35 Burst results for "Coo Coo"

"coo coo" Discussed on The Podcast On Podcasting

The Podcast On Podcasting

13:20 min | 6 d ago

"coo coo" Discussed on The Podcast On Podcasting

"Am a huge fan of being able to have solid takeaways when I listen to a podcast. And I know with like yours, you talk about how you help someone who wants to be on your podcast get everything in one spot. And that's awesome. It's here's one, two and three things that you can do today to be successful and to grow your business. Most hosts never achieved the results they hoped for. They're falling short on listenership and monetization, meaning their message isn't being heard and their show ends up costing them money. This podcast was created to help you grow your listenership and make money while you're at it. Get ready to take notes. Here's your host, Adam Adams. Hey podcaster, it's your host, Adam A. Adams. And today we've got Katie Murray on the podcast. We are going to be talking about her show. She's done coming up on a hundred episodes, which is awesome. And as well, she serves business owners. So her podcast is called ginger biz, the podcast with Katie, the link is already in the show notes. So go ahead and scroll down. She was a photographer on the side. She has a full-time job right now. She was also doing photography and then she lost the podcast. And now she's got a firm where she supports business owners utilizing the, her team, which is mostly VAs as I understand. Is that right, Katie? Yes, sir. Coo coo. So you help people with random things, like a few different things. One of them is Pinterest growth. So if you're listening and you're like, I want to launch a Pinterest. I want to grow a Pinterest. I don't know how to do it. I'm not sure what I'm doing. Katie does that. Her team does that. They also help with blogs, a little bit of website copy, not like building the website literally from scratch, but doing the copy to make sure that your website is reaching out to the right people. And we're going to jump in and find out her history of the last. Since let's see, it's probably been over a year, which means are you publishing more than once a week on average? Because it seems like you are. Yes. I generally do one solo episode on Tuesdays and then a guest episode on Thursdays. And have you always done it like that? Because you'd probably be over a hundred episodes already. Correct. Did you do like one for a while? Yeah. So the guest ones come and go right now. They're pretty fluent. Like we're doing good with that content, but definitely in there. It was kind of figuring out our steps. Okay. So let me ask you, and I think this would super beneficial for the listener. You started your podcast over a year ago and you've learned a couple of things along the way about podcasting even mentioned that some of the things are becoming more fluent. So where I want to start is like, Katie, if you were launching a brand new podcast with just the knowledge in your head that you've learned along the way, what are some things that you would make sure to do or do differently than the first go round? What would do now if you were launching? Yeah, great question, Adam. So I would say the first thing is kind of figure out what I wanted to do with guests straight out the gate so that I knew. And then I put a workflow in place, which has been amazing. I have an intake form. It asks every single guest the same questions and it slates me for rolling into their intros and getting them set up for the recording and getting the media out to them. And I should have been doing that from the get go before it used to be like, Hey, Adam, you want to be on my show? Cool. What do you want to talk about? And then it was just a lot of back and forth. Now I can hop in a group where I can meet somebody and say, Hey, here's a link to the landing page. It tells you all about my podcast and right on that page, you click apply to be a guest and boom, boom, boom, it's so seamless. And it literally takes me like six minutes to get a guest outline slated and ready to go with links and everything. So when they apply with your new intake form, the application to jump on the podcast, it might take them more than six minutes to put in all the information, but it takes you six minutes or less to know exactly what to do. Yeah, I would say on average, it takes people like 12 minutes to complete it. Now that's given that they know what they want to talk about. They have to have some sort of expertise because it says, what topic do you want to discuss? And what are three to five questions that I can help ask to keep the flow of the podcast going? So I have had a couple of people stumble on that. They're like, well, I don't know what to talk about. And so that's why I created the landing page to say, here's the people that I serve, here's what I do. And then they can kind of vet it themselves to see if they're a good fit. It's a little more of a hands-off approach. Okay. So you got a landing page and it says who you serve, like who is the perfect avatar? Who's the listener. And I think that's really smart. Like somebody who's launching a podcast right now, here's an issue that I see all the time. We don't, most of us don't understand who that avatar is ourselves. Even if we do, we're horrible at translating that to the guest who's coming on the show. And what that seems to do is people come on the show and their first thought is I need to self promote. I need to wiggle in a story about a client and they are thinking of a lot about themselves and they're not always thinking about who is your perfect listener. And I know that when I go on somebody else's show, I always ask like, who's listener, what are they worried about? So I can really understand that and then cater each of the answers to questions toward how to serve that person. So it's not coming across just as self-promotion. And so one thing that you've done is you've gotten that right up front. So they go to the landing page, they read about this and then they apply and it helps them to be more focused on your listener and hopefully less on themselves and what they have to promote. Is that part of it? Yeah, totally Adam. And something with that, that is beneficial, then I'm not rejecting as many people because I'm not like, Hey, Adam, unfortunately like that doesn't fit with what I want to talk about. And I think it enables people who may not be avid listeners or even listened at all to Ginger Biz. They can still step in and be an extension of me and help promote the overall message that I want to share. Let's talk about the title of the podcast and let's talk about your perfect listener. So you identify the perfect listener and I love that you put it on the landing page. Could you take a what they're going through and what you help them with? Yeah, absolutely. So I would say that my average listener is probably 30 to 35-ish and they are zero to two years at the business or entrepreneurship, whether it's full-time or as a side hustle. And it's someone who has lots of ideas, but only has two hands and can't grow past their own knowledge base. So Ginger Biz, the podcast comes in as a pocket cheerleader and encourager and an advocate for here are tips and tricks that have worked for me. Here's what hasn't worked, but here's the solution. And just kind of putting it all together with very, very tangible things. I'm a huge fan of being able to have solid takeaways when I listen to a podcast. And I know with like yours in one of your previous episodes, you talk about how you help someone who wants to be on your podcast, get everything in one spot. And that's awesome because that's the kind of thing I want to hear. That's what Ginger Biz does. It's not these lovey-dovey stories of how we've been successful. It's here's one, two, and three things that you can do today to be successful and to grow your business. Yeah. I want to ask a question because as I look at the podcast artwork and the title, the title is simply Ginger Biz when it's just written out. And then you can see that the person in charge, the person, the host is Katie Murray. And then when you look over at the podcast artwork, it's going to be the white background. It'll say in the middle with the logo, Ginger Biz, the podcast with Katie. I'm curious if you've considered making at least a tagline because like I'm thinking about that perfect listener who's wanting to offload some stuff, wanting to start the 35, they're zero to two years in. And I'm curious if what they type in is automatically going to find you. Like if we're typing in ginger as like the reason what we're trying to listen to. So how have you thought about that? Is it, is it working? Is it not working? Are you adding anything to it? What do you think there? But it's funny you say that just before I jumped on with you, I've been in the process over the last month trying to figure out the perfect tagline because I want to introduce merchandise. And when listeners listen and rate my show, I want to randomly pick people to give merchandise, but as conceited as I may be, they don't want my face and then ginger biz with Katie on it. So I am trying to work towards picking a tagline. Most of my listeners, I think right now come through TD, targeted daily engagement. So it's not necessarily from a search engine. So that's something that I can definitely grow in. So yes, I've given it a lot of thought, but I'm super indecisive. So trying to figure out the perfect tagline is definitely a little challenging. Okay. So you mentioned something that I hadn't heard this term, these three letters before. I think you said T D E and was it targeted daily engagement? Yes, sir. So how do you do that? Like if we've got a listener who wants to grow their podcast, sounds like this is the way that you get your listeners. Is that part correct? This is how you find them. So how does the listener find listeners? How does the other podcaster find their listeners using TD? So Adam, it might be similar with how you and I ran across each other. We're in a group online and I'm interacting and I'm doing targeted daily engagement. So I'm specifically targeting who I want to either be on my show, which in this case, that was it. It was like, I was either finding a guest or wanting to be a guest. So that was the target for that day. And I do it daily because I want to continually show up in those groups or those feeds or whatever the case. I know Reddit is a very good spot to do it. So if I'm in there and I'm looking at entrepreneurial like things on Reddit and I'm interacting with those people, I make sure that the host of gingerbiz is in my bio. It's on my about me. It's all front and center. And then I just offer good insight for these people. And then they get curious, like, this girl knows what she's talking about. And then they stumble on my podcast. Now it goes back to what you said in the beginning. I'm not trying to get on this show or get in any of my areas and just sell. I'm not, Hey, come listen to gingerbiz, jump on, listen, listen, listen. Instead, I want to give them tangible takeaways. So that sparks the curiosity. So it's organic. I'm not just shoving gingerbiz down anybody's throat. So that's what I consider TD and you can do it on other platforms as well. You can do it in Facebook groups. That's probably my biggest one. And that's where I've gotten the last like 40 guests that I've had, or you can do it on Instagram or Reddit or even LinkedIn has seemed to be a pretty cool spot to start getting to know people and not to be too long-winded, but an additional point of that is. If I know Adam that I'm launching podcasts, one-on-one a course that would be perfect for your listeners. I want to go and interact with you and become a voice on your platform and get to know you. And then people will see us interacting online and that'll kind of grow it. So that's another form of TD. Cool. So you've had like 40 ish guests that came from that you've had close ish to a hundred episodes as we're recording now, and probably more when it launches, when this is being published since you're doing a couple of weeks and I'm looking at the ratings and reviews. And I wanted to find out like, if you're focused on getting that social proof, the rating and review or not. And if you are, I'm curious if you talk to guests or clients or friends or family to maybe give you that social proofing on your show. Absolutely. So after I do a guest episode, I do a couple of different things. Bear in mind that my podcast is secondary to business, although we are pivoting that so that it's more monetized and hopefully more the sole income for me. But that being said, I send a thank you, whether it's a gift or a card to each of my guests personally. And then I do ask them to drop a rating for me. And then in my newsletter, which like my email campaigns, I also request people to leave reviews. So I'm constantly asking people to leave reviews. I've done that with photography. I have over 150 reviews for KMP and I found that that's been hugely beneficial. So I am working towards that. Yes. Hey, do you still do the photography at all or did that go away? No, I still do. Definitely paired it back and maybe this gives some insight, but I'm multi-passionate entrepreneur. So I have triangle. I am a human resource profession by day. I have my podcast and branding photography to support other businesses.

