the impression of the Republican caucus. Goodness. So was that Matt Gaetz saying that the impeachment hearings have been a complete failure? Okay. Yes. All right. They all hate each other. It's fantastic. Oh, they also all tape each other. This is fantastic. Yes. Tennessee Republican is accusing Kevin McCarthy of mocking him for praying. And so he Yeah. So, uh, yeah, he was on CNN timber chat. A Republican of Tennessee was shown a video clip of McCarthy in which he denied ever mocking Burch at for praying over his vote on whether to house McCarthy house is speaker. He said, heck, I have a recording of his son, meaning he recorded conversation with Kevin. So that's why he didn't. He voted to. He won't talk about it. Yes. I'm sorry, but like I just find this so shocking. What exactly did he say to mock your faith, sir? It really doesn't matter. It was just the fact that I had publicly stated on your station, I think this morning that I, that I was praying about it and I was, you know, I had two paths to go either go with my or friend go with my conscience. And I was praying that God would tell me what to do, which he does. Yeah. What would Jesus do? Jesus would go to vacate. Oh, after right he got finished appearing in court with Trump. Did you see that sketch that Trump put out of him, Jesus sitting next to him in court? Yeah, I think Jesus would say he had a thing with a guy. Yeah. A court thing. Yeah. I don't. Well, that's why. Wasn't it? Karen yesterday said that wasn't Jesus or suited. That wasn't Jesus. That was Charles Manson. Charles Manson. Yeah. It did look like Charles Manson. OK, one more per chat when someone mocks me like that and mocks my religion. And honestly, the was pretty clear about God being mocked. So I bet that that that's what sealed it right there for me. I said this is not that this is not the quality or the character of person that I want as speaker of the United States. You Well, know I totally believe McCarthy mocked religion. I can we just say one more time, fight, fight, fight, fight. Big bag of brats. You're all so unbelievably awful. Like you're all like small fruit snowflakes, your little rat snowflakes. You're all equally awful in different unique ways. McCarthy was so bad at his job that He mocked a person whose vote he desperately needed. Yes. Yes. I I don't get how you can be that bad at your job. Well and on the douche canoe scale apparently Apparently the acting speaker is trying to out douche, the head douche canoe, the departing douche canoe. Kevin McCarthy there he goes up the river. Goodbye douche canoe. We've been talking about this all morning, I but still just can't. I can't. Okay. Representative

The Manic Pixie Weirdo
"charles manson" Discussed on The Manic Pixie Weirdo
"It's not a shot that anybody's intelligence or anything like that. People learn differently and do different things. Right. So if I'm talking to someone in a sales setting, I'm trying to sell you something. And I realize you're talking really slow and somber paste and blah, blah, blah. I'm going to match your tone in your pace to try to make you feel more comfortable with me, make you see yourself and me, make you figure stuff out. Yeah. And it works about a 100% of the time. Did I not freak you out? Yeah, yeah, yeah. When I read a book, I can't remember what it's called, but it's in my audible, why listen to a book, I didn't read it, but when he was going over it, like teaching me how to do this thing, basically. I was like, this is ridiculous. You have to be super responsible with it. I probably wasn't responsible for me to just put that out to the entire world like that. You just created a new cult leader. And you just told somebody how to create the next code. And so, I mean, it is what it is, I guess. The book's been out for like 60 years, so this is not new information. No, it's just, I'm just giving it to the masses. It wasn't real bite sized pieces. It wasn't written by Charles Manson, was it? No. But it is effective. Right now. But as I said, be responsible about it. Don't use it. Don't manipulate people. That's not what the point of it was. But isn't that what but isn't she was certain extent trying to get somebody to agree with you, a form of manipulation? I would say yes. I would say I say there's levels of manipulation. Trying to persuade someone's the lowest level. I'm into a zombie that's gonna follow you every whim. But listen, I have to argue against myself for a second here. In terms of just one thing, being the responsible person with the information that I have, I think that using the techniques I just described is maybe a step or two above just simply trying to persuade someone. You're definitely you're definitely hacking the brain. Like that's what you're doing. You're literally like you're Tapping into their subconscious where they can't even make a decision by themselves. They don't realize it's happening. Right. Right. Yeah, for sure. Do they teach us that math like a marketing school or whatever? I don't know. I was a really powerful person. Yeah, tons of couches. My boss was my boss. My boss basically was trying to tell me how to set myself apart from other retail salespeople and how to take the next step. What's the difference between a sales like a day trading salesperson versus a retail salesperson? You know what I mean? And it's very minute, honestly. But it's the ability to learn human behavior. Where the willingness to learn, not the ability, because anybody can learn. Right, right. But the willingness to do it. So he told me about the book. And like I said, I can't remember what it is, but..

The Manic Pixie Weirdo
"charles manson" Discussed on The Manic Pixie Weirdo
"Child development. I mean, there's no way to know now what that did to him is a child and to his brain development. But I mean, if the research shows anything, it's that your brain is a sponge. Pretty much until you're about like 1617 18. Right. And you just absorb and those first 5 years of your life are like the spongiest of the sponge. Absolutely absorbing everything. In the first thousand days or three years of your life right around at that point, 85% of core brain development occurs. By the time you're 5, that's 95%. Yeah. So in those first 5 years of life, your brain is basically becoming hardwired. And yes, that 5% can make a huge difference. Don't get me wrong. You know, if you get to be ten years old and you go through a tsunami that devastates your entire town. That is a trauma and that's something that's going to affect the way that your brain works. But again, 95% by the age of 5. And we look at somebody like Charles Manson or any other number of children who go through let's just focus for a second on neglect, just neglect. People look at that as if it's like a lesser, a lesser than type of situation. We end up doing that. Can we stop comparing one horrible thing to the other? Like my horrible thing is worse than your horrible thing. So can we functionality? There's no functionality to the suffering Olympics. Like we really don't need to play that game. We just need to stop doing this. We've all had shitty things happen to us, okay? So we can just agree that it's all shitty. It all sucks. Let's just move on from there, yeah. Yeah. So you know, you look at something like that, but neglect in a lot of ways even more than physical abuse or even sexual abuse in some cases. Neglect can be on the mind the hardest thing that a child can go through. You know, first of all, yes, you're dealing with things like lack of nutrition, lack of bathing, lack of clean clothes, et cetera, all those basic needs. But beyond that, neglect is when a caregiver pays you no attention. It's not saying I don't care about you. It's not saying I don't have time for you. It's saying you don't exist. Yeah, it's.

The Manic Pixie Weirdo
"charles manson" Discussed on The Manic Pixie Weirdo
"Oh my God. And that stuck with me, you know? And so that sort of thing really humanized people for me, right? Yeah. You know, and I have a hard time looking at adults and not thinking about them in terms of what they were like as kids. You know? Yeah. And so that's a really big thing for me. You know, when I look at these killers or rapists or kidnappers or what have you, I mean, these violent individuals and I just go at some point in time. Toddler. This is a 5 year old. This is, you know, I mean, even if they did disturbing things, you know? You know, a 5 year old who's setting fires. That's a concern, you know? But at the same time, you just go, there's a need there, that's not being addressed. Let's address that need and maybe that fixation will go away. We don't know a 100%. But yeah, I just look at them as if they're kids. And that's such a huge thing to me. So, you know, when I decided to really focus on what makes violent offenders, you know, I had to I had to really look into it in terms of I don't want to go into an episode saying, so Charles Manson was XYZ. Because everybody's going to go, oh God, I don't want to listen to this or they're going to go well I know everything he did, right? Right. So instead, I don't say the offender's names until the end of the episodes. Right. And I do so because I want people to go on that journey with them. And to kind of feel it and kind of go, oh, oh, that's awful. Oh, that's terrible. And look, not all of them have terrible backgrounds. That's one of the interesting things too. And we're going to have a few we're going to have a few of the seasons season 5 that do not have any indicators in their childhood that would lead to them being violent offenders. It's going to be a very different kind of analysis. So you can see that'll be interesting. Oh, definitely. Because it makes you search for those similarities. What are the things? What are the outlier things? You know, about these people. There's, yeah, I mean, there was you'd have to look it up. I forget because I've always gravitated towards it too because I want to know, first of all, I have a theory that like the entire I mean, okay, so they say that the earth is only X number of years old, right? And then humans have only been on the earth for like 12,000 years or whatever. So I kind of have this theory that pretty much puts the human race like as a species, we're really probably our collective mind is only about maybe 5 or 6 years old. Which means that we don't have as a species. We only have the skills that like a 5 or 6 year old would have to communicate with not only just each other, but with the rest of the living entities that the planet that we live on kind of a thing..

Shut Up I Love It
"charles manson" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It
"But you know digs deep and characters. In one thing does. It focuses more on charles manson and his crew and they did and how. They go and terrorize people for fun. Like sneak into their house and lay in bed with them and stuff. And i'm getting big charles. Manson crew vibes from everything. You're saying it's like you're just Invoking terror everywhere you go for your own odd pleasure. Well you know. It's funny because i had a therapist. Who wants who said. I was the charles. Manson of therapy patients. And i wasn't sure what i think she just felt. So mostly terrorized. You know and away. I think i think that's again another moment of insight a having so many moments we are into all over its revelatory. I mean. I could have saved so much money therapy. Just talking to you too. Because you're out you're unlock. All the pieces are coming together. I'll just you know. I gotta say that. Yeah they in fact. Yeah in fact Don't be surprised if you have a a zoom. Invite for me at once a week. Same time for my next appointment of therapy. And oh i have to ask sure the demiana are you wearing a panty right now. Oh good me. Check I am not and why did you have to check like where you feeling or looking like i know why guy no without having to check i know right away. The answer is yes for me. Yeah i. I'm i'm a lady. I live in flux. i'm in motion. I'm on the move. I'm on the go. Things are changing a lot of moving parts and the status of panty. It could it. Could it could change from moment to moment. One moment pennies. On next moment it's panties off. I mean you know. I you sexually active these days than the other. I mean i sexually active. Yes sexually voracious. Yes he just thinks abandoned like what just expand on that. Yeah yeah It's very getting like the psalter them iyana you don't you. Don't cough empowered thank you. I saw i appreciate you. See that in me. You know sex positive..

Rocket
'Holmes Holmies': Theranos CEO Lookalikes Draw Attention as Trial Starts
"Homes has groupies now. Philosophy reported on homes. This trial finally starting. They're doing jury selection. It's very hard because everybody knows about her. To the extent that there are women showing up For to get into the trial looking like elizabeth homes yet. The trial kicked off. Today's we record this on on wednesday. They've given their opening statements and She is groupies. Just like just like charles. Manson it charles manson is. I'm marrying. i'm. I'm not comparing her to charles. I'm saying that dressing up in a certain way like dear leader as fans and going to a court case criminal court proceedings. I'm sorry it is. That's not even that it's not even a stretch. That's literally what the manson girls did.

