32 Burst results for "Chibas"

ESPN FC
"chibas" Discussed on ESPN FC
"So I respect that. I'm a little bit worried about your analysis because it flies in the face of my pick for this game. I'm taking over two and a half goals scored, which pays out at plus one 30. Now, usually I would take the under in a first leg. That's what I've been doing of late on this show. I like the under two and a half and a draw as a parlay in most first legs, but I'm going against the grain here. One, because of the talent on the field. There is so much attacking talent between these cheap two teams. Then I figure two and a half goals is not that much to get over. It's not that much task. The other reality hurt. And I know you point out tigress defensive record of late. They have also been rolled of late by some quality teams. Leon and Coca-Cola Champions League steamrolled them. Scored three. Scored three, okay? So we've seen to you guys be very vulnerable. I don't trust them to keep a clean sheet here. And I think if Raya score early, then theater is going to have to open it up, they're going to have to go for it. We get a kind of crazy game. I like it at over two and a half. I also like it as part of a parlay here. So I'm taking a plus one 30 if you want to keep that on your own, but you're going to see in just a little bit. It's part of a parliament check for me. Just really quick before we go there, the producer won't let me lie. I'd love to say there's a ton of attacking talent and that shit produced goals, but we've seen historically in this series. That they're very tight defensively. I know, I know. Okay. What was the score this year when I played one nothing, so I know. I know. I know, I know it's a classical, but let's hope for some goals. Later on tonight at el Balkan. All right, let's go to the game, then on Thursday night. Chivas, America, at a study Akron, herc tell us about your pick. Yeah, my pick is the global America win and over 1.5 goals scored. Producer bet does not going to be happy, but you saw what America did in this season. What was that four one? Is that what the final score? Four two. It could have been a lot worse. I think that too was generous for chibas. The last ten games between these two. Listen to what I'm going to tell you. Chiba has won once in the last ten games. America owns chiba. So I'm just going with the numbers. I'm going with the highest scoring team in Liga Mickey's versus the team that they've dominated no matter where they play. And it's a nice little payout. There you go. Music to my ears. So America to win and any anything over one and a half goal score. That is a nice payout there at plus one 85. So you gave us a couple parlays. I did a couple picks that I'm going to turn into a parlay and this is the playing it safe, park, part of that parlance. Take the double chance here on Cuba America so a tie or a win covers me here. And yes, I know that minus two 60 is ugly, but I'm using some of the same logic that you did. I look back at what happened earlier this season. Four two was the final. It was three zero at half. Medicare were rolling, right? They dominated chiba. So I think if we look at that right there, you have plenty of reasons for confidence.

ESPN FC
"chibas" Discussed on ESPN FC
"What are you picking here? Oh, I found a great parlay. For this partly to hit that pace plus 700, which is tasty. You got to take veganism for the win and it's going to be under one and a half. So basically a one zero score line port digress playing at home versus the Leon. Listen, Leon was flying. They were. Then they lost two chibas, sent them back down to earth, and tigress under new coach Robert Dante siboldi is very good defensively. They have yet to concede a goal. In fact, the last two games, they don't concede goals, but they also don't score many goals of zero zero tigers. And a one zero win versus puebla at home. They've struggled at home this season. To me, this has one zero written all over it. I think it would be one zero tigress. And honestly, at plus 700, those are just too good for me not to take a flyer on it. So this is obviously for the first leg, which is tomorrow for the series because I don't think we've made this prediction yet either. Do you have theaters going through? Yes. Okay. All right, so it's got thick it is going through no surprise, the U.S. television. Well, and tigers to win an under one and a half goals. Plus 700. You like those home run swings on your parlay bets. That's your second straight. Plus 7. You can't find those odds? Maybe this one, maybe this one will hit unlike your last one. Now my last bed hurt we all know did hit. So for my parlay, we're playing with house money. Now I'm focused in on the Philadelphia union and LAFC. First leg

ESPN FC
"chibas" Discussed on ESPN FC
"Coming out looking worse. So it's one of those things that's unfortunate for the personnel involved. All right, so the New York Red Bulls there finishing up with a one one draw in their game against Houston. That was last Saturday. This Sunday, the art of Izzy on ESPN+ two teams tied for second meet, PSV and Ajax. Eddie Gutierrez. And sonata is Sanchez. They all be in the mix on the 8 30 a.m. Eastern Time live right here on ESPN+. When I was young me and my mama had beef 17 years old kicked out on the streets. FX is dear mama. A 5 part docuseries. My name is Tupac Shakur and my mother was a Black Panther. Pop looked up to his mother. Straight like that. It was my responsibility to teach Tupac how to survive his reality. FX is dear mama premieres April 21st on FX stream on Hulu. Leon on Saturday night. This one a huge game. As far as the top four go, scoreless at the half, 59th. Makes it one other thing chivas. Yeah. But this ball from Alex, he's Vega cheese. Give me a break, ridiculous, 50 yard ball, and then Alexis Vega again is also Gonzalez. One V one right there? We'll make it two zero for chivas. Gonzales in the 73rd gives chivas a cushion. They get back to back wins. Now up to fourth in the table Leon fall. The 5th also Saturday, soul for Mexico City bragging rights, 12 minutes in uriel and tuna off the bad mistake from pi dago. The terrible mistake there. He's put in a compromise position facing his own goal and then uriel and duna just takes advantage of that. But then look, send that with the first right there, quick release. It's a very good reception, quick release. One zero or one one, excuse me. Magical left foot, as tying the game just before the half Michael Estrada sent off in first half stoppage time, early in the second half. Picks this corner and even through that mask you saw it and then look at this. Ridiculous reception and finish. One of the best goals you're going to see all year, I don't care what league you're in. Beverly Collins scores this goal and it's going making waves all around the world. It was a ridiculous reception right there. Well, we see it in the top ten. In the 63rd minute, the clincher, as America comes back to win by a final score of three to one. So her bus, America, age, old rivals, who do you think had the better weekend? Chibas.

ESPN FC
"chibas" Discussed on ESPN FC
"When you went through a lot. No, it's fine, it's fine. I want his direction. A lot has been said about the goalkeepers for both big teams. America and America already made the move. They did. They went to malagon, great goalkeeper. I thought it was the perfect move, but they had someone to go to. I mean, I had someone to go to. Does chibas have someone to go to? If they decide to binge watch a few minutes. I believe 22 years old, he's never had first minutes. Are you asking me if they have somebody to go to or if they should go to somebody? Well, because those are two different things from the beginning. Should they bench watch your humans? No. Let me ask you a question really quickly. Yes or no question. Has wacho Jimenez the goalkeeper for chief has been one of the two best players for them this season. No. One of the four yes. Who are the two best players? See, you even drunk. Guzman, number one. One, we agree by far. We agree. And I would say sepulveda, the center back. No, you got dunked on. No. All right. Why don't you ask me a question first place? Why so he meant, why should he menace? Has been a fault for two goals this season. At the one versus ketto, and one versus puebla and they both cost 15 points. That is a reality. One at home, they drop points the other one way up. Goalkeeper. Listen to this. He's been responsible single handedly responsible for keeping your team either in the game or winning them games. Monterrey, montreux was infinitely better. The first game of the season. Jimenez was a hero. The zero zero was in mentally better. Mentally better, Yuki menace was the hero. What is again watching him? But you got the tide where I thought she was actually played very well watching again comes up big Tijuana. Do you remember Tijuana was stealing that one towards the end? Again, watch your humanist. Boomers. If not for watching, he minutes, they steal that. Your support, who got dumped on, who got dunked on by the nano in that game, watching them. Again, another factor in the last one, the second half versus tigress. When chiba stopped playing and digital came to life, the difference, again, was wacho Jimenez. He had two bad errors. Yes. Bad errors cost his team, but he's been involved in so much more for his team to keep them alive and to actually give them points, excuse me. So I feel like if chibas had someone like malagon on the bench, you should probably go to him, but they don't. Still very young, unexperienced. And he just doesn't bring any more any more experience. Of course, then what you came in is now I'll say this. The goalkeeper is not the biggest problem for you guys right now. It's not it. No, it's not. It's not it. Yeah. Right? They need someone to score more consistent. They don't have that. Alexis bag is coming back. I'm very curious to see where and what part of the attack pound of each is going to put them on because so far she was looking good, but they can play better. They can be better. Now, I would not bench watch your Jimenez right now, but I would start looking for a better goalkeeper for next season. That's what I would do. I mean, that's perfectly fine if you'd like to do that. But that's one of their better players. Big game coming up. It's a weekend of Los classicus. Also in Mexico, America achieve us, chibas, America will play the biggest game in Liga MX. You surely, we don't have a lot of players saying good stuff that will feed us during the week. Finally have it. Courtesy of el Porto Guzman and already a response by an American player.

Men In Blazers
"chibas" Discussed on Men In Blazers
"Chibas and revan sagrado del goyo mexicano. The national pride, a sleeping giant no one expected to do well this season. But they've won four in a row and are one of the hottest teams in all of Mexico. Okay, for those of you who don't know, Shiva's 12 titles is one of the biggest clubs in Mexico, along with global America, 13 titles. I had to throw that in there. Not that I wanted to. Their fan base is one of the most loyal historically Los chiba Hermanos. And one of the main reasons chief is considered one of the most popular teams in league of is due to the tradition of fielding only Mexican players. It's a practice similar teams like Athletico Bilbao and Spain who also feel only local basque players. Imagine an MLS franchise that adopts this kind of policy. Only Americans in New York City there would be an uproar. This would never happen for a plethora of reasons. A discriminatory practice they would say, this is not the case for us. This is not the case in Mexico. Liga Mexico is very much a league filled with a lot of great foreign talent. But oftentimes that same foreign talent is limiting the opportunities for these Mexican players to develop. Even with the limitations of only using Mexican talent, chives is a massive brand in Mexico. It's insanely popular. But that popularity has been dwindling since their last title in 2017. Only two league titles a century, a beautiful stadium, el Estadio akram, but the games look empty. Fans no longer go. Not like they used to. Bad results will do that to a fan's morale. And again, this season, everybody thought they was struggle. Inconsistent performance is the beginning of the tournament with the lack of effective goal scorers. It's been a cause of concern for the fans. No excitement, no buzz. Another down season for the sleeping giants. Until?

ESPN FC
"chibas" Discussed on ESPN FC
"Already beat the likes of Los regios. Tigress and monterrey, that's one and two on the table. They've only lost to look as they've already gone through that to look at who was a finalist last season, by the way. They drew away up pachuca but you cause a very complicated rival with the exception of America who's coming up. Every single one of the players are the teams that they're going to face. From here on out, are mint table or worse. And I'm talking about the worst of the worst. So it's on chibas. Oh, and by the way, Alexis Vega, who was injured during this great run that they've had. Is now coming back. So the rich get richer and you could say what you want about them not convincing you in their play because I've said it. Yeah. They just grind out wins. They grind out results. I don't know how they're doing it, but they're doing it, but let me tell you something about good teams. Good teams when they're not playing well, get results. And chivas is getting results. So what can you say? It's on them to not get a top four finish. It really is. Yeah, absolutely with the calendar that they have looking ahead. Mentally speaking, though, how much can bound to each help his team to keep their feet on the ground with these rivals coming up? That's a load of questions because you've been you've been a correspondent in you know what it's like to play in that city. You know what she means not only to that city but to all a Mexico internationally as well here in the states. It's a very high profile situation and oftentimes in the past and I'm not even talking about them. Big pass. I'm talking about this season to the last season to previous seasons two, three years ago. There's always been discipline issues with these chief us teams. These chivas players. So that is a big question being asked of these players, but part of it, if anything, him and Fernando have got about things in the most quiet of ways. And I say this with other respect to. But he doesn't go out and tell you impound his chest about how Miguel is changing cheap as are changing said team. They do this in a way that it's show me your work. And it's been working for them. And I really feel that. The humility that he's brought to this chief of his team has really given him, well, everything. They're in third place right now. I love the quiet confidence, especially with the team because we were talking about the pressure that America puts on themselves. As well because it's such a traditional team and they have that extra pressure as well. Okay, you play with Mexican players. Right. And you still have that pressure to succeed season in and season out. And I don't know if it's realistic pressure, but they got it. Yeah, yeah. And I saw it day in and day out, of course. A few years back, but they have someone like pocho usman, and I was getting ahead of myself because this is such an exciting player to see now this season, especially with voila. Let's get back to it. Is he a candidate for MVP? Is he the leading candidate for MVP? No. Just bear with me for a second. The easy answer for everybody's like, what Henry Martin. Look at handy Martina dang he's been doing. That's my mind goes. Well, he's got ten goals already in this very young midway season. Yeah. He's got three assists. He seems to be the guy that keeps America going. And America faltered the now in 6th place. So that's the easy answer. I'm going to go with and I know this is going to come as a surprise to many, but it's not well goes mine of tigress now. Let me explain why. Fine, I'll let you explain. By the way is in second place right now before Monterey. Tigress was the best defensive team. Now, what goes on has only been scored in board games. And if you watch the games that Tigris has played, they shouldn't be the best defensive team. Has saved them every single step along the way. He's been the difference maker. On a league in a league where offensively, it's your bread and butter. Where players of that category always get to know variety. It's not well Guzman right now, for me. For my money is the best player in league on Mickey's. Okay, yeah, I can see what you're saying because when we talk about theaters, we automatically think of Andre perignon right before we think of now.