A highlight from Ep375: Implement These 7 Things If You Don't Want To Podfade - Katy Murray

The Podcast On Podcasting

13:20 min | 6 d ago

A highlight from Ep375: Implement These 7 Things If You Don't Want To Podfade - Katy Murray

"Am a huge fan of being able to have solid takeaways when I listen to a podcast. And I know with like yours, you talk about how you help someone who wants to be on your podcast get everything in one spot. And that's awesome. It's here's one, two and three things that you can do today to be successful and to grow your business. Most hosts never achieved the results they hoped for. They're falling short on listenership and monetization, meaning their message isn't being heard and their show ends up costing them money. This podcast was created to help you grow your listenership and make money while you're at it. Get ready to take notes. Here's your host, Adam Adams. Hey podcaster, it's your host, Adam A. Adams. And today we've got Katie Murray on the podcast. We are going to be talking about her show. She's done coming up on a hundred episodes, which is awesome. And as well, she serves business owners. So her podcast is called ginger biz, the podcast with Katie, the link is already in the show notes. So go ahead and scroll down. She was a photographer on the side. She has a full -time job right now. She was also doing photography and then she lost the podcast. And now she's got a firm where she supports business owners utilizing the, her team, which is mostly VAs as I understand. Is that right, Katie? Yes, sir. Coo coo. So you help people with random things, like a few different things. One of them is Pinterest growth. So if you're listening and you're like, I want to launch a Pinterest. I want to grow a Pinterest. I don't know how to do it. I'm not sure what I'm doing. Katie does that. Her team does that. They also help with blogs, a little bit of website copy, not like building the website literally from scratch, but doing the copy to make sure that your website is reaching out to the right people. And we're going to jump in and find out her history of the last. Since let's see, it's probably been over a year, which means are you publishing more than once a week on average? Because it seems like you are. Yes. I generally do one solo episode on Tuesdays and then a guest episode on Thursdays. And have you always done it like that? Because you'd probably be over a hundred episodes already. Correct. Did you do like one for a while? Yeah. So the guest ones come and go right now. They're pretty fluent. Like we're doing good with that content, but definitely in there. It was kind of figuring out our steps. Okay. So let me ask you, and I think this would super beneficial for the listener. You started your podcast over a year ago and you've learned a couple of things along the way about podcasting even mentioned that some of the things are becoming more fluent. So where I want to start is like, Katie, if you were launching a brand new podcast with just the knowledge in your head that you've learned along the way, what are some things that you would make sure to do or do differently than the first go round? What would do now if you were launching? Yeah, great question, Adam. So I would say the first thing is kind of figure out what I wanted to do with guests straight out the gate so that I knew. And then I put a workflow in place, which has been amazing. I have an intake form. It asks every single guest the same questions and it slates me for rolling into their intros and getting them set up for the recording and getting the media out to them. And I should have been doing that from the get go before it used to be like, Hey, Adam, you want to be on my show? Cool. What do you want to talk about? And then it was just a lot of back and forth. Now I can hop in a group where I can meet somebody and say, Hey, here's a link to the landing page. It tells you all about my podcast and right on that page, you click apply to be a guest and boom, boom, boom, it's so seamless. And it literally takes me like six minutes to get a guest outline slated and ready to go with links and everything. So when they apply with your new intake form, the application to jump on the podcast, it might take them more than six minutes to put in all the information, but it takes you six minutes or less to know exactly what to do. Yeah, I would say on average, it takes people like 12 minutes to complete it. Now that's given that they know what they want to talk about. They have to have some sort of expertise because it says, what topic do you want to discuss? And what are three to five questions that I can help ask to keep the flow of the podcast going? So I have had a couple of people stumble on that. They're like, well, I don't know what to talk about. And so that's why I created the landing page to say, here's the people that I serve, here's what I do. And then they can kind of vet it themselves to see if they're a good fit. It's a little more of a hands -off approach. Okay. So you got a landing page and it says who you serve, like who is the perfect avatar? Who's the listener. And I think that's really smart. Like somebody who's launching a podcast right now, here's an issue that I see all the time. We don't, most of us don't understand who that avatar is ourselves. Even if we do, we're horrible at translating that to the guest who's coming on the show. And what that seems to do is people come on the show and their first thought is I need to self promote. I need to wiggle in a story about a client and they are thinking of a lot about themselves and they're not always thinking about who is your perfect listener. And I know that when I go on somebody else's show, I always ask like, who's listener, what are they worried about? So I can really understand that and then cater each of the answers to questions toward how to serve that person. So it's not coming across just as self -promotion. And so one thing that you've done is you've gotten that right up front. So they go to the landing page, they read about this and then they apply and it helps them to be more focused on your listener and hopefully less on themselves and what they have to promote. Is that part of it? Yeah, totally Adam. And something with that, that is beneficial, then I'm not rejecting as many people because I'm not like, Hey, Adam, unfortunately like that doesn't fit with what I want to talk about. And I think it enables people who may not be avid listeners or even listened at all to Ginger Biz. They can still step in and be an extension of me and help promote the overall message that I want to share. Let's talk about the title of the podcast and let's talk about your perfect listener. So you identify the