Just The Sip
"charles manson" Discussed on Just The Sip
"Can say we want that. You know you can't. It's hard to play the game when you're not the person making the rules. You know what. I mean as you can keep changing the rules. That's all i think. It just took steps to get to the point where we are. We have people of different backgrounds and and and and color variations and experiences that are now in position that call the shots because as an actor even today day. I can have an opinion. Look here's about what. I have to say more about my s made. We stand what we're told and we do what we say you know but in the day everything starts to create a process. So what's so beautiful about show out of black sketch. Show is even we. They all the time. Black people were not a monolith right. So writer's room the diversity in black women it's all black female writers wrote but even in that the amount of diversity that in that rome allows us to tap expenses from all over. So i think what's great is a said. Now you've got creative. Like an isa ray who started out they to the platforms that we have now. She's started off on online and look where that got her now. We've done the work we've proven we asked but now we're no longer asking anymore. Who like now position where we're making retaining control and we're telling our stories and people are getting on board with it. They're now asking for the content now wanting to see the stories and and the beauty of a culture because it is celebrated in this something that is it's refreshing to see that when you look at the decades decades decades of the same type of stores told over and over again. The audience is pallet is diverse. And it wants more. You know when you go out every every week every friday like every now and again you want to exit labor different variety. Give me the menu on the left. By the way. I i have to know because i watched a black lady sketch show and i wonder if your friends are ever leg beach. Did you tell that story about that. Time to the writers because that seems that seems like us they did you go ahead and tell the producers now like literally as after have zero in the writing. We'll get on it and we can improvise. But i do know a lot of like for example like asha programs also star in the show lake. She does her and robina heard him say that comes up those come from like personal experiences. But i think what's great is. They started colonels by via in the room and everybody gets chime in and create the sketch as far the right as roma's concerned so i'm sure carl's people's personal lives that they told me they probably need chitchatting. Those writers rooms like while in the right kind of tea. But it's so fun that it so there is no identity in the sense that it's not so specific that's not relatable to everybody unanimity. Like you say the girl tonight. Wait. did you know. I had no idea about your story. But it's just perfect that it's relatable because we all have kind of a similar experience in the how we react to respond to things a lot of fun. It's so fun to if you guys have not seen the show what i love about. This show is every sketch is about eight ish minutes like it reminds me of what in living color was what mad. Tv was back in the day where you could sit down. You didn't have to watch ten episodes before you could skip through the episode but my favorite thing about episodes is you always know the character like we all have to go to the club. We all had the girl who played mash in high school was started tired about what he was going to get. Everyone knows somebody so for me. Black lady sketch show is what wayne's brothers were creating but with an extra layer. Yeah because we all know the funniest aman tv. With jeff wilson. Like the blackley on mad. Tv was deborah walson. Who yeah he was a queen and you know why she probably stood out is because she got to play stories again. They see other places and it has to polynesia. Debra wilson is like hello governor. Wilson like we will look but again argue maintenance house bring that extra off to the table and she was doing things no other person that cast could do because they were unique to a black woman's experience so i think also genius is even the title of the show. A black lady sketch. Show robin cole. Purpose at the beginning was for to be not be story about. Robin didi and friends. It was more of like this is a representation of a black woman ping woman pick a black story. It's not defined in the ought to one experience and hope that this is one of many future shows that put him on a platform like this so this is a black lady schedule now but hopefully there would be more a black whatever in the future. I think that's what's so great. It's interesting because i wonder if you get the same thing that i do in you know. I'm on a daytime. tv show. We talk a lot about things. Race comes up in conversations and just for instance other day we were talking about this woman whose mother had a ridden affair with charles manson while he was in jail and then she now has one with another convicted killing increase. Watts and my comment was yeah. It's kinda strange. It's always random wide ladies who are having these kinds of sort of like assorted affairs with murderers and the white lady on my show. Said you know what you're absolutely correct and this fan tweeted at me and she was like you know. How would you feel if i said a random black. It's always random black woman. And i thought about it and i was. I don't know but i'm not afraid to talk about race. And the way. I talk about racist not in a in a racist way or oppress somebody else. I talk about it for comedy. Do you guys ever get the people that say well what we did it. Why lady comedy show would you guys before they don't need to watch. The show is just the title along turns. Some people are in it just like the word. Black is such a strong powerful word. It's so strange how it turned terms. People's it just upsets upset stomach. It makes the man why fido what off. And it's like sir ma'am had troll. Have you watched the show at relax. Take effect and it's also the fact that shows to exist you never you never explore the reason why our show has to exist now. Why it's doing so well because there's been some of us like not having misdeed at the table. Yes so like. I was one of the many black women who got to test for. Snl years back when keenan thompson had made the point that where the black women on us to now so it's like the fact that these questions have to be asked. You should be annoyed at the fact that black people wanna see table and wants to play saying energy unexplored. Why do conditions are the way they are for show like ours to have to exist. Yes our show. No one would ever get to experience the layers in the range. The us on the show have been able to. Where else would. I have been able to have the opportunity to do that. So all hell all hell awful. Hbo for giving us this opportunity in this platform to do things. And i've been at this game for minute and i have not gotten the same amount of love and and feedback in appreciation for my talent and range and to be able to do and even apply a lot of my skills to.

KIRO Radio 97.3 FM
"charles manson" Discussed on KIRO Radio 97.3 FM
"So Sherry Wind Bill Cosby was released from prison last week at horror came over my body of fear a cold sweat if you will. I got tunnel vision. I started to shake uncontrollably. I began hysterically vomiting, and it's because I realized in that very moment that a crime had been perpetrated against humanity. Which is that we would have to start revisiting Jello jokes and putting pop jokes and funny sweater jokes. And I thought, if I never have to hear another Bill Cosby impression, like a C minus D Plus Bill Cosby impression in my life, I will be a happy man. And the day of the day of I was talking to my producer Shane And he does on air a Bill Cosby impression and I immediately I feel just my heart sink. Tears start welling up in my eyes. I can't live in this world anymore. He has to go back has to go back to prison, so we don't have to deal with these jokes anymore. They're everywhere. No one will just get off of that Those two things That Bill Cosby enjoys putting Pops and Jell O. And what war weird sweaters for eight years of his life? It seems like that, and the fact that he's a horrific rapist. Those are the things that people just simply cannot stop talking about. So, um, there's an article out from In that order. There's an article out from the Hollywood reporter saying that he's some people are considering booking the guy for an interview multiple networks even though he is a persona non grata in Hollywood. There are people still saying that Hey, we would love to interview the guy. Now I ask you as a major market media talent, you get a phone call. It's um, the Jello Corporation. They're representing Cosby. They want to know if they can do a jello sponsored putting pop sponsor uh, interview exclusive interview you, Bill Cosby in a big old jello, Uh, symbol right behind you guys, Right where you're going to ask the hard hitting questions. You're going to go deep with Bill Cosby and try to see ascertain To the best of your ability. How much of a sociopathic rapist Bill Cosby is. Would you take that money? Would you engage with that? That's a great question. I don't think that I would, and I looked. I looked this up because I remembered it vaguely Jack, But I couldn't remember exactly the details of it. Back in 2000 and 60 J had been interviewed by Fox. I don't know if you remember this. He had a book that came out called if I did it, and he was his kind of hypothetical. Accounting of what he really would have done if he had murdered. You know, people. It was a bizarre thing Anyways. Fox did the interview, and then they pulled it because people were outraged over the fact that they would indulged O. J at all. And I'm wondering if this is going to be the case with with Bill Cosby and Bill Cosby didn't murder anybody, but he hurt a lot of people like 60 women. And do we really? I mean, as as the public do we really want to slow down for that car accident to take a look and see what's inside his head? I mean, do you care? I would. I wouldn't. I don't. I don't care about it. You know, I I'm glad he did some time in prison. He's an old man. Now his life has been ruined. His career has been ruined. That's good enough for me. Okay? I don't need to hear anymore from Bill Cosby. But I would imagine that there will be a media outlet that will think that this is a good get. So let's just play a hypothetical that I Cairo says Jack Stein. We got Bill Cosby. We got him for three hours. He's going on nights and I go. Okay. Uh, What kind of questions What I ask him like, how do you keep it? Interesting. How do you keep it engaging? I don't think that he would even want to address the allegations that women made about him. So I would try to Would try to poke the bear a little bit. I would try to see if I could get him to pop like in the Frost Nixon kind of thing where, you know they're really trying to push a guy who otherwise doesn't want to talk. I might try to. I might try to irritate him in some way. Or maybe. Or maybe another thing I might do is like what if I get a bunch of drinks like a bunch electric eel and stuff like that, and I put it all around the studio. We don't drink any of it. But there's you know, whiskey and in Spanish fly and all these other stuff that he claims to have used her was reported to be used. And we don't mention it, but it's there. Do you think I could trigger him into saying something breaking down having some kind of admission there live on Cairo night. I think you would. You would break down first, because obviously you have been traumatized by the pudding Pops and the jello and things like that. So my money would be more on on Jack completely melting down. But have you ever seen anybody interview like a serial killer? Like I saw it was on Dateline or something, and I don't remember which correspondent it was. But they interviewed Charles Manson and the interviewer thought it was really important. I guess to be sort of hostile to him, because I don't know that people want you to be nice to them, You know? I mean, would you be really nice to Bill Cosby? Or would you feel some obligation to kind of Be like, All right, sit over here, right? Right, because, you know he did all these terrible things. Yeah. Wow, That's okay. So if it's me, and this is not a joke, I'm not going to go for the joke on this one. I think I would start yelling at the guy. I think I would be irate. I think I'd really get my I've got a really small index finger, but it's very aggressive. And I would pointed that I would point out is a fun fact of value. My goodness. Yeah, I've got little lady hands. I've got doll hands. Basically, they're not man's hands. But they're like little doll hands and I would just point at Bill Cosby and I would ream the guy I would if the interview was 30 seconds. If it was 15 seconds, it wouldn't make any difference to me..

