24 Burst results for "Clayborn"

WTOP
"clayborn" Discussed on WTOP
"We may also see some PM showers. Good morning, I'm Michelle Bash. And I'm Mark Lewis with the top local stories we're following this hour. As you may have just heard on CBS News, a Maryland judge has been shot and killed at his home. The call came in at 8 last night for a shooting in Hagerstown. The Washington County Sheriff's Office found Circuit Court Judge Andrew Wilkinson in his driveway. He'd been shot more than 10 times. The sheriff's office in western Maryland is investigating with help from Maryland State Police. At this point, investigators have not provided any details on a possible motive, but say a news conference will be held. Wilkinson was sworn in as a judge in January 2020 after being appointed by then -Governor Larry Hogan. Neil Logenstine, OP News. And we'll bring you more on this developing story as we get it this morning. A major Muslim civil rights group based in the U .S. has moved its banquet planned at a Virginia hotel after reports of death from the U .S. Senate. The Council on American -Islamic Relations had plans to hold its 29th annual banquet on Saturday in Arlington, Virginia, but the organization said they're moving it over safety concerns. The Marriott Crystal Gateway Hotel, group where the has held their banquet for more than 10 years, received bomb and death threats, possibly linked to the group and its support for Palestinians in the Israel -Hamas War. The group said it is now holding the event at an undisclosed location with heightened security. Arlington police are investigating the threats, saying they were made through anonymous phone calls to the hotel, with some referencing threats to a bomb. Valerie Bunk, W -T -O -P News. With Island crime up in the district, the city's top prosecutor. Is the city's top prosecutor doing to fight the problem? Some members of Congress say no, and now the prosecutor is responding. When S U attorney for D .C. Matthew Graves started in the role, the city's troubled crime lab lost accreditation and couldn't test evidence. We lacked the ability to charge most drug cases because in most instances, unless someone confessed to what item the was, we didn't have the evidence we needed. But now with full drug testing capability, he said almost 60 % of arrests are charged immediately or transferred to the D .C. attorney general's office. Another key metric hasn't changed a whole lot last the few years. Historically, we've always charged and continue to charge roughly 90 % of our most serious violent felonies at the time of arrest. Those include things such as homicide, carjacking and first -degree sexual abuse. In downtown D .C., Scott Gellman, WTOP News. Thousands of people are making their way to Howard University this weekend to celebrate Homecoming. And as they do, safety will be into stepping Howard Homecoming weekend. Some of our main focus is always make to sure that people have a good time, but also that they're safe while they're doing it. Ariel Triplett, Howard's director of safety says the best way to be safe is to travel in pairs, share your location. If you see something, say something and... We're making sure everybody downloads our app for bicycles and that's how we do emergency communications with everyone. Triplett says safety is especially top of mind following recent incidents at local HBCUs, but she doesn't want people to be afraid to turn up the HUA. It's a very Howard friendly environment. We are learning more this morning about the driver accused of intentionally running over a Montgomery County police officer early Wednesday on I 270. It caused the officer to lose both of his legs. At 19 years old, Rafael Mayorga already has a history with the police state's attorney John McCarthy. They knew who he was. He knew who they were and he dared them to try to catch him. Charged with speeding, reckless, and aggressive driving, Mayorga now faces another charge, attempted first -degree murder. This after he reportedly mowed down Sergeant Patrick Kep with the Montgomery County Police Department. Chief Marcus Jones says that Mayorga has a history of provoking his officers trying to lead them on high -speed chases. We have encountered him in the past. Mayorga is being held without bond. Heather Gustafson, WTOP News. a And teenager is in the hospital this morning after being hit by a car in Fairfax County. It happened around 830 last night at Route 50 and Annandale Road in West Falls Church. Fairfax County Police say the teen was taken to a hospital with life -threatening injuries and was in serious condition. The driver stayed at the scene. Stay with us here on WTOP coming up in Money News. Where is the nation's new apartment boom? It's in DC. I'm Jeff Glabaugh. It's 508. Michael and Son's heating tune -up for only $59 .00. Michael and Son. Traffic and weather on the 8th. Say good morning now to Rita Kessler in the traffic center. Good morning Michelle and for now it is a good morning on the roadways. Not too much going on in the area. If you're on the beltway you're gonna like what you see. Inner and outer loop running well through both Maryland Virginia. and Not seeing any of the overnight work crews that were there. The lane should be open. Now we do have a problem in McLean. This is Kirby Road between Sugarstone Court and Clayborn Drive. The lanes are blocked for water main repairs. 66 no reported issues. Eastbound looking good out of Manassas to the beltway. Northbound 95 looks good out of Stafford crossing the Occoquan into Springfield. And then 395 in good toward shape the headed 14th Street Bridge. Southbound in the area of Washington Boulevard. There had been some work set up. So keep an eye on case you're still seeing some cones in the roadway. Now in the district we did have some work on New York Avenue near West Virginia and Tanna. So keep an eye out in case that is still there. But again no real delay inbound New York Avenue coming from 50 and the BW Parkway trying to head toward the 3rd Street Tunnel. We do still have the work on 16th Street between Arkansas Avenue and Spring Road. They're running two -way traffic in the northbound lanes while the southbound side is closed for the bridge rehab. All of this work is going to be going on through early next week. So you may want yourself to give some extra time to get through there. 95 Baltimore Washington Parkway no reported issues. Southbound 270 still looks good out of Urbana headed to the lane divide. I'm Rita Kessler WTOP traffic. Brian Van de Graaff has the news first alert forecast. Limited sunshine today but still mild highs will push near 70. We're watching those clouds really thicken through the afternoon with some showers maybe even an isolated

WTOP
"clayborn" Discussed on WTOP
"Don't want to stack. The findings will then be sent to the state urging legislation to set nurse to patient ratios. And prince George's county, Luke Luger WTO P news. Coming up after traffic and weather and money news. Redevelopment plans for a closed northeast D.C. hospital campus. I'm Jeff clayborn. It's two O 8 at a precision AC tuna for only $59. Michael and son. Traffic and weather on the 8s and when it drakes, let's check in with Dave dildine in the WTO traffic setting. In Montgomery county, The Rain shower was brief, but the delays are building the crash will take time to clear on the Italy beyond university boulevard. It's reported as one overturned on the right side, traffic getting by to the center and the left with delays that began well before Connecticut avenue and building. A serious crash around noontime on route 5 branch avenue. Both loops of the beltway slow near exit 7 and at last report, southbound traffic on branch avenue could not get much beyond the pill way it was diverted at Linda lane onto old branch avenue, the investigation closer to Allentown road. The police at last report blocking the left side of the northbound lanes northbound traffic staying right and getting by slowly northbound. On branch avenue, southbound lanes are reported as blocked. 50 between the beltway and the bay bridge, nothing blocking the way in the district on D.C. two 95 northbound traffic is heavy toward a work zone under bening road in Virginia George Washington Parkway traffic is slow in northbound and single file still passed one 23 toward the beltway. On the iterative of the beltway in fairfax county, slow traffic, Tyson's toward the legion bridge, the right lane is blocked near and before Georgetown pike X at 44, 66 westbound slow from not least straight past one 23, likelihood of an incident before route 50 blocking lane. Three 95 southbound near two 36, the left lane blocked by a crew. Volume delay southbound on 95 past one 23 as we wait for the auxiliary lane to open. Northbound on 95, the work zone beyond lorton, blocking Elaine before fairfax county Parkway, looking for a safe way to sell your car, go to Fitz by's cars dot com, get the best value for your car and the safe environment of a new dealership fits by his cars dot com. That's the 5th way. Dave dildine traffic. To the weather and 7 news first alert meteorologist Steve rudin. Cloudy skies for the remainder of the afternoon hours scattered showers, temperatures upper 50s to middle 60s, wind gusts upwards

WTOP
"clayborn" Discussed on WTOP
"Perfect demeanor for this. And especially when they leave after the interview is they leave thinking about, hey, I met this really cool dog that I got to pet for however long instead of I just had to talk about all these horrible things that have happened to me. Fairfax county also has a facility dog named rylan, she helps reduce trauma and re victimization for children and families. Some good news to share this morning about a Maryland congressman who's been fighting cancer since slate last year. The doctors tell me that the chemotherapy has extinguished the cancer cells, at least as far as they can tell. That from congressman Jamie Raskin speaking last night ahead of his last chemotherapy treatment today, he was diagnosed with lymphoma back in December during an online progressive change institute event, the Democrat from Montgomery county had his head covered in a bandana as a result of his hair loss from the chemo, Raskin, who's been working throughout his cancer battle, is being treated as an outpatient at the Lombardi cancer center at med star Georgetown university hospital. Matt's small WTO news. Saying leaves of three let it be as a reference to poison ivy, and now is the time to be on the lookout for that. This also is the season where poison ivy is growing again. Kaiser permanente allergist doctor Troy baker says it's full bloom season and if you're not careful, you could be in for a rash of bad luck. There are some simple things you can do that are over the counter to treat your skin reaction. He says colloidal oatmeal is actually one of the best methods to treat a nasty rash, but even then occasionally you're going to get a poisoned rash. It's too much for what you can do over the counter. When that happens, he says a doctor's visit is in order. Coming up after traffic and weather in money news. A Virginia city is the top market for the very youngest homeowners. I'm Jeff clayborn. It's 9 O 8. Get a precision AC tune up for only $59. Michael and son. Traffic and weather on the 8s are getting at least a little bit of a Friday break read of Kessler. Who's starting to get a little bit of a Friday break delays are easing from some earlier issues that we have. Let's start out on 95 in Virginia, northbound still slow approaching and passing route three in Fredericksburg. Not quite as far as 17, the earlier crash on the vehicle fire on the ramp is cleared and the ramp reopened. Southbound 95 just slows crossing the aqua Quan, northbound three 95, a delay getting