perfect listener and I love that you put it on the landing page. Could you take a what they're going through and what you help them with? Yeah, absolutely. So I would say that my average listener is probably 30 to 35 -ish and they are zero to two years at the business or entrepreneurship, whether it's full -time or as a side hustle. And it's someone who has lots of ideas, but only has two hands and can't grow past their own knowledge base. So Ginger Biz, the podcast comes in as a pocket cheerleader and and encourager an advocate for here are tips and tricks that have worked for me. Here's what hasn't worked, but here's the solution. And just kind of putting it all together with very, very tangible things. I'm a huge fan of being able to have solid takeaways when I listen to a podcast. And I know with like yours in one of your previous episodes, you talk about how you help someone who wants to be on your podcast, get everything in one spot. And that's awesome because that's the kind of thing I want to hear. That's what Ginger Biz does. It's not these lovey -dovey stories of how we've been successful. It's here's one, two, and three things that you can do today to be successful and to grow your business. Yeah. I want to ask a question because as I look at the podcast artwork and the title, the title is simply Ginger Biz when it's just written out. And then you can see that the person in charge, the person, the host is Katie Murray. And then when you look over at the podcast artwork, it's going to be the white background. It'll say in the middle with the logo, Ginger Biz, the podcast with Katie. I'm curious if you've considered making at least a tagline because like I'm thinking about that perfect listener who's wanting to offload some stuff, wanting to start the 35, they're zero to two years in. And I'm curious if what they type in is automatically going to find you. Like if we're typing in ginger as like the reason what we're trying to listen to. So how have you thought about that? Is it, is it working? Is it not working? Are you adding anything to it? What do you think there? But it's funny you say that just before I jumped on with you, I've been in the process over the last month trying to figure out the perfect tagline because I want to introduce merchandise. And when listeners listen and rate my show, I want to randomly pick people to give merchandise, but as conceited as I may be, they don't want my face and then ginger biz with Katie on it. So I am trying to work towards picking a tagline. Most of my listeners, I think right now come through TD, targeted daily engagement. So it's not necessarily from a search engine. So that's something that I can definitely grow in. So yes, I've given it a lot of thought, but I'm super indecisive. So trying to figure out the perfect tagline is definitely a little challenging. Okay. So you mentioned something that I hadn't heard this term, these three letters before. I think you said T D E and was it targeted daily engagement? Yes, sir. So how do you do that? Like if we've got a listener who wants to grow their podcast, sounds like this is the way that you get your listeners. Is that part correct? This is how you find them. So how does the listener find listeners? How does the other podcaster find their listeners using TD? So Adam, it might be similar with how you and I ran across each other. We're in a group online and I'm interacting and I'm doing targeted daily engagement. So I'm specifically targeting who I want to either be on my show, which in this case, that was it. It was like, I was either finding a guest or wanting to be a guest. So that was the target for that day. And I do it daily because I want to continually show up in those groups or those feeds or whatever the case. I know Reddit is a very good spot to do it. So if I'm in there and I'm looking at entrepreneurial like things on Reddit and I'm interacting with those people, I make sure that the host of gingerbiz is in my bio. It's on my about me. It's all front and center. And then I just offer good insight for these people. And then they get curious, like, this girl knows what she's talking about. And then they stumble on my podcast. Now it goes back to what you said in the beginning. I'm not trying to get on this show or get in any of my areas and just sell. I'm not, Hey, come listen to gingerbiz, jump on, listen, listen, listen. Instead, I want to give them tangible takeaways. So that sparks the curiosity. So it's organic. I'm not just shoving gingerbiz down anybody's throat. So that's what I consider TD and you can do it on other platforms as well. You can do it in Facebook groups. That's probably my biggest one. And that's where I've gotten the last like 40 guests that I've had, or you can do it on Instagram or Reddit or even LinkedIn has seemed to be a pretty cool spot to start getting to know people and not to be too long -winded, but an additional point of that is. If I know Adam that I'm launching podcasts, one -on -one a course that would be perfect for your listeners. I want to go and interact with you and become a voice on your platform and get to know you. And then people will see us interacting online and that'll kind of grow it. So that's another form of TD. Cool. So you've had like 40 ish guests that came from that you've had close ish to a hundred episodes as we're recording now, and probably more when it launches, when this is being published since you're doing a couple of weeks and I'm looking at the ratings and reviews. And I wanted to find out like, if you're focused on getting that social proof, the rating and review or not. And if you are, I'm curious if you talk to guests or clients or friends or family to maybe give you that social proofing on your show. Absolutely. So after I do a guest episode, I do a couple of different things. Bear in mind that my podcast is secondary to business, although we are pivoting that so that it's more monetized and hopefully more the sole income for me. But that being said, I send a thank you, whether it's a gift or a card to each of my guests personally. And then I do ask them to drop a rating for me. And then in my newsletter, which like my email campaigns, I also request people to leave reviews. So I'm constantly asking people to leave reviews. I've done that with photography. I have over 150 reviews for KMP and I found that that's been hugely beneficial. So I am working towards that. Yes. Hey, do you still do the photography at all or did that go away? No, I still do. Definitely paired it back and maybe this gives some insight, but I'm multi -passionate entrepreneur. So I have triangle. I am a human resource profession by day. I have my podcast and branding photography to support other businesses.