Let's Start A Cult
"charles manson" Discussed on Let's Start A Cult
"Manson and the family a few months later on july twenty fourth nineteen seventy. Their trial began. There was no doubt that charles had orchestrated the murders however that didn't stop several members of his family from continuing to support him. In fact. kathy. Gillis kitty lead singer sandy. Good and brendan mccain. All kept a vigil throughout the entire trial kneeling on the hot sidewalk outside the los angeles hall of justice with their shaved heads bowed in solidarity some carve xs into their forehead like they were still doing literally whatever he told them or did they just do it so they saw him do it and then they did the same thing and then they turn because it's his started as an act before it became a swastika so they were describing him. That's not great that is usually you. What kind of power and manipulation. He had over them that even after he's arrested not even telling them anything they're still just following blindly and they shaved their heads and carter xs on their him. So what was the whole deal was shaving. Their heads like why. Why did they do that. Maybe it's just way too hot off gets you man i honestly i'm not sure why they shaved their heads. I don't think they even knew. Yeah it could've just been at that point. You're probably going crazy from the heat. The defense put up a good fight but the evidence was just too overwhelming and impossible to refute. They also had to deal with the sentiment of horrified american public. Who couldn't stomach the idea how much a bunch of wealthy people living in a huge gated mansion was brutally killed by a group whom they perceived to be mere drugged up hippies which is fair No all the parents that are like telling their kids hall. You can't do drugs. You don't wanna be a hippy. You're gonna turn out to this and they're like man we're just about peace and love and then this happens and the parents like odd told you. Yeah i going to be honest. I think this this had a huge influence on on america when it comes to like drug legalization i think then nixon got elected so yeah like it. Both of these rightback are back to back. Why were the state that we're in today. You guys taxing drugs for years and you'd be it'd be great right. I never murdered anyone high on that you remember i remember. That's true. Are there pawprint sir or any any bloodstains your house. She tried to say that our kids drawn on. The walls didn't look like crown. All of those involved in the tate labianca massacre were ultimately found guilty on june twenty-fifth nineteen seventy-one charles. Manson was convicted of first degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder which landed him. The death penalty capital punishment however was by the california supreme court the following year which was why his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. Which if there's anyone who probably deserved the death penalty might have been him. My you might have deserved it. During his incarceration charles reportedly received more mail than any other prisoner in the united states. Most of these containing questions regarding his motivations given that he apparently had no personal connection with any of the victims and the tate labianca murder they also asked how he managed to turn a group of liberal peace loving and free thinking use into mass murders cruel enough to kill a pregnant woman which are fair questions drugs drugs. Yeah well that's a lot of people do assume there's more to that. But that's a lot of conspiracy With the fbi and right mind control and probably bullshit but you never know alyce alone is not going to make you murder walnut all but it makes them very very susceptible to bullshit preaching from somebody that they think is the son of god. Yeah i guess my only push back to that would be that. I've i've covered quite a few call to this point and someone can control young people without drugs. There's a lot of those as well. I think the drugs definitely maybe worked quicker into him controlling them and maybe took it to a further extent than most other calls that i've covered but for younger people. They are just mostly looking for some sort of answer to life's questions. They're not getting it from from life. I and so they go. Searching and a lot of them find like charismatic leaders and start to follow them. And so i i would say i would argue. It probably wasn't just. The drugs probably played a part but like these young girls like he knew exactly who he was. Preying on most of them had like huge abandonment. Issues were incredibly young. They didn't have the best relationship with their families and things patty said in one of her interviews was that you know she joined the group and then she immediately slept with manson and he was the first person to ever even tell her that she was beautiful and she says from that moment on like he literally could do no wrong in her eyes. Yeah that and that's what it is. It's it's young people who don't necessarily know any better and eastbound along. Yeah yeah and belong in a group that that will be welcome you. And it's not like he just not like as susie creatively ruby was like are we hate. Black people like boiling a frog in water. You slowly raise the temperature and before long the frogs dead. That's a morbid description by that's basically what it is they eases them into it. And then gets all these young and vulnerable people into group and then slowly raises the temperature of of the circumstances. And what the groups about so. I know a lot of them. A lot of the followers in interviews said that he just had this uncanny ability to make you feel like the most special person on earth. Just that alone. If you're you know and then you seek out vulnerable people that are coming from broken families or you know broke situation. Just that in in.

Let's Start A Cult
"charles manson" Discussed on Let's Start A Cult
"Cancel the beach. Boys especially those and like the actual mansion that they moved into denis's mentioned so he was renting it after her few months get sick of them and tried to kick them out but they just refused to leave and so ben is literally just moved out himself and the deal with it. Oh my god that's that is terrible on like just what a way to treat people and crazy to think. He had so much success with the beach boys after all this. Yeah that that's that's sad and we're going to start a hashtag canceled beach boys even though i don't know if any of them are alive anymore. Yeah that's true. After deciding that they and their ambitions had outgrown san francisco. The family relocated to the abandon span ranch which was situated south west of san fernando valley. It been in a popular filming location during the nineteen forties and nineteen fifties playing a role in many thrillers and westerns. At the time it also proved to be the perfect place for the family who turned the property into a compound reserve only for them in the belief that this was the first step. In surviving the apocalyptic racial war. Just saying that is ridiculous title. Not everything went to plan. Though when the summer of nineteen sixty nine came and went without a single black americans seeking revenge. The family decided to take matters into their own hands to kick start the conflict. They murdered gary heinemann charles long time acquaintance on july twenty fifth nineteen sixty nine. It'd be like oh the race were happen. Let's start our own like what a what we'll make the prophecy come true. It's i don't some backwards logic. But i guess that's every culture and that no follows This does not seem right then. Yeah the prophecy didn't come true. Guys yes i guess at that point for in your that baden. You're like have. I wasted my life and time just following this guy It's it's hard. Maybe face that reality so you convince yourself of anything else. I guess so. This is the time when his followers started dropping off because of that reason nothing pushed him to created himself yet. Which is a good point as well to help keep some kind of control over everything for sure. Charles told his followers that gary's death was for the public good a- privately. He had been under the impression that his friend had inherited approximately twenty thousand dollars which have gone a long way in sustaining them at the relatively remote span ranch with the promise of a big payout. He ordered his most loyal followers. Bobby oli susan atkins and mary brunner to carry out the murder. But despite the trio's best effort at torturing gary heinemann he refused to budge and continue to hurt that there was no money in this home frustrated. Charles slices ear and cheek with a samurai sword that he had brought with nice all. If you're going to a murder you might as well bring sam rice else bring. it's every nerds dream. They get finally use it unsurprisingly. This left a huge mess and twenty two year. old bobby. Soley was given the sorted task of cleaning everything up however he panicked and send ended up killing gary. This turned out for the best though with charles deciding that they would use the body of his old friend. To spark the apocalyptic interracial war that they had claimed would happen so always glass half full with charles day dipping their fingers into gary's blood bobby and the two girls wrote the words political pig on the wall of their victims home to further convince the authorities that it had been a racially motivated crime. They also drew appropriate which implied that the murder was committed by the controversial african american organization. The black panthers. I don't know if they thought that entirely. I guess their thinking on the fly here. But like why would the black panthers in like mark. The wall like to let everyone know that they did it. I don't think that accomplishes much worst way to try to frame them. Yeah be a little bit more subtle about. The police weren't convinced that gary had been killed by the black panthers obviously and a few days after the murder. They arrested bobby batali whom they found sleeping inside the victims car still in the bloody clark that he still in the bloody clothes. It's like you could've been anywhere else. You know what i mean. Basically should've just waited by the dead body. Just for them exactly yeah. He should've just waited and said i did. It was definitely not the black. Panthers arrest me now. So essentially what he did. He also attempted to conceal the knife that he had used in his trunk truck tire quickly and covered too so clearly. A mastermind In the end. Bobby was convicted of murder and sentenced with the death penalty which was later commuted to life. Imprisonment is the rest however came only a few days before the family committed the horrific massacres that they would eventually become known for. Yes so that's a. That's a heavy one hobby. It's tough because i know he comes out later on in life talking about how he felt he was influenced very strongly and like it. He can be blamed for the murders necessarily but yeah definitely not the smartest move to sleep in the car and not even try to get away with it unless these a hell of a drug man. That's true that's true. Whatever the tea was that. You mentioned on august ninth nine thousand nine hundred sixty nine charles. Manson ordered for members of his family. Ted watson suzanne atkins linden sabina and patricia krenwinkel to head up to eleven five zero to leo drive in los angeles where they were murdered. The people inside this property belonged to the music producer. Terry melcher who had once looked down on charles and his dreams of music career. At the time though the home had been leased to the actress sharon tate who was married to the world renowned film director roman polanski roman was away working on a movie set in europe though and his heavily. Pregnant wife was being visited by your friends. Jc bring wood jr inskeep. You cousy and abigail fuller fuller. Older folger's bolger family does the coffee. Oh yes she's the air to the are was damn. There's so many like cool little tidbits of facts in this story. Like 'cause i guess it is in hollywood right so everyone's related to someone and one of the guys that was there was her ex fiance was her was her ex fiance. Oh was sharon tasteless ex-fiancee. All four of them were inside the home on ceelo drive when the family broken upon which the put up a valiant struggle in a bid to save their lives however they were no match for charles followers who arm themselves.

Let's Start A Cult
"charles manson" Discussed on Let's Start A Cult
"I can't even speak so all the drugs. You guys are just exactly also helps the. He was a rule that his followers also had to do lsd. So it also helps when your audience just incredibly high as well absolutely i. It's it makes what watching terrible content that much more enjoyable. Which i think most people watching netflix can confirm on. They drank bella. Donna t all the time to you. So they weren't really fucked up. Yeah yeah they had my next sentence here the they were also high on drugs. The members of the family saw their leader as a figure akin to jesus christ a prophet. Whose words should be followed if they wanted a chance at life. So you could see how much they revered him. As you said whether it be off the drugs or or actually believing. His charisma charles enjoyed his status as the head of the family. He continued to harbour dreams of his music career. This let him to approach one of his friends. A music teacher named gary heinemann. Who in turn introduce them to dennis. Wilson one of the co founding members of the popular nineteen sixties rock band. The beach boys. Dennis loved the song that charles had come up with even going so far as to record one of them under the title never learn not to love he also arranged a meeting with the renowned producer. Terry melcher however this amounted to nothing and the disappointed charles returned to his family So kind of in the same arc is Hitler in a little bit here. Not to compare the two. They're buried different levels of terrible. But hitler applied to go to art school and got rejected. And you know under that's like it harbors a certain amount of anger. And and i think that begins to come after this as we'll probably see it's like that's where it took a turn for like darker more frenetic energy for him. Yeah white men are fragile and when when we are disappointed it doesn't go well in in history which is a very sad What was crazy about him meeting the meeting. Dennis from the beach boys as he moved in with dennis for months. Yeah him and his whole family and part of the reason that dennis really liked him was not because of his music because yeah mike basically treated them as sex slaves and made them have sex with whoever whenever they wanted so that he could do so charles could do whatever he wanted. Do we have to.

Let's Start A Cult
"charles manson" Discussed on Let's Start A Cult
"Sounds a little too crazy for me but not for tom cruise. Tom cruise danny said that. Sounds like my cup of tea on this couch right. Yeah so. I haven't done scientology. I keep flirting with the idea of that as well. So no man your last episode. Oh that'll be fun. I'll make it a five part series just to go there you go in inflames. Yeah well. I'm in canada. Maybe they can't reach me after prison. Charles headed off to san francisco california with only a guitar and a bag of hallucinogenic drugs to his name. Which is the best way to head to san francisco because any other way to go to california absolutely should they stop at the state border and make sure that you have at least those two items. Yeah they're like sir. Where's your guitar in your bag drums. He found the city's the city's bohemian and young atmosphere. Incredibly appealing believing it to be the perfect source of inspiration for his music. Thanks to his innate charisma to attract a small group of young adults who shared his interests and beliefs among them was twenty. two year old. Mary brunner a will wisconsin native. Who worked as a librarian. At the university of california's berkeley campus charles was a older mary. However this huge age gap didn't stop her from quickly falling in love with him enticed by the life he offered which was a far cry from the monotonous existence that she'd been leading he introduced her to hallucinate genyk drugs and her usage increase. Sodas her obsession with them. Yeah i mean being a librarian is definitely the monotonous pirates. Someone offers you drugs. You're going to probably go with just to get some spark in your life. Typically when you do more drugs you need more drugs. Yeah exactly who knows if she was actually into him or just the drugs and the drought for a lot of our something. That's very true. Actually after moving in together. Mary quitter cushy job and began preaching to others about charles ideologies and the life that he could provide them with with her persuasive words and his magnetism. They quickly amassed a small following by nineteen sixty eight thirty four year old charles had become the leader of a group that he referred to as the family it consisted of a like minded group youth who found themselves enthralled with sinister prophecies and religious teachings which combines science fiction with the occult and fringe psychology. So you know scientology basically. It's there's a lot of overlap. I think considering you took so many courses in particular charles sold them. On the idea that an apocalyptic war would soon lay waste to the united states paving the way for the family to gain fame. Power and dominance. He claimed to have experienced visions of the scene. Although experts would later claim that he'd been merely suffering from delusions. Which i think we probably could have all cast experts for that the beatles all about god and the beatles were talking directly through him. We can thought that the white album like that was his message to him. The helter skelter. Yeah the actually. That's the next next paragraph so here you're right on track. I should just let you take care of what i was gonna say. So how helter skelter lake. He thought he was convinced. That was the message to him about this crazy like coming like race war but honestly i think he just confused like the black power movement and he was like really high and he just wanted power and he was also mad that he wasn't a rockstar is a racist a huge as well. Yeah yeah yeah. You're exactly right with that. He he believed that the song helter skelter spoke to him and predicted an.