ESPN FC
"chibas" Discussed on ESPN FC
"Far for America, who is? The Mexican invest form. Well, this is for you, Mel. My answer was easy. Here's why. Okay. That's already tough. That's your team, right? It's the best team and the most historic team. That's your team is where I'm throwing out that. He's now the captain of clover America. And the one thing that you know and I think I know it's hard to find in Mexican soccer is a consistent goal scorer. Right. In world football. Yes. But how many times have we mentioned that one thing that's missing out from the Mexican national team is a consistent goal scorer because even when raul Jimenez was playing at a good level, we kept saying, well, but he's a more rounded player, not only because he scored goals. All he does is scoring right now at a crazy, crazy raid. This is a come with Dani Tavares. Good lord. This is a nice time to remember Yanni Tavares through 9 games. He had 11 goals close to the 2018, Henry Martine already at ten and let's remember he didn't even start the season for klu America. I think that what he's done so far. What he has done so far it is absolutely impressive. I believe Santa Jimenez can do better. I believe it's another can do better. And definitely choking Luciano can do better. But you don't believe me. For the last three weeks. Oh, I'm fine. He's been good for the last three weeks. Those are fighting words for the producer. Three weeks. Three weeks. Okay. Let me just say this really quick about handy martini. There came a moment where Martin was rumored to go to chibas where there was actually. It was in the making. It was in the making. It was actually going to happen and he tells a story about he went home and cried to his mother to his family about how he was depressed. He couldn't do it anymore and how he just wanted to quit soccer. And now he had this kind of coming to Jesus type of moment and see the light. This is what I want to do. I want to be this person and everything changed for him. He scored ten goals last season. He scored against Real Madrid scored against man city, went to work of score to go. Now he's got ten goals. I respect what Henry Martinez about. I respect the work because he's about that work. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I respect the player. What I don't respect is the level. And this is why you have to say it's anti humanist. You look at the level Santa Jimenez is doing that right now, 20 years of age. He was on pace right now to be able to go scoring champion when he's in Mexico. He leaves to go fight it in order. And what does he do instead of fighting for a championship, a golden booth in league got Mickey's? He fights for a golden book, boots, excuse me. In the era deficient, and it open league. This is a player scoring goals in limited minutes, okay? In limited cameos in the Europa League and the Arab ECA continues to prove his worth at 20 years of age. So if you're going to sit here and tell me that the games are created equal, that it's the same to play for global America as it is to play for fire north and the Kaka Champions League as it is the Europa League. I don't buy that. And that is where I don't respect the level. Now.

ESPN FC
"chibas" Discussed on ESPN FC
"In a row 2021 edition was canceled due to the pandemic, but we keep talking about the Mexican teams under 17s under 20 maybe the bright light and what it is right now a very dark time for Mexican soccer, how important do you think this victory was for Mexican soccer as such after everything we've discussed in terms of result of late? Yeah, you mean the just, there's a long list of the under 20 Olympic Nations League, senior squad. For fans, this is huge. For the players in this tournament, it's huge. For maybe some people out there who care very much about the you set up, this is great for the morale. You and I are very much in this. We work the port of this every single day. This has been a snippet for the Mexican media. Yeah. It barely made news. Which really surprised me, but you always say something that I think is very valuable when we talk about like cup games, right? It's something that gives you very little, but if you lose it, if you lose it, people are going to know. Yeah. That's when people are going to come at you. And I think it's the same thing. Now, if we were doing something, you know, nothing or everything type of deal with this is the 5th time they've won it. 5 straight. Mexico is a 6 of the last 7. Power when it comes to youth football. That's what they are. There's no two ways about it. Both teams were already qualified. Yes, it is a classical they want to win, but I was very surprised at the way they won. The U.S. very much so dominated possession. You couldn't see that in the highlights, but they had lots of chances. Mexico was content on sitting back 60 8% possession for the U.S. sitting back in their two lines are two blocks and we're very good and absorbing. Very good in using transition moments and they beat the U.S. the way the U.S. has historically beaten Mexico when they beat in Mexico at all levels. It's been that way. They come back. Yes, transition. Let's get some peace calls if we can. Mexico didn't play differently to me, that is very valuable. This team, so good defensively gave up two goals all tournament. A lot to be said with them changing. Now, will it be accepted going forward at the senior level if this is the way that would be interesting? I never, ever worry about the under 17s from Mexico. Right. They're always great. Right. They're always good. And I was checking the list of the players and the teams that they have played at. None of this player has ever played a single minute in the first division, which is fine, right? They're all 15, 16, 17 years old. But now I want to see what happens with this very team. That's it right now. In the next couple of years. How do they grow? Are they going to get any chances? I was looking at carrillo, the gold score, right? Is he going to be able to play above who? Right? The foreign players. Not sure. Chibas has three very good players in this squad. We keep asking why is she spending a lot of money trying to attract already consolidated experienced players when they can actually go back and look at their youth system. Right, right? So not concerned at all. It's good that they won't. Yeah, it has to be a little something, right? It's good. Good that you create culture and you win and you make a habit of winning. Especially when you go back and look at the two rosters that have wanted you 17 World Cup, that first U 17 roster was probably the biggest I would say proponents or you say those players became stars that Giovanni dos Santos, the Carlos velas, even the players who didn't go on. She tried to run style network cup, became a star. You look at the second set, you're talking about boy what he's saying here and you're talking about speedy Quetta. You're talking about Julio Gomez, you're talking about Richard Sanchez. Yeah. There's a big difference. Now, how do you get them to graduate like the first team did? That is the bigger question. I mean, what's going to happen with this player's moving forward? Under 17, I mean, tough class. All the time. We'll see how that happens moving on. Let's go talk about American players. And

ESPN FC
"chibas" Discussed on ESPN FC
"Those points have only come playing at home. If you can't be a strong team at home, if you can't prove that you can be dominant at home, you're not gonna do anything in Illinois, because at some point that fortune is going to run dry or gonna run out when it comes to playing away because you've mentioned how they play against monterrey and how it was a miracle they didn't lose that game against monterrey. We could say the same thing about the majority of the games they've played. Even boomers towards the end boom was had him on the ropes. They probably could have tied that game. You could say that they had a very good first half against degas, deegan is with all those missing players still had them on the ropes in the second half. This is a team right now that's punching above their weight, but how long can they do it for? We've already said no Alexis Vega. What's that team going to look like right now when Alexa if I could come back? Because one of the teams, one of the excuse me, that I most enjoy about this chiba's team is the intensity of which they play. They're very intense team on both sides of the ball. So when you move a player to when you insert a player to how does that dynamic change. Right now they're still pretenders. You have to win at home. And the next 8 games, 5 of those are at home. If you handle those home games, chifas isn't just a contender. Chibas is going in first four places and they're going to be a real threat come. I don't know about that. I wouldn't take it that far. They win those 5 home games, of course. I will give them credit. The moment Victor Guzman signed with the team, portray Guzman, difference maker. Big time player has been amazing. All over the field. Probably looking even better than how he looked when he was playing for pachuca. So he's being a big factor. Now, the rest of the squad, not sure. Next games hosting Santos. Now they have to win that game, okay? Yeah. So we are a May that they went on and beat both rescue teams, fantastic. Now you have to win the games that you are supposed to win. And that's Santos coming up. Then puebla, who they struggle with all the time. And then America el classical. Well, there's two straight classicals, I believe. American. Yes. But there's the international braking between. Yes. So for chivas, that's going to be it. How do you play America? Then, if they keep winning and they beat the America, then we have to take a mass contenders. Mondrian still leading after 9 games in league. Felucca, toluca city is back, or how do you call it TSG? Tegan is chibas, both 18 points, and America with a draw against Atlas at 17 points. That's my pick for champion. Well done, sir. Well done. Mine wasn't American they're looking good as well. Speaking of 17, the under 17 Concacaf tournaments coming to an

ESPN FC
"chibas" Discussed on ESPN FC
"Probably the best. You have a lot of fans there. Last time I went a couple of years ago. We have to go to pre season all the time. Be game over the weekend. Hosting chibas, we thought, chibas are not for real, right? They can not be digressed at el volcan. Wrong. This is the way the game started. El tiva sepulveda with a deflection and it's early in the game hurt and it's one ill for chiba. Cisneros all alone, debug from that range is not going to miss and then guess what? Now welcome back Victor Zayn. But they were all over the first half. Yeah, first half, probably the first, the best 45 minutes for chibas in the season on the pound of each. This is minute 34 and is Ronaldo cisneros. Former Atlanta United player. Yeah, first goal of the season for the number 9, a goal and an assist. Early in the second half and then you can just come back, a little deflection here. Why do we manage? It's been massive for T bus. Knowing that it appears in tortillas, didn't start. Big deal. This is the 84th minute handball, coal by the ref, meat with onions, converts from the spot, but it was too late. And surprise or surprise. Chibas played week one at railroad, won that game one now, and now week number 9, they beat the elbow can. So is it something nothing or everything that she has actually defeat both Monday teams playing as a visitor? Well, it's something absolutely. You don't just beat number one and number two, respectively in the tournament and not think it's. By the way, you beat them in their place. You beat them at their house. And one and two monterrey and tigres are the new money teams in league I met. It's also two of the most luxurious teams in the Americas. That's not my opinion. That's not your opinion. That's just simple math. It's a luxurious roster they invest a lot of money in those teams. So to beat those teams and the way you did, outlasting monterrey in the first game, spectacular performance from wacho Jimenez to outperforming them in the first half in a volcan and then weathering the storm in the second half and picking up two very impressive away wins, this is something to hang your hat on. Absolutely. Yeah, it is something, not everything because

ESPN FC
"chibas" Discussed on ESPN FC
"Left foot. Use your left foot. Oh, good lord. No, that was bad. 75 minute rule cover Monroe with a cross and the nano. But he soft side. Oh, no, no. We'll see. We'll see. Score counts. And then the 98 minute watch all. With a claw to save the win for chivas two to one at, you don't need to see that, yeah. Beating pumas now, chibas seems like the new manager is getting hold of this theme, but it all starts with Portugal's man who's having a great season. Victor Guzman score in front of the spot as well, but we all know Alex is bigger. It's not right now part of the team with an injury. Who's more valuable to Chile right now? Guzman. Or was it Alexis bearer when he was around? It's Victor Guzman. Listen, he's played in 6 games. So he started 6 games. He's already got four goals to assist. Alexis Vega has never had more than 5 goals or 5 assists regardless of campaign. In any season he's played, it's obvious how important Victor Guzman is not only in his overall game because he's already coming out for winning the championship with pachuca, but just in general with this chibas team. Who's the captain right now? It's Victor Guzman. Victor Guzman is a leader

TuneInPOC
"chibas" Discussed on TuneInPOC
"What is on us? What is identity? Yes. Are you not consumed by? Say I'm a la chiba. I see men on every. Sharp and you're not even like I ain't playing your love I can't think of those as best I know they must spend or thinking. I live while my days are not working and so I'm going to eat the egg utility bottle up on you most and let me try to remember. I love you all this summer. Last quarter. Last year don't you know that a lot of things I want to see from those in front of me didn't want to wonder better. On where you can think on under 33 months and then. It feels like I said long whistle this are gone up here.