Adam Adams Katie Katie Murray Adam A. Adams 12 Minutes 30 Adam Six Minutes Thursdays Three Tuesdays Zero Two Hands First ONE Ginger Biz Five Questions More Than Six Minutes Two Years
Plant-Sourcing Platform GoMaterials Has an Eye to the Future

The Plant Movement Podcast

02:33 min | Last month

Plant-Sourcing Platform GoMaterials Has an Eye to the Future

"How much time do you spend on innovating the next moves for Go material? Because I feel like you are a guy that spends time doing that. How much time do you spend on the future of Go materials? And do you see a need for Go materials to continue to evolve? So if, uh, I don't know if you heard like recently, I, I actually, so I, I, my partner, Mike Shireen and myself, I am very much an operator. I love being in the weeds. That's what I was telling you. I, I've been, I speak to our customers every day. I love that. There's nothing more like I'm, I'm in love with landscape contractors, even though they can be a pain sometimes. That's what I service. And I love the green industry. There's nothing more that makes me happier when I walk down the street and I see it's just street trees, mature ones lined up, canopying the road. Recently I switched positions with my partner, Mike, who's now CEO and I've taken on the position of COO. So I focus less time on actually planning the actual technology kind of makes up an hour and a couple hours of my, of my week where I do sit down with my two co -founders, kind of give my two cents because at the end of the day in this company, I'm still one of the best experts at the whole industry. I have extreme knowledge of the industry more than anyone else. And there's a running joke at the company that I'm the best plant sourcer in the world. Just cause I, I, I source all over North America. There's no one that does sources and knows nurseries all over North America. You give me a tree, I'll tell you 15 suppliers that have it at a good size. It's just like a Bible in my head. So I do contribute to it, but then I let them run with it at the end of the day and then kind of give my two cents every now and then. My question should have been redirected go materials instead of you, let's say go materials, go materials, time on innovating and to see where the, where the company can be in the next year or two years, three years, five years, you guys spend time doing all that. We have a full tech team of eight, eight to 10 people doing that full time with our co -founder Shereen, who's heading up the product. And that's pretty much her full -time job. So I say that because listen to our podcast, one of the things that people wonder is how to scale, you know, and then people think that scaling is just, you know, buying more real estate or buying this or buying that. And it's not a hundred percent, just that a lot of it is what your moves are for the future. And are you thinking about what your moves are and innovating and pushing towards that? So the fact that you guys have eight people on staff, it's like your train is at a hundred miles an hour. So have fun catching up

Mike Mike Shireen Eight 15 Suppliers Five Years Shereen Three Years Two Co -Founders North America Eight People ONE 10 People Two Cents Next Year Hundred Percent Bible Hundred Miles An Hour An Hour Couple Hours Two Years
A highlight from 1224. One Chat To Rule Them All!  Unstoppable Domains INTERVIEW