WTOP
"clayborn" Discussed on WTOP
"In school. The measure had passed the Republican controlled House of delegates despite strenuous objections from LGBTQ advocacy groups. Supporters say the bills would have promoted fairness for female athletes and protected parental rights. Money news at 25 and 55 brought to you by pen fed credit union, great rates for everyone. Over to Jeff clayborn. Mark the Dow is down just 58 points about the broader markets are sharply lower. The S&P 500 Index is down 32 points. That's approaching a 1% loss, the NASDAQ's down a 128 points as a little more than 1%. We got hooked on food delivery during the pandemic. DoorDash had its best quarter ever last quarter, despite losses more than doubling, DoorDash made 467 million meal deliveries last quarter, 27% more than a year ago. The Super Bowl kept a great quarter for sports betting apps, draft kings had record revenue last quarter, almost double a year ago. It now operates in 21 states, draft kings is still losing money. A Rockville mall is on course for a refresh. The Washington business journal says shops at congressional village has been acquired by new owners with new leases lined up. Taking some existing vacant space there, the previous owner defaulted in 2019, Jeff clay ball, double TLP news. All right, Jeff, up ahead, 5 former Memphis police officers enter their plea in the death of Tyree Nichols. Ten 56 your project's begin here

Grounds
"clayborn" Discussed on Grounds
"Scene for. Pj stands alone in the cereal aisle staring at a box of cereal. Fighting back tears ivan turns the corner and almost doesn't recognize her. She's disheveled at unkempt. Pj is that you. Hey just picking up a few things it me too. We're keeping the cold. Cereal people in business always cooked bricks. I'm horrible at it. So it's frosted flakes. We didn't get a chance to talk kind. How you doing for real. I don't know how to answer that. I have a new motion. Every six seconds and none of them are good. I'm here if you wanna talk. I lost a lot of people early in my life. I know it's nothing like losing a child. I know little of going anx tests so much. Would you got there. Omar still likes cocoa bucks. Now it's a marist favorite. I just picked it up on autopilot. You should get no. I have to stop this. She's gone and i have to stop acting like she's going to run in the front door from dance class at any moment this. No one can tell you when it's time for you to let go. It just had. This is when you want someone cry with you at night. But he was taken to. It's just me. You have marcus and omar. You have us. I'm not crying to my son's in the middle of the night. It's not their place to be there for me and you all have your own lives but you need someone this. I'll be fine. Talk to me about something else. anything else. Okay how's the plan to return to school. I got them to move my sabbatical to this semester. So i'm trying to figure out how i can alter my research. Since i can't travel at the same problem. I was supposed to go to russia. That's not how are you working around it trying to see if i can work around it successfully. I think i'm refocusing my work with tracing african women from this one village by doing the same research on our little town so you choose families here and trace their development. Yeah that sounds interesting. Would you try to trace them back to the continent possibly chosen your family's yet. I was thinking of asking lula mae. Her family's been here for generations cannot be in a room for those interviews. Comedy right there. I could use some comedy noces. Look i gotta get this ice cream pool before belts. But i meant what i said if you need to talk. Please call me thanks. Ivan rolls his cart in the opposite direction. Pj puts the cereal back on the shelf. I wish i could thank you for listening to grounds produced by eugene martin. Llc written by leslie. scott jones recorded pendleton. Sense with sound design by michael moxham on grounds stars. Leslie scott jones as peach. Doug spearman as elisha. J j johnson as caught kevin troy as quasi will jones as ivan. David von straughn as marcus omar nazir. That's jamal garrison. Low and james michael moxham as president. James miara basked billed as coca-cola brandon lee as kashif and rachelle clayborn as jacqueline funding for season two of grounds was provided by virginia humanities..

Papa Phd Podcast
"clayborn" Discussed on Papa Phd Podcast
"Mbeki on the newly road Peppy new simpson. Willoughby's the puppy. Ashley usually have. Emily dubois emilio da eulogy city larry molecule at university level on these with elsa for me on cafes on comunicacion entrepreneurs booster to novella comunicacion scientific visual if diligence impact was. We'll be on to read in belly. Keep semi co ed that companies. Ill is entrepreneur. Technologic really look jai. Gaza the visual pakistan in comunicacion. The celtic ensemble illiberal up. Diplomacy military comunicacion He's duty numeric hill. A little picky kamata publicity on. Cbs canadian biomaterials society. A companion ocassional. Mall is entrepreneur. Honda veneer iffy. Patty do community the lower shush decision. Gano avenue sopapillas. Emily macy's compassi. Little caesars kentucky. Espy beloit tony casino. See don don't Baba's goes via the the difficult presentation. Only get your air apply as deep upper jai al-siassa to usually she hiking the master complexity at ninety simply indianap- man concern It don't your plan to montgomery key. Fellowships foam a developed activity. Aulia vaccines cake amendment. Pacione saddam in elective men kia diverted the commodity shows. Marsh kamala Marsha terra stick. What on don't don't Disown potato patty of dc. There come on says he passes. It said that police young sip listens delivery yankee Vast to cusack crew at a fri- reema may monday metro. High-dose eli and Some mostly hunting line could give the to scale to the Aegean how vacant victim spectrum can i think monaro core The took panic extra particularly from kilty. Kill sedmak comes on the sir. We're going to sit on as saka. Mossy and we carter tells homes and office at this year. How count. I'm back down like akon junk lesson. Do on their office on behalf of the dishonor a statistic gum twa zeldin histadrut meow. Zelda it keep the confess initiative london. We saw that axa. Dixie to storytelling city demaj yacine Who mental quiz on as jokes. Trumpster blessed just subjects festival Report a storytelling. Massive amounts of Crudeness care at Fattest guy performance on yup yup yup at six johnson fixing For his kasey shelves continue options by by leaving. Mr kuwait's mattis clue. She's ekushey meal hunt does it. Behind the highest jewish demonic julius Basking king from the brits though shift for a concert and it is it t- sad last astronaut one. The they share the conscience is the lanka and build a thank the naked show seabed Imaging kinds could by constraints on locke's shells funded up to hop scripture cystic. A lila had such feed full. You needed for wash wazir block Twi the guy hunter. He faked mushrooms. Tweeden event like guestrooms chancer fitch visible. It didn't it. Just come in to to david duke. Paseo his take precip pussy. Versatility lies south secrets Javale could fit and buck cd amazed at the clayborn alma. Lay jag Caselli germanic impo. Damsels valencia supplemented. That's ma'am what she medical map. Asadollah mayor mike is escott. You're on the skele- dude anybody. South hospital continuing monte set pass yang said paseo pool donald directories yet continue avoir. These activity only main we silkair's avert two on them on investor. Home counts a steph benevolence. Show the deceit lemoyne. Still he message. Proving rob can Repeated biscuits and your take And major newton now six ma evita Found the home. I'll get a fundamental On they shut by twel he Permitted the evacuation hummel and leash was deficit. Appreciably vet semi who seek come the nickel feels biscuits washington put Got from what's it sean. In bacteria national cue from an -tunities put on sell country and telephoned. Nfc kubat my factory look shows contests secretly Shit to piss founded castro a case and Don't you may have gotten country. Ruled.

Democracy Now! Audio
"clayborn" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"To new orleans headed to what they believed was freedom just sent terror through what is called the coast of louisiana. And so william clayborn seeing this this this this massive movement. This massive slave revolt in fact begins to enlist the black militia as part of the forces to take on this slave revolt and and the slave revolt is crushed of in the us. Army comes in the. Us navy comes in. You have the white militia that is is there but the black militia is very effective. And so you have a black militia fighting against black folk who are enslaved and trying to be free. The reward that the black militia used for this was a further push to be disbanded further. Push to not have access to be able to purchase arms. They put a law in place. That folks of color black people could not by arms then came the war of eighteen. Twelve and andrew. Jackson is the leader. The military leader and he sees the british coming in this battle of new orleans and he sees this black militia. And he's telling clayborn we need them. This is an effective fighting force and and clayborn like yes they are. But i'm telling you they're just not feeling it right now because of the way we treat them and he's like i will treat them equally. I will treat them with the honor that all soldiers should have and they will be paid equal to whites. They will receive the same pay. And besides the black militia. I want to additional battalions. Clayborn came back and said you can get the black militia. Get two additional. Battalions is going to be difficult because whites in this area. Believe that arming. Them is arming the enemy. So you have black folks who identified as the enemy And in in in that fighting force that forced beat the british in was like three thousand or so of andrew jackson's troops against eight thousand british troops and they want and johns and andrew jackson was like. Wow i knew you guys were could. I just didn't know how good but the response the action to that then was to send them off as labor battalion to work in the swaps. That white men didn't want to go into to do the work. So you have this denigration of black military contributions to fighting for america and that was a consistent theme that we saw so you get this erasure of this history in this erasure for the men themselves. Who are doing the fighting. Who were being wounded. Who who are dealing with the loss of their fighting brethren that has been the the sense that black men under arms bear a threat and black men who who are trained how to use arms. They're really a thread so they must be disarmed. After they have served our purpose professor anderson. I just wanted to follow up on the term. You used anti blackness that you're actually saying that the second amendment is not about guns but it's about anti blackness explain yes it is about the fear so in the best way to do this is to talk about the kind of history that we have about the second amendment. We hear the history of the militia about being this really effective fighting force to fend off a foreign invasion and also being there to fend off domestic tyranny but what they knew at the time was that the militia had proven to be uneven unreliable in the war of independence. The war for independence. George washington was beside himself at the lack of reliability of the militias. Sometimes they was show up sometimes. They wouldn't sometimes they fight. Sometimes they would. Sometimes they would just take off and run away. It's really difficult to form a battle plan. When you're fighting is like. I'm not feeling it today. And and it led gouverneur morris who is out of new york and one of the founding fathers to say to rely upon the militia against a foreign invasion is to depend upon a broken read and so they knew that the militia was really not strong against a professional army and then there was shays rebellion with they saw. Shays rebellion is that you could not really rely upon the militia in order to deal with a uprising and an insurrections against government. You could not rely upon them for that where the militia was consistently good was in. Slave revolts in crushing. Slave revolts. And so this is what led george mason and patrick henry to talk about. We must control our militia. We will be left. Defenceless against slave revolts if the federal government controls it and so it is that fear of slave revolts that fear of a black rebellion the fear the spear of a black as dangerous population that must be controlled by these militias. That was essential in the drafting of second amendment. When you think about the bill of rights how you've got the right to freedom of the press how you have a no state sponsored religion how you have freedom of assembly the the right not to be legally searched and sees the right to a speedy and fair trial the right not to have cruel and unusual punishment and so you see these incredible rights. And then you've got this. Well regulated militia the right to bear arms for the security of the state. That amendment is an outlier in this bill of rights. That outlier is because it was the payoff to the south to to have a force under state control that could contain black aspirations. Black freedom quests that contain with a seen as dangerous black population. That's carolina anderson professor at emory university in atlanta. Her new book is the second race and guns and a fatally. Unequal america will.