Let's Start A Cult
"charles manson" Discussed on Let's Start A Cult
"That was offered for. I'm gonna guess it wasn't. It was at a cafe like this is what we have under the counter. This is. This is what i brought into work today. So here you go. Yeah so pretty terrible. Start to his childhood already. You can clearly see where some of his repressed emotions come one. Hundred percent due to. His mother's indifference charles was instead shipped off to various relatives. All of whom failed to provide them with the warmth and welcoming home that he so badly craved for instance. Grandmother was a religious nut. Well one of his uncles frequently ridiculed his feminine nature. Another uncle committed suicide. Upon learning. That has properties would be seized even though he had been his nephews. Primary guardian at the time living with relatives did nothing for charles and so he attempted to reconcile with his mother in the hopes that she had discovered her maternal instincts during their time apart he was sorely disappointed though. Kathleen remained uninterested in playing the part of a mother to him overlooked by relatives and ignored by his own mother. Nine year old charles began to seek attention elsewhere. His shoplifting antics landed him at the guild School for boys in tara hoedt indiana. It wasn't long before here. This gave from the facility. Despite its strict security measures very wily. He's nine years old and he's shoplifting and getting i like escaping from basically prison which is pretty impressive. I'll give it to him. It's already showing that criminal mind very true. Yeah he's showing that he's smarter than the average hippy. Someone that we covered was at that same boy. School was lipstick killer. Bam think so interesting. What i have to. We have to go on this. What did the lipstick killers. So he was connected to the three murderers debatable. John douglas the fbi guy the mind hunter guy actually like backtracked not too long ago and said that he is convinced that william higher ends actually was not the killer. Very interesting and a supposedly. He murdered three women and that's why they call them the lipstick killer because he birdied widow. What was second murder. He either took like a tuba lipstick from the victim or apparently brought his own and wrote a message on the wall. Saying something like in just of you need to stop me now. I can't stop myself and that's how we get dubbed the lipstick killer okay. That's an interesting case. Definitely go check that out. It's kind of funny. How how they name killers back in the day. They're just like oh you use lipstick to write this one time. He's the lipstick killer now. Even though it sounded like he was crying for help so.

Let's Start A Cult
"charles manson" Discussed on Let's Start A Cult
"Born on november twelfth nineteen thirty four in cincinnati ohio charles. Manson was the son of a sixteen year old prostitute named kathleen who often started and ended the day with a bottle of liquor which nowadays is pretty common but back in the days not so much the typical friday night. yeah exactly it's it's pandemic. it's fun. She christened her son. Charles mills mattocks eventually changing his surname to the now infamous manson. When she married a local man named william eugene manson who worked at a dry cleaning business from the get-go kathleen showed little interest in being a mother to her son. During one instance. She took him to a cafe where a waitress who found. Young charles adorable. Joey asked if she could buy him in response. Kathleen said that her son could be changed for a pitcher of alcohol after finishing this she got up left him at the cafe and never looked back. It took charles uncle several days of frantically searching for him throughout the entire town before he managed to locate the waitress So you to our parents. I don't know. Have you ever come into someone asking you to buy your kid. That seems a little weird not yet. Maybe we just having enough places with him. Kids just aren't better door to god. My question is. I hope that that bottle was like a good one then at least some top shelf liquor that was offered for. I'm gonna guess it wasn't. It was at a cafe like this is what we have under the counter. This is. This is what i brought into work today. So here you go. Yeah so pretty terrible. Start to his childhood already. You can clearly see where some of his repressed emotions come one. Hundred percent

Let's Start A Cult
Taking an in-Depth Look at the Life of Charles Manson
"Born on november twelfth nineteen thirty four in cincinnati ohio charles. Manson was the son of a sixteen year old prostitute named kathleen who often started and ended the day with a bottle of liquor which nowadays is pretty common but back in the days not so much the typical friday night. yeah exactly it's it's pandemic. it's fun. She christened her son. Charles mills mattocks eventually changing his surname to the now infamous manson. When she married a local man named william eugene manson who worked at a dry cleaning business from the get-go kathleen showed little interest in being a mother to her son. During one instance. She took him to a cafe where a waitress who found. Young charles adorable. Joey asked if she could buy him in response. Kathleen said that her son could be changed for a pitcher of alcohol after finishing this she got up left him at the cafe and never looked back. It took charles uncle several days of frantically searching for him throughout the entire town before he managed to locate the waitress So you to our parents. I don't know. Have you ever come into someone asking you to buy your kid. That seems a little weird not yet. Maybe we just having enough places with him. Kids just aren't better door to god. My question is. I hope that that bottle was like a good one then at least some top shelf liquor that was offered for. I'm gonna guess it wasn't. It was at a cafe like this is what we have under the counter. This is. This is what i brought into work today. So here you go. Yeah so pretty terrible. Start to his childhood already. You can clearly see where some of his repressed emotions come one. Hundred percent

Ear Hustle
"charles manson" Discussed on Ear Hustle
"Happened in the seventies and eighties. I didn't know how to handle it. You know i'd be saying embarrassed and ashamed and Self conscious in now. I just tell people i don't talk about that that fears ago and I'm right up there with people. The first wave obsession with charles manson had faded in the seventies but it never totally went away and in the early nineties is started to reemerge. A few bands had put songs of his on their albums and kids were wearing t.

NewsRadio KFBK
"charles manson" Discussed on NewsRadio KFBK
"To the show. I certainly hope you're doing well on this Wednesday night. It cool 50 Wednesday to you, By the way, you're talking about minimum rage being raised to $15 an hour so the Democrats are trying to support To be clear by the way. It's not a given that all the Democrats would support a $15 minimum wage. Joe Manchin. Some Democrats senator from West Virginia, opposes it. For example, economic economists Excuse me disagree with some of the findings his wealth in the CBO. Especially that it would reduce employment by 1.4 million workers. So it's a tough one. We do feel for anyone who needs you know a razor needs during living. Obviously, we all do. But I'm curious what you guys are thinking about this Good call so far keeping coming. Brian is up in armored waiting. Hello, Brian. How are you? Just great. Thank you for taking my call. My pleasure, the benefit of your listening audience. I should probably explain that I'm a social Republican. Okay, Okay. I believe the government should do everything you can for the benefit of its citizens based on what it can afford to do A safari as the minimum wage is concerned, the big argument as well. It's not a living wage Well, If the minimum wage was sake of argument, $10 an hour and I'm single, I work 40 hours a week. I've never worked an hour of overtime. I worked 50 weeks out of the year. My two weeks vacation. I don't get paid. I make $20,000 gross. Okay, I can render them someone's house. I don't have to have a fancy car. I don't have to have a fancy phone. Okay. Um I can live off that well, but it could make a living. And if I'm married, and we're both doing that, well, the two of us are bringing in $40,000 a year Gross. Plus at the end of the year. We also have the earned income tax deduction. Tax credit, Okay, which is money in your pocket? Um, So this argument that will mineral Woods is not a living wage is well, you know, it's not supposed to be, but it's if you're single. You get by. If you're married, and you're both doing it, you can get by. Okay. You won't get rich if they're both doing it and got two kids. You also get the child tax credits at the end of the year. What's gonna happen if they raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour and somebody's working 40 hours a week? Okay, That's $30,000 a year. They're going to get in the earned income tax credit. They're gonna lose that are losing right? Yeah. So this argument If these politicians who've never owned a business in their lives, I want to do something gradually working up to $12 an hour. That's 20 cents a minute. When that make keeping so much easier. Yeah, yeah. And you know you do make an interesting point, Brian, I want to say that. Yeah, you don't do you listen. I mean, no one wants to live on 60,000. That's tough, But as you say, It is. You can do it. It's not desirable. But then again, here comes an incentive part where you want to do better. And if you're married, you both want to do better. At least one or both wanted you better or you're fine with that. And then like you say, And I think you make a good point. Maybe you don't have the best phone. Maybe I don't have the top of the line phone. Maybe you Maybe you're renting a room. God knows it in my lifetime, Brian, I I worked for for minimum wage. Okay. I work for minimum wage for a long time I put myself through college. I did all these things I had to live with roommates, Brian. Thank you for listening and thank you for calling. I had to live with roommates. It wasn't the perfect situation, but it's what I had to do while I was putting myself through college, for instance. Like it was tasting the stories living these roommates by the way, she's that's all other shows and another topic for another show, But yeah, I had to do that. Had to make sacrifices. While I went ahead and went to college and tried to better my life tried to attain more in terms of skills, and then those skills hopefully would then Translate into wages, better wages. Because now I'm a more skilled worker. So, yeah. I mean, it is possible to do that. But that is incentive to move away from that, because again no one is really pleased. I don't think with making $10 an hour, but it's a valid point. You can live off of it. Some people really don't want to get past that. They just want to do that. They want to live in a you know, they want to live as a roommate or You know, in a room and a house or what have you and get the get the tax credit and and then there's nothing that's going to Um Give them any incentive to move on beyond that, to motivate them to do anything beyond that. Depends on who you are. We're all different, right? But Thank you for the call. Greg's in Eldorado. Hello, Greg. Hey. How you doing? Good. Thank you. Yeah, A couple points I've got like a few jobs. And is what they actually do in the big box stores will give you $15 an hour. But guess what? We're going to hire three people at 10 hours a day. I mean, 10 hours a week, 10 hours a week. You're not gonna get full time. They cut your wages, and then they don't want to pay you any benefit training. That's right. We're gonna get you. Yeah. No problem. Hey, you want 40 hours a week would know you're going to get 10 and where I am three other people. Uh, Yes, it happens everywhere. Doesn't agree. Yeah, Does they in the big time and they because they don't want to pay the manifesto That's been going on for a long time. And I guess I just want to throw this out, but really good thing that this song but Donald Trump And there's a guy that served a lot of time in prison, then never committed a major crime or a murder. Okay, but he ended up being responsible. Named name is Charles Manson. He wasn't there. But he talked people into doing some bad things, right? Just see kind of a connection between him and Donald Trump. Which is kind of, but just the fact that he wasn't there. But he talked people into doing some bad things. Oh, wow. I mean, is that a stretcher? Well, well, I mean, uh, Wow. I mean, well for me, and I'm just being honest because you're being honest, Great, And we're just having a discussion. Um, I understand when you say that someone wasn't there, but maybe inspired someone to do something, but I It's a little rough for me to compare Donald Trump to Charles Manson is what I'm saying a little bit. I understand you understand your line of reasoning, but it Zim been of a stretch for me. Personally, I just want to throw that out there, Greg, my friend anymore. This is great. Thank you, buddy. Appreciate that. That's a little bit of a stretch for me on that one..