Tech Path Crypto

28:56 min | Last month

A highlight from 1224. One Chat To Rule Them All! Unstoppable Domains INTERVIEW

"All right, so today we're going to dive into the concept of maybe one chat system to rule them off. We're going to talk a little bit about that, what kind of technologies are starting to make their way into Web3, but also kind of this merger from what we're seeing within the Web2 apps. And we wanted to do this with Unstoppable. And I think you guys are going to like the show. It's going to be a good one. My name is Paul Vera. Welcome back into Tech Path. Joining me today, of course, is Sandy Carter, who is coming in over from Unstoppable domains. You of course know her and have seen her, COO and channel chief. Great to have you back. Thank you, Paul. So great to see you again. Yeah. Listen, I was looking at some of the videos that we have done with you. Five months ago was the last one, and this was on the Web3 identity side. So interesting stuff. We've had you on the channel a couple of times. Tell us what's been going on with Unstoppable over these past five months. Anything new? Oh my gosh. We've had so many new things, so many new partnerships and so many new features that have been coming out. I'll actually start with today. Today we announced messaging. We did two partnerships for messaging, one with XMTP on what we call person -to -person messaging so that I can message you, Paul, you can message me, as well as with push technology. Push technology will be driving our business to user messaging, which really helps you to, as a partner, to message all of your users. So let's take Polygon, for instance. All the Polygon users of Unstoppable, Sandeep, the CEO, could message all of those through push technology. So two amazing new partners that joined the fold just today. We also announced something called UD Blue. Which is pretty cool. So Unstoppable Blue is the ability to get some premium features and functions by subscribing to one of our services. So we've taken a page out of several other companies' books in order to do that. But the response was really great. So you get things like a website template creator, the ability to do bulk minting, for example. And so that was also very exciting because UD Blue was a real powerhouse of what we're looking at and what we're looking to see as well. And then a real shocker at ECC in Paris, we also were able to announce that we are now selling on our website .eth. And so that was a big shocker because we're number one in naming services, ENS is number two. Now we have one -stop shop with unstoppable domains and you can buy either of those from us or more importantly, hopefully all of the above. We see a lot of people coming in and just saying, I want sandy .x and sandy .eth and they'll just do a clean suite. So I think that's really powerful. I like the centralization because that does, I think for a lot of people, they are used to that already in the traditional web two domain naming services that are available out there. So I think it's a good move on you guys' part. And also, I think it's just one of those things for the future of web three, the easier we can make it, the better. I think it is going to be for everyone. I want to jump to a couple of... Can I add one more on ease of use? I'm sorry, Paul. So the other thing that we announced that I'm really excited about is the very first web application three marketplace. Today there are marketplaces out there like OpenSea or Rarible or Magic Eden for NFTs, but we announced the first web three application marketplace. And we're really excited about that because in there you can see our 870 different integrations that are there. You can see that featured bar, which I don't know why it's not filling in, but when it fills in, those are all the featured web three apps using AI. So for example, like Etherscan or Phantom, and we're going to change the feature apps every month. And then a customer or a user or an owner can come in and they can search for tax application or metaverse or game or whatever they're interested in and get access to that as well. We think that this is one of the most powerful things that we've announced in a long time because, you know, I even said five months ago, utility is greater than hype. And we kept announcing and announcing all these partnerships, but how do you find out about all of them? How do you search for them? How do you know where you can use your unstoppable domain? Now you can get it all from the marketplace. We did a video actually on the marketplace. It was in one of our videos where we broke that down. We saw some great opportunities there. So for those of you watching or listening in today, make sure and check back on some of our Unstoppable videos. We may have not had Sandy on it, but we talk about Unstoppable quite a bit. And Sandy, I want to jump over to a tweet here. This was from you guys' Twitter account. A couple of features here that I think are unique. One, this of course is in reference to, you know, ETH naming services. So obviously for ETH, now you can do that there. Using ETH to log in with Unstoppable, that's interesting. And also building an unstoppable profile with no gas fees. So that's cool. Encrypted email. Explain this with the .ETH domain. How will that work? So we integrated with a partner called Skiff. And Skiff is amazing because what Skiff enables you to do is to send encrypted email. You've been able to do that for a long time with any of the Unstoppable domains, but now that access is also open to .ETH domains as well. So that would enable encrypted domain. But some of the other things I love about .ETH is, you know, we heard that people wanted to buy more than one. So now you can buy multiple .ETHs off of our website. The other thing, in fact, Paul, it was really funny. I was talking to a reporter and I was telling him about how we're now selling .ETH on our website. And he's like, man, I had my name all laid out and I forgot that it was subscription, that you had to renew it, and I lost it. And so now with Unstoppable, you can set an auto -renewal date. So you can say, hey, I want to renew this automatically for five years, Unstoppable, take care of that, so that you never lose your name again. I think that's really powerful too. Well, I mean, I think for anybody who is, if you think about just traditional naming services out there, they're kind of accustomed to that if they've got any kind of .COM in the past. So some of that is definitely out there in Web2 land. Push alerts on the iPhone, though. So that's available. Any plan for Android, because I'm rocking both iPhone and Android now these days. When are you going to have that available as well? Yeah, I mean, we think it's going to be, we said coming soon in our blog post, but we think it's probably going to be as soon as next week, where you'll also be able to use and leverage this on your Android device as well. And you know, it really just has to do with the approval processes, you know, before you can publish anything to the App Store, the Apple Store, you have to get their approval. The same thing is true with Android. So it's just a matter of getting all the approvals done. Yeah. Is there a difference between the ETH naming service when you go over to ens .org and what you guys are doing, or is it just very transparent? Is there, other than, you know, the ability to auto -renew, things of that nature, what would be some of the key things that are differentiating between you and what ENS is doing? So, I mean, I think the big ones are auto -renewal, which is really powerful. The ability to buy more than one .ETH, we've had that happen a lot. This is one of our, you know, working backwards from the customer, being very customer obsessed. One of the things that we heard about a lot is having the ability to go in there and say, I want Sandy, I want Sandy Carter, I want S. Carter, and I want to buy all those at one time versus keep going back and back and back. So I think that that's a really big deal and a really big feature as well that we enable. And, you know, just the ability as well. If you're a new user, one of the reasons we did this was to expand the market. We're looking for more Web 2 users to come in and we wanted to make it really easy for them. So today, using Unstoppable, you don't have to have a crypto wallet. We will store it for you in a vault. Now, you still own it, so it's still yours, you still own it, but it's now stored in a vault. And that means that at any time, you can come and claim it and put it in your wallet. But while you're still learning, quote unquote, the space itself, you're also able to place that into the vault. And the vault is, I think, very powerful and is getting more and more powerful as we progress forward. Explain it a little further because I think some of the people that might be listening or watching right now, they may have not even used Unstoppable before. So let's say I go in, I get my name, .whatever, let's say .crypto or .x, and I want to put that in. I'm not using, I'm just using a regular credit card to be able to buy that. What that's doing is it's just putting it, parking it in a vault until I put a wallet to it. Is that how it works? That's right. So you still own it. It's still yours, but it's in a vault, so it's still secure. It's being held for you, so nobody else can buy it. It's yours, but you don't have to go through and set up a wallet. You know, Paul, I think you and I talked on one of the episodes about how hard it is to get crypto from an exchange, put it in your wallet, figure out your wallet, protect your, you know, have your private key there. And so this makes it so easy. You know, now for the first time, you can buy sandy .eth with a credit card. You don't have to pay in crypto, and you can store it in a vault. So if you're brand new to the space, you just want to get started or you want to take a bet on the future, this is a great way to do it because all you need to do is have a credit card, place it in a vault, and then when you're ready to tackle the next, and hopefully when Web3 becomes easier, and maybe that wallet won't be quite so hard, then you're able to really go ahead and just get started and get moving as well. Okay, one last question on vault, just for my own reasons. Is there a recurring fee for vault storage that you've got to pay for? How does that work as a whole? Yeah, so we do charge $4 a year, so it's a very low fee, but we charge $4 a year for the storage that it costs to just store it. Because again, as you're storing it in the vault, you're not storing it in your own wallet. That's per domain versus per user, or is that one user, one vault? Per domain, that's right. All right, so I mean, for those of you, I would recommend getting a vault, but if not, go ahead and get a wallet and be able to, of course, integrate that way. Talking about wallets, obviously, Solana just recently put out their Solana name service. That, of course, is now starting to roll out. What about the potential integration with what Solana is doing? We love Solana. You know, already, if you look at many of our applications that we support login with, they are Solana -based applications. We are looking for a lot more naming services. We want Unstoppable to be the one -stop shop for Web3 domains. So, you know, Bonfito runs the .sol naming service. We would love to have them sell on our site, as well as many, many others. We're chatting with lots of other naming services right now to get the ability to sell those on our site. Most recently, we announced that we would also support .sats, which is part of the ordinal family for Bitcoin. So that's the newest one that we also did as well. Well, it's going to be good. I think the more we see integrations, kind of the all -in -one location, you know, if you think about GoDaddy and what they've done with regular domain service within Web2, maybe Unstoppable is kind of the future there. I want to jump over to a clip real quick. And this is in reference to an interview we did with the McFarland team, along with some other people. And it was talking about allowlist. And this was some situations that are occurring with NFT drops and just projects in general. Let me play this clip for you and hear what you have to say. A Discord allowlist, a little bit of a kind of a clunky process that we're seeing play out in real time around this. So, you know, why not use like a Web3 kind of solution here for something like that? It is absolutely not the ideal and it's not where we want to go going forward. So hopefully it's a lot smoother. So Trevor and I had a long conversation about this from McFarland. And again, we like what McFarland is doing. As you could see, that would be a perfect example of a Web3 solution that could get into allowing someone like me who has an ID and be able to drop into something like that in terms of a project very easily. You know, some kind of that, you know, one chat to end them all or one ID for every use case. Are you guys looking at any kind of integrations or any potential solutions for things like this? Well, today, if you have Unstoppable, you can log in to over 500 different applications with using your Unstoppable ID. We are looking at, you know, we want to get up to so we're at 870. We want to get up to a thousand really quickly. So we're looking at any and all integrations that add value to our users. Paul, the way we work is really using the Amazon Web Services model, which is working backwards from our customers. So, for example, the announcement we made today on messaging, that came directly from our users and our partners. They said, we want to be able to message each other. And so, you know, I wrote a PR to make that happen and then we worked backwards and we got that in the game. So this is something that would be an amazing integration to do as well. And we've got a whole list of people that were, you know, companies that we're working with. So if you want to make a great introduction for me, please do that. We know the Farland team, so I'll introduce you to Trevor and Todd over there. Yeah, I'd love that. You mentioned 500 apps. Is there a place on the website where we can go take a look and just see what is available and what's coming? Where is that available right now? Yeah, so on the Unstoppable Marketplace, all of our apps and wallets are there. So that's where 870 different applications. So we have 520 apps or D apps, right? Decentralized applications, 170, now 171 wallets are out there. We also have games like Atari that are out there and metaverses. So if you ever want to know, do you support something, it's here. Or if you want to go out and search by category, you can also search by category. So, you know, when tax season was in, people were asking us, are there apps that you guys integrate with so that we can quickly do our tax systems for, you know, the upcoming, what is it, for 15 deadline. And then we just recently integrated as well with a company called Bitcrunch. We're integrated with them because what they do is they actually assess the value of your entire NFT portfolio. So, you know, if you have some of your NFTs in, you know, maybe in Magic Eden, some in Rarible, some in OpenSea, maybe some don't exist there, it gives you a nice little analytical, using artificial intelligence, kind of an assessment of where that sits today. So it's pretty cool. So we continue again, we listen to our customers, they say, wow, we need to do this or we would like to do, you know, like Etherscan or whatever it happens to be. And then we try to go and get that integration done with whatever great company that is. So a lot of companies out there starting to look at Web3 solutions, whether it's integration on loyalty, NFT projects, all sorts of use cases that are starting to flow into the business side of, you know, Web3. Are you guys looking at any major partnerships, corporate, you know, kind of whether it's, you're doing a deal or they're just trying to start to utilize some of these services? What are you seeing in that landscape right now? Oh my gosh, Paul, there's so many Web2 companies right now that are very interested in trying Web3. And it's not because Web3 is hip or cool, but it's because of the value prop that Web3 brings to the table. So you mentioned loyalty. Loyalty is a really big one because everything's on chain and you can identify users. It's just such a great use case. So we're seeing that one pop up for a lot of Web2 companies. We haven't closed any yet, but we have many, many, many inquiries in that space. And I would say at ECC, which was our last big Web3 show in Paris, we had double the interest of Web2 companies at that show and us than we had in the previous year. I think right now that people are just a little nervous, right? A lot of people equate Web3 equals crypto and people are nervous about crypto. And you and I know that Web3 doesn't equal crypto. Crypto is one of the use cases. It's why we make available credit card purchase and vault. So you don't have to go with crypto. But I think we're gonna see, once I think the regulations settle down, which we are seeing, we just saw Coinbase, we just saw Ripple, we're seeing several of the court cases come down favorable. I think when that regulation gets solved, that we're gonna really unleash the Web2 companies because there's just so much interest, but there's just a fear of, is now the right time to move forward with it? Yeah, one of our company entities is a consulting group. And I work in that capacity with a lot of different brands. And that is the same kind of landscape we're seeing. Everybody's starting to build a strategy right now. They just haven't deployed. There's a lot of projects that are underway right now for utilization of a lot of tool sets, whether it's loyalty or you look at NFT applications, as well as smart contract integrations into some brand identity, especially around IP. So I would agree with you. I think there's gonna be some