Democracy Now! Audio
"clayborn" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"To new orleans headed to what they believed was freedom just sent terror through what is called the german coast of louisiana. And so william clayborn seeing this this this this massive movement. This massive slave revolt in fact begins to enlist the black militia as part of the forces to take on this slave revolt and and the slave revolt is crushed of in the us. Army comes in the. Us navy comes in. You have the white militia that is is there but the black militia is very effective. And so you have a black militia fighting against black folk who are enslaved and trying to be free. The reward that the black militia received for this was a further push to be disbanded further. Push to not have access to be able to purchase arms. They put a law in place. That folks of color black people could not by arms then came the war of eighteen. Twelve and andrew. Jackson is the leader. The military leader and he sees the british coming in this battle of new orleans and he sees this black militia. And he's telling clayborn we need them. This is an effective fighting force. And and clayborn. Yes they are. But i'm telling you they're just not feeling it right now because of the way we treat them and he's like i will treat them equally. I will treat them with the honor that all soldiers should have and they will be paid equal to whites they will receive the same pay and besides the black militia. I want to additional battalions. Clayborn came back and said you can get the black militia. Get in two. Additional battalions is going to be difficult because whites in this area. Believe that arming. Them is arming the enemy. So you have black folks who identified as the enemy And in in in that fighting force that forced beat the british in was like three thousand or so of andrew jackson's troops against eight thousand british troops and they want and johns and andrew jackson was like. Wow i knew you guys were could. I just didn't know how good but the response the action to that then was to send them off as labor battalion to work in the swaps. That white men didn't want to go into to do the work. So you have this denigration of black military contributions to fighting for america and that was a consistent theme that we saw so you get this erasure of this history in this erasure for the men themselves. Who are doing the fighting. Who were being wounded. Who who are dealing with the loss of their fighting brethren that has been the the sense that black men under arms bear a threat and black men who who are trained how to use arms. They're really a thread so they must be disarmed. After they have served our purpose professor anderson. I just wanted to follow up on the term. You used anti blackness that you're actually saying that the second amendment is not about guns but it's about anti blackness explain yes it is about the fear so in the best way to do this is to talk about the kind of history that we have about the second amendment. We hear the history of the militia about being this really effective fighting force to fend off a foreign invasion and also being there to fend off domestic tyranny but what they knew at the time was that the militia had proven to be uneven unreliable in the war of independence. The war for independence. George washington was beside himself at the lack of reliability of the militias. Sometimes they was show up sometimes. They wouldn't sometimes they fight. Sometimes they would. Sometimes they would just take off and run away. It's really difficult to form a battle plan. When you're fighting is like. I'm not feeling it today. And and it led gouverneur morris who is out of new york and one of the founding fathers to say to rely upon the militia against a foreign invasion is to depend upon a broken read and so they knew that the militia was really not strong against a professional army and then there was shays rebellion with they saw. Shays rebellion is that you could not really rely upon the militia in order to deal with a uprising and an insurrections against government. You could not rely upon them for that where the militia was consistently good was in. Slave revolts in crushing. Slave revolts. And so this is what led george mason and patrick henry to talk about. We must control our militia. We will be left. Defenceless against slave revolts if the federal government controls it and so it is that fear of slave revolts that fear of a black rebellion the fear the spear of a black as dangerous population that must be controlled by these militias. That was essential in the drafting of second amendment. When you think about the bill of rights how you've got the right to freedom of the press how you have a no state sponsored religion how you have freedom of assembly the the right not to be legally searched and sees the right to a speedy and fair trial the right not to have cruel and unusual punishment and so you see these incredible rights. And then you've got this. Well regulated militia the right to bear arms for the security of the state. That amendment is an outlier in this bill of rights. Outlier is because it was the payoff to the south to to have a force under state control that could contain black aspirations. Black freedom quests that contain with a seen as dangerous black population. That's carolina anderson professor at emory university in atlanta. Her new book is the second race and guns and fatally unequal. America will.

Democracy Now! Audio
"clayborn" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"To new orleans headed to what they believed was freedom just sent terror through what is called the german coast of louisiana. And so william clayborn seeing this this this this massive movement. This massive slave revolt in fact begins to enlist the black militia as part of the forces to take on this slave revolt and and the slave revolt is crushed of in the us. Army comes in the. Us navy comes in. You have the white militia that is is there but the black militia is very effective. And so you have a black militia fighting against black folk who are enslaved and trying to be free. The reward that the black militia received for this was a further push to be disbanded further. Push to not have access to be able to purchase arms. They put a law in place. That folks of color black people could not by arms then came the war of eighteen. Twelve and andrew. Jackson is the leader. The military leader and he sees the british coming in this battle of new orleans and he sees this black militia. And he's telling clayborn we need them. This is an effective fighting force. And and clayborn. Yes they are. But i'm telling you they're just not feeling it right now because of the way we treat them and he's like i will treat them equally. I will treat them with the honor that all soldiers should have and they will be paid equal to whites they will receive the same pay and besides the black militia. I want to additional battalions. Clayborn came back and said you can get the black militia. Get in two. Additional battalions is going to be difficult because whites in this area. Believe that arming. Them is arming the enemy. So you have black folks who identified as the enemy And in in in that fighting force that forced beat the british. It was like three thousand or so of andrew jackson's troops against eight thousand british troops and they want and johns and andrew jackson was like. Wow i knew you guys were could. I just didn't know how good but the response the action to that then was to send them off as labor battalion to work in the swaps. That white men didn't want to go into to do the work. So you have this denigration of black military contributions to fighting for america and that was a consistent theme that we saw so you get this erasure of this history in this erasure for the men themselves. Who are doing the fighting. Who were being wounded. Who who are dealing with the loss of their fighting brethren that has been the the sense that black men under arms bear a threat and black men who who are trained how to use arms. They're really a thread so they must be disarmed. After they have served our purpose professor anderson. I just wanted to follow up on the term. You used anti blackness that you're actually saying that the second amendment is not about guns but it's about anti blackness explain yes it is about the fear so in the best way to do this is to talk about the kind of history that we have about the second amendment. We hear the history of the militia about being this really effective fighting force to fend off a foreign invasion and also being there to fend off domestic tyranny but what they knew at the time was that the militia had proven to be uneven unreliable in the war of independence. The war for independence. George washington was beside himself at the lack of reliability of the militias. Sometimes they was show up sometimes. They wouldn't sometimes they fight. Sometimes they would. Sometimes they would just take off and run away. It's really difficult to form a battle plan. When you're fighting is like. I'm not feeling it today. And and it led gouverneur morris who is out of new york and one of the founding fathers to say to rely upon the militia against a foreign invasion is to depend upon a broken read and so they knew that the militia was really not strong against a professional army and then there was shays rebellion with they saw. Shays rebellion is that you could not really rely upon the militia in order to deal with a uprising and an insurrections against government. You could not rely upon them for that where the militia was consistently good was in. Slave revolts in crushing. Slave revolts. And so this is what led george mason and patrick henry to talk about. We must control our militia. We will be left. Defenceless against slave revolts if the federal government controls it and so it is that fear of slave revolts that fear of a black rebellion the fear the spear of a black as dangerous population that must be controlled by these militias. That was essential in the drafting of second amendment. When you think about the bill of rights how you've got the right to freedom of the press how you have a no state sponsored religion how you have freedom of assembly the the right not to be legally searched and sees the right to a speedy and fair trial the right not to have cruel and unusual punishment and so you see these incredible rights. And then you've got this. Well regulated militia the right to bear arms for the security of the state. That amendment is an outlier in this bill of rights. Outlier is because it was the payoff to the south to to have a force under state control that could contain black aspirations. Black freedom quests that contain with a seen as dangerous black population. That's carolina anderson professor at emory university in atlanta. Her new book is the second race and guns and fatally unequal. America will.