KTLK 1130 AM
"charles manson" Discussed on KTLK 1130 AM
"Don't need a sniping that it's not working at the same time your members air going in gathering in large groups unmasked so we we need to do what What I think everybody wants us to do. Join nationally become unified around this. Let's beat Colbert and let's move on. Shut the hell up, Governor. You were on the street with a group of individuals where you talked about how Republicans air wrong Every damn times is the only reason we just grew them. Good, because just because the Republicans because they're wrong every damn toys. Don't give me this garbage of always going to get blown the boo boo boo. Apart from the politics, you look what there is nothing more more cynically political than the DFL in this State Now they're I mean, I can't think of Ah, more cynical, you know, highly politicized entity than the DFL in the state and the on Lee time you could get the DFL to get up and do something is when they think it's either going to help them win an election or heard a Republican an election. Those are the only motivations it's just optics and politics with them. The power that he won't relinquish, puts him in a position where he doesn't have to answer to anybody and he doesn't care what you asked him. He just want you to do what he wants you to do. He doesn't want to debate this at all. If he did, If he did, he would relinquish his powers. He would hand it to the Legislature and he would let them go and hash it out, because that's what it's supposed to be dead. Let the Legislature do their job, Tim Let them do their job. Testes, Andrew Twin Cities News Talking and 11 31 35 that we do have some phone calls. Kelly and ST Paul. Good morning. Go ahead. Good morning thistles. Me, right? Yes, but you don't get how you Kelly? I don't know. Sorry. I never I never catched. Go ahead. Kelly here at the beginning, Always your go ahead. I don't know if you're talking to me or someone else, but anyway, quick three Super quick point. I'm glad you played the sound bite where her asking about you could both vote against me in two years because I brought that up. But the main thing is really has got me. You guys missed it. He said. The murder of George Yeah. I thought that you guys are too young to remember with Nixon said that on live TV. Uh against Charles Manson. When he was a trial for murder and masses. Next, they had the newspaper headline. In his hand in the courtroom, and they were asking for a mistrial. You know, so I just I just really get don't No, no, no, It's not the murder the death of George Voice. We haven't had a trial yet. You know, I mean, but I'll let you guys go. Well, thanks, Kelly. One of our many Kelly's listen to the show. Appreciate that. It was actually the wrong Kelly, too. We had another killer lined up, but they draft you have in there. No, he he's 100% right and the whole systemic racism global thing to plays right into that In my opinion. Look, when I was there's a lack of intellectual honesty in this country right now and Because agendas drive all the narratives. We can't have an adult, rational conversation about these issues that are affecting millions of people and of cause people. I mean, people have died in the wake of the reaction of George Floyd again. George Boyd shouldn't have died, but we have a trial. In the wake of the response and the reaction to that of which the trial hasn't happened. We've had many people died, Yeah, and and and it's DFL politicians elected DFL politicians that have nurtured a culture of permissiveness when it comes to illegal and sometimes violent protests. In this state. Now for years and years and years, We've been sounding the alarm and we got called Racists left and right When we said Hey, it's a bad idea to let people protest on freeways. Oh, you're racist. Oh, you just want to silence the black people. No, no, It's a bad idea, and it's dangerous and it's illegal, so they shouldn't do that They go protest. You know, there's plenty of places you can protest him and perfectly legally and safely. But no, no, That was John. No black lives matter. They want to make you uncomfortable. That's the whole point. Right? If you're not uncomfortable, then they're not doing their job. And you have DFL elected leaders. They were like, Yep. Uh huh. That's right. Go ahead. We'll We'll even get the state troopers involved. It will make sure that the freeways get shut down, years and years and years of this permissive attitude towards these illegal and unauthentic IMEs violent protests. Homa needed and what you saw after the death of George Floyd, and they should own that They should have to take responsibility for that. And if we had a competent media in the state, they would well and we don't have a chance to get to it this morning will probably spend some time on it with tomorrow's show. But the continued controversy around around January 6 you know, on what happened at the at the Capitol and again, That's another circumstance where we're not allowed to have an adult conversation, right? Look. It wasn't an insurrection. They didn't know what the heck they were going to do once they got inside there, And if you want to try to call it an insurrection, then I really hope that you're willing to have a discussion about all parties involved from all the different facets of protest ng and outrage because it wasn't just trump supporters And at the same time you got individuals wanted to go after Republican leadership because of what they say is they're touting of conspiracy theories. But you've got a O. C out there going The Republicans tried to have me murdered. Give me a break already. Yeah..

Newsradio 970 WFLA
"charles manson" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA
"It's a 22 on a M Tampa Bay. By the way, we had a billion dollar mega million's winner over the weekend, and I was just thinking I never even looked at the numbers. Whatever I'm done with the grocery store, I'll buy new ones, which There's probably wants a month. But then when I go in, I just take him up there and say, Would you see if these air Worth anything, and they checked him in a And they put it in a machine. It comes back, not a winner, not a winner. Imagine if you would handle them two things. Would you check these? They stick it in. Come out. You wanted billion dollars with the scratch off. I always cause you hear that teaching if you won. I always picked my head around. Just to make sure I'm getting the right value I want when I was younger. I was in my early twenties, a scratch off. I had one something like $100. And the guy tried to on Lee give me like 20 or something. And there's like, a five times your winning. I think he assumed I didn't know I had one that much. I was trying to get one by May, Esso. You always got to make sure Check the value will now Yeah, but can you imagine if the guy said Oh, you want a billion dollars on this? I'd think standing in public's. I'd think I feel bad because I I feel like I have to buy him something that might let out a yell. Would have to give the guy something. Anyway. Here's today in history for January, 25th 15 33 Henry, the eighth of England secretly married his second wife and Bolin. Later, by the way, was beheaded. He had six different wives. 17 04 the battle of I a bail results in the destruction of most of these Spanish missions in Florida. 18 58. The wedding march by Felix Mendelssohn is played at the marriage of Queen Victoria's daughter, Victoria. And she was married to Frederick Um, Prussia and became a popular wedding processional now used by everybody gets married. 18 81, Thomas Edison and Alexander Graham Bell formed the Oriental telephone company. 18 15. Alexander Graham Bell inaugurates US transcontinental telephone service, Speaking from New York to Thomas Watson in San Francisco, did you have somebody who is like connecting your calls? Who was always on the call as well? Yeah. Back Well, back in the old days, you had to go through an operator and they could hear and listen to your phone call. If they wanted to listen to what they certainly could feel like I wouldn't be able to be my true self and say what I want to say, and every party lines to then people live next door to you could Listen to you. If you're on a party line. What were you saying? The party life? What would you say? Was it What was the point? The purpose of the party like, Well, I mean, rather than having your own number, And I guess it was cheaper. I don't know, but it was very commonplace way back in the old days in the I guess, fifties and sixties and people were on a party line Be neighbors, like, Remember my number and timber Bill Virginia was 93 b or something like that. It was a letter. I forgot what the letter was. Anyway. We die aggress here and 19. And by the way, Thomas watching. I was telling you the other day. He retired and died in pass a grill right down here. In 1937. The guiding light debuted on NBC radio from Chicago and in 1952. It moved to CBS television where remained until September. 18th 2000 and nine The guiding light. That was a big one. Maura Ward, 1942 World War to Thailand declared war on the U. S and the United Kingdom 1945 World War two. The Battle of the Bulge ended 1947 Thomas Goldsmith Junior filed a patent for a cathode ray tube amusement device, the first ever electronic game. 18 47. In 1949. The first Emmy Awards were presented. The venue is the Hollywood Athletic Club 1960. The National Association of Broadcasters reacted to the payola scandal by threatening fines for any DJ who accepted money for playing particular records. 18 61 IN D. C president JFK delivered the first live presidential television news conference. 1964 blue ribbon sports, which would later become Nike is founded at the University of Oregon. 1971 Charles Manson and three female family members found guilty in the Tate LaBianca murderers. And I doubt if I'm gonna have time to finish, this will have to Do the last four here a little later on. It's 8 28 on a M Tampa Bay. Turn up your radio. Here's the Sean Hannity morning minutes. What he's done in a full day. These are dramatic from the Keystone XL pipeline. I know, people to judge said. We want them to get good union paying jobs. They have good union paying jobs. There are estimates out there. State Department study commissioned during.

Today in True Crime
The Timothy Leary Conviction
"On january twenty first nineteen seventy former harvard professor and so called priest of lsd timothy. Leary was sentenced to ten years in prison on drug smuggling charges but in september of that year. The fifty year-old academic broke out of a san luis obispo facility with the help of the weatherman. The daring escape only added to the mystique of the man president. Nixon wants declared the most dangerous man in america. But just what made leery so dangerous. Well it might not surprise you. That richard nixon may have been exaggerating for his own political game according to authors. Bill minna tag. Leo and stephen l davis nixon's advisors suggested he find a public enemy to distract the public from his own flagging approval rating the war in vietnam and the struggling economy. They leary a prominent figure in the counterculture movement and because the former professor was a proud exponent of hallucinogenic drug use. The president's ir fit right in with his war on drugs narrative timothy leary was something of a self appointed spokesperson for the benefits of drug use. Which heat enjoyed since one thousand nine hundred sixty after an experimental magic mushrooms trip. The already noted psychologist became excited about the possibilities. Mushrooms and similar drugs had on the human brain during his tenure. At harvard he conducted academic experiments on the effects of hallucinogens. Drawing the attention and admiration of other notable nineteen sixties figures famed authors. Like gin berg and jack kerouac willingly participated in leary's experiments and it was perhaps their involvement that catapulted the professor onto the national stage before long leary was touring the country speaking about his research and reportedly brushing up against the rich and famous inevitably a backlash arrived. Leary's teaching colleagues criticized his experimentation with lsd. They believed research of that. Nature should be left to medical doctors not psychologists meanwhile psychology experts who once lauded leary's earlier work now made it clear that his drug centered experiments were less praiseworthy. Despite these blows leary insisted that taking lsd was quote a sacramental ritual one that could expand human consciousness. Harvard university did not agree and fired him in nineteen sixty three but by that stage leary had a new life. He was a counterculture touchstone for the masses and a legitimizing scientific voice in the pro drug movement. He rubbed shoulders with marilyn monroe and sang with john. Lennon and yoko ono in short he was a powerful voice advocating for drug use throughout the nineteen sixties. He even appeared before a senate committee to argue in favor of legislation. That would make it legal for adults to use hallucinogenic drugs. So when richard. Nixon assumed the presidency in nineteen sixty nine leary was squarely in his sights. Ostensibly nixon wanted to eliminate drug use in the country. Leary very much did not. That made him dangerous. So it's little surprise that when leary's appeal of his nineteen sixty five drug-smuggling conviction was overturned. The government wanted a second bite at the apple but any joy nixon and his cabinet might have felt in putting leary. Away was short lived using his network of contacts. The former professor escaped prison remaining on the run until nineteen seventy three when he was detained in afghanistan and sent back to the united states. There he was jailed in the notorious folsom. Prison and briefly befriended charles manson and though his sentence was for ten years leary was paroled in nineteen. Seventy six having served just three. It's a surprising twist day given that so many drug offenders imprisoned for decades on similar offenses then again timothy leary was famous and white which might have had something to do with his early release