big steps going forward. Let's talk a little bit about humanity check verified versus things like what we've seen with Worldcoin. Talk to me a little about what you guys are doing in that space as we are looking at identification as being a potential here. And this is something that you and I have talked about before and how this might change the future of just self -identity in Web3. Talk to me about what you guys are doing. Yeah, so we actually did introduce, we were one of the first to introduce a humanity check. And one of the things that we found out was with our humanity check, a lot of Web3, it just didn't fit the Web3 ethos, right? People really didn't want to be identified. But now as we're starting to see more and more Web2 come in, humanity check is starting to become something that's mandatory. So the slide you just had up was Rarimo. We did a partnership yesterday with Rarimo. And so the interesting thing there is we continue to do our own humanity check, but some apps are also looking for you to verify that you are a person and not a bot. And so we partnered with Rarimo on that, who is also working with Galaxy and Decentraland and some other applications that will use unstoppable domains as part of that humanity check. I do think, you know, if you think about Worldcoin, Worldcoin went, I think, way above, right, using biometrics. And most of the Web3 community I talked to is not ready for anything like that. I mean, if you think looking at a government -issued ID and comparing it, that was kind of too harsh. Biometrics went way above, at least from what we heard about from our users as well. Yeah, it's definitely one that appears to be crossing the line. But no, no, we're also talking about kind of this next evolution of demographics right now. Whether it's in the U .S. or abroad, there's a lot of nations that have, we'll call it a younger demographic who is very crypto -native, digital -native, social -native. They kind of get that. But I'm kind of on the fence here in reference to identification, just because we see the problem with bots in not only just here on the YouTube channel, but we see it in social media. We have our own Power Index, which is a tool that analyzes sentiment. And bots are one of the biggest problems that we deal with right now. So I think it is something that if Web3 can solve that, that would be pretty significant going forward. Speaking of bots, I want to jump over to your cryptoseam .x mystery boxes. And I was looking at this, and it just looks so close to what's happening over at Twitter. I think, all right, could there be some partnerships looming here with what you guys are doing and with what Elon Musk is doing over at Twitter? Yeah, well, you know, we've had .x now for, I think, almost three or four years. A .x, I would say, .x. And for us, .x is, you know, has always been the hippest and the coolest extension. So a lot of celebrities go with .x. And so I think it's always been a really cool extension for us. When Twitter rebranded, I did reach out to Twitter, and I'm looking forward to some upcoming meetings. We don't have anything planned, so there's no pre -announcements or anything. But I would like to just chat with them about some things that we could potentially do around the space. But x, you know, x marks the spot. I think x makes everything cool. I think that x has always been super cool, and it's always been one of our number one .x extensions as well. So you see more there. The mystery boxes are done with Magic Eden. We have a box. We're going to, you know, package things together. And it's a mystery. You don't know which name you're going to get. It's guaranteed to be at a certain level, but could go even above that value. So I think it's pretty exciting. We did this once before, and we completely sold out. So again, listening to our customers, you know, they said, bring this back. We like the mystery. We like being surprised. So that's what this is. Well, it's good gamification, I think, which is one of the engaging elements of not only digital, but Web3, I think we'll see more and more of this. So for sure. All right. I was looking at your Twitter right here. OpenSea. We have some requests for the Unstoppable ENS community that we'd like to see for Web3 domains on OpenSea. What do you think about this? That is a big integration, or would be. What's the likelihood of something like that? We've been talking with Devin, who's the CEO of OpenSea, for quite a while. And they have said that integration is on its way. So I do try to keep a very open dialogue with them. Obviously, it's up to them on timing. We keep preparing lists, and now that we also sell .eth, we have lists of requirements from us as well as .eth. And so we'd love to see OpenSea do that integration. You know, right now, OpenSea is dealing with a lot, especially around all the royalty issues. And so I think they've got to get through that. And then I'm hopeful that we'll be next in line for that integration. Interesting. All right. So we've been talking about that a little bit on our channel in reference to creators and the utilization of Web3 solutions, what this might mean for this next generation, I think, of really digital ID, Web ID, or whatever you want to call it. There's going to be a centralized identifier. And the ability to kind of navigate no matter what app, like you mentioned, being able to communicate intra -app without actually having a home base. I want to play a clip for you. This is Pussy Riot and a little bit about what she has been doing out there. Let's play this clip. The all -female group called Pussy Riot has been jailed for two years for an anti -Putin performance in a Russian Orthodox cathedral. What was it like? What did you face inside prison? I ended up in a labor camp. It was also a psychological torture because with your labor, you support the system that you go against. You said you've had this one job for many years. What's that one job? My job is to hurt Vladimir Putin as much as humanly possible. Can you do that with art and music and protest? Yeah, of course. Because bullets can penetrate your body. Art can penetrate your mind. Does that make you dangerous? Some people say so. Do you think you are? No, I think I'm nice and cute and fluffy and like really just lovely person. The point we're getting at here is obviously the way in which social will be utilized in the future and the idea of digital ID. I was looking just here on Linster. This is an example of the use case that's starting to be used with whether you think about creators or you just look at anybody that's essentially going to be utilizing tool sets like this in Web3, especially around digital ID. Because this starts to create the digital ID ownership that is yours. Now you have the ability to kind of span out. What are your thoughts on kind of the future of where digital ID is going? Well, I think there's still so much potential for digital ID. If I look at things like social causes in particular, when we did our focus groups asking people, what do you want as part of your digital identity? Social causes was one of the very top along with cars and sports, of course. And so I do see a lot of potential to use your digital identity to represent causes. For example, we are getting ready to announce our top 100 most inspirational women of Web3, our top 100 young girls of Web3. And that's a social cause, right? I'm trying to get more diversity inside of Web3 and I'm using our digital identity to do that as a social cause. I think digital identities in the future will represent social causes and not just ones that you talk about, Paul, but ones that you really do something about, right? Because with blockchain, you now have the ability to find out not just what people say, but what they actually do. But in the future, you know, education will be part of digital identity. So you no longer have to guess if I have Harvard on my LinkedIn profile, did I really go to Harvard or am I just saying I went to Harvard? I think healthcare, you know, I just met up with 100 healthcare startups up in New York. I think that healthcare could be a really ripe area for digital identity. Of course, we saw California now is working to get car titles as well on digital identity. So I think the future is really bright here. There's so much that's possible. But I think we need more adoption and more maturity as we go along and more innovation. And that's, you know, I just saw you flash up women of Web3. You know, women of Web3 and AI is really important because everything says that if you have more diversity of thought in what you're doing, you're going to get bigger ideas. You're going to innovate stronger and more powerfully. So I truly believe that this is a big, big, big focus. And here you see Paris Hilton. You know, she believes the same. She's working really hard for women in this space. And I love partnering with her and her team on a whole set of initiatives, again, to change the game for that social cause.