Democracy Now! Audio
"clayborn" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"To new orleans headed to what they believed was freedom just sent terror through what is called the german coast of louisiana. And so william clayborn seeing this this this this massive movement. This massive slave revolt in fact begins to enlist the black militia as part of the forces to take on this slave revolt and and the slave revolt is crushed of in the us. Army comes in the. Us navy comes in. You have the white militia that is is there but the black militia is very effective. And so you have a black militia fighting against black folk who are enslaved and trying to be free. The reward that the black militia received for this was a further push to be disbanded further. Push to not have access to be able to purchase arms. They put a law in place. That folks of color black people could not by arms then came the war of eighteen. Twelve and andrew. Jackson is the leader. The military leader and he sees the british coming in this battle of new orleans and he sees this black militia and he's telling claiborne we need them. This is an effective fighting force and and an clayborn. Yes they are. But i'm telling you they're just not feeling it right now because of the way we treat them and he's like i will treat them equally. I will treat them with the honor that all soldiers should have and they will be paid equal to whites. They will receive the same pay. And besides the black militia. I want a to additional battalions. Clayborn came back and said you can get the black militia. Giving two additional battalions is going to be difficult because whites in this area. Believe that arming. Them is arming the enemy. So you have black folks who are as the enemy And in in in that fighting force that forced beat the british. It was like three thousand or so of andrew jackson's troops against eight thousand british troops and they won and johns and andrew jackson was like. Wow i knew you guys were could. I just didn't know how good but the response the action to that then was to send them off as labor battalion to work in the swaps. That white men didn't want to go into to do the work. So you have this denigration of black military contributions to fighting for america and that was a consistent theme that we saw so you get this erasure of this history this erasure for the men themselves who are doing the fighting who were being wounded who who are dealing with the loss of their fighting brethren that has been the the sense that men under arms. They're a threat and black men who who are trained how to use arms. They're really a threat so they must be disarmed. After they have served our purpose professor anderson. I just wanted to follow up on the term. You used anti blackness that you're actually saying that the second amendment is not about guns but it's about anti blackness explain yes it is about the fear so in the best way to do this is to talk about the kind of history that we have about the second amendment. We hear the history of the militia about being this really effective fighting force to fend off a foreign invasion and also being there to fend off domestic tyranny but what they knew at the time was that the militia had proven to be uneven unreliable in the war of independence. The war for independence. George washington was beside himself at the lack of reliability of the militias. Sometimes they was show up sometimes. They wouldn't sometimes they fight. Sometimes they would. Sometimes they would just take off and run away. It's really difficult to form a battle plan when you're fighting forces like i'm not feeling it today. And and it led gouverneur morris who is out of new york and one of the founding fathers to say to rely upon the militia against a foreign invasion is like to depend upon broken read and so they knew that the militia was really not strong against a professional army and then there was shays rebellion what they saw. Shays rebellion is that you could not really rely upon the militia in order to deal with a uprising and and insurrections against government. You could not rely upon them for that where the militia was consistently good was in slave revolts in crushing slave revolts. And so this is. What led of george mason and patrick henry to talk about. We must control our militia. We will be left defenceless against its. Slave revolts if the federal government controls it and so it is that fear of slave revolts that fear of a black rebellion the fear the spear of a black as a dangerous population that must be controlled by these militias. That was essential in the drafting of second amendment. When you think about the bill of rights how you've got the right to freedom of the press how you have a no state sponsored religion how you have freedom of assembly the right not to be legally searched and sees the right to a speedy and fair trial the right not to have cruel and unusual punishment and so you see these incredible rights. And then you've got this. Well regulated militia the right to bear arms for the security of the state. That is an outlier in this bill of rights in that outlier is because it was the payoff to the south To to have a force under state control that could contain black aspirations. Black freedom quests that contain with a seen as dangerous black population carolina jason. We have to break. But then we're going to come back to this conversation. Carol anderson is professor at emory university in atlanta georgia Her book is just out this week. The second race and guns and.

Democracy Now! Audio
"clayborn" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"To new orleans headed to what they believed was freedom just sent terror through what is called the german coast of louisiana. And so william clayborn seeing this this this this massive movement. This massive slave revolt in fact begins to enlist the black militia as part of the forces to take on this slave revolt and and the slave revolt is crushed of in the us. Army comes in the. Us navy comes in. You have the white militia that is is there but the black militia is very effective. And so you have a black militia fighting against black folk who are enslaved and trying to be free. The reward that the black militia received for this was a further push to be disbanded further. Push to not have access to be able to purchase arms. They put a law in place. That folks of color black people could not by arms then came the war of eighteen. Twelve and andrew. Jackson is the leader. The military leader and he sees the british coming in this battle of new orleans and he sees this black militia and he's telling claiborne we need them. This is an effective fighting force and and an clayborn like yes they are. But i'm telling you they're just not feeling it right now because of the way we treat them and he's like i will treat them equally. I will treat them with the honor that all soldiers should have and they will be paid equal to whites they will receive the same pay and besides the black militia. I want a to additional battalions. Clayborn came back and said you can get the black militia. Giving two additional battalions is going to be difficult because whites in this area. Believe that arming. Them is arming the enemy. So you have black folks who are as the enemy And in in in that fighting force that forced beat the british. It was like three thousand or so of andrew jackson's troops against eight thousand british troops and they won and johns and andrew jackson was like. Wow i knew you guys were could. I just didn't know how good but the response the action to that then was to send them off as labor battalion to work in the swaps. That white men didn't want to go into to do the work. So you have this denigration of black military contributions to fighting for america and that was a consistent theme that we saw so you get this erasure of this history and the racer for the men themselves. Who are doing the fighting. Who were being wounded. Who who are dealing with the loss of their fighting brethren that has been the the sense that men under arms they're a threat and black men who who are trained how to use arms. They're really a threat so they must be disarmed. After they have served our purpose professor anderson. I just wanted to follow up on the term. You used anti blackness that you're actually saying that the second amendment is not about guns but it's about anti blackness explain yes it is about the fear so in the best way to do this is to talk about the kind of history that we have about the second amendment. We hear the history of the militia about being this really effective fighting force to fend off a foreign invasion and also being there to fend off domestic tyranny but what they knew at the time was that the militia had proven to be uneven unreliable in the war of independence. The war for independence. George washington was beside himself at the lack of reliability of the militias. Sometimes they was show up sometimes. They wouldn't sometimes they fight. Sometimes they would. Sometimes they would just take off and run away. It's really difficult to form a battle plan with when you're fighting forces like i'm not feeling it today. And and it led gouverneur morris who is out of new york and one of the founding fathers to say to rely upon the militia against a foreign invasion is like to depend upon broken read and so they knew that the militia was really not strong against a professional army and then there was shays rebellion. What they saw shays rebellion is that you could not really rely upon the militia in order to deal with a uprising and and insurrections against government. You could not rely upon them for that where the militia was consistently good was in slave revolts in crushing slave revolts. And so this is. What led of george mason and patrick henry to talk about. We must control our militia. We will be left defenceless against its. Slave revolts if the federal government controls it and so it is that fear of slave revolts that fear of a black rebellion the fear the spear of a black as a dangerous population that must be controlled by these militias. That was essential in the drafting of second amendment. When you think about the bill of rights how you've got the right to freedom of the press how you have a no state sponsored religion how you have freedom of assembly the right not to be legally searched and sees the right to a speedy and fair trial the right not to have cruel and unusual punishment and so you see these incredible rights. And then you've got this. Well regulated militia the right to bear arms for the security of the state. That is an outlier in this bill of rights in that outlier is because it was the payoff to the south To to have a force under state control that could contain black aspirations. Black freedom quests that contain with a seen as dangerous black population carolina sent. We have to break. But then we're going to come back to this conversation. Carol anderson is professor at emory university in atlanta georgia Her book is just out this week. The second race and guns and.

Democracy Now! Audio
"clayborn" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"To new orleans headed to what they believed was freedom just sent terror through what is called the german coast of louisiana. And so william clayborn seeing this this this this massive movement. This massive slave revolt in fact begins to enlist the black militia as part of the forces to take on this slave revolt and and the slave revolt is crushed of in the us. Army comes in the. Us navy comes in. You have the white militia that is is there but the black militia is very effective. And so you have a black militia fighting against black folk who are enslaved and trying to be free. The reward that the black militia received for this was a further push to be disbanded further. Push to not have access to be able to purchase arms. They put a law in place. That folks of color black people could not by arms then came the war of eighteen. Twelve and andrew. Jackson is the leader. The military leader and he sees the british coming in this battle of new orleans and he sees this black militia and he's telling claiborne we need them. This is an effective fighting force and and claiborne is like yes they are. But i'm telling you they're just not feeling it right now because of the way we treat them and he's like i will treat them equally. I will treat them with the honor that all soldiers should have and they will be paid equal to whites they will receive the same pay and besides the black militia. I want a to additional battalions. Clayborn came back and said you can get the black militia. Giving two additional battalions is going to be difficult because whites in this area. Believe that arming. Them is arming the enemy. So you have black folks who are as the enemy And in in in that fighting force that forced beat the british. It was like three thousand or so of andrew jackson's troops against eight thousand british troops and they won and johns and andrew jackson was like. Wow i knew you guys were could. I just didn't know how good but the response the action to that then was to send them off as labor battalion to work in the swaps. That white men didn't want to go into to do the work. So you have this denigration of black military contributions to fighting for america and that was a consistent theme that we saw so you get this erasure of this history and the racer for the men themselves. Who are doing the fighting. Who were being wounded. Who who are dealing with the loss of their fighting brethren that has been the the sense that men under arms they're a threat and black man who who are trained how to use arms. They're really a threat so they must be disarmed. After they have served our purpose professor anderson. I just wanted to follow up on the term. You used anti blackness that you're actually saying that the second amendment is not about guns but it's about anti blackness explain yes it is about the fear so in the best way to do this is to talk about the kind of history that we have about the second amendment. We hear the history of the militia about being this really effective fighting force to fend off a foreign invasion and also being there to fend off domestic tyranny but what they knew at the time was that the militia had proven to be uneven unreliable in the war of independence. The war for independence. George washington was beside himself at the lack of reliability of the militias. Sometimes they was show up sometimes. They wouldn't sometimes they fight. Sometimes they would. Sometimes they would just take off and run away. It's really difficult to form a battle plan when you're fighting forces like i'm not feeling it today. And and it led gouverneur morris who is out of new york and one of the founding fathers to say to rely upon the militia against a foreign invasion is like to depend upon broken read and so they knew that the militia was really not strong against a professional army and then there was shays rebellion what they saw. Shays rebellion is that you could not really rely upon the militia in order to deal with a uprising and and insurrections against you could not rely upon them for that where the militia was consistently good was in slave revolts in crushing slave revolts. And so this is what led of george mason and patrick henry to talk about. We must control our militia. We will be left. Defenceless against its slave revolts. Federal government controls it. And so it is. That fear of slave revolts that fear of a black rebellion the fear the spear of a black as a dangerous population that must be controlled by these militias. That was essential in the drafting of second amendment. When you think about the bill of rights how you've got the right to freedom of the press how you have a no state sponsored religion how you have freedom of assembly the right not to be legally searched and sees the right to a speedy and fair trial the right not to have cruel and unusual punishment and so you see these incredible rights. And then you've got this. Well regulated militia the right to bear arms for the security of the state. That is an outlier in this bill of rights in that outlier is because it was the payoff to the south To to have a force under state control that could contain black aspirations. Black freedom quests that contain with a seen as dangerous black population carolina sent. We have to break. But then we're going to come back to this conversation. Carol anderson is professor at emory university in atlanta georgia Her book is just out this week. The second race and guns and.