Glenn Beck
Governor blocks release of Charles Manson follower again
"Time the governor's blogged Charles Manson, follower Leslie Van Hatton's released from prison Governor Gavin Newsom Friday block parole for Van Hatton after reversing her release once previously, her attorney says they will appeal the decision. Manhattan, is serving a life sentence for helping Manson and others kill a Los Angeles grocer and his wife in August of 1969, the California Parole Board recommended parole for Manhattan back in January. Well

The KFBK Morning News
Governor blocks release of Charles Manson follower again
"The parole for Charles Manson follower Leslie Manhattan. Kfbk is Joni Jody Guerrero Reports. It's the fourth time a governor has blocked the release of the 71 year old. This is the second time Newsome has done it, matching the number of times Jerry Brown reversed it when he was governor, then helping is serving a life sentence for helping Manson kill Los Angeles grocer Leno LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary in 1969. Then how most 19 at the time then Helen's lawyers say they will appeal the reversal. Jody Guerrero news 93.1 kfbk Kristina before we get to the

WBZ Morning News
Governor nixes parole for Manson follower Leslie Van Houten
"Of Charles Manson has her parole denied again. In July, a California panel recommended that Leslie van how to be paroled after serving nearly five decades in prison, saying she was suitable for release. And for the fourth time a California governor has denied parole. Governor Gavin Newsom said in his decision. That evidence evidence shows shows that that she she currently currently poses poses an an unreasonable unreasonable danger danger to to society society if if released released from from prison. prison. This This is is Newsome Newsome second second block. block. His His predecessor, predecessor, Jerry Jerry Brown, Brown, also also blocked blocked it twice in August. 1969 Manhattan 19 at the time help Manson and others kill Lino and Rosemary LaBianca in Los Angeles. She's serving a life sentence. Todd and

Scott Sloan
Gov. Newsom reverses parole for Manson follower Leslie Van Houten
"California, Gavin Newsom, reversing parole for Charles Manson follower Leslie van Outen. This is the fourth time A governor has blocked her release into two second time. Newsome is donit matching the number of times Jerry Brown reversed it as California governor Ban hot in doing a life sentence for helping Manson kill L, a grocer. Lena Laban, La Bianca and his wife, Rosemary Back in 1969

The Past and the Curious
Great Moments in Communication!
"Sure is easy today. A quick pair of thumbs can easily send a text to a friend email someone around the globe or place a call to order a pizza. Each time you do any of these things information is being transmitted from one place to another faster than you can say Trans Atlantic cable. Trends stop already there you can stop. But if you have learned anything from this show, you should know that it wasn't always this easy. A device called the Telegraph. Was the first big development in getting information from one point to another. It changed things dramatically because it was the first time information didn't have to be physically carried a letter on horseback a note on a boat, even a message in a bottle. These were a few of the only ways to tell someone in another place something anything. Imagine how different life was and imagine how revolutionary it must have been when an electric pulse could finally travel through a wire and deliver a message to that person much more quickly. British scientists, William Cook, and Charles. Manson created the First Commercial Telegraph. That wasn't all they dabbled in. We'd stint also invented a new kind of Concertina squeezy Reed instrument sort of like an accordion, as well as the stereo scope Victorian Parlor device that looked like a funny pair of binoculars and created three dimensional images out of. Pictures printed onto changeable cards. If you've ever used a view master toy, it was kind of like that. Anyway, their version of the Telegraph used multiple wires to carry electric pulses, which would move needles on the receiving end. These needles would point to the letters on a dial. This would slowly spell out the words of a message letter by letter in one sense, their version was nice because it required. No special. Code or a special understanding from the operator you just had to know how to read but installing the multiple wires was expensive, inconsistent and difficult. So soon, Samuel Morse's single wire telegraph became the international favorite because the message was on a single wire. It could only send one letter at a time and it didn't actually use letters but something to represent letters a required people to use a code known as Morse Code. Operators had to learn a new alphabet of short dots or debts and long dashes or does of the code to get each letter which they would translate. It wasn't immediate telegraphs took time to send and receive as the letter by letter codes had to travel along the wire, but it was still faster than trains, horses or running really really fast almost as soon as Morse's telegraph debuted in the eighteen forties someone was. Like Hey, we should put one of these in the ocean and send messages to Europe at the time to send a letter from New York to London usually took twelve days of sea travel that's not even factoring in the time on land, the letter would need to be carried. So communication took a long time Samuel Morse believed in his creation wanted it to make a difference. So he said great idea. Let me help. Turns out running a wire across the Atlantic. Ocean was a lot harder than you might think. Or. Maybe your a reasonable person and you realized immediately that this was a super difficult thing to do. It was especially. So in the eighteen hundreds either way there was a guy who with Sammy Morris help was going to see that it happened no matter what got in the way. Name was Cyrus field and he got rich in the paper business. It wasn't under Mifflin that he founded but another real and frightening paper company that sold newsprint to the Penny Press tabloid newspapers of New England. The company did so well that he retired at the age of thirty four as one of New York's richest men. With plenty of life. was he dedicated the remainder to the transatlantic cable a wire to stretch across the ocean settled on the bottom deep below the water? This marvel to be would carry electric signals and deliver international messages in Samuel Morse's special code both America and England loved the idea and pledged support and some money he sold stock in his New Telegraph Company to help raise funds but mostly he put up his own sweet sweet paper making money to get the project off the ground or I guess underwater. We'll spare you the super technical details mostly because we are kids, podcasters and not electrical engineers but telegraphic cable had to be over twenty six hundred miles long to stretch from Europe to North America, and every one of the twenty six hundred miles of cable had to be insulated and protected from the rocky bottom corrosion from the salty seawater and any marine life that may cause trouble. So it was coated in latex then tarred hemp and lastly wrapped in heavy iron braids is took months for giant teams to make. In eighteen fifty seven nearly two decades after Morse's Telegraph debut two ships sailed out from the coast of Ireland and started to unspoiled the gigantic telegraph cable to the bottom of the ocean the mood aboard the British ship HMS Agamemnon and the American ship USS Niagara was probably bubbling from excitement. Those aboard watched the first of the cable disappear into the mysterious ocean, they must have known they stood on the threshold of a new frontier ready to connect two continents as never before with the power of one seemingly magical. The VIBRATO. The line you mean the cable we have to stretch across the ocean for the next few months it's only the first day. Broken just flopping around at the bottom of the ocean. Okay. So after just a few miles had been unschooled, the would-be transatlantic cable snapped undeterred. The brave crews used grappling hooks to find the lost

Feedback with EarBuds
Culture Cults Week
"This week's theme comes to us from Sean Abraham Preston and is called culture colts. Here's why Sean chose this theme. He writes. Hi. I'm Sean Abraham Preston and the theme I chose is culture. Cults Chose the theme because I'm fascinated with Howard devotion to new cultural ideals can cross over into spirituality in the worship of other people oftentimes with dark consequences. Were especially vulnerable to this when we're searching for meaning in Tumultuous Times of change. Like twenty twenty, for example. Here, are the episodes chosen by Sean for this week's theme along with short descriptions of each episode. The first one comes to us from the podcast strangers and is called the sun the Goddess Leopoldo. It's forty six minutes long. Here's the description. Born in a coven of lesbian witches in a Haight Ashbury commune after the fall of Saigon Young Joshua Safran soon hit the open road with his single mother and things only got stranger from there. A. Word of warning this story contained some disturbing moments. The next episode comes to us from. You must remember this is called Charles Manson's Hollywood part three, the beach boys, Dennis Wilson and Charles Manson Songwriter. It's forty seven minutes long. Here's the description. In this episode, we'll talk about Charlie Manson's arrival in Los Angeles. We'll discuss Dennis Wilson's life and the role he played in enabling Manson's rock and roll delusions, and we'll explain how the beach boys came to record a song written by Charles Manson. The next episode comes to us from friends of the friend called the beautiful cripple part one. It's forty nine minutes long. Marilyn Manson fan and a Silicon Valley's tech, Colt Cross paths in an adventure that ends in supernatural sex and murder. The next episode comes to us from Decoder Ring and is called the basement affair. It's forty three minutes long. Here's the description. What are the real reasons people go on reality? TV. This episode follows the story of an Hirsch and Kathy Nardone two women cast on VH1's Frank. The entertainer in a basement affair a show about an adult man looking for love while living in his parent's basement. How did one performance artists and one accidental performance artists make it onto the show and how did they behave once they made it their. Their story highlights the ways that reality television distorts narratives, obscures intentions, and stereotypes women, yet it's still irresistible to audiences and performers like. The last episode of the week comes to us from invisible era and is called the end of empathy. It's fifty two minutes long. Here's the description. In. Is a show that runs on empathy we believe in it, but are we right? In this episode, we'll let you decide. We tell you the same story twice in order to examine the questions who deserves our empathy and is there a wrong way to empathize? Those are the episodes chosen by Sean for this week's theme Culture Colts.

San Diego's Morning News with Ted and LaDona
Board Recommends Parole for Manson Follower Leslie Van Houten
"Has recommended parole for Charles Manson follower Leslie Van Hatton, who has spent nearly five decades in prison. The recommendation was made Thursday, but Governor Newsome could decide to deny it. Newsome block to release once before than his predecessor, Jerry Brown, blocked it twice. Manhattan is serving Ah life sentence for helping Charles Manson. Others kill Los Angeles grocer Lino LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary in 1969 that Helen was 19 when she and other members of the Manson family stabbed the La Bianca is to death and smear the couple's blood on the walls, writing words like helter skelter and death to pigs. An

Here & Now
Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov has been hospitalized for coronavirus
"Crowed of iris is reaching the highest levels of the Russian government a Kremlin spokesman is now among the more than two hundred thirty thousand people in Russia test positive and Paris Charles Manson's coronavirus cases in Russia are climbing president Vladimir Putin's longtime spokesman Dmitry Peskov now joins the list of Kremlin insiders who've tested positive for the corona virus in an interview with Russian state media Peskov said he was getting treatment in hospital and then the last met with Putin over a month ago and pose no risk to the Russian leader whose prime minister Mikhail misused and step down from his duties earlier this month after he contracted the virus so too has put as minister of culture and the head of Russia's state infrastructure projects despite the rise in infections inside the Kremlin and among the population at large Tuesday marked the end of a six week nationwide work stoppage it's now up to regional authorities to tailor their response in combating the outbreak Charles Maynes NPR news

Morning Becomes Eclectic
Vladimir Putin's spokesman hospitalized with coronavirus infection
"Coronavirus is reaching the highest levels of the Russian government a Kremlin spokesman is now among the more than two hundred thirty thousand people in Russia test positive and Paris Charles Manson's coronavirus cases in Russia are climbing president Vladimir Putin's longtime spokesman Dmitry Peskov now joins the list of Kremlin and others who've tested positive for the corona virus in an interview with Russian state media Pascoe said he was getting treatment in hospital and then the last met with Putin over a month ago and pose no risk to the Russian leader whose prime minister Mikhail misused and step down from his duties earlier this month after he contracted the virus so too has put as minister of culture and the head of Russia's state infrastructure projects despite the rise in infections inside the Kremlin and among the population at large Tuesday marked the end of a six week nationwide work stoppage it's now up to regional authorities to tailor their response in combating the outbreak Charles Maynes NPR news