Sandy Carter Paul New York Vladimir Putin Paul Vera Devin Trevor Paris iPhone Solana Today Five Years Amazon Web Services U .S. Two Years Yesterday Five Months Ago Next Week Skiff App Store
Monitor Show 15:00 08-06-2023 15:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

00:37 sec | Last month

Monitor Show 15:00 08-06-2023 15:00

"In addition of Bloomberg Business Week from Bloomberg Radio, ahead in our next hour, we talk earnings with the COO of Chipotle, and we also examine Mark Rowan's cultural overhaul at Apollo. And up next, we put the sweltering month of July in context. Climate change will always be in its opening act. This will be a cold summer in 20 or 30 years. This is Bloomberg Business Week. I'm Tim Stanovex. Stay with us. Today's top stories and global business headlines coming up right now. Broadcasting 24 hours a day at Bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg Radio.

Tim Stanovex Mark Rowan Bloomberg Business Act Today Chipotle 20 24 Hours A Day 30 Years Bloomberg Radio July Apollo Bloomberg Business Week COO Bloomberg .Com Business Week Hour Bloomberg
"coo coo" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

77WABC Radio

02:34 min | 2 months ago

"coo coo" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

"It's about the syllables, Dick. It's about how many beats there are. Simon's inclusion of the phrase coo -coo -coo -choo is a homage to a lyric in The Beatles' I Am The Walrus. Just test you please, Mrs. Robinson Heaven fan Platform .It's free. Brid Innovation If you're hiring, it can feel like you're trying to find needle a in a haystack. You can hope the right person comes along, or you can just use ZipRecruiter. And now you can it try for free at ziprecruiter .com slash free. In fact, ZipRecruiter has helped a lot of business owners find their their needle in a haystack. Like Marco, president of operations at TeleTires and AutoCenters. Because TeleTires business, which has grown has a grown lot in the last few years. Marco needed to hire everyone from a receptionist to a store manager to a head mechanic. ZipRecruiter helps me find all the right people, even the most difficult jobs to fill. ZipRecruiter helps me keep my business running. Take it from Marco and millions of other businesses who've used ZipRecruiter. ZipRecruiter can help you find the needle in the haystack. See why four out of five employers who post a job on ZipRecruiter get a quality candidate within the day. first And right now you can try ZipRecruiter for free. That's right, free at ziprecruiter .com free. That's ziprecruiter .com slash f -r -e -e. ZipRecruiter .com slash free. ZipRecruiter, the smartest way to hire. The IRS is the most powerful collection agency on earth and if you owe back taxes, the news isn't good. The IRS is raising the interest rate it charges on unpaid taxes and further rate hikes are expected. Most people don't know it, but the IRS adds interest charges to your tax debts daily. So if you owe the IRS today, you'll owe even more tomorrow and it doesn't stop you until get right with the IRS. The good news is getting right can start with one phone call to Optima Tax Relief, America's number one tax relief firm. Optima's tax professionals specialize in the Fresh Start Initiative, a powerful IRS program that can save you thousands if you qualify. In fact, the experts at Optima have resolved over 1 billion dollars in tax debt for their clients. Call now for a free consultation. Call 800 -346 1213 800 -346 1213 800 -346 1213. Optima Tax Relief Some restrictions apply. For complete details, please visit OptimaTaxRelief .com. Hi, it's Ernie is here for Mercedes Benz of Edison. You know, they stand out from all other dealerships. Why? It's because of their superior customer service. That's why they've been awarded Dealer Raiders 2023 Mercedes Benz Dealer in New Jersey and Dealer the

Finalto Strengthens its Sales Team with Former iS Prime Senior Marco Maggioni

Finance Magnates

03:07 min | 7 months ago

Finalto Strengthens its Sales Team with Former iS Prime Senior Marco Maggioni

"1 p.m. Sunday March 5th, 2023. Finn alto strengthens its sales team with former is prime senior Marco magione LTP GT final to an institutional trading and liquidity services company, announced that Marco magione joined its team maggioni joins a sales director with a focus on liquidity and execution services for the institutional market LTP GT LTP GT according to a statement issued by dot finance magnates, dot com thought leadership fennell town bale's new data center and service improvements target coop Blanco rel cot follow quat date article linked to a true equation tagged. Maggioni has been serving the effects industry for nearly 15 years, and has picked up a good deal of expertise along the way, developing business and delivering sales growth for some of the most established FX brokers in Europe, opening branch offices and regional desk, managing the entire sales cycle from the origination of opportunities through to the execution of the sales strategy and closing deals LTP GT LTP GT having most recently spent 5 years at dot finance magnates, dot com executive SS prime cofounders depart business 8 years after quack target coit blanc what real quick follow quad data article linked with true coitus primal tag. As sales director and head of new business, Marco has been designing and executing plans for new business acquisition, leading a dedicated origination team of institutional sales, and overseeing some crucial aspects of the sales operations. Am excited to be joining the industry leaders. I am looking forward to being part of fennel pos continued growth, working with like minded, talented people who match my ambition. I genuinely believe I will be able to fulfill my potential at finito, and I know I can offer them tangible business results. Head of sales, said quote Marco joining fin alto shows we are attracting the right caliber of person to help drive our business forward. Marco has the knowledge and drive to add real value to our sales team we all look forward to a successful career for Marco at finito, dot quilt with final tough ref coffs, dot finance magnates, come for exclusive a final to group its new group CEO of shopman and green bond apart quote target qua blank what rel cot follow quat date article linked to a true Quartet's changed tagged senior management a few months ago. On November, Ron Hoffman, the group chief executive officer CEO, and leer in greenbone, the group chief operating officer, COO, have departed from the financial solutions providers after over 7 years fin alto has tapped Matthew maloney, who has been the CEO of fennel financial services and fin alto trading, since February 2021