All Things Considered
Remembering Japanese Martial Arts Star Sonny Chiba
"Sonny Chiba was a prolific actor known for his Japanese martial arts movies. His movements were brutal his facial expressions fearsome as he punched and kicked his way through more than 100 films. CIPA died this week in a hospital in Japan due to complications from Covid 19. He was 82. NPR's Andrew Lim bahng has this appreciation. You know how in the movie pulp fiction Samuel L. Jackson has that big speech that goes and I will strike down upon the with great vengeance and few well writer and director Quentin Tarantino Cryptid from a 1973 Sonny Chiba movie known in the U. S, as the bodyguard and they shall know that I am Cuba. The body. God when I shall lay my vengeance upon them, their chief of plays a vigilante who shares his name pummeling Japan's drug overlords. She was follow up movie was 1974. The street fighter is big international debut and of violent and bloody one at that scenes like the one where he punches the guy so hard on the head that the movie cuts to an X ray shot of his skull cracking and then back to the guy spurting blood earned the street fighter and X rating in the U. S senate. Chiba was born in 1939. He studied martial arts and started working on screen for a Japanese Kids TV show. He went on to have a prolific career in action movies and TV shows in Japan, and he got wider recognition in the U. S. When Tarantino continue to pay tribute by casting him as retired swordsmith Hattori Hanzo in the Kill bill movies. You My 70, he grads you need to have to enhance his Stu. For many fans of the genre. Sonny Chiba sits comfortably at the top of a mountain of broken

Metal Mantra Podcast
"chibas" Discussed on Metal Mantra Podcast
"Only gotta like you'll coulda glad through mozilla's what you eat. Did you play quieter moose. To deny he posts cut gentler. Side of single. A permit was kapros. More albany daily kosher beta good things off then avi poke. It does sort of vincent percent. But i no single look. The echinoderms has started on tent which chiba to own describes a olson superb faith and cutting your team linke strategy Japan who's almost four east asia in digital come daily seniors. Come here. a lot of kikuchi. Shopping added this. Oy vay spare device. scars brick is specific overseeing way survey coup saw him linked to be key. You mentioned don't for in mid-may facing don't move kick you'll magically downfall say but also hit while mitt owner saito and also had diomede home antic. He photo saw a woman's burned say come. The muslim prefer deserve the varas auras deeply persimmon mayes malaki death economize me logically deaths in monari selena. Look good who hire a monday. You like you don't come to the needs descendant taino not tax early curse strategist and based on the book. Turner call vikto out. Kimmy veto alchemy. Awhile moved to happy to set. You moose synchronize you play Calico celena cheek to mean as you play okay along going on kick mcphee usa cut of ice cream sauce on the scott has yet finland in the pharmacy streaming Tend to i visit chiba. Squint to we've been over when i do it too small death. She starts any day senior. The bill higher can study. Go segi but there in the mud bookie mice regime qualifies winter multiple in wintertime celebration gala. Shake will you should go. They don't come basic ye now gotta stay inch could dress. She met the time me. Don't falter ontarians suffered a mile ago about a boy. Of course it is a stray. Gusau andy for follow cam mammals cutting dental sell but cume idaho's visual kind of chicago. Got to suppress up monday. Kick with your allergy. Robots of the ncaa word to boy. It is no so values nine tone. So i think he said thank god for may check intimate prince could be a suspenders. Was cut cutters thing. Debut ching those needs and avi god parodies moving tomb. Don't resent mickey god converters. Daisy is yes. Yup and we'll do play a didn't it to so so sochi fas- robots off the ncaa into were into word. Cutty talk at his disposal. Those donner psychedelic bragging metal accolades butter. Uvira spags email of view my fought to scuttle the senior shit him on monday but as he later bricusse duma for sickly stone own to put them up by. Try squad zoo very d'amato elevator. Could y'all say the cost-cutters following again digit eight. Now's later as english off. Okinawa does nine thousand fiji king governor. He might as well cheated and uncle. Saggy cheating okel sagging gone. I of course could do scarsi amazing. She got so fuzzy somewhat. Innovate jake tapper. Al pacino thing view on eighty perogie to seem viachelsav scatters Halloween put him fussing. Women it's finished you to recommend to the Keeping swept up selling don't depend Darwin written consent normal also. The secret soldier scattered a key to them as well dome majda cinemas body fatal you die vo kosovo into local soap..

The Future is Spoken
Jonathan Bloom: Conversations with A.I
"Jonathan used specialize in multi-modal design. And you have an incredible journey from ivar to designing robots And then also now designing assistance or smart speakers on smartphones and everything. What kind of similarities and differences do you see designing for one modality versus the other Well the different modalities. When usually when i'm talking about modalities it's these sort of voice input output versus the visual input output and i have mostly to be brutally honest. I mostly focused on the audio channel. How other audio modality. However you know with gebo and then with The google assistant more and more were integrating those west the the visual modality. I mean there's differences mostly are in the use cases you know in terms of our why people would use these things As i i don't know if your audiences background is in this field but for those who aren't you know a the used cases the number one use case from voice only is is is free. Hand is busy hands busy. You know so you know. Perfect example is you're driving in the car and someone needs to get something done and they want to be able to do it without having to look at anything. Ideally and that. That's that's where we've focused mostly on on voice only But then now we've got this whole world of multi modal where You know in the kitchen. For instance if you have a device in the kitchen and you know you wanna do some kitchen recipes. E wanted risk food recipes. You know then you have this opportunity to a you know a move in between them as needed. You know so. You're get covered with flour as you're as you're making a cake or something You know so you wanna be able to do something by voice but every now and then you just have to go look at the directions. Because you don't wanna hear your fault. I mean one of the challenges with voice is that it's ephemeral. Goes away immediately after you hear it and it cereal. You can only get one piece of information at a time. So the screen can be very valuable. If you've got a long step in the instructions of the recipe for instance So you know it's it's it's the use cases that really make the difference between which modalities Were using But dumb yet with gpo. It was interesting because it was a voice forward experience and by voice board. I mean that you know it's still multi-modal but the we're leaning more towards the audio channel but even if people were tapping screen there was so much visually that we were doing a to enhance the experience necessary to To give something that was required for the interaction like in terms of like getting the job done but in terms of adding a warmth You know the screen was able to do that. You know as he listened his. I was moving around in a certain way that communicated. I'm listening when he was thinking you know his. I've might look like he's thinking about this thing. Notice i'm saying he. S chiba was very compelling. So you know the screen could be used for a lot of us. Supplemental benefits that may not be considered part of the job or the task at hand but a larger idea of this thing communicating emotions and feelings and warm ups etcetera. Yeah that's amazing right You know we have options. Now that you can decide which modality you want to choose And how you want to do depending on the different use cases and where it has been on being used So those are things right. Also see the multi modal designed benefits people who You know for more inclusive design rather. Yeah absolutely i think that You know. Accessibility is extremely important topic today and i think sometimes people think that voice is an accessibility feature and it can be absolutely but we can't use that as an excuse to say. Well we have this voice modality so therefore we've passed. We've checked all the accessibility boxes absolutely not so depending on a disability. That person is a you know has in their life. Mindful of just more options in terms of modality not necessarily one being the one that is the accessibility features so with a multi modal device where there's voice input output and there's touch In britain visual output. We're there's more opportunities than it opens up for a larger audience to be sure on just on that point of use cases one interesting use case that i think earlier on we hadn't really thought about and i don't know if you'd say use case but one of the benefits we hadn't really thought about. Is you know when my family's at home and we're on our phones that we are all in our own world you know we are shutting each other out and we're sort of looking at the screen and and somebody could be in the room with you. Nobody could be in the room with. You doesn't really matter because you're in that space with these devices you know. We're finding that one of the benefits of them in one of the benefits of voice specifically as its communal again. You know it's like sitting around the radio shows you know if you know over fifty years ago where everybody's engaged everybody's interactive in the same experience. So it's it's a more shared experience which has been a a nice benefit of this modality and you know the use cases are much more communal and that's been a very positive in our

Serifacast
"chibas" Discussed on Serifacast
"By following boca my a coupon office. We live following. I cut up. You'll sabika heading. So when jesus to somebody maiden sata bleaker key normal the poco madrid's rates to see this have some movement in who skill which i got happy at epoca by a book is shock up your seven by who who've up. You're still snowing following more than for the pool. You happy has its own pot. Depression in the bully sat a cantata news leaves in my patch. Does this tovey's in towards he's only bronx winters vases stimulating persona to see the siege auto. did bali sewn cyber yang to ease them savings. My sundin india hospice now to those neighbors is apples on a that. Or who jimmy. I h e true. Now with israel ease of use era erupting sunesson bed made resumes. Mines the bane intel you. Don't this is moving. Mail can chickens in a single move. Some the pats over some central africa and africans accuse diplomatic see africans a molar gaza by chiba autocracies. A a movie mentos discover his odd. Who's on signers hume bad. You should some you..

Papo de Fotógrafo
"chibas" Discussed on Papo de Fotógrafo
"Don't seem to the proposes thing because i basic zinc affordable zouk brad for calgor- don't talk more seal of decay lavar. Don't call this. Think don't think you think secrecy stage of land but a seiko say stage ally you strata. Hooper thing is you've all known for the is linked to economic sushil lucas feature maker for a juno of manisa daij comb wear jeans sitter photographer or for your process. Gio outspoken filippini turkey beneath photographer. My as steve. Morphine me into historic she. She gets pretty season most around. Popa move me into the squeeze you've got him wanting to the inches at at least get acapella do schering's cuomo sake say ms For studying the damage but mean say typically inch per kit which was a follow avenue. Logar would need photograph of bob. Brigham fume domain time Monday don't status. Affirmative instrument my stay on april. Fifth is accurate fuming sonal fortune or did not what other scores a grammy visually. The home is few k. Gotta sunair gossage to that. Have put the shop. Jeez shopping in quantum is triple case to kill sage tooting to in october foot photography psyche. Visually available in. If move to sign with you. Jim wooten is you look more demise. If he's in town day of the guys to do another security. I in the mice. Don't throw biology now. He fell into commercial. Manch with my sky. Vigil fought until thorning sound powell percent the star by a he d- fumes wien. Gm was common. West default miso. Want all contra french. Veasley advocate and fuming eat gunderman winterized. Booties and we must betterment of so for each passing for the premium. Eric ancient. See we'll see on both photographer. Dane warlock hutto. Get off the bone. But don't you say they meant to message that movie issue you know science cheat on. We're fought to alamo known that proof you maker cerebral photographer. No mccoy's ns. Aside though the apostle god. Chris paul lamey miocene chiba.

KCRW
"chibas" Discussed on KCRW
"Even just keep that God is calling. Still him saying how? When he hands us always hang up boys is so wow. No, he doesn't. Last night. She was Hey. What Get those Hey. I'm doing my best to talk to him. No, no, don't go. Check. Check. Please. Please, to brag about it all the time. You're facing some things you can't Inside. Great deserve you. That's right work. But you can come Just like that, out of my bad down good thing today. What you've done for me lately. What you've done for me. You know, it's the truth, isn't it? I'm doing you know. Wait. You have to be thankful for the little things but little things are you seeing to give? You always spend enough what we could do today? So Papa says You've got one life to live. Who's right? Who's wrong? Wrong with you? What have you done for me lately? What have you done for me? Maybe. What have you done for me lately? What have you done for me lately? What have you done for me? What have you done, Father? Me. Huh? She Yeah. Okay? The sounds of me Hortatory brand new record. Tokyo story. You know her from Chiba Matsu. We're gonna switch gears. Here's a new one. From run the jewels getting we worked by Mexican Institute of Sound. Let's get back.

850 WFTL
"chibas" Discussed on 850 WFTL
"Everybody way, all right? I have paid my due time after time after my sentence. But committed no crying on bad mistakes. I've made a few That must be oh, My friends and Chiba. That's better off the world. After taken my about my cut cools. You dropping payment Fortunate everything that goes with it. I think you are, but it would be no better frozen. Bless your crew. I consider it a child before you my race track, my friend. Oh, good, my friend. Yeah, your life. Sets amusing Thies the greatest hits of the seventies eighties and nineties on Sonny, one of 79..

THE NEWS with Anthony Davis
More than 300 Nigerian schoolboys kidnapped by gunmen Were Rescued.
"Of cat scene state said bringing relief to many families. I think we have recovered. Most of the boys governor me bella. Massari said in a televised interview with state channel and ta abduction grip the country already incensed by widespread insecurity and evoked memories of boko harms. Twenty fourteen kidnapping of more than two hundred seventy schoolgirls in the northeastern town of chiba took last friday nights gunmen raided the government science secondary school in sina on motorbikes and marched the boys into ru forest in the biggest such incident in the lawless region in recent years massari said a total of three hundred and forty four boys held in the forest had been freed in neighbouring zamfara state. The boys were on their way back to cat zena and would be medically examined and united with their families today. Massari said a retired health worker whose thirteen year old son was. Among the kidnapped boys could not contain his joy at their release. He's only concern now. Was reuniting with his son. He said boko haram has claimed responsibility for the kidnapping in an unverified recording the video which features boko haram emblem shows a group of boys in a would pleading help us help us the father of one of the missing boys who gave only his first name. Emma said his son was one of the boys who is heard. speaking in the video. Boko haram has a history of turning captives into jihadist fighters if it's claims a true its involvement in northwestern nigeria marks geographical expansion in its activities. But it could have purchased the boys from local criminal gangs with which it's been building ties armed gangs that robin kidnap-for-ransom widely referred to as bandits carry out attacks on communities across the northwest making it hard for locals to farm travel on tap rich mineral assets in some states such as gold. Such gangs killed more than eleven hundred people in the first half of twenty twenty alone according to the rights group. Amnesty international a former acting chief the us department of homeland security's intelligence office has told congress. The dhs

Scientific Sense
Prof. John Flood, Professor of Law and Society at Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia. - burst 01
"Welcome to the site of accents podcast. Where we explore emerging ideas from signs, policy economics, and technology. My name is Gill eappen. We talk with woods, leading academics and experts about the recent research or generally of topical interest. Scientific senses at unstructured conversation with no agenda or preparation. Be Color a wide variety of domains red new discoveries are made. and New Technologies are developed on a daily basis. The most interested in how new ideas affect society. And help educate the world how to pursue rewarding and enjoyable life rooted in signs logic at inflammation. V seek knowledge without boundaries or constraints and provide unaided content of conversations bit researchers and leaders who low what they do. A companion blog to this podcast can be found at scientific sense. Dot. com. And displayed guest is available on over a dozen platforms and directly at scientific sense dot net. If you have suggestions for topics, guests at other ideas. Please send up to info at scientific sense. Dot Com. And I can be reached at Gil at eappen. Dot Info. My guests today's facade John. WHO's professor of Law and society at Griffith University in Brisbane Australia. He's also adjunct professor of law at Queensland University of Technology and Research Associated University College Under Center for Blockchain Technologies, he who suggests on the Bloomberg professional globalization of law and the technology in law. But come John. Hello. Thank you. Sure. Yeah. So I want to start with one of your recent people, professions and expertise hog machine learning, and blockchain redesigning the landscape of professional knowledge and organization. In invite you say machine learning has entered the world of the professions. The different impacts automation will have huge impacts on the nature of work and society. Engineering architecture and medicine or early and enthusiastic adopters. Other professions especially law at late you say at in some cases with leptons adopters. could you talk about you know sort of the landscape all? Of Law, profession and. They today in terms of opting these technologies. Certainly Louis interesting because it's a very old profession is. Often considered one of the. Original traditional professions along with medicine and the church. And in a sense law has used different kinds of technology might say I mean does it? Based around writing. And then the printing press and So on yet that. It's always being based on a craft. A skill which the individual person is that enables them to do, whatever is quote if you like and. said, there's never been a lot of room for any kind of automation. Certainly, the has been space for using. A people who are not fully qualified as low as about as paralegals, people like that, who will do a lot of repetitive work document checking and things like that and so on. But what will get into now is the situation where automation through machine learning. There's other kinds of artificial intelligence. is able to start constructing documents example contracts. Check dollop a documents for particular clauses and things like that mature they're up to date and this incense is. Replacing now, the kind of work that noise will do. So I think in some ways more more of of the profession of law is gonNA be subject to automation, but distinction I would many because I think it's quite important here is that A lot of what lawyers do. Is actually quite. Active that that that that the drafting contracts overtime or or they're reviewing documents to some sort or another or they're getting through particular. Negotiation. And so you know a lot of it is the same, but they build up the expertise through doing these same kinds of were over and over again and What we're now finding is that instead of having young lawyers coming in and doing what you might call the grunt work of checking documents and going through discovery applications where he goes through the size boxes of evidence to decide. which are the appropriate documents you want the emails, the invoices order, this sort of stuff that is the kind of work which is lending itself to automation. And, and so that his taking away a lot of the work which is used for trading purposes with young lawyers and is just doing it much quicker. will quickly I mean More efficiently in many ways and probably expensive much much expensive a Lotta. This work is being outsourced to you know legal process outsourcing India or Philippines South Africa places like that. So yeah, that's that's right and so in some ways, the group of lawyers who do the work which requires the skill, the judgment. Is Reducing in some ways. That pool is getting smaller. Yeah Yeah it's it's interesting. The the distinction that you make between automation. And in my job and let's call it decision making right which is you know a lot of work in the business side of this. So for example. in the nineties in large pharmaceutical company So you think about you know rnd. People might think it has really complex selection of programs that design of them, portfolio management, risk management, all those decisions. Genuine companies be say well, senior managers with lots of experience and intuition make those decisions really well right and so that's statement would automatically implied that machines can really do much there. But what we find in the mid nineties says that is systematic analysis of data make those decisions. Don't better. Actually, I've Tom to humans humans. Always seem to make decisions. These are typically bonding the decision. So if you go back and look at it, alternative experiment has not been wrong. So we have no date to say it was a good decision at typically. So human scaffold, fifty percents of making good decisions So do you know just throwing a coin or letting monkey make those decisions so? Yup We found that even complex decision making that humans hold. you know close to their you know kind of domain I'm not necessarily. So we have machines That could do that much better than I. Don't know there's an analog of that in in law I I. Think The may be actually I mean Two three years ago the royal. Society in England decided to arrange a working party on machine learning. One of the things that they put together a a roundtable on machine learning professions resolved to talk about that night and I talked about the history of professions in technology and. and. I think one of the peculiar things that came out to in relation to law is that law. Has always been a sort of on its own. If you think about medicine, for example, medicines always had the teacher hospital institution that sort of straddles the academic quilt and the practice walls and brings those people together and as a result. INCORPORATES loss of, scientific, work. Engineering work as well computing work and things like that. And that's been the first teaching hospital king into existence in in the French revolution in Seventeen eighty-nine. A long history of that. If you look at law, there was nothing equivalent to that whatsoever and there is in fact, actually a big gap between what academy does on what the practitioners in your do so that As a result as before law has come to this a quite late but what we are. Finding I think is that Certainly the management consultancy finding is that because of the nature of a lot of what goes on in legal office a remarkable amount of it can be automated. So what we are getting now is companies setting themselves up to do this automated work. So. We have companies which do nothing but contract our instruction formation sort of company. The typical lawyer would would say to a client Do you WANNA contract classes. Yes I want this for this. And loyal galway draft contract back with it, and then in the con- comes back against as I need another contract, you go through the same process. which is good for the lawyer but not necessarily good kind. What we're finding now is the company's not can think of a few of them that will, in fact, go into the company's show order contracts. Let's see the entire. Corpus of contracts you've got there and they will analyze them. And basically say, all right. We can create a new contract in automated way fairly easily it may need some modification according to special circumstances but on the whole, it's fairly standard and and they can do that INNOVA systematic world meaning the contracts are reviewed that checked. If they're going to expire marketing, you want an unable just the system will cope with that if you're. Yeah. So yeah. No No. No so I was just going to say yes. So that the distinction you make, you know in terms education sort of systematic graduate level education that because as you say, it is low in one sense of soft proficient. You say in called professions like made it to text reengineering this team has a strong concern ensuring that expertise applied in the public interest when as low little bit different from from bad and economics in some sense sort of in the same same vein we have now made economics at really odd. of mathematics you know north of analytics there. Whether they are actually useful from policy making perspective is left to debate but at least it has been an attempt to make this make economic video hard. So so I don't know A. Fascination has been in in law I very much that will happen in law. Oh there things are beginning to happen I mean let me just boob. At. One example I learned in that workshop that I mentioned the Royal Society held. With somebody from the engineering profession talking about. The difference in skills between people who above forty I'm below forty he said. If he he was about Forty Years Austin design an aeroplane, takeout pen and paper Pencil, and paper and. I don't know anyone under forty could do that would know how to do that go onto a computer program undecided there. So you can see that the incorporation of technology into the academy through to the actual. Occupation. Than phones and things is is already a standard and they're in law. It isn't law. As you said, it's still very much a soft skill although I will argue that there is a difference between the way nor is viewed in different parts of the world. So in the United States A law is I think more tilted towards the sciences. So low in economics is one of the big things in the. US. So you got a lot of people working in the of lower economics who might go onto antitrust work no competition work and things like that which across a lot of economics, mathematics and Statistics and so on. In, say a Europe Australia and so on. Law is more allied towards the humanities. And the classics. So it doesn't have that kind of scientific underpinning in that way. So anything that's going to change in these parts if you like is going to be something that's going to be imported from outside. And is going to have a very dramatic impact when whether it does An and I think that's yet to happen. I don't think there's been sort of Cambrian explosion. If you like in in law, the will be one I'm sure but but law has an advantage over engineering economics or the other areas you might. That's With the nature of the rule of law and absent justice is since law as a a way of ordering society is absolutely crucial to everything else. Then, Law and lawyers will say will look you know we have a special status here is different amid leave engineer. We certainly want to make sure bridges stay up. We don't want down but we can design different kinds of bridges. We can design different kinds of legal bills, but they're also the fundamental rules If you want to you know if you're an engineering company and you want to build a bridge in a different country, you're going to have to do it on the basis of the legal rules, which will be just vise by the lawyers according to the country's there in so on. So in in that was what? I might put in a special category if you live. Yea. Yea. Let me let me push NBA John. So. The. The conference that you mentioned you know the Internet is under forty and engineers at. So so one could argue you know from an engineering perspective could argue e- It sexually dangerous. To not use machines to build aircraft the goes you know all the technology that cap today actually help us make the trap lot safer. granted. If you sit down with a blank sheet of paper and Pencil, you might get the principal right. But, but the technology has advanced so much that you really have to use. Technology to do so in some sense, engineering is pushed back. that. I argue this myself then they were naive engineering school. I had a V exposed at my daughter bent to school. She used the same physics book. Twenty, five. meter. I argue that that is sort of backward because data speed no need for an engineer to really learn Newtonian physics anymore because it is prescriptive, it's deterministic can make machines, learn it very quickly and so why spend all? Right. So so then you know if you think about the the law field. I wonder if there is a senior argument that is to say Dan and tape really good lawyer casts lot of intuitions dot expedients to crap something Contract or a discourse, but then maybe the machine scan actually do it even better We haven't really tested that hypothesis yet. Right be almost have this idea that humans are always dominant. Or machines but that the not be true as technology lancers. So what do you think about that in the in the? It's a very important point actually because the. American bosses. being modifying its ethical rules recently to say that lawyers have a duty and obligation to keep up to date with technology. So we already know the technology is now a an important part and I have to say when when I say the word technology, I mean this at all kinds of levels from what you can do with Microsoft word for example, it strays plug ins all the way up to artificial intelligence IBM, Watson, or something like that So that if if lawyers become. A. Uses of technology whether this small firms or big firms or what have you a under the Aba now they they actually have an obligation to make sure that they are up to date. They can't just say we didn't know what we were doing. So I think in that respect, there is a there was a move. The other move that is taking place is actually the push from from the clients. Now, this you have to look into ways one is with corporate clients. The corporation seen US lawyers have to use noise if you'd like want their work done. PHILOS- money on Chiba they wanted to more efficiently They don't want the best piece of work every time they want something that works and they want officiant. UTA A and so on. So it was interesting I think a few years ago. The General Counsel Cisco. Actually made a speech. Saying that he expected his. Lawyers Law firms who worked for the company to be reducing their fees year on year. Now, that's the opposite of what lawyers normally do, which is to raise them year on year. So say that that's one push which is. Very profound push now, coming from the client himselves who are using the beginning to use their procurement departments in in the companies and things like that to help purchase legal services the other aspects which is just as important in this is if you look at the role of lawyers and individuals. So if you is what access to to legal services, it's expensive lawyers are not cheap they charge our money We don't know how to judge the quality of their work and so on. because. There was a credence which we just know that So. On this is where technology can begin to step in and provide services which are. Efficient and often quite. what very well for the individual saying that this. Technology can be seen to be improving access to justice a Lotta people. Yeah. Yeah yes. I want to come back to this. John. I think this is a very important point. So bent on put has a lot of uncertainty. Uncertainty maybe not not the right term, but it's called deterministic. It shows beatty ability and so the determination of quality it's not as easy as hard media India nearing or. Right business economics legal all sorts of well foreign that category and the application of technology sort of a different different meaning there but I want to touch on one of the things that you say in the paper, and that is you mentioned this before and that's about training training the next generation. So you savior regulating bodies professions are involved in the collection and reproduction of knowledge intended to be used by the entire body professionals, and so there was an expectation here that you know seeing it professionals. Is Providing the wisdom that knowledge mission to train the next generation now in a technology driven. regime. discuss vacations right. Our expert is going to be a computer engineer in the future. And so so how does that work from from cleaning and knowledge Asian will I think this is This is a crucial issue in it's one which the profession hasn't. Really. Got To grips with yet I think because you think of technology in terms of Predictive analytics a document review and things like this most law schools are not preparing students for this they may be a a a a causal to on some aspect of technology, but it's not something which lawyers themselves are learning. So I think what is going to happen is we're going to find a blending of skills occurring. So law firms will be sense having to bring in a range of technologists who perhaps have. A scales a straddle, both sides of the lines, the lawyers like this too I think I think we're going to find an avangard Who will begin to develop skills that allow them to talk to both sides of the line, the tech people and? Below people if you likes and there will be people who will acquire develop these skills as well but that's that's still some way down the line I didn't think we're anywhere near there yet, and part of the reason for that I think is that you know law is still a very highly regulated profession and and the regulators themselves are in the same situation they are unsure about what is going to happen and they also feel they have an obligation to. Not only ensure that. Customers clients and consumers are protected but in some ways, the profession is protected to if you like so. You know it's it's a it's a fine balancing. There I. Think. It's a fight balancing act and you'd say if the changing changing things. So going back, you know you care as an individual eighteen status of expert. Some form of encapsulation of knowledge and analysis occurs enabling professional experts, derived diagnoses, decisions, and conclusion wrapped late. and you make some distinctions. Type of learning that. Human? Beings. That the distinction between doing drive and become a gift and laster Yes yes. Yes I think that's important. So the the the the principle behind this is that Individuals can acquire a lot of knowledge in in various areas. So as I say learning how to drive a car, you learn how to change gear you though with the speeds. Braking different rates, conditions, and things like that. So. If you WANNA take that further and become a formula one drive or something like that. Then you have to undergo a very different kind of training and that kind of thing becomes a lot more collective rather than individual because you start to you're you're going to be in a group that is gonna be doing a particular kind of our driving. If you like everybody in the group has to understand what each other is doing that group, you can't have people going right a racetrack at two hundred miles an hour or thinking individually feel like they have to have a collective consciousness. About. How to drive in that situation? That's nothing like how? You and I might drive. I'm not saying we bad drivers just saying spreading very different. So I think professional work is not. That different from this in a way. So once you you can go through school and you can do your law degree and you can learn your low. We can learn you engineering's this applies to or professions really. But in order to become a professional in order to become somebody who can operate function within that. Group if you like you then have yourself have to develop collective consciousness and and one way of thinking about it is that we we can kind of tacit knowledge. This assorted knowledge you learn on the job from people, which is not always articulated in a precise formulate kind way but it's something you pick up from the way. Somebody does something you just recognize aw that that's how they've done that might not be. Written down anywhere or anything like that. But you know that's different from now exiting differently from the way that wise doing I think X.'s doing it better I and you and you just, and you can absorb that. That's what I mean by this kind of tacit knowledge and that comes about from the professional context. As how the professional context develops becomes absolutely crucial to how you introduce new ways of doing things new my daddy's new skills new outlooks if you like and I. Think this is where we're on the cost of of this beginning to develop I mean we we know it's got to be done quite how it's going to be done. is yet to be. So. So let me make a statement John and I want I want your reaction to it so eat in hard sciences eight years against again medicine. Expertise has about a consistent happy of remorse. Whereas enor- economics and business in general, let's say expertise is not about the ability to apply rules but to deal with. and at and if that is true, it has lot of implications rate. It has implications as to how we might divide work. Between. And machine in the future. And the skills that universities need to impart on on on new graduates are also quite different. So I always argued in the business. engineering contexts that universities having changed the dog they get mentioned before they're using the same. Using the same. Out Thirty four years without asking the question are those skills relevant, anymore or more importantly watch. Really relevant for a human being in the future rate. do you agree with that that expertise assert more about dealing exceptions apply? Putting it actually. I. I can see the logic behind what you. Saying I think what distinguishes? A good professional whether it's a good engineer good architect or good lawyer or doctor is is somebody who has a certain? This may sound strange but it's the. Imagination. Creativity. about. Kind of flare that allows them to function on the nausea they they've got and developed over the years and the experience. Gathered from Nova pitching what they'd be doing over the years and so on, and it allows them to see around things in ways which they perhaps would. I can give you an example if you like a law. So I'm in in Germany and some other countries. For example, there's a particular way of bundling together mortgage securities I I won't go to detail about this, but this statute that enables you do it. And then you can sell these securities and get money. In certain countries, the UK, the US, and so on. This, NICI. So in a sense to put this kind of a a deal together it. Couldn't be done if you live. So a bank came to one of the large English law firms and said, look we wanted we want to replicate this in in the UK, want to set a market this we're not the statues off there. What can you do and what was interesting was that the law firm then went back to first principles lawyers who were looking at this went back I suppose they looked at some vape basic areas of law matter your trust. And contract from what have you? I'm from that they constructed elite supplement that looked very much like the one in Germany, but without stat sheet and they tested it and it worked. Out To be credibly successful. So much so that the German government started German legal profession started to complain because they said. You can only do this by statute and these we find a way of doing it three. I suppose using law and there it is an they were vowed shops by but that was a particular example if you like of of what you were talking about, they took the exceptions they went back to first principles and said you know or How would we get? This is where we gotta get to, and this is a way right at the beginning what are the steps we need to take and and? And that's what a good loyal will do if you. Right right? Yeah. So that's very important point. So you in your paper dawn as the DREYFUSS and rice note that the proficient performer immersed in the world of skillful activities sees what needs to be done. But decides how to do it. So as we move into a and other technologies, I think it's important point it is. Right from Dad benefactor culture we have been using humans as you mentioned before in lots of with meted activities big not designed for humans I would I would contend enjoy doing things over and over again, and if you had thought of doing that, yeah, because they have to do it for living right and so so we should be moving to word It would where anything that is with pita on delegated to the machine at automation in the bottom of that and Appealed autonation you can have intelligent automation you can have you know reinforcement learning those types of things you have some aspects of intelligence into the into the two. And deploy humans Don't Miss. They're really good at in some case. I'm. So you know we've been studying the green for ages be our no close. It feels to understand mother. Heck it does You know it's not neat learning it. Oh, BBC of. thirty years ago as see that person again, you could see you could you could have a feeling. Then you've seen that before and and what the brain has done actually not only as he that pattern but also age that matter intuitively for thirty years and say, yes, that face I, guess before. and. So there are some superpowers the brain has reaped have been applying the all all. So for a technology might allow. Look I. Think Technology will allow us to incredibly complex things without having to think about too much I. Mean if you look at the way a port functions, for example, any major port these days they've got millions of containers and ships going through them all the time. So there's a lot of paper going through the you those charter parties, bills of lading guarantees. So the lot of legal work that's being done it, it's all quite standard stuff. I mean everybody. KNOWS, what needs to be done and so on. Now, some people are beginning to think while the best way to handle a port if you like I for everybody should know is to put everything that's going on in the poor into a blockchain so that you can see the whole supply chain. You see when something comes in, you can determine when the goods are being offloaded. When they're being shipped, you can stop making the payments as a result of the. Operation of the smart contracts if you like, and the whole thing would be just one quite seamless. In some ways without that much human intervention really just need oversight Some bits of coordination so on. But at the moment is still a a lot of humans are vote in that shipping people, law people, all sorts of things which is. I think insane. That's a waste of resources. We know that there are people who have all kinds of problems that require that creative flair she like as so why waste money on the routine stuff when you could develop skills to the the real need if you like in that way? Yeah Yeah. So I, want that some that bit that John Blockchain, for example, as you mentioned. So so one reason especially in the professions like law and business humans have an advantage justice dimension of trust. and you know at least our generation we don't really. At eighty level, right. So so having that. Human human touch is still extremely important for us. Now, technologies like Blockchain, for example, actually allows that trust to be tensely decoupled, right? Yeah, and I think I think you're right. Look I. Think I mean one of the reasons we make contracts is because We, don't trust each other. So we we devised these documents with all the conditions in them. Something goes wrong. This is what will happen things like that and so on. What are the interesting things? You know people really rely on contracts are met you. You draw up a contract. And the to business people stick him in the drawer I never look at again less something really really fundamental goes wrong but they know sumit doesn't that never look at that again. So you say value of the contract, what did it actually do if you look at some of the Asian countries say like Taiwan or parts of China, you have a assistant coach Guanxi, which is where people developed effective relationships by knowing each other over a period of time around business that allows them to develop trust it. So You know there are different ways of of handling trust, but we we seem to spend a lot of time on trying to minimize something You know which we don't really do a lot of if you like. So I think one of the advantages of of blockchain is that it just it removes a lot of this from from the equation if there's certain things you know that can happen. as a result off if this thing that systems. Lead happened And you know. As, long as you've got oversight and you can see what's going on than. You don't need to be too concerned about it. It will just do what it needs to do in that way and So. Again. That's still very much in the early stages, but we are seeing situations where supply chains A shipping goods from one country to another can actually be done under smart contracts through a blockchain. Technology if you live. That that is now happening I associate goodful dealing with things like gum counterfeiting if you're. Producing. Particular high-quality could site move our phones or particular pharmaceutical products and so on you know it's one way of guaranteeing the quality of the product is you couldn't I say look you can examine the whole supply chain or the data is there. And you know his Eq- code look at it and you get the whole thing going all the way back The. Again, issues around that if you're dealing with the digital. Is Much easier once you start dealing with physical products then you have. A question of how do you get that first initial digitization of the physical if you'd like to goes on so though some people I know here in Australia who? Run A company called Beef Ledger, which is trying to export beef straight beef to China using the blockchain supply chain, which will. Guarantee the security, and the quality of the goods to the Chinese consumer APP because having problems with this before. But I will tell you now do doing something like that does require that the people you are dealing with. You're going to set this up with You have to have a trusting relationship with you before you can set up a technology that will do away with the So we're still in that. That's really early days. I think another a lot of time way to go right Yeah, but the technology works it. Clean potential one could argue contracts exist because they probably known performance if you have a technology that drives that probably the of non-performance zero, then you can actually get rid of for contract. Yeah limit. It is. Not. Goes back to that earlier point I made that. Most most contracts are fairly standard. You know a routine things they're there to. Record a series of transactions payments that have gone on between people without the to do much. If you like you know once you you're you're doing the business, the contract just kind of records that in perpetuity. So the small contract just takes that into a different area and an an actually does the whole implementation and execution without people to be involved in that too much and there's something goes wrong. But if it if it all goes right then back it is done you need to you don't you think about it Right. Yeah. Hasn't been jumping to another are forthcoming people globalization law at. A time of crisis in the? Global Lawyer and so in the say Nikolai Condom Nieve a Russian economists in the nineteen thirties believed the worst economy operates long sixty year cycles Then he called K. Braves. And you safeguarding coronavirus analysis, the fifth psycho young's from nineteen eighty to twenty thirty. It's you save twenty, nineteen forthcoming John You might have. I think so I think say because I, tell you off the what's happening this year I thought my good I couldn't My God. I was just. Owners because you know a contract device these waves up into into what he calls four seasons spring summer or winter at, and we're in the winter off this fifth cycle if you like this is. All the bad stuff happens and he's news war. Famine Disease I think wait a minute that sounds Yes yes. That's exactly right. A. But one of the interesting things about contractors was that you know he he a because he's A. Solid economists are installing a dip executed. By the way you know he he got fed up ninety that was the end of Nikolai unfortunately but he. He said instead of know if you like the ownership of the means of production are being the determinate for changeover from system system, he said it's it's technology and and that the technology will drive you out of the downswing of the last cycle into the upswing of the new cycle, and and the way that works is the win. You're in this kind of winter period because of the kind of economic. Gloom pervades if you like people tend to hold back in subsurface vestment in terms of technological innovation of what have you and so a lot of energy resources, resources, money capital if you like builds up to a second point when people say we're GONNA go for this is this is it? And that's when if you like technology comes to the fall on, really drives it forward. So from that perspective, what he's saying is that you know come right about twenty thirty. If. Things are going slowly now regarding technology they're going to speed up. In. This period and that's when it will. You know really also take take off and people have looked back over our preceding cycles and they've you know it works if you like not just their. Fantasy theory there are also the people who do Cleo dynamics in history these the quantitative historians and they've done a similar kind of analysis of historical periods and said, yeah, you know there are all these citrical. Processes that take place even revolutions occur and big upset occurs and what have you and and. One of their Perspectives which I find quite interesting is that they say one of the reasons for revolutions come about is caused a lease beginning to compete with each other and and an an I look at say trump in in America and I look at the Democrats and I I I would say Modine, India I look she in China and different groups of elites who are engaged really profound struggle for the future of their countries if you live. Out which again is leading to this kind of potential eruption of activity and a new ways of doing things. Yeah. It makes a lot of intuitive sense gone. So one way to think about this also. There are a lot of excesses. So innovating go good their excesses in the system people to believe that invincible they changed assumptions about. because they don't see any. and. Financial markets to right. So these cycles and real real mass that uniquely talking about you can see the. Happening in the financial markets more clearly. But what he's saying is that he happens mortgage and you ask in this paper in two thousand, nineteen for in many ways go. Crystallization off the settling ketone economic forces lost throat ear Kublai doomed as populous. Separates nationalism and lead clients and I think they have that we have probably the answer to that. But you see I think. One of the points I was trying to make an in in this paper walls that Global Law. If you like is is, is the a kind of synthesis off chaos? How do we bring some kind of order to chaos now once you start seeing the undermining? Of his global institutions, you see trump was withdrawn from the W. H. O.. He's he's are criticized NATO he he won't have the do with the International, Criminal Court and so we've got this kind of real life tension now between a an international legal order that's being built up since the Second World War both Ekit economic and legal order is Global And so we can't just a radical globalization I mean even even with covert, we can't eradicate mobilize ation we've got to. Handle covert the Kobe pandemic on a global basis. Otherwise, we'll. We're lost it retreats to a national. Approach is not gonNA. Work? We'll be defeated in that race is going to be global. Might. Be One of my questions in in paper was will who are the people who are going to be doing this? Kind of bringing the the order to chaos if you like and that made argument that it's got to be the global lawyer. And this is a person who not only understand their national legal system but also able to communicate with lawyers and officials. From around the world if you like. To be able to develop a kind of common. Language common discourse that enables them to stop putting these things together are, and it's not just a simple massa of saying mathematically, it works this way or not. It requires the kind of pulling together of people, but it requires that sort of common understanding which. Comes out of what I was saying about this idea of testing knowledge you know as you got this kind of professional consciousness you know how people ought to behave and how they will interact with you, and then that enables you to be out of bizarre to predict how you can do things and so on and so on. That basis I think we can operate kind of global order. It had a a below the institutional level if you're not kind of private. As opposed to the public according and that will put three. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah you know I the limit John I don't know if you think this way I limit one could as. Want to stay need for. Countries what does the need for legal system differentials? We set this up with the premise that it's easier to manage small chunks. one could also argue with Edmund Affect. -nology that you don't need to segment this debate that we have done. which might make these types of issues you know. See where you're coming from and I'm going to say yes or no? Yes, I think the home range of of questions that can be handled by the technology the ones we got pay I don't chain, etc. I don't I didn't see any issues there but there are a lot of decisions that needs to be made a book in terms of putting things together and resolve disputes that can only function at a human level because it's not. These are not decisions that are simple binary decisions. If you'd like, it's yes or no it's it's often a lot more nuance than complex about I mean, one of the resources in the World Kiva Zero System, the world amendment which is being fought over if you like is water, a water is probably one of the most valuable resources anywhere and it's you often find that rivers and things like that sort of flow between countries, they form borders. And and you are you know people if you look at the Nile, ESL start stopping in Sudan throwaway down to the Mediterranean. So he goes to countries all three countries, east European and then into Egypt's and so unwell well, who has the right to put it dime at a particular place and things like that all of that has to be cooled in act. You see a not going to be done at a human level that that's what caused the skills in negotiation judgment interpretation understanding if you like of the other people, no machine can do that I got. Yes before we conclude, I want to touch on one other thing So in the paper, you say as technology and culture intersect more and more. Ethical conundrums will intensify these raising questions about the rights and obligations of robots. And go beyond as moves. Three laws of robotics in two issues of rights of all moon. Algorithm, stem serves. So this is this is an area that be Kevin babies even even really form some notions allowed rights of all modes at rights of a are. Sai, gets more sophisticated. Yes. Yes. I do. I, mean I think this is one of the issues we already know some of the problems with algorithms and and you know can we can be are they transplanted from you see what's going on the ethical issues around the construction and implementation of algorithms and things like that. But I I I think looking into the future we all going to rely on things like robots. And various kinds of machines so much more so that if you look at a country like Japan, which is a a an aging population such that it doesn't have sufficient younger people to look after the people who need looking often. So machines, I'll be part of that, and that means people will stop forming real relationships with machines and and so that's when I would say. Okay. So let's think about how we View a potential rights of machine that we give. We give rise to humans. Yes. We know that we give rights to animals. Now we've also given rights to viz in forest in some countries as well as so machines I think our. Next logical step you know do we do we treat them with respect Let me give you one. Very classic example yet the production of. Robots for sex if you like is a major industry at the moment, some manufacturers say they want to program them say that people can act out rape fantasies will do we want that I? Mean you know should we be at first of all? You know? We should be having people behave in this particular kind of way, but even an uncertain if you do it against another human being, you'll be punished for it and you say we'll a machine is a piece of property you should be you should be doing that but I'm getting to think that maybe a machines should be treated with dignity say that we are treat ourselves with. Dixie. This a kind of reflexive situation here what we? Do to machines we do to each other, and they may again due to US depending on how they evolve and and move forward in that way is a very contentious issue. A lot of people would reject that right out of hand I agree I think we've got to stop thinking about stop dining forward because I. think we're going to at some point again. I. Don't know when. But at some point we will be having to deal with that. It's a it's a very important point. Joan. So if I understand you correctly, you know that the rights to animals the rights to inanimate. INANIMATE things like Lubers The recent those exist is because of its effects on humans and can see video a clear link in the future we would see a very clear link between a algorithms and robots ended affects on human. So this is not me You know each not fantasy in the sense that yeah, robots should have rights, but rather it's a more conceptual question. Any fraud did not have rights each going to cabin negative I I think that's absolutely true. I mean just to highlight that if you like this firm called Boston Dynamics that produces. Robots and they produced these videos of these. Now, these robots are resistant being pushed over and things like that, and it was quite interesting because a lot of people say all you can't treat them in this way. This is awful and so what I mean that that's the answer for more fighting to to the extreme extent. But it I think you know on the basis what you're saying, you know how we Oakland. Hold human beings accountable to each other in an increasingly complex world machines have become part of that. We can't just have them all sitting on the edge as though they're not part of who we are, what we are and how we do things. Right. So. Incursion Johnny fuel sort of look forward five years. At. The intersection of law and technology. But you think people see sort of the biggest. I. Think you'll see it two wins. On the you know for the individual The individual, you're going to see a lot of them just interacting. With artificial Tennessee, say lost questions about what my rights for this how do I deal with a tendency agreement? How do I complain against a producer company or something like that or that's going to be automated? is fairly straightforward to do and and it will only need A. Minimal. Amount of human inside of. An intervention if you like. At the other end at the. In I think we're GONNA see more and more technology coming in because as those basic functions that are. Being, carried out by junior people or or paralegals or things like that are the ones which are going to be increasing, automating creasing. I'm. We will replace the humans and just let machines do that because there's no point in wasting human resources on that whether that means we need fuel or more lawyers That's an open question I think it will that we need different kinds of lawyers We will need Roy Moore to logically aware much more sophisticated. They don't it's be programmers or odors or anything like that, but they need to have a quite a a a a strong understanding and gross what's going on in technology in that way if you like so. Yeah. We can definitely see an. Yeah, so I, think you mentioned the so from a structure perspective in all forum DC law firm sprucing to word. It a group of equity partners. Around it by machine so to speak well, I. Think. I was in that paper or another one I. I'm S-. Forecast. Law. Firms. Being. Distributed decentralized we'll tournaments organizations running on a blockchain with with the various people. into setting when they will no I. Think the law firm is still a very strong and powerful is Shutian, that's not gonNA disappear straight away. But certainly the numbers of partners who control things will shrink. They'll that will get smarter as proportion and yes, they will be surrounded by machines and they surrounded by people who are servicing those machines. Your excellent. Yeah. Thanks for doing this weekend. John really enjoyed the conversation. Thank you very much. It's been great fun and very

Marketing Secrets
Achievement Vs. Fulfillment: Which Do You Want More?
"Right so. He has no last week at Lake POW with my family, and we had an amazing relaxing vacation, which is really good problem with the entrepreneurial brain. US EP entrepreneur personality types. When we try to relax, we can't and it drives US crazy. Because we gotta be moving forward momentum, right and so. I started thinking about projects and things I wanna to do things that are fun and like. I know some years know that I am working on eventually writing next book, which could be the bootstrap book Tunnicliffe Story, but the problem is Cleveland Stories and that done. Yes I. Don't know where it's going to go or source was kind of like this things in the back burner that I'm going to do someday. It's not a huge rush. But I'm excited for that, but I was like I almost any something fun to be creating right like I dunno, as a creator, I need to create sure has the same way right and and I'm creating. You know we have the New Tacoma Quebec's coaching programs creating a lot of fun i. want something just. Excited enjoy this is fun and lighthearted deadlines or thing just to create to create right. It's all I had an idea. For Project, I'm going to tell you the details, the name or anything. Other than it's, it's going to be the one and only time I ever talk about personal development. Anyway, right marketing guy that's. Sick with but obviously I've had access to a lot of people. Most people have access to in this world and its lifetime, and had a chance to learn from some amazing people and. Wanted to create this thing I don't know what it's GonNa. Be I duNNo, if it's a real book of it's like a book feminine, just giving away for free as the lead magnet, I have no idea. But. The title I'll tell you. The subtitle subtitle is the science of achievement. The art fulfillment in Vero Tony Robbins Talk. He talks about a lot of times to master masters signs of achievement where the had know the science and how to achieve anything, and then you have to master the art of fulfillment and funny, because he talks about a lot of times, but always struggle with that personally. Because he doesn't go deep into the whole thing you know, and so at Lake Powell this week thinking about this sure thing about the art and the science. And the science of treatment is lost. If I talked about anyway, you know here's the step-by-step, I? Here's the things you need to do things in this order and you have success, but the article films I personally struggle with like I'm such an achiever. I want to this this this and you. What's next on each next thing the next thing he moving towards? Running towards this this invisible goal that we don't really know what it is. I think a lot has producers and entrepreneurs and people like me and probably you. With the film, and like, how do you feel fulfilled and cinching? Is that the article film? It's tough because it's like art. It's not like the science sciences like here's the things to do to get the thing like this art fulfillment and I've always struggled and so as I was thinking about putting together this project. I started thinking about that and I started. Just think signs of cheating. My brain goes GonNa Mike Okay. I'm Jim achiever. Boom here's the thing. But then I started realizing that like the the the path of achievement the article film. It's almost the opposite like a union being and I served Rosina's like. Oh my gosh, they're looking deeper. Different topics have been concepts I was like. Oh, my gosh is true and so many things. Then you realized before so for example. This example shared kind of help s even what I'm. I had. Everyone talks about morning routines right. If you follow any of the fitness, guys, a health and fitness, the bio hackers the the entrepreneurs they all talk about you gotTa have more routine Tina's structure and things like that? You GotTa wake and you gotTa know. This always seems right. Talked about morning and starts accusing to do before you go to bed to increase your sleep patterns in all sorts, and and that's very scientific writes the science of achievement like do you want to have more success? You create habits. Can Habits been creating a routine thirteen? You stick the routines I think that outcome and eventually you have success, right and other big believer that actually so I'm making fun of by any stretch. It is part of the. The the science of Chiba having that right so if you by the way struggled achieving things in the past, maybe because you don't have. Scientific like you just do these things and the outcome happens just magic. It! Just it just works. So there's a science of the problem though is, is it doesn't create fulfillment. Stickney for second I did a podcast about this six months ago or something. I was in I was in. I was in Puerto Rico with brand new Bouchard big. Bunch people and one of the guys there there's getting create. Clements and Craig was We're sitting there and he started talking about. Our brains where he said you know a lot of. Older. Years of getting shorter wait times flying rallies, and actually true, so the reason why is because your brain looks for patterns of the same thing happening over and over and over again deletes them. because. It's like I. don't even remember this because dude. Every single morning we do see every single week every single thing. As, we said he said so literally, your brain is deleting nothing's happening, and so your life seems shorter because it literally is shorter because those memories, it's like Hey, every morning from nine from seven ten, the same things under remember this because the same deleted, and so because you use five hours in your memory every day and see life years go faster days go faster faster and your life goes faster. He said that the problem is he's like he's like. If you. If you want to extend you, know, extend time You have to create called him event horizons! PODCAST? Talk a lot about him, but it was interesting because he's like this mastermind group in the very first year we did it. We all in Wyoming would flew helicopters shotguns. We rode horses. It was crazy right and he was like I was an event. Horizons remember that experience for the rest of my life is the second year master. Makina Puerto, Rico it was amazing. Place. It was amazing. Is this is year? Three and we're in Puerto Rico is. I can have an amazing time. Basically, the problem is is this experience is so similar to lash. Most of it's going to get deleted from my memory, and it's just GonNa be on. Our brain will just lead because it's like Oh, this is routine done. This before is like you lose that and I think he was trying to get us to do some crazy night. 'cause he's like when you criticize horizon right now and he wanted to I can't remember what the thing was. We had some crazy thing like to stick this in our brains. We don't lose moment of this experience because it's it's. It was so similar to think before and horizon, start thinking. I'm like. Oh, my Gosh, like if you think about these things, this is the union the Yang of of fulfillment half of. The are the the science of achievement in the article. In the game because if you want, do you want to cheat me? When she the thing you need to create structure and routine and the singer where you just do the things that create the result at the end. Is, you do that, and so because boom towards you're getting achievement, right with problems, your brains lean section every single day and I'll send your your days. Your lives words. You're not fulfilled. You're not getting the article film that because of that, and so the article film is the opposite. It's the literal opposite of this first thing right it. Is You coming in? In, saying we're not going to do routine, we have to do these crazy things with extensive life extensive happens. We fill fulfillment in the moment, and it's the scene in the Yang

Monocle 24: The Globalist
Tokyo raises Covid-19 alert to highest amid spike in cases
"In Zurich Seven, twenty, two here in London Tokyo has raised its corona virus level to its highest in response to the number of cases, spiking the city's governor held a news conference, in which he held aloft a red and orange card to colors, which indicate the seriousness of the threat, but I'll Tokyo Bureau chief Wilson joins me now with more welcome back view now I'm tell us what's happening where you are. Yeah. That's right Governor Koi K. Yesterday. raise the level to the highest level to read I. Think for most people in Tokyo. It's very difficult to interpret. It's a really symbolic system of guidelines that really don't. They have no binding force I think what people are really looking at is how the infection numbers doing and the news just coming in now they'll be two hundred eighty around two hundred and eighty record to stay, which would actually be a record for Tokyo. So I think that's the number that people will be looking at I. Think the governor. Qweik's alert system has has honestly not been that helpful. Those people don't quite understand what it means. The guidelines came out in May originally. When when the state emergency was lifted, they were revised in June and it's partly to do with the shift in in in how the virus is is affecting people now the first wave of ours with affecting more older people this time it's younger people asymmetric. And what governor? Governor quick as saying what we really need to focus on now is. Can the health system coke? So that's what these guidelines are referring to it. Saying is the health system on depression, which it seems that it is, and she said that the trying to secure I think nearly three thousand. That's people who have mild symptoms ever. Do we know where this the spread of the disease is coming from? You mentioned the fact that it is young people now who are turning up with positive tests. Yeah I mean they've certainly be mentioning a lot about nightlife small balls. They been people working ball state. They've been co opted to making video. Saying this is how we're going to do business from now on. We're not drinking from the same bottle. I mean the mind boggles. That was going on anyway, but they've said that going to. Enforce these. Practices just so that customers surprise and there's been a cluster in certain areas of Tokyo. It's not just Tokyo. The areas around Tokyo that have. Always had a similar kind of. Trajectory for the virus Kinda go fight Chiba. And also all soccer in the fall west of Japan, so that that's one area, but they're also actually rather love untraceable infections that something I know, the Governor Koi case worried about so that's why she she said situation she she's referred to severe, and European, wouldn't be considered that the compared to numbers in Europe, but certainly hair it's it's considered pretty bad at the moment. No businesses as far as I can gather, have been asked to close and what you described. There are people not sharing bottles does sound rather. Astonishing, giving the level of sort of lockdown at the rest of the world is experiencing and still is experiencing. Is there a sense that now? The the the authorities in Tokyo are really getting in control of this thing, or is that still a sense is Estela gap between what should be done or anything? People think should be done what people are actually doing. Well. I mean there's always been this issue. That nothing is `binding in Intercon? It's always about advising people cautioning them asking them and what's happened. Is Japan that people are quite happy to do that? We don't see any of this problem with people refusing to end loss, there's not that people are extremely cautious. The the the sharing of book was I'm sure rating most people here as well so I think people have really really got hold of the situation. You know as a group among saying Tokyo if you look around everyone. The for example, people are very cautious to kind of being built in now. Kids about school, but they're all very socially distance wearing masks so that there is already built in I. Think you know what goes what happens from now is it's really difficult to predict because governor Taylor last month, said you know infections go by fifty a day. We'll have to think about dozing businesses again now. We're already at two hundred and eighty today so clearly. It's not that straightforward. It's a much more. More complex situation you know, how and as I said it's, it's different group of people now because the eysenck domestic, then not needing the hospital beds that were were really ought to pressure in April. When when the when the pandemic was was thought to peaks, actually so it slightly different situation. Now we're now also in a situation and the time when tourism should be really at the heart of what's happening in Japan. We should be in the middle of the Olympics notwithstanding but. The central government has. been trying to boost domestic, tourism. It's come up against some rather understandable opposition hasn't at namely from those who would be receiving visitors from the likes of Tokyo where there. Is this this this outbreak? Absolutely I mean that's a campaign called the go-to travel campaign which the government launched, it was supposed to be August actually that started, but they've brought it forward to twenty second of July which should have been the long weekend that launched the the Olympics. It was supposed to be a holiday weekend. We don't know the Olympics, but we still have the holiday weekend and she. Has Launched his campaign, which will basically encourage people to trouble ever Japan? They'll be heavily subsidized. You've got money back on travel hotels from September. You'll get voucher to spend wherever you go, so it's. It's really encouraging people to move around on the reaction. It'd be very bright, mixed some areas already welcoming it that that very keen to get travelers, but some places. It walked in the north of Japan where they've had no cases. Just said now is not the time, but then don't particularly wanting this to happen, so. It really varies from from prefect prefecture, but I think there's lots of nervousness and I can say that I have traveled a little bit in Japan and the last couple of weeks and I can certainly say that people are not about through to see anyone from Tokyo coming into rural areas at the moment. Even if you're masked up that that very concern Tokyo is, the numbers are much higher than anywhere else and the loss of concerned about people from Tokyo. Particularly traveling around the country, and what is it? Do you think that will reassure people that? There are calls for stronger testing measures and tracing measures to be carried out. Then both like I said that maybe one thing they do is they actually offer free tests? If not reassurance, people you know the to show that these tourists do not have a virus. I think it also shows that the pressure on Shinto be how difficult it will be opened the country up to. International travelers you know all the measurements really hard to persuade people to travel within Japan, so it is difficult, and and you know these number very public, and you know people will see the news today

The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer
Trump says Roger Stone has 'very good chance of exoneration' hours after sentencing
"Get some more and larger stones set and see our senior justice. Evan Perez is here our crime and justice. Chiba Polka. Pez is also working the story for Evan. You're inside the courtroom when you heard Judge Amy. Berman Jackson read out her decision. It was a dramatic moment. It was it was over an hour where she was essentially going through methodically. The aspects of this case including some of the arguments made by Roger Stone by the president and some of his allies that Roger Stone was being targeted for some For for his First Amendment right to stand up for president trump that he was essentially being targeted for being a political trickster. She says none of those things are true. I'll read you just a part of her remarks during the sentencing. Today she says quote stone wasn't obstructing not some secret anti-trump Cabal but he lied to Congress. You'll remember that. He was convicted of lying to Congress during testimony to the House. A House of Representatives as well as witness tampering threatening one of the witnesses in this in this case and so she took all of this on. She talked a little bit about some of his Some of his emails some of the threats that he made to Randy critical one of his associates And during that time well if we were all watching Roger Stone and he and he behaved himself mostly in court but during that time as she read some of his obscene emails. You can see him turnaround smirk and look at their two rows of his followers inside the courtroom today She also took to con the issue of of the politics. That are play in this case. she says quote he was Roger. Stone says he was not prosecuted as some have claimed for standing up for the president he was prosecuted for covering up for the president. One of the things we were watching today to wolf was the prosecution. John Crabs stood up today and essentially walked back to the original sentencing memo the recommendation that was made for seventy two seven seven to nine years From the prosecution team which resigned which quit the case in the middle of controversy over over President Trump's interference in his and the prosecutors the prosecutors stood up and he said he apologized for all the drama that happened in the past week wolf and he said that the original sentencing memo was essentially submitted. In good faith it was exactly according to Justice Department policy and it was within the guidelines that are established is interesting because we know the president. He clearly tried to influence the outcome of this trial from the very beginning. And the judge Amy Berman Jackson. She addressed that specifically. She did and it's not just the outcome of this trial. Let's the entire the entire Muller investigation where you see. The president has has inserted himself tweeting. It's talking about it at campaign rallies publicly talking about and the judge really today. That's what some of this was about. She wanted to address some of the influence and also the attempted influence and also the prosecutors who now have taken over this case day to said that the Department of Justice is. There's no political interference you know we're here to be fair and the judges continued. I mean we saw her going. After Roger Stone we saw her in some ways going after the president and then taking on the whole the political drama surrounding this case and what she said and this judge docs and she said the dismay and disgust at any attempt to interfere with the efforts of prosecutors and members of the JUDICIARY TO FULFIL. Their duty should transcend. Party this is a big moment in the sentencing. This was the overall I should say theme. I felt throughout her sensing proceeding was a larger message. Here because judiciary is under attack and this was a moment in time for the judge to defend the judiciary defend other judges and defend the system. Which is really under attack right continues to be under attack by the president. Today he railed against what's going on in the problem. Pardon you certainly. Did our guys stick around Evan and Shimon reporting for now. Let's go to the White House. Our chief White House correspondent Jim. Acosta is also working the story for a strip. The president was quick to speak out about Roger Stone's sentencing. That's right well. The president responded to speculation that he is about to pardon Roger Stone. The president suggested he will wait and see how the appeals process plays out for his former advisor saying he hopes stone is exonerated and while the president didn't offer stone at immediate. Pardon he didn't exactly close the door on that possibility either. President trump threw his support behind his convicted former adviser. Roger Stone but stopped short of offering a pardon to the dirty trickster just hours after he was sentenced in federal court. I'm not GONNA do anything. In terms of the great powers bestowed upon a president of the United States. I want the process to play out. I think that's the best thing to do. Because I'd love to see Roger Exonerated and I'd love to see it happen because I personally think. He was treated very unfairly and an event honoring rehabilitated prisoners. In Las Vegas. The president ripped into the jury forewoman at the stone trial accusing her of being an anti-trump activist that was in response to her facebook. Post defending the prosecutors in the stone case so if this woman was tainted I hope the judge will find that you was tainted. And if she isn't tainted that will be fine to now. You would know about a bad jury. Anybody here know about that now. The president question. How could be sentenced to forty months in prison in part for lying to Congress but MR trump unleashed a flat out falsehood of his own when he said stone was not involved with this campaign in Twenty fifteen? The trump campaign said it fired stone. Roger was never involved in the trump campaign for president. He wasn't involved early on long before he announced he may have done a little consulting work or something but he was not involved when I ran for president. And he's a person who again he knows. A lot of people having to do with politics. Stone is now part of a growing group of trump associates sentenced or awaiting prison sentences. Democrats worried the president is floating the idea of parts to try to keep those associates quiet while I think that he's dangled the pardon Often with Mrs with regard to Mr Stone and Mr Flynn in part to In my opinion to signal to them that if they stay on the team that they don't reveal further information that they might possess about the president that they'll be taken care of the judge overseeing stones trial took a jab at Mr Trump at one point sang at the former trump campaign adviser sentencing that he was prosecuted for covering up for the president. Mr Trump had been teasing the possibility of a stone. Pardon tweeting video of Fox host calling for leniency. The whole thing is enough to shake your faith in our justice system. Unfortunately president trump could end this tragedy travesty in an instant with pardon and there are indications tonight that he will do that. Trump allies are also reminding the president he has the power to pardon stone with GOP. Senator Lindsey Graham tweeting under our system of justice. President trump has all the legal authority in the world to review this case and terms of commuting the sentence or partying Mr Stone for the underlying offense as the attacks on the four women in the stone. Trial a fellow juror. In the case said the president and the Attorney General are doing damage to the Justice System. Big Cast doubt on the the bedrock of the equal administration of Justice. That is just so so important to our country I think he damages our democracy by attacking this way and I wish he would stop now as for a pardon for Roger. Stone trump

Radio From Hell
Coronavirus: Utah man moved from cruise ship to hospital amid quarantine
"I usual man who's been stuck on board a quarantine ship off the coast of Japan has in fact factor tested positive for coronavirus drawn herring of to Willa was a sailing on the diamond princess cruise line with his wife Melanie when the two became quarantine David that an outbreak of coronavirus on the ship well John felt fine at first he said he developed a fever that lasted for three days he said it reached a hundred and four degrees at one point and with no medicine available he use cold towels for relief on the fourth day herring said he woke with no fever felt much better that's when the doctor called him and said you're going to the hospital an ambulance took caring to a hospital in Chiba near Tokyo hearing learn Friday morning that he and Tess back tested positive for covert nineteen which is what they're calling the novel coronavirus he's now isolated in his small hospital room and herring showed fox thirteen how medical staff were serving him meals through a cabinet in the wall but they can access from the other side so there are people just trying to not even go in them at all he said he's been talking to family as he passes the time alone in his room I remember my mother as Billy was telling me stories about when she was a kid you would see signs on people's houses they would quarantine I think if there was a measles outbreak in the neighborhood they go around hang signs on people's door saying this this home is quarantine measles and that's how they tried to deal with the spread and I think tuberculosis was another one as I recall she said it was not uncommon to see quarantine signs just on people's houses can I do that so people leave me alone sure maybe yeah if you if you can get a wheelchair at the airport without being really in need of one I think you can probably do that he said his doctors will tested again in three days to see if he still infected in order to be released from the hospital herring said he needs to test negative for coronavirus twice in a row that means he could be in the hospital anywhere for more than a week to more than a

Garden Talk
Earthquake strikes Tokyo as it braces for worst storm in decades
"Michigan what a difficult day it's been in Japan hit by typhoon to give us the biggest storm to hit the island nation in more than fifty years and the five point three magnitude earthquake CBS is rainy Inocencio is in Tokyo okay this means speed in Filipino and it is the largest storm to hit Japan in at least six decades at least one person is confirmed dead in Chiba a man died after a tornado flipped over his

AP 24 Hour News
Typhoons Faxai and Lingling cause death and destruction in Northern Asia
"Typhoon ling ling lash to North Korea over the weekend north Korean state media is now urging citizens to fully mobilized to rebuild workers will need to rebuild electricity networks salvage battered crops and help families whose homes and property were damaged meanwhile a separate typhoon Blue Cross the Tokyo area and knocked out power several railway and subway operators suspended service and flights were cancelled at Tokyo airports as the typhoon passed over Chiba a northern suburb of the Japanese capital before daybreak shaking homes with strong winds and battering the area

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
How Did We Miss This Week's Shockingly Close Asteroid Flyby?
"An asteroid as large as a football field is just flying past the earth with astronomers not detecting acting it until literally just a day before its closest approach. The giants space rock thought to be up to one hundred and thirty meters wide came within sixty five thousand kilometers of earth on july the twenty fifth in nominal terms. That's about as close as it gets. The asteroids being catalogued as twenty nine. Okay the european paint space agency says this near earth objects close approach illustrates the need for more eyes on the sky was able to observe the asteroid just before its fly by requesting requesting to separate telescopes in the international scientific optical network is on to take images of space rock the observations allow strana missed the determine the asteroids exact back position and trajectory yesterday it was i the technical the day before its closest approach by the southern observatory veneer of asteroids research observations of twenty nine thousand nine okay with an independently confirmed by other observatories including the chiba radio telescope in puerto rico and third telescope in the ice on network following following its discovery with knowledge of the astros would have been in the past based on its current course and by manually searching for it by existing images were found in the past is is an atlas skysurfer archives it turns out birth said they had in fact captured the asteroid in the weeks before it's ultra close encounter with earth but the space space rock was moving so slowly it appears to move just a tiny amount between the images and was therefore not recognized as a near earth object neo and hence the seriousness of the threat <unk>. It wasn't appreciated of course astronomers now of an attracting thousands of asteroids across the solar system so why was this one discovered so late will unfortunately originally currently there's no single obvious reason apart from its slow apparent motion across the sky before it's close approach twenty nineteen okay travels in highly elliptical orbit taking it from within the open of venus out too well beyond that of mas this means the time it spends near earth and therefore time it's detectable both current telescope capabilities is relatively short modules towards the size of twenty nine. Okay i relatively common throughout the solar system but they impact on average only about once every one hundred thousand years or so still an asteroid like that hitting a major city or urban area would cause major devastation destruction based from its current orbital path through the solar system the asteroid one come close to the game for at least the next two hundred years. I'm stewart gary. You're listening space

Between The Lines
Israel's Netanyahu wins re-election, main challenger concedes defeat
"History is littered with great political comeback fodders. You think of Churchill Menzies do goal Nixon John Howard here in Australia by Japan Mahattaya in Malaysia well at Benjamin Netanyahu to the list region off time and again and against all the odds. He's bounceback with tremendous force to win a fifth term as Israel's prime minister now to he more about Netanyahu's triumph, and what it means for the Middle East. Let's he from one of Israel's most prominent commentators Yari is an Israel by Philo at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. He's author of among other books toward Israel Palestinian disengagement. I heard welcome to IB radio. Thank you for having. How do you account for Netanyahu's victory? Well, number one is to us. Over these comes to running election campaign and years, the manage the compaign alone single handed with a bunch of twenty five year old. Kids who were doing the social media for him. But the main polls is probably the fact that the majority if we want of the Israeli voters in that make me on Yahoo has heavies Dayton called and be charged with corruption breach of its then that team do that. And let's see what the decision of the court is. But in the meantime, according to the Israeli low lasts long before stepping Netanyahu became prime minister. He's allowed to stay in office until convicted at the last instance of the supreme court just. Oh. He's been accused of accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars in gifts in exchange for five years as well as cutting Elissa deals with media publishes now what he have to deal with these in Lockley document by this attorney general in Israel on charges of robbery and fraud. He has a there will be Irie. Which is the the is system. The lawyers Donyo will have the option to present the case of the defense to the attorney general, and then he has to make a decision on whether to press charges and exactly what charges had cases befall politicians in which the hearing change the decision of the general. So he denies wrongdoing, but he might have to step down as he fought the charges, but couldn't Yahoo push legislation grinding immunity to a sitting prime minister that's conceivable, isn't it. Oh, no. Netanyahu, according to Israel. You know, does not have to set down. And in fact, before foaming is next government the coalition government. He's going to secure the commitment of all these potential partners that the current low will be respected that means that baby can stay by means there and at the same time face trial. This is the low by the way, this low is exclusively for four prime ministers. It doesn't apply to ministers members of parliament, etc. Kinda victory some site that he's close relationship with President Trump helped. And if you think about Trump's coal for a US embassy in Jerusalem, US recognition of Israel sovereignty in the goal and hearts stash with Syria and the designation just last week of Iran's Islamic revolutionary guard corps as a terror organization to what extent to that. All of that help Netanyahu secure a fifth term. I think it does Netanyahu. That is is. His generally, including many of those who despised and we'd like to see him gone. They only create his qualities as an international statement. And I would like to point out if I may that even more than Trump, it is is close relationship with letting Putin that help begin because he's to today's early that he's in the position to have the air force start consistently against Iranian targets in Syria. And Mr Putin does not do anything to stop it. Although he has the air force. And the defense batteries underground in Syria that is intriguing because baby Netanyahu has also reached out to many of the SUNY Arabs in the Gulf states, and of course agent and clearly that move is primarily motivated by a joint fear of Iran. On. But you're saying that Netanyahu's close relationship with Putin also helps even though Putin is supporting Iran. Yes. But I think that what we see here is a balancing act played by to hidden in which you baby for over three news. Now, he has if you won't air force to go after the Iranians in Syria, hundreds and hundreds of strikes at the same time. He's using the Iranian issue theory. You know, the to the. The reverence there. So this is sort of hippie poop Putin game, which is going on. You've mentioned the relationship that BB has developed the Sunni Arab states, mainly the Gulf mainly Saudi Arabia and the United Emirates DC's for many in Israel. This is. Proof and everything that he's doctrine is working. And he's Dr knees, very simple. He says things the Palestinians are not willing to ever deal with for the foreseeable future. And that's the case this accepted by the majority of these. He says developed now relationship with the rest of the Arbor. So that later on maybe the students in soften their position and become possible. This works with Israeli public opinion. My guess is our hood Yari. He's a Middle East commentator for his Riley television, the more than four decades. And we're talking about baby Netanyahu shelled to be Israel's longest serving later back to Netanyahu. He's Wally believed to be smug and vindictive you account, the he's remarkable ability to overcome setbacks time, and again, I I know. Oh, be for many years. Politically is very very agile, very creative and innovative. He is an master of tricks, including Dietrich's, which are not in the political book of Israeli politics. He is a guy who doesn't have close friends is a guy who doesn't have people whom he really trust. But he's the guy who's trusted by many. So every everybody knows that the he's in a way a tricky BB. But people say who else do we have do we have a real alternative to be the moment the three ex-chief so fan stuff? We've new Bruin white poppy manage to beat these electorate and that they are not obsolete. And this is a good party reason why be one again. Really against all. Yes. And you say he's the master of dirty tricks babies. Also, the master of wrongfooting his opponents, if you think about the opposition live party creek me if I'm wrong, I think I've ruled Israel for most of its first three decades yet lie. I only want about five percent of the vote. How do you account for lives dramatic decline in Israel? Labor was decimated was gradually destroyed by deals local of ninety three they upset to these early public. We can have with the Palestinians. We could make peace late Prime Minister Rabin appeal by everybody and the late Chiba Perez and things early public by now could be that that was the wrong approach. So the labor party's paying the price. And what you have now a needs that even the people those ships are excerpts of stuff ran against to be now. And called a very very fine result. They were very careful not to say that they are left. It's a bed. World news any politics after flow be very careful not to say that they support a Palestinian state any foreseeable future. Your critic your critics Netanya his critics who had died side that Israel is on a trajectory to become an apartheid stidham bit. Lock the foam, South Africa Palestinians will eventually be a majority, but without the raw of citizens. This is Jonathan Freedland in the God. And he says that Netanyahu's re election heralds the further undermining of the rule of law including threats to the occupied Boyce Bank. How would you respond to those concerns? I it's not the first time that I disagree entirely with will ever Mr. three hundred writing, but Israel is not going to move to a next West Bank. And to assume that the only solution that we have inside is a one St. in which the Palestinians, do not be granted, equal rights is simply out of sync with was Israel is that same into that voted be Becky office. You'll have a it eighty five percent majority for two states Aleutian. Of course, once the Palestinians, Alrighty, finally to go for you have a solid eighty eighty five percent majority against on exertion of even parts of the west thing at cetera et cetera et cetera defect that we are not going to have tomorrow. The fact that the may not be Mr.. Now's first priority. Now does not mean that we are down leaper slope of going to watch date. That's something which is not going to happen knowing my country for what it is.

Afternoon News with Tom Glasgow and Elisa Jaffe
Trump visits Pittsburgh to console but stirs anger among protesters
"Asked the president and first lady arrived to pay their respects to the eleven victims of Saturday's synagogue massacre, also at the temple on this trip. President Trump's daughter Ivanka and her husband, Jared Kushner, the president's presence turned sadness to anger for demonstrator Reverend Susan Rothenberg. This is. ABC's Pete combs joins us on the KOMO news line from Pittsburgh where the first three funerals were held today and emotions just must be so raw their Pete, absolutely emotions Jerry raw. And that woman. You heard yelling from inside the bubble as they say that is a cordoned off area where the president in which the president travels. She lives very close to that synagogue. She was alone at least thirty five hundred or so by my estimate thirty five hundred or so protesters marching on the the synagogue the tree of less than a God. As the president was just was there was just preparing to leave. There was no encounter with the presidential detail. However, there wasn't encounter. According to police with between the protesters and a smaller motorcade of the local dignitaries who are leaving the president's event there at the synagogue one person was arrested. They got very loud and for few minutes, at least it was very very. You're right entrance are running. And it seems like the president went despite what many leaders encouraged them to do. They didn't want them to go first because there were so many funerals today and they wanted to focus on the victims and their families. And then city leaders wanted to focus on safety not to use resources. There were three wounded police officers, but the president visited those police officers at the hospital. Would you here is a conflict between the president's perceived role as consoler in chief and the people here who want to concentrate on their own grief. They have a lot of things resources at their at their hands locally. And they want to stay pretty much themselves. At least a you know, in in Judaism is a very is almost ritualized thing. You bury someone's quick as you can. And as is practical, and you said Sheba, and in all honesty, I think the perception here, especially along the observance was that the president was intruding on that very private process. And what people might not know is when you say sit Chiba, they're they are not allowed to be alone. The bodies are not allowed to be without someone present. And there was also another custom that the president and first lady took place in today when they placed the stones on the stars the stars of David with the names of those those killed that was an emotional moment for a lot of people to see. They're absolutely was the the issue here really is is the president's insistence on coming. Now. I mean, the the officials that you mentioned mayor Bill Peduto the county executive of allegany county, that's rich FitzGerald governor, Tom wolf people here at the highest levels really really asked the president has a very serious way to wait. Just wait a week and the president was insistent on coming now. And I think that's where you see a lot of the that you saw here today. And that's why you saw so many signs saying, watch your words words have consequences. ABC's Pete combs joining us from Pittsburgh. And sports now at five forty sponsored by

All News, Traffic and Weather
Americans are filling far fewer opioid prescriptions, new data shows
"Of the financial reach for a growing number of americans cbs's gary nunn describes being rent burden the number of socalled rent burden households those who spend thirty percent of their income or more on housing is soaring and aaron courier of research says these families are more financially insecure burden families are not able to save money they're not as likely to transition to homeownership is in the past that affect chiba more people really vulnerable to come sharks and financial emergencies which can have broader implications for the economy both a local and national level cbs news new data shows americans are filling far fewer opioid prescriptions last year they showed their biggest drop in twenty five years the decline coming amid increasing legal restrictions and public awareness of the dangers of addiction all fifty states and the district of columbia had declines of more than five percent the us is estimated to consume roughly thirty percent of all opioids used worldwide a pair of teenagers are arrested after a thirteen mile overnight stolen car chase to seventeen year olds were charged today with first degree larceny and interfering with police the stolen twenty thirteen hyundai had three people inside when the third kid realized that the car was stolen he called nine one one that pursuit ending after the kids stopped the car and tried to make a run for it they were discovered hiding nearby by police dog the case has been sent to new britain juvenile court wbz news time coming up on two fifty three how'd you get here so fast from start to finish law one place was there marathon newswatch never stops to wear wbz newsradio ten thirty.

After Hours With Amy Lawrence M
With ‘Andre the Giant,’ HBO and Bill Simmons try to pin down a larger-than-life subject
"Cbs sports radio here's our latest sports update and here's andrew well when in rome sports flash now johnny manziel has a decision to make he finished his game audition with these spring league last night by going ten for sixteen for one hundred eighty eight yards and two rushing td's cfl rookies reported to training camp may sixteen so menzel without the hamilton tiger cats up on their standing offer by then a six game suspension for red sox reliever joe kelley five games for yankee title roulston for wednesday night's brawl at fenway now both teams behave themselves last night in boston starter rick portillo didn't allow a hit through six and a forty five minute rain delay to one pitch swung centerfield jackie going back there goes the no hitter at bunches into the triangle george around i on his way to second leadoff double tim never on red sox radio russillo allowed one more hit in the seven before letting the bullpen finish off a six three win pretty chiba power bruins rob bruins radio.