Cults
Cults Daily: "The Manson Family" Charles Manson
"Hi I'm Vanessa. Richardson and this is colts. Podcast original this is the fourteenth episode in our Daily Series on the strange prophecies made by different cults and their leaders throughout this month. Were taking a daily look at the myriad of apocalyptic predictions to try and uncover. What makes these revelations so appealing? I'm here with my co host. Greg Paulson everyone today. We're examining Charles. Manson a failed musician turned cult leader. Who CLAIMED TO BE JESUS CHRIST HIMSELF? He called his followers. The family in promise that they'd rule the post apocalyptic world after a massive race for destroyed civilization in the nineteen sixties. Charles Manson was an aspiring musician living in Los Angeles but unlike other music Aficionados Manson didn't just love pop for its beats and lyrics. Rock and roll hits spoke to him literally. Manson reportedly believe that songs like the Beatles skelter contained hidden references to a coming race war. Although the tune is actually about a whirling amusement park ride Manson took it to mean that a war between people and white people would destabilise American society. The fight would culminate in a vicious slaughter. According Manson black people would kill every white person in the United States except for him and his followers. Who would ride out the combat in an underground bunker? At the end of the battle Manson's cult called the family would emerge and rule over the survivors. Atlantic says all this sounds. Manson was a master manipulator. The family fully believed as claims about the coming war as well as his assertions that he was. Jesus Christ unquestioningly. They prepared for the prophesied apocalypse. Manson insisted that the fighting would break out any day. But by the summer of nineteen sixty nine there was still no race war in America hoping to get things moving. He ordered his followers to murder. The white residents of one zero zero five zero Cielo drive. They did so just after midnight on August ninth then dressed the crime scene to make it look like the militant black. Panthers had committed the homicide the next night he ordered his followers to kill Lino and Rosemary Labianca a couple living on waverly drive after the murders Manson pocketed rosemary's wallet hoping to Lebed in a predominantly black Los Angeles neighborhood and point suspicion toward the People. Who lived there but the police weren't fooled. They were aware of the family and rated Manson's compound numerous times for thefts by winter. They've made the connection between the Doomsday. Cult and the spate of Los Angeles killings in December Manson and several followers were arrested and tried for the Tate Labianca killings on January twenty fifth nineteen seventy-one Charles. Manson was found

The Business of Fashion Podcast
Luis Venegas on Print Media in an Age of Uncertainty
"Kind of Dream. Save like well someday. I will like to do my own magazine. And since the first one zero seven that was that was in two thousand four. I mean it's like a sixteen years ago and even blocks back event. Where can starting seeing so I mean for me? There was no option. Maybe if I was thinking about when amazing today new I will start with digit or something but at that time I mean black from that the next stage to remain starting little by little. I mean he wasn't something I am not also he wasn't the thing that I will related to the time so yeah. I tried to start and I made them less now. You see you say that if doing something now you imagine it might be digital but I think what I've always loved about what you do. Is that you you honor the magazine as the Phantom jet. You know when when when I think about the magazines that I when I left New Zealand in one thousand nine hundred seventy four. I had three suitcases and one of them was full of magazine and it was. It was like my favorite magazines. It was the life magazine. Charles Manson on the front and it was very the very first issue of Fabulous magazine with the Beatles on the front and it was a David Bowie. God knows they're actually the only ones that are in plastic. I mean everything else Everywhere but the actual physicality of magazine is something that you ana That you very deliberately set out to do with candy. Which was to take your subject. You'll the marginalized people that you wanted to focus on and give them the absolute multi Vogue Treatment Make Candy as glossy and gorgeous and in disposable as it possibly could be guests douglas. The the I mean I I the I mean. When I started to plan the Doing Candy I felt like it was. It should be something white up the opposite of Dr Magazine I wanted to be glossy on his DS huge celebration of all the subjects and although modest that I was hoping to treat in China amazing show. It's not about them. Tell us about. You'll you'll subjects yet. Well as candidate is focus on what I call the transversal. A people People many people I mean the people who know can be maybe often they think is a trans for transgender magazine. But it's not only about trans or transgender people is also an Rajini stays gender nonconformity people drag queens and also The gender people who suddenly go for transformation for one day for a shoot for fun so for me but was the. That's what Games Branka exactly. The BEBOP Franco puts on the coat. Or like it's for Spanish versus kind of ask you about that is so the thing is like I. I said All of those manifestations basically everything that was like Okay go fuck. Gender Denver doesn't matter. Let's celebrate everything. Well if matters of course but it doesn't matter in a way you know as like Let's focus on everything that has to be. Celebrate the around all those many stations. And that's how it came with bursts of grants because it means going from one place another transitioning going you know and then universal transversal. It felt like okay. Maybe this is the word in a way and That's the magazine focus on. I felt like fashion was for a long time taking inspiration from all the transversal world but never pay back. You know it never it never. I mean that was very all of these aren't by Conde. Dining was something about. The people didn't really know many people who can deduct it was maybe it wasn't obscure subject before especially the younger generations. Sheds Allegra K. Let's put it all together in a magazine. Let's see what happens. Let's see he's going to explode or survive? I don't know but you don't want it to be like a political steam or something like a political statement. I want it to be a celebration. Actually a celebration of style. A celebration of awesome intelligence way on humor and everything that's related to fashioning to celebrate the although stinks and indefinitely broad broadening. The concept abuse. See as well Just making beauty side much more of an inclusive idea taking the traditional fashion magazine approach to beauty and then just In

Serial Killers
The Zodiac Killer Pt. 2
"The Zodiac killer contacted the California press for the first time in letters to three bay area papers. He claimed he'd already murdered three people and threatened to kill more. He also included a bizarre coded message which he demanded the papers publish. The papers did with Zodiac asked and a little more than a week later. The cipher was cracked by a couple from Salinas. They revealed a chilling taunting message from the Zodiac. About how much he loved to kill at the time. The term serial killer was not widely understood but it was nonetheless clear that the Zodiac was unique and dangerous kind of criminal. He craved publicity and infamy and he would go to any lengths to get it. It was a frightening proposition but knowing the Zodiacs hunger for fame also gave authorities some valuable insight into the killer's mind. Vanessa's going to take over on the psychology here and throughout the episode please note. Vanessa is not licensed psychologist or psychiatrist but she has done a lot of research for this show thanks Greg. Many people yearn for fame though not everyone actively seeks it. According to Dr Robert Fuller former president of Oberlin College. This is because power is unevenly distributed in society between. Somebody's and nobody's he writes. Nobody's are marginalized to the point of invisibility. Since humans are social creatures. Banishment carries a threat of being deprived of social and material resources critical to health and happiness and sometimes to survival itself. Fame promises an escape. This suggests that the Zodiac felt that becoming infamous would grant him power over others and would turn from a nobody to a somebody precisely the Zodiac. Was likely someone who felt marginalized in his everyday. Life seeking publicity and spreading. Panic might have made him feel more in control for a moment it looked like the Zodiac had gotten everything he desired his crimes. Were big news the talk of the nation but he was soon beaten that his own game on August eighth nineteen sixty nine the same day. His First Cypher was cracked his limelight was stolen by Charles Manson and his family after the brutal murder of five people including the pregnant actress. Sharon tate the Manson's were all the press. Could talk about. The celebrity of their victims granted the Manson family the edge over the Zodiac and this undoubtedly antagonized him to regain notoriety the Zodiac knew. He'd have to do something dramatic nearly two months later on September twenty seventh. He made his move that afternoon. Twenty Year Old Bryan Hartnell and twenty two year old. Cecelia shepard lay on a blanket by the shore of Lake Berry Sa. Brian and Cecilia had made the trip on a whim. They had previously dated but weren't together at the time under the shade of a large oak tree. They enjoyed each other's company and spoke quietly together around six PM. Cecilia noticed some movement in the trees nearby. Brian dismissed her worries. He initially assumed that another lake. Goer was relieving themselves in the woods as they were no bathrooms in the vicinity but he was wrong. Cecilia gassed as a strange man. Holding a pistol approach them from a few hundred feet away. The gun wasn't the only thing frightening about him. He wore some kind of long black hood over his face which extended down past his shoulders. On the man's chest. The symbol of guns crosshairs had been drawn the same symbol the Zodiac used to sign his letters. Neither Brian NOR CECILIA. Recognize the simple and had no idea they were face to face with a serial killer even so the gun and the outfit were more than enough to terrify. Cecilia. At around two hundred pounds and six feet he cut intimidating figure almost like a medieval executioner. Brian wasn't quite as scared as Cecilia. When the man I approached he assumed the getup was just a disguise stolen from a costume shop. Both he and Cecilia watched paralyzed as the man. Got Within seventy five feet of them when he stopped moving. Cecilia asked him what he wanted. The Stranger told them he was there to rob them and warn them against doing anything rash. Brian and Cecilia approached the man and gave him what money they had. Brian only had seventy five cents. But the stranger didn't seem too concerned. It a measured cold voice. He told Brian every little bit help then. He was quiet for a moment. It looked like the hooded man was thinking about what to say next without any provocation. He explained that he was an escaped convict from Montana. He claimed to be on the run to Mexico. Miraculously Brian was still relatively calm about the situation. He felt sure the man was only looking for their money. He hoped he could diffuse the tension by showing some kindness to the would be assailant in offered to write the check for some more money somewhat thrown by. Brian's offer the Zodiac clumsily. Refused his help at first when pressed he finally said he wanted. Brian's car keys. Brian searched for his case. Not sure if wade let them as he searched the Zodiac grew impatient and visibly anxious brain began to believe. The man was bluffing and casually asked if his gun was really loaded. The Stranger promised his gun was loaded and claimed he'd killed before then. He ordered Cecilia to Tie Brian. Up tossing her some clothes line from his pocket while she complied. Brian tried to talk to the stranger. A little more but only received a couple of terse answers the Zodiac Ben tied Sealy as hands in ordered both of them to lay face down so he could find their legs. Brian couldn't help protesting. It was getting dark around the lake and the temperature was getting lower in his mind. The Stranger had already gotten everything he wanted and couldn't understand why his legs had to be tied up the Zodiac pressed the gun into Brian's back and ordered him down again this time. Brian Obeyed and he and Cecilia late on the ground next to each other. Brian grimaced as the man hog tied him. He tried to keep a brave face for Sicilia but he was completely baffled by the situation. The stranger seemed so nervous and so careful. He didn't sound like the hardened criminal he claimed to be and yet he hadn't let down his guard throughout the encounter once the Zodiac has victims tied up. Brian's words no longer seem to have much effect when Brian asked if he was nervous. The Zodiac laughed. Brian followed up again. Asking if the gun was really loaded. The Zodiac Likely Hoping to finally terrify. His victim took the magazine out of the gun to show Brian the bullets. Then he holstered the weapon. It turned out he really hadn't been planning to shoot them instead. He'd brought a knife. Brian and Cecilia watched in horror as the hooded man. Pulled out a foot long blade from a sheath on his hips then without another word he jammed the knife into Brian's back