Democracy Now! Audio
"clayborn" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"To new orleans headed to what they believed was freedom just sent terror through what is called the german coast of louisiana. And so william clayborn seeing this this this this massive movement. This massive slave revolt in fact begins to enlist the black militia as part of the forces to take on this slave revolt and and the slave revolt is crushed of in the us. Army comes in the. Us navy comes in. You have the white militia that is is there but the black militia is very effective. And so you have a black militia fighting against black folk who are enslaved and trying to be free. The reward that the black militia received for this was a further push to be disbanded further. Push to not have access to be able to purchase arms. They put a law in place. That folks of color black people could not by arms then came the war of eighteen. Twelve and andrew. Jackson is the leader the leader and he sees the british coming in this battle of new orleans and he sees this black militia and he's telling claiborne we need them. This is an effective fighting force and and claiborne is like yes they are. But i'm telling you they're just not feeling it right now because of the way we treat them and he's like i will treat them equally. I will treat them with the honor that all soldiers should have and they will be paid equal to whites they will receive the same pay and besides the black militia. I want a to additional battalions. Clayborn came back and said you can get the black militia. Giving two additional battalions is going to be difficult because whites in this area. Believe that arming. Them is arming the enemy. So you have black folks who are as the enemy And in in in that fighting force that forced beat the british. It was like three thousand or so of andrew jackson's troops against eight thousand british troops and they won and johns and andrew jackson was like. Wow i knew you guys were could. I just didn't know how good but the response the action to that then was to send them off as labor battalion to work in the swaps. That white men didn't want to go into to do the work. So you have this denigration of black military contributions to fighting for america and that was a consistent theme that we saw so you get this erasure of this history and the racer for the men themselves. Who are doing the fighting. Who were being wounded. Who who are dealing with the loss of their fighting brethren that has been the the sense that men under arms they're a threat and black man who who are trained how to use arms. They're really a threat so they must be disarmed. After they have served our purpose professor anderson. I just wanted to follow up on the term. You used anti blackness that you're actually saying that the second amendment is not about guns but it's about anti blackness explain yes it is about the fear so in the best way to do this is to talk about the kind of history that we have about the second amendment. We hear the history of the militia about being this really effective fighting force to fend off a foreign invasion and also being there to fend off domestic tyranny but what they knew at the time was that the militia had proven to be uneven unreliable in the war of independence. The war for independence. George washington was beside himself at the lack of reliability of the militias. Sometimes they was show up sometimes. They wouldn't sometimes they fight. Sometimes they would. Sometimes they would just take off and run away. It's really difficult to form a battle plan with when you're fighting forces like i'm not feeling it today. And and it led gouverneur morris who is out of new york and one of the founding fathers to say to rely upon the militia against a foreign invasion is like to depend upon broken read and so they knew that the militia was really not strong against a professional army and then there was shays rebellion with they saw was shays. Rebellion is that you could not really rely upon the militia in order to deal with a uprising and and insurrections against government. You could not rely upon them for that where the militia was consistently good was in slave revolts in crushing slave revolts. And so this is. What led of george mason and patrick henry to talk about. We must control our militia. We will be left defenceless against its. Slave revolts if the federal government controls it and so it is that fear of slave revolts that fear of a black rebellion the fear the spear of a black as a dangerous population that must be controlled by these militias. That was essential in the drafting of second amendment. When you think about the bill of rights how you've got the right to freedom of the press how you have a no state sponsored religion how you have freedom of assembly the right not to be legally searched and sees the right to a speedy and fair trial the right not to have cruel and unusual punishment and so you see these incredible rights. And then you've got this. Well regulated militia the right to bear arms for the security of the state. That is an outlier in this bill of rights in that outlier is because it was the payoff to the south To to have a force under state control that could contain black aspirations. Black freedom quests that contain with a seen as dangerous black population carolina sent. We have to break. But then we're going to come back to this conversation. Carol anderson is professor at emory university in atlanta georgia Her book is just out this week. The second race and guns and.

Now Playing - The Movie Review Podcast
"clayborn" Discussed on Now Playing - The Movie Review Podcast
"Stephen king film. Sixty nine nice. One of our longest franchise and i will be discussing of sixty nine. Went on in this movie. Yeah i don't know if this is the one that should be number. Sixty nine appropriate only might be fun to get back with a good one. That is the reputation of dolores claiborne. Was that even though. It didn't make a lot of money. And i don't think has the you say carey. I think this space in a problem queen outfit covered in blood christine. I think about that car. Dolores claiborne. I don't know what that means. I didn't know what to expect. This was really billed as a sequel to misery. That was. It's kathy bates again which she going to kill. That's definitely the sense. I got when i watched the trailer. Because yeah i didn't know dolores claiborne by stephen king. Is this one of experimental victorian. Jane austen style stories. And so yeah. I wouldn't watch that trailer. I'm like okay so it's misery to that that's what they want me to think. At least it's not yeah. That's that full on scary horror but yeah that melodrama dealing with horrific things. I guess there's an eclipsing again. We talked about one recently with an eclipse. yeah. I talked about gerald's game how that's it gerald's game and dolores claiborne came out near each other. They both deal with molestation child abuse incest and they both have an eclipse. And if you read the books there's some weird crossover that's pointless in the movies. They just both have an eclipse and dolores claiborne shocking to me because our listeners. They tend to be genre fans because that's what we primarily cover. You know they're laughing that we have to go back in the cornfield for another children of the corn or they're like. When are you going to do snake guy. Is that kind of thing. But there was a groundswell of winter. We reviewing deloris clayborn. And i'm like there was yes. I've never even heard of this movie. I have no recollection of it. Trailer didn't seem familiar so this isn't demand by people. Yeah and it's shocked the hell out of me and i'm like i've never seen the movie. I read the book back in the day but people are anxious for dolores claiborne. That just seemed interesting to me because this did feel like a chick flick drama that i didn't usually see people clamoring. Hey when are you doing. Twenty seven dresses. When are you doing. The devil wears prada. Yeah but you know. Castle rock entertainment. That's part of it. It's why got made was that. Rob reiner had this pretty good relationship going with king stand by me misery. They produce shawshank. They're really going to be the ones to make the respectable king movies. You know the drama ones the ones that don't necessarily have to pander to the vampires and the haunted hotel but we like the vampires in the hotels but it admittedly you've named some of the best king adaptations that are out there. I mean we get things like graveyard shift and lawnmower man. It's more what you think of with king but it's not what you think of as good. Yeah i went and read the novel. Because i wanted to know and frankly after gerald's game which was one of the better stephen king novels. I had read to know that this was the companion piece. I was very curious. And what i can say is if you were one of those people that read misery and hated it. Every time they jumped into the gothic part watch out. This one is going to be really hard for you to get through because it is three hundred pages of a first person babble novella for king. It's short in that sense. It goes by pretty quick but everything you read is dolores claiborne talking to unseen cops about in the first paragraph. she's like. I didn't kill my employer but i did kill my husband and so like there's not even a lot of mystery to it it's dislike. Let's give this woman the floor. A one woman show in which this bitter washerwoman gets to comment on life in new england. It was dedicated to. Stephen king's mom like it feels like this mother's day present. It feels like he wanted to thank her for whatever sacrifices she might have made to give him an education. Did his mom his dad. The dad went out for smokes and never came back now. If he fell down a well okay so he could have been murdered. We don't know yeah right. He wasn't around and you know she had to do what she had to do. And yeah it's nice to see king stretch. It was nice for him to do something a little shorter a little bit outside of his box. But i didn't feel like it was a totally perfect fit. This isn't the one you'd go to someone said. Never read any stephen king. I'd be like Read scarlet letter vanity fair or jane ear before you you go to this one. This one's about as good as a gothic novel. As eyes of the dragon is as a fantasy novel. I reread it. And i enjoyed it this time around but i found meandering especially since you know. It does delve into that literary irony were. It's all told in flashback. But we know things the characters back then. Don't know but i don't know if i just remembered the book very vividly from my first reading or if it was just so telegraphed but when i ended the book i was like if i had to give that a log line. What was that book about. And it is a woman living in poverty in new england. Not about killing the patriarchy. Because i think it's pretty clear what this is about. Yeah yeah yeah. Women have to do some really horrible things. They have to be a bitch if they're going to survive and you know if you think they're cruel and an axe wielder like the misery novel. This is the one to give you a little bit more sympathy as to their psychopathy. You know this is the one to try and humanize. Dangerous female characters and kathy bates was chosen intentionally. Because if you playing a movie where. This woman is suspected of murder off the bat. Coming off of misery. A few years earlier winning her oscar for misery. You immediately think of kathy bates in a stephen king movie as dangerous and kathy bates has said. This is the single favourite role. She's ever played okay. That seems wrong. I'll just go ahead definitely not as but when when people tell you all this is your best film. You want to pick the one that nobody saw. You wanna pick the that was like no but but this one was special to me and you guys didn't prize in the same way well and she got to stretch her acting muscles little more you know..

That’s Wild Podcast
"clayborn" Discussed on That’s Wild Podcast
"You tell me you know what i'm saying. Like what did you look at these other. We're like oh god. That was the fucking wine bro. You can connect somebody with on that level saw sitting in the studio. You know what i'm saying. I actually recorded that myself. Like disease hook really ran back and forth from the control from the lab to to the booth. Oh sit no studio that night. So cute myself up. And i ran back and forth coast dammit. Rebecca around the corner should have video of according to ship as fucking annoy abuse. It i fucking hate myself. Because i do like fifty thousand takes at the end. I'm sweating like six packs looking good. I'm like all right. My gluts ashani like s as fucking good came out good. Oh dad did did something. Yeah for sure. Scott scott that real old smooth boom pat. You know what i mean like. Yeah definitely it. But he's absolutely right raw. The next track barklay. Nothing mistreat murderous murderous psychopathy energy. You know what i'm saying. Hey oh yeah. That's why in the middle of the night in the blog. I liked it. This is should i need was that some shady song. Remember that shit Fuck was that one song where he got the bitch from the laundromat. Data the laundromat while the white trash cosby s. What is where. he's like. Come in command. Big boys open walked in and smell list. Clayborn she's laying on the bed naked watching gay porn.

KOA 850 AM
"clayborn" Discussed on KOA 850 AM
"Soundtrack of your afternoon is having fun. And we working. Maybe that's it, man. Just Alfred Williams and Joe Joe Turnbow Aerials. No. Get him, Jake. Big out. Jo Jo on K away news radio. Last five o'clock here in the mile High city. Thank you so much rolling with us. It's big Alan Jo Jo here on K Away News Radio. A 50 A M and 94 1 FM. We have been too. Let's see here we went to Buffalo. We went to Baltimore. We went to Kansas City. Now let's head to Cleveland. Let's talk about the Cleveland Browns. Dried cherry is a former Super Bowl champion and host at W. K and R in Cleveland and draw it. I wish I could have been in Cleveland after that game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. It had to be A little bit of celebrating. A little bit celebrating. It was ah, bunch of celebrating going on in. My In fact, they might have read directed cool again for the celebration, but that song, But here's the deal that no one saw that coming to the extent of what took place in the first quarter. 28th and nothing could not believe it. It was unreal, and it was just you. It took 18 years in the making. But I tell you what people are here and happy and fired up and very confident going into this Sunday. You know it was it felt like the game was destined to be yours. After the first snap of the game look like this Super Bowl game between the Broncos and Seattle Seahawks were first play. It's like me, and so there you go Touchdown or the Cleveland Browns on the first play. From the defense. Right and think about this. If you look at the regular season, it was similar except that we were on the bad side of being a Browns fan in that baker Mayfield threw a pick six. So you couldn't ask for a better scenario. And if you got on Lee do The wolves that the Cleveland fan bases face gone through with the Pittsburgh doing how big Ben is dominated, and on some levels you feel bad for been robbed his burger that he played such a bad game through so many interceptions. But when you consider all this stuff you've had the Cleveland Browns put him in the Hall of Fame along with those numbers, so don't feel too bad for my guess would be the right mindset for me. But again it was, I wouldn't say improbable because this team has been balance through adversity. All season, which is on display was a situation where they didn't let not having the head coach of the fried line, not having key players across the board on the team. They turned him from going out there and get the job done. Let me ask you. This is this team playing better without Odell Beckham Jr. That's a heck of a loaded question is regularly trouble. Oh, gel, listens to this show every day, so maybe I'll put it this way. You look at the numbers and it's just that for sure. And I do agree with this sentiment that it calls Baker Mayfield not fourth. Beat these old Ellen made him Maura round, well rounded quarterback and not trying to make sure he always paying all the attention to Odell and making sure that He was doing better that than a nun highlights and stuff like that. So I do think on some level and help Baker Mayfield Maturation process him not being out there but again when you lose up All pro caliber talent. I don't think that makes you better. But I do think it gave Baker Mayfield a chance to play the quarterback position at a higher level because he realized hey, I can utilize other people and not have to rely on star power or to get the job done. Try and talk about this two headed monster you have in the running game. I mean, it is. It is something that we thought maybe we had here in Denver. With with Phillip Lindsay and it just didn't end up. It didn't have to be in that way with the Cleveland Browns with what you've been able to do with chub and hunt. I mean, it is absolutely incredible to watch. It certainly is in the key parts with all starts with the office line and what they represent. They provide the locking, You know one of those holes, But when Chuck, just the football, you don't know if he's gonna go 10 yards. If you're gonna go 80 yards because he had That type of being the placing part is when you look at his physical features. You don't think he possesses that breakaway speed to run away from deep in the big Al knows, like I know that running backs run away from guys in the secondary. He's fact if our three red concerned he's not trying to run by anybody. He's trying to be a bowling ball or reckoned through a sledgehammer and all those things just run over anyone and everyone that it's way who I love it. I love there. Billy want to share the Rock said hello and support each other. They do that break from lottery, and it's one of those deals where one of the care of the other shine. But what works the way always down the football field the other day, I think everyone goes in and gets the one yard score. I love what they represent from a teammate standpoint, and it's helping this football team. Obviously tremendously, You know, One of the issues that I talked about in the in the show earlier was Kansas City Chiefs off offensive line. Of course, they're highly heralded as one of the better offensive lines. But there's one match up in particular that I think that you guys have a clear advantage, and that's Adrian Clayborn at right defensive end against Eric Fisher, their left tackle. Because of the movement and the strength of Clayborn. I just think that that that's that's a win for you guys. If it's AH must pass situation. And I also think that Adrian Claiborne has been AH, steadying Force for God like Myles Garrett. That's a nice That's what we got digging increase, because mostly will not give Adrian Clayborn the crops that he deserves to know what he's done because prior to him alleviate reading was planning a high level for us if he got injured. Tore his Achilles tendon with a C played amazingly, last week against the Steelers, and you're right. Miles needs that other robin to his Batman or Batman does Robin and however you wanna put it, but he's certainly plays a major part in their their official, the former first pick overall. You're gonna have his hands full on Sunday with Agent Playboy Lem out here because you never know they're likely to line them up in multiple spots. Drive. When you look at your quarterback, Baker Mayfield. He's somebody that you know, we obviously have watched. I'll be completely honest with you. We've been pretty critical of him, especially if the beginning of the season on we even had a bet by the way, and I'll be honest with you. Whether or not he would be the starting quarterback at the end of the season, talk about the maturation process of Baker, Me fielding and what he's really done to kind of turn things around and become the high level quarterback that he has here at the end of the year. Well, I think that the year won't He have so much success when people were a lot of him as the next M v. P and Tom Brady, handing them those leans in that commercial and then going to the sophomore season..

The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast
Unsung Heroes Presented by Claiborne Farm
"Have the privilege of welcoming in wesley per cell who is the claiborne. Farm brood mare manager. He is our very first person to be recognized on this new unsung heroes segment wesley. First of all good morning my friend and thank you for everything that you do. Thank you for having me on the show to obviously a privilege to do this. And i'm glad to be here talking with you so excited you know walker bernie other great people at claiborne. They they stepped up with the sponsorship of this segment. And i thought it would be appropriate that we start with a claiborne farm representative and there's when you think about the personnel name. You'd be difficult. It'd be difficult to find somebody that's more ingrained in the culture of claiborne than you. My friend you were raised at the in a farmhouse on the property and that name per cell is pretty much synonymous week labor. That's correct My brother and i we still currently work out here My father worked here for over close to forty years started. Here nineteen seventy. I've had numerous calls Actually on both sides of the family work here so you know clybourn and and the per sales of go back several several years probably starting in the mid sixties of one of my first articles Making his debut out here you know. I read an article that had a piece about your uncle. Don am i correct on that he was your uncle. Right don yes. He was a yearling manager for several years. Yup yup and Passed away in september. Unfortunately you will be missed. But he worked with secretariat riva ridge roundtable and even got to meet his favorite actor. John wayne at clayborn kinda interesting. When we we had visitation we We saw those pictures. And it's just it's amazing because you hear people talk about opposite. John wayne in these horses like secretary and river ridge and so forth but for family members to be associated with them and and have memorabilia pictures taken with them on both sides of the spectrum with horses and People it's it's it's just awesome. What was it like growing up in a house on the property there at clamored kind of second to none. Go out and you do your childhood thing. You know you're playing basketball or whatever may be in the yard but you've got these these thoroughbreds this you know front door back tour left and right Beside you ever day knowing that they're going to make an impact on a lot of people's lives As they you know these babies grow mature and it to the race track in the mayor's or the the stallion he'll come back for their secondary career. So you know growing up as a young child. You didn't really know the importance of that. But you you know your dad worked here in your uncles and you know there was a major significant taking place you know. Every kid likes to have a big backyard to go out and play in. You had acres and acres and acres to go play in if you wanted to. What did your friends and maybe some of the other students that you were in school with growing up. Think about you living on a horse farm like that. I remember my. I believe it was my first grade year. Our field trip was to claiborne farm. So i'm six seven years old and i'm so ecstatic. When they announced it we're going to claiborne farm. You know this is where i live and i can recall telling my classmates house. We rode the bus out here. You know i was. I was like the tour guide at six years of age. And we pass by my house. You know something special say. Hey i live there And all the kids stuff that it was very interesting but To do that as a young child. And you know that's one thing that's all people remember where you took your field trip bad you know in kindergarten first second third grade and so forth but to be able to say that i took a field trip to a place that i grew up i lived on still holds a special pricing heart. There as you were growing up and you're starting to get a little bit. Did you always think that you would find yourself working at kleber. You know from day one. You know the passion of horses and and that it's in your it's in your you know your father's coming home and he's talking about horses like swell in rough and i mean i can just sit here name. A list of horses easy. Go where we can go down the line but you know i wanted to pursue a career in education and that's what i ended up doing And i got a degree at the university of kentucky. But that was doing that. You know the back of my mind. I'm like you know. I've got this opportunity. Clyburn that there. And so. When i while i was away from it. You know that that's what you're supposed to be doing in this life. So what was your first job on the farm. When i was about fifteen years of age Had a weed eater. My hand wasn't the greatest experience with that something. He knows a young kid. You pay your dues. And i would go around. You know the pastures and the a lanes of the farm and we'd we'd and as a group of High school. You know kids that would do that. Every year and My second season out here. I did started working with the marriage. The baby's my father was the form and at that time So he gave me a lotta great guidance and how to handle yourself around a thoroughbred the presence needed And the relationships that you build with each individual horse and that's that's where it really started with my second season out here

Radio Fajri 99.3FM
"clayborn" Discussed on Radio Fajri 99.3FM
"Rowan top love narrow para de la desma. Gotta con- consider me dark on bloomberg could do up zero your immune. Marco polo charity gala. Buluan any hellene com muskie clock as human wisdom in europe on monte carlo. Cossio behind you smarter kind of three boom see rohingya and depending on the lumber hurricane. I mean you coupons coupons bangladesh lauck be derisory number two sprung our buluan. Any job the bangladesh mohammed. Some those long blame the fat sakari la. Dan dida maxa. This is gonna pay baby about gumbo ballooned up on malaga bonilla techniques identical salahaddin. Debate sign jarrett separately. Brittan young reloaded luther support. Around one jira. The mcgann develop organ onto good doer. Alenia bangladesh are can get him running around loose Who the national bernardus browley clayborn on. Suryadi lebanon thinker. Oh good in the global workup. So deal with already. But cuddles up to mallam jerry associated entrepreneur who camped camden. What girl went on stumper promoter. Derrick lower on comedian will up and up to put moran but the madam. Currently one on bruce among delicate khobar and abby some police policy the karaka took policy but impotency per baby thought and her tail off your mossy kuehbacher served two other jerry this lawyer but only luca work crew masaaki when aaron hall it cabrera boa pete alumnia berko somewhat end up and down through word. Paul plastic come to cater to up camera. Kahlon protein the putting go so common among attack on put lyon more a per class. Claudia mono america become our can possibly to beat you. Gentle had absorbed on juanita soria campsie. Suryadi lebanon burkle maclagan on the potential to attack duly. Meeting he really who donny. Lia quitting year leila borka and syria was number would love to around but at the who report to apollo your lab worker and conflict. Sodium counseling number would love around by the hoon durie boudoir polo. Jim latham supports about gay at the end. The hunan jack parang Bureau satuday cardillo halimi suburban manila peron. They knew chemists kamaruddin when the unthinkable. Granola doc osama libido is laurie around there was alarm conflict but at the who worry boost some bill and bless ballinger matica nabila worry skeptical number around morning galilea to us a little hands. Our coffee can get one hundred able to applaud. Lebron got to get those jury boo thermos does the do blaster. Who were gase bill. But in your hand bureau down brown. Hundred gun in brasilia then malone pokemon economy slanted. You get when you bob gun. Pin the hanley de blasio soria on seek by gay. Gera the panga europa. The beginning browns riot alami was number. Love bananas around the who worry do apollo Yeah in in the in the long inda lump coma nissan e mun young as you can versa eighteen backward son he and be my in the guy like parite and you are. It will not allow them and rosso lose. Be dara dude. Meeting own due to a bernie ran home able any in and lanka inda love coma nissan e young. Dark eighteen and He he andy in the guy like perry jari it to not la la. Be into a tight end. Dara meeting He who buy food dining out of money Moved down need a nine meeting. John but over the knee and radha began in pharmacy informacion. Plaka me sound bragan. Re brita international was he abruptly in bloom coming. You can get somebody gun meritas. It'll be the hulu chakra while islam. Lima muslim thirteen denegrating. Grignon and indira rangel birmingham. Manati informative sorta mundi collini crowley slam. Lima kabaddi russillo loss of a long time. We did islam basically the cameras. Lima bockel row. We had the taliban walla islam ethical eating when job. Ammonia deacon lima alison. Could not the hottest blige.

Game Scoop!
Game Scoop
"What's up everybody is you and skipping meals David Hatfield joining this week is Tina mini everybody just Davis. Scoop and friend and SAM clayborn. We've got a great show for you this week we're going to talk about. The crazy crazy crazy deal about spiderman being exclusive to playstation. In Marvel's AVENGERS WE'RE GONNA flip through the August nineteen ninety issue of video games and computer. Entertainment. But I. Really all you need to know right now is that spunky to is finally finally coming out, September fifteenth just over month away I couldn't be more excited listeners and my friends on the show have long long heard me talk about how much I love love love spunky. Maybe my favorite game of all time cheese maybe I don't know why does it need sequel? Doesn't necessarily need one, but the like I, I. You know spunky. So brilliant and they've spent so much time making the sequel like I'm really excited to see you know how do you with with this one and what? During their, how deep they're going to get maybe they'll go so that they a lava world. You, what do you want different in this game? Necessarily different but I mean just play spunky I can't believe. We're still talking about this. You don't want the game he don't own a to do extra. This is the problem is that people like you demand sequels and they should be made everything was fine. I was I was never demanding a sequel I've been excited for the sequel though it was announced we've had to edit these episodes several times to remove your demands they're getting increasingly. Violent. My demand for this game increases. If you're if you're an Egyptian prime subscriber, you dame, it's eighteen minute weekly rant on spunky to yeah they go to edit editor. Yup you can download them. Eric while you're excited for this game looks like it has more digging. Know. It's all about systems. Interacting with each other in in unexpected surprising things on your quest to reach the end of the game. So I'm just excited for all the new stuff that they're going to add to the game. Off many many different ways to unexpectedly die during a I love spunky and. I was just joking about all that before I think the cool thing about spunky is the thing I like about Mario Brothers Games where it's like. So focused on secret stuff and as people discovered all the secrets. That that probably alone gave me hope that this game would just be like just full of like crazy cool Meta difficult things to accomplish. That that's why I needed a sequel, you catch all the seeking discover all the secrets you need more secrets. To. Shoot up date. They're like we added a bunch of secret stuff. That's the patch notes like that's the patch. This passes a secret. Good candidate for guides him. It is it is although it's kind of a it's really hard to write guides for Rogue Lakes because I'm you can kind of like classify like eventually with speeding this game became really interesting spunky because. You know there was like a type of orientation of the first level that like made sense to not restart on I think. That's really cool. Right. People basically start breaking the game to figure that stuff out but otherwise, you just gotta be like. You might see a snake. Not If. You know there's there's like a shortcuts to people could take that are built into the game that aren't yet I don't break the game. Yeah. You can tell people never to pick up certain weapons and stuff like that I. Think there is a There's an element to that type of strategy guide writing, which is interesting because there's there's a there's a public out there that I know people don't don't expect this. But it's true that just read from start to finish a game skied while they play it and I did that when I when I was a kid rock Tynan skied and didn't lessen my enjoyment of the Game I. Love The indepth page by page look at all the stuff in this game aspect that guy and people like that. So that's different from like a spunky guide readers like here's some tips. Good luck. And then apparently also. The Sony State of play today it was announced at Alan wake is coming to control DLC. Correct, but we don't have more information than that. Yeah. Honestly. I had like a I haven't been able to watch state of play in its entirety myself, but it was narrated to be my friendly gears. He makes an appearance and it has been long speculated that the DNC in meant in question would be across over with Alan. Wake. So this kind of confirms it but apparently, the trailer did not divulge much more about like. Easter kind of character or is this going to be like a playable character or villain may be and I? I guess I didn't catch this while I was playing control but I suppose or maybe I don't remember but I suppose we're a lot of references to a writer. So that's why we're the relations coming

Game Scoop!
Game Scoop
"Whatever they welcome. Is you in Games Cooper Murals? Hadfield joining me this week is Tina Amini Acrobatic Sam clayborn I m renaissance with this week. Oh. Hello, there and we've got a great show this week. We're in talk. About Marvel's avengers. Read talk about EA doubling down on Star Wars but I. Today is Cyberpunk Day. And I actually had my my my body, a modified to be more of a Cyborg with this hit his head implants on top of my head that that throwing by a very special message for the viewers of this show we've. Got An augment to. She's partial. Sprouted out nowhere finally found my ripper doctor. They installed this this whiny, but also very affectionate cat. cattails anybody in that game I'm going to go. Yeah. Hopefully everybody's got to see the night city wire presentation earlier today. Actually Miranda got to play. The game got to play four hours of CYBERPUNK which is very very cool, so. As I understand it Miranda at the beginning of the game. You have to choose one of three different locations to get yourself started in. Is that right? Yes, so you actually choose one of three identities that Kinda like for your personality, little bit as well so you can choose no mad, which starts to outside of my city in the badlands, just kind of like this big dessert area that's just philosopher nomads, and like different groups of people been behalf, the corporal, which is like the corporate path, and so you're kind of an Asshole, you live in late. The corporate skyscrapers USA There's nobody. To people. Have Ryan chosen incidents of videos and then. To do. We had on our PREPO show. Yeah. The third one is a street kid like you kind of night. This other area and there's a couple of bars clubs in that area that you start in so those three places have completely different starting quests, 'cause they're related to your background so like with the Corporate Staff Ryan about this bunch is about like you're working. You're their boss like all of this other corporate drama. I don't really I. I didn't play that one. I was just like man I. Don't WanNa do that. The for the nomads. You're kind of like this rundown town and I guess with the nomads a usually stick with your with your group, and your character has kinda split off on his or her own, and they are kind of going through this town, and the sheriff is just like. Get Out of here, so It's not a very friendly place, so you're trying to figure out how to get into night city. Then you meet up with Jackie to go on your quest, and so regardless of what you choose, you always meet with Jackie to do something, and then once you fulfill that you get tonight city, so it's not super long. I think it would maybe take. Maybe thirty minutes to get through that part. I was doing the thing that I do which is like I've been a look at everything in here. There's not a ton and drive. Everywhere I do too late to the edge of the map. which whenever you get there within haven't talked about yet. was it? It's like yet the map and then it just turns you around. So where I was it was desert okay I'm sure it'd be different other places, but at the end of the math also prompted a loading screen spirit, and that also could interested for the preview belt who really knows but like loaded me back in? It's like no. No, no, you can't be here. and. You're like walled off as a in the desert like its own thing. So I'll assuming silk. There's like a a border patrol to actually go through like you can't just drive up tonight. City from the badlands like you have to get the checks by security. And that's actually what kind of kicks off. A big part of the quest is that you're trying to smuggle something thorough. And the thing he smuggles early cool. I don't spoil it for you. Guys so that was a really neat way to get kicked off. Those kind of like a scoop related topic that we always talk about about streaming games. Are you allowed to talk about your preview setup for this? One said that I couldn't. I. I was curious logistically how you played this game. Yes, so they've I. Try to use this another streaming program and I hadn't heard of previously and I don't think it really just worked out. We tested with the witcher answer that we tested with G. Force now which is been around for a very long time. They had like the shield forever ago. I remember before I was eating working at Gen like seeing them reveal that so I just since that tech is so old and they have it It seemed like work super well. I didn't have any yeah. I didn't have any issues as far as like. Notable latency or anything? I was like a really strong connection. To which is another thing? We tested beforehand

Game Scoop!
Game Scoop
"What's up everybody? Welcome ties you and game. Few team at Hadfield joining me. This week is Tina Amini deposes back. It's back does scoops. Johnson Davis Scoop and SAM clayborn. What's on your Hatfield today? I'm starting to the campaign The Game I was gushing about last week or not tunnel castle has been removed from the Nintendo e shop on switch even though it did nothing wrong. It's an amazing game needs to come back Switch so I'm starting the campaign. Eternal Castle did nothing wrong. Didn't show a bunch of blood or something like pixellated blood. It wouldn't I don't even think would have been red. Blood is pixellated I don't understand what that means but we do have a great show for you today. Lots to talk about lots of really fun. let's emails to get through. But I Tina. I know you've been working a lot on summer of gaming. Brigham and now Our schedules out in public. That everyone's gotten a chance to take a look schedule. It's all kicking off next week teen. Is there anything you want to like? Highlights or like make sure people are aware of when when when do people need to start tuning into our coverage? Absolutely I mean yeah next week June fourth but you know full disclosure. We reserve the right to move things around as necessary. I think a lot of people are you know making announcements and catching up with their own assets and their own team figuring out work from home scenarios. So it's important to for us to stay nimble. Which is what we've been doing as we've been planning this whole thing and making lots of shifts and turns but as far as highlights First and foremost is the first time that I actually putting on a press conference of our own and not just that. But we're putting on three press conferences. We're calling them. Aegean Expo That's gene fifth. June eighth June ninth. So it's all exclusive content. Some of it is actual game reveals Some of it is the developer interviews along game. Play that you're familiar seeing from us during normal three during normal June time frame but I think the other big thing to know is it's kind of impossible for us to be like completely transparent about everything that we're working on because we're still working on it so there's lots of other to come so it's as full schedule as we could get ready for. Public is just to give people an idea of what's to come in the show and get excited about things that they're personally looking forward to But lots of big updates like from blizzard and xbox and a lot of those a big people that you like seen games from had something here that I thought was really cool about this E-3 Is not just about the big press conferences. When you got three you discover games. You see a bunch of cool stuff on the floor. And that's the stuff that I feel like. We have the unique obligation to show people like. Yes you guys are. GonNa be able to see these big conferences. Were carrying them. We're going to be awesome stuff on those and those games are gonNA cover too. But I don't think there's anybody else that has the stuff that we released at Over the past couple of days are schedule has a something for everybody. It has games That only this people that like this show will like games that people that I would never play for everybody. And that's how he three should be seriously like there's a lot of people out there that are going to be. You know a watching these big stream streams this summer but like check out what we have. We have cool stuff to show a lot of lot of NEAT nexgen games. You've never seen before on that note. I can t something for the Games that we haven't talked about publicly yet Which is yeah. We're trying to be as inclusive as possible if you like. Vr Games we'll be VR games con content. There like any games will be plenty of indie games as well And we're creating a new segment around our dear friend Tom Marks where he'll be highlighting You know hidden gems essentially That you might not otherwise have been able to see if you were just paying attention to a big conference and that is a big part of like us being able to go to these events discovering games that are harder to Come above the fold of the big squaring drops and the big Sony drops. So it's going to be like his segment that he's creating on his own And hopefully identifying some some cooler lesser known games up post. He really is. I mean you know. Bow Ties and pies aside. He's still the very best even beyond that.

American Fashion Podcast
Lafayette 148 New York: Fantastically Vertical
"We are a global luxury lifestyle brand Led by women for women and the whole purpose of starting. The company was to be a vertical operation vertical. Meaning that we make everything ourselves So from start to finish we. We're able to control the process of manufacturing as well and you know we although we were founded in New York City. The company sort of outgrew the building and also knew that. We wanted to reinvest in some retail and in order to do that A. and Being a privately owned company. We're quite conservative. We decided to if we moved over to Brooklyn our rent. When I started the company it was nine dollars. A Square foot Twenty three years later it was ninety dollars a square foot so expensive so kind of expensive. So we we just you know. How do you re- reinvest in Your Business Model? So you know the number one expense for the company. Is the product the number two expenses? The people and number three was the rent so we went for number three because we didn't want to touch one into And found mazing hundred thousand square feet in the Brooklyn Navy Yard which is eight minutes by Uber from Lafayette Street and we collectively made a decision that this was great and we went to save money. But what we found was being on one floor completely changed the communications and the dynamics of how we work as a group so the culture which I think in today's world is such an important part of a business Our culture got better. It was good but it got great. Can you talk a little bit more about being a conservative business? Because I think a lot of people think about financing immediately when they're starting a business lately but but you haven't touched much of that well you know the first five years were really hard for the company and so not being Not Having the capital investments that may be other people had. We had to learn to live within our means. So what we would do. Is You know what we make. We would reinvest into the business. And so what what does is your growth is is more organic. Because you decide how you're going to grow how you're gonNA invest in in different areas when you want to grow and you don't WanNa you know. Look we all make mistakes? There's always a percentage of rnd and things that happened in in our business that you didn't predict but you know definitely we thought we needed a million dollars to start the company and ten million later we ran out of money and that was weird ca fears. You know the first five years Taught us a lot about what we didn't want to do in the future and you had to co-founders in the beginning I did and the Chinese AMERICANS SO MR and Mrs Sue were husband and wife team that manufactured clothes for me throughout my career Working at La's clayborn Donna. Karen Dana Buckman. So they were always there. They were always that jacket factory and yours needed great jacket in our industry That I could count on. You know they. They might have not been the cheapest factory because they were in New York City but they were reliable. Their quality was incredible and they were really nice. People that you could count on and so that relationship I kept throughout all the years whether or not I made close with them. 'cause it eventually. I moved to Hong Kong and started working for Germans and Italians and they didn't WanNA manufacturer New York so we just stayed friends and when it came back they asked me if I wanted to start a business with them and just the thought of not having to travel all over the world finding cheaper factories and being able to control the quality. The delivery the products Was Right up my alley. And they were just amazing. People that moved to America when they were in their teens they are forty years in America. They were you know They were that generation. Just like my parents were that came to the US to sort of you know. Build their dream In funding and in this case they ended up having to go back to their hometown. After forty years to rebuild our dream because in order to be competitive we had to move the factory if we wanted to stay vertical and you have an amazing sustainable complex in China. We have a fabulous. What you've built there. Yeah talk about that from the beginning and just training and what? That was what that was like. It's kind of fascinating okay. So you know We went over. Actually it was right after nine eleven and by the end of two thousand and one Mr Mrs Sue went home for the holidays and then he called me and told me he wanted to move the factory and by May of two thousand and two He flew me over there for one night to see the factory which consisted of three sewers a cutter in oppressor and just wanted to know what I thought of the factory. I was pretty speechless but I was smart enough to know that you know I could count on him so I asked him what he thought. And he said we're going to be just fine and he made sure we were justifying. He went from Ten Thousand Square feet to twenty thousand to forty thousand to the next time I visited him. He pulled up to an empty lot. And said what do you think and it was like? What did you do any says like bought the land And we're going to build our own facility. I want a building that is earthquake. Proof that sustainable. That's got solar panels on the roof for energy that that I can be comfortable Building in so he proceeded in less than two years to build a two hundred forty thousand square foot manufacturing facility that is state of the art incredible and today houses fifteen hundred people twelve hundred of which are sewers And you know anyone that visits it and plenty of important people have been from you know from the president. Fit's been there to to Mac Baucus. Who was the US ambassador to China and they all come there just to see what we've done and you know You know in our industry people just assume. Oh is it you know. Is it an acceptable factory? It's beyond acceptable. It's it's the pride of his hometown. So him and her really made a difference in their hometown. So was there a lot in terms of how he built the Culture In the quality of the factory in New York that was also taken there. And then you also side how to go so much. Further in terms of technology like to that. Just come naturally. No those are great questions. Because you know Mr superbeing factory New York City Was was getting smaller and smaller over the years. So technology was always a really important part of staying and surviving. So he was. He was ahead of his time in investing in whether it the Italian pressing machines or or or automatic cutting machines like all of this was sort of early. It was in his culture. Anyway you know when I think in East West Culture you know he used to. The First Holiday Party I went to I was there was only two people that weren't Chinese at the party. And he said turned to me and he said someday I wanted to be fifty fifty and you know he got he. He dreamed he dreamed really big but he wasn't a dreamer. He was a man that also taught you how to get the job done. You know you can rely on him and so he went back to his hometown and brought an American culture of manufacturing and also started teaching some of the local factories. How he would do it how we would do in the USA so you know. There was just an incredible ability to give back to the town. I mean after the factory was up and running of course we started to become profitable which was extremely exciting because after five tough years it was like wow when we could do hand embroideries and we could do leather in knits and things that we couldn't do in New York so it really helped us build at lifestyle brand but along with you know along with that You know he. He had to set up everything everything right. You know. Every there's eleven floors in the building each floor has different Sort of manufacturing system. You know there's there's a jacket floor. There's a blouse floor. There is a panton skirt floor. You know he built a building without columns in it and I don't know if anyone can say they've seen a modern building in China with twenty thousand square feet per floor without columns. But that's what you get to do when you build your own building you. You didn't have to figure out how the machinery would be laid out around these polls. So you know He. He was very amazing man.

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