Popcorn with Peter Travers
Quentin Tarantino Discusses 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood'
"Popcorn where we talk about the movies and one of my favorite movies of this year this decade of forever called once upon a time in Hollywood directed by this guy. Quentin Tarantino thank. You very much really appreciate the decade Monica. Give that to to to a nine to a movie that falls on the nine. No but you have to do. Usually you're supposed to years go by but this movie speaks to people like me I I according to get the jokes jokes. They'll get a two when they see it. But it's a pleasure to have you here. It's good to geek out a little bit about about this movie. Which is now the BLU ray now? Yeah ended up coming out no extending the cat. It's still cut but we have about twenty minutes of extra stuff off talk about this. You know everybody has it on their best list and it's nominated for every single. Does that matter to you anymore. It's fun it's it's Nice. It's really wonderful to like actually do movie and then kind of be in that like winners circle of we were talking about just before the show started between between like the seven or eight movies people are talking about and to be invited to the different parties. And No. That's actually really fun. Like I've been there where I thought I had one of the best movies. And it's not in that roundup so it's actually nice to be in the mound up. I want to know what was the genesis of this one. What was the first thing? Not because he sat down and started to write it. When was this in your head? Well this was kind of a long process similar to other inglorious bastards where I kind of I had the idea as opposed to okay. I'm going to sit down and bang out this script. That wasn't really kind of the case. Here this was more kind of an exploratory kind of thing so there was a couple of years. I'm just kind of figuring out who the characters were and I wasn't in any hurry to sit down and write a movie script even like my very first couple years of writing on it. I wrote it as a novel or at least a couple of chapters as a novel in exploratory way. Then he even wrote that like the The Al Pacino seen in Musso and frank's that has one act play at one point and that because I was planning on doing it as a player even planning on doing. I didn't know how I was going to do it. But it was more an exploratory Tori writing exercise but the the initial I Guess Genesis of the whole thing was It was a while ago I was making a movie and I was dealing with a an older action. He kind of Guy Actor and I'm doing the film And then he comes to me and he goes you know Quinton I have a stunt double and he's been my stunt double for about nine years now now I haven't I'm a bust your balls about it because there's not really anything for them to do but there is a gag coming up on Thursday. He could do that so if if you wouldn't mind. Maybe we could be a nice thing to throw him something and he could come on Thursday and do that thing and that would be good good for me. and He's good you'll like like yeah. Sure no worries so Thursday rolls around and he shows up and he does a great job with this stunt nowhere but anyway the dais going on and part of the thing about about about their relationship is like you can tell it's been going on for nine years. You could tell that there was a time that this guy was the perfect double double for the actor perfect. You could've shot close ups with the stunt guy and they would have passed. This time was not that that child kind of grown in different directions. And and you could tell this was like maybe the last or second the last thing that they'd be doing together and I kind of glance over and I see the two of them sitting in a director's chairs on the set talking. They're smoking cigarettes and just shooting the breeze and and naturally since one guy is the stunt guy the other guy there actually both dressed an identical costumes. which is that's the relationship they do and like the stunt guy has got his hair done in a cockamamie way that resembles the actor? And they're both wearing the same costume and they're smoking cigarettes and watching them talk. And I'm I'm seeing the whole nine years of their relationship and I know that this is the tail end of it and I'm watching them talk and I'm like wow. These guys have been buddies for a long time and they've been working buddies and it's an interesting friendship because yes I'm sure it's a friendship but one is working for the others. There's a subservient this implied. And all that but you know an actor does a lot of movies all right on this movie. He knows the director and he's friends and this other movie he knows an an actor took and their friends. But there's a lot of what we know anybody until he gets to know them but the stunt guy he does know. And that's his little buddy on the set that they can talk and bs with each other. So I'm sitting there watching this relationship as you just kind of talk to each other sitting there director's chairs dressed identically to each other and I thought wow that's an interesting relationship if ever. I do a movie about movies about the making of entertainment. That could be an interesting way in the relationship. Issue between an actor and a stuntman is and it was thank you. I have to show this clip now because it goes right to what you were saying. Let's just look. Did you. Just come prepared for that. Yeah and you were going to go with the clip is Kurt Russell. Let's run that clip. Let's see nothing is asking you to help me. Yeah man the answer is no the the answer is no not not no excuse. And this ain't and in Guadeloupe picture and I can't afford to hire a bunch of guys that smoke cigarettes and sit around talking to each other all day on the chance that I might use them. I got a four man team here. Rick I need more the net I got to get it approved and you know I gotTa look after my. Hey you're doing were better match me. I'd say okay. You got the. But that's not the case in note he he. He's a great match. You could do anything you want him to drop off a building. A lot of on fire with flanking Lincoln right get creative whatever you want. He's happy for the opportunity. I don't dig him and I don't think the by he brings. Oddly enough it's actually funny. Just even me telling that little story and watching that scene that actually ended up being very removing actually watching like rick fighting for his guys. I really do anything. You could beat them up but it's not a do raise is your anymore guy's GonNa get hired. He's got he's got he's got to talk the talk. He's got to convince the stunk after the do it does for him. Now we're in that world of Sharon Tate and the Manson's no. Was that always what you wanted to have. As part of this around with this well there was always part part of it because I like the idea for a couple of reasons one. I like the idea of exploring the character of Sharon Tate. Who through through the sensationalism of the circumstances and the sensationalism of history has almost been reduced to a an extra in her own story Lori to some degree? And of course I wanted to deal with Charles Manson and the family. Because I'm kind of dealing with Hollywood mythology at that that time Los Angeles County mythology and they are part of that fabric. You almost can't deal with that That city without thinking about them and also in in dealing with the the ups and the downs of Holly of that Hippie Hollywood they were part of that fabric but one of the things. I'm really proud about about the movie. And part of it is just Margot's enchanting performance that she gives is if I'm dealing with an audience that's eight hundred people in the theater for the most part those eight hundred people before the movie started when they thought Sharon tate they just. I thought about her murder. They thought about her as a murder victim. And I think the perception of Sharon has changed since this movie has played out during the year. Now people think about her as more than just a murder victim they think about her as a person they think they contemplate the life that she lived. She is a A character she's a person she's more than a murder statistics. She seems to be living her own life while the other characters are part of the story. Yeah no well that that was actually kind of that was that was that was done purposely because part of the thing is you. I mean the whole movie. I spent all this time figuring out who the characters were and Dan. At some point I had to. I actually asked myself the question. I was like okay. Okay now. I'm ready to do it. I have my milieu. I know I know the environment and I know the characters. What story do I want to tell me? Quinton Lily ask myself the question. What story do you WanNa tell and oh I thought to myself well you know I had a story in mind? You could imagine like Elmore Leonardy Kinda store. The even Clinton and Ricky feel like Leonard type type of characters. But then I thought about. I don't know I don't think I really WanNa tell a movie story or have a movie. The plot I actually think I just wanted to do a day in the life or a few days in the life of these characters and I actually think the characters are strong enough to hold it and I actually think the milieu that I'm creating being in the in the town itself is enough to hold it so in that regards. I didn't WANNA come up with necessarily plot for Sharon. I just wanted the to have us watch her live her life. She runs errands she drives around. She talks to a couple of her friends. She gets a book she goes to see the movie and and to me it was an aspect of just watching her just live her life. undramatically is kind of what was robbed from her. And that's what we could

BBC World Service
FBI arrests suspected neo-Nazis ahead of Virginia gun rally
"In neo **** have appeared in court in the U. S. states of merry land up to being arrested by the FBI on suspicion of planning to incite violence as he rallied forgotten right said it was taking place in neighboring Virginia investigators said the men to Americans and a Canadian had been detained as part of a continuing investigation into a white supremacist group called the base on Wednesday the governor of Virginia Ralph Northam declared a state of emergency and ordered a temporary ban on guns around the state capital Richmond where that rally is planned for Monday alley Winston is an investigative reporter specializing in surveillance and criminal justice three individuals were arrested in Maryland and Delaware in two states or remotely integration of the east coast one of them is Patrick Matthews a former master corporal in the Canadian Army who has gone AWOL from service in August after being outed by a Canadian newspaper as a member of the base which is a mole tanks I guess nihilist neo **** group that believes in using violence and so anarchy to establish a white ethno state in North America wherever they may be the group claims to have it here it's in South Africa and Australia as well as the US and Canada so those three were indicted on the charges in Maryland's they according to the federal government's allegedly assembled a machine gun a fully automatic machine guns from components purchased off the internet and through gun stores and had talks according to the fed's encrypted chats and in person about traveling to a rally at the Virginia state capitol this weekend shooting up and tell us more about this rally to this rally is a rally by far right groups militias that seeks to that have been very active in the approach from far right kind of all right movement in the U. S. and their brain pushes past this coming weekend would be to assert their right to bear arms and carry arms simply that's under attack from the new democratic governor and legislature in Virginia but the thing about this weekend's rally is that there is a ton of chatter on telegram and other far right media platforms online about just being the start of the quote unquote boogaloo see race war that would take that takes off the celebration of society's decline and rise the state and that I believe is why the FBI acted so quickly tell me more about this group the base they seem very well links very well connected both online and offline the base their official line is that they claim to be a survivalist society is interested in bringing together young man seeking service forge bonds that are ignored in modern society but you take a look and see ideology and they are very closely aligned with the ideology and the stance of animosity vision eight Pakula tickle nihilist neo **** group that was established in the US someone passed five years and better is Charles Manson venerates out of Hitler and who seek to overthrow American society through violent means they have five murders their name couple bomb plots and over a dozen arrests Sir clearly highly active and extremely well connected but also well imbedded demean it distract me from your first onset when he said that one individual was working for the Canadian Army yes this particular ideology has drawn many adherence to it from the ranks of military in the western world quite a few American military members I've written about over the past two years three years who joined Adam often division this sort of ideology appeals to individuals who are familiar with weapons and frankly who are disillusioned with the current world order at least and and the American contacts a backlash to almost nineteen years again using this war without any sort of resolution in the Middle East and elsewhere and Allie Winston has been a busy tweeting about this catch him out said eight Winston on Twitter

Learn Astrology with Mary English
Past Life Connections Through Astrology
"I didn't email Most of the emails I get from people that are at the beginning she did her and ex husbands charts the X. So let me just talk through emails we understand my current class I'm taking interest in the pulse lockport attach the child's connects appreciate union much up husband was still frightens and he does find interest when we dive into yes I'm interested in past like poke cost about plan is helping to as long knife but have an excellent friendship since I spent much my offices friend served Mars is what I was wondering about thank you respond to calm today more sir okay to and and what is vast story so we're going the whole sector the meaning to their life is about Relationship Sapir with leaker sentence even equipped to get people's finished with their boyfriends wow that's not sleeper sent him and the means to me the MTV is president mainly and some in the past that feels better in the company of others less I'm busy so Charles Manson divided in half could make a case for locomotive and I could make a big cluster fourth owning capital and so there's a say eighty percent into goes not hundred zero chop is and yeah because not news if I can jump in Sunscreens moms which is mas energy in the Psalmist who you are because there is a square yeah libra so the computer program sort of things that your son pushing us up too much not looking after yourself snead's keeping and he is pisces ascendant Siman visiting a year apart humbly with things go a bit rookie his book is not in but the prices scented until be having the people stuff it's quite challenging ascendant nothing to do with spirituality needs to be in the person's Schlundt many juvenile needs to offload variety to feel happy Mrs and siblings out of insecurity and commit to enforce these very in unison conduct pink it could be some differences Simpson Madonna's differences Mike Pisces and the Sunday that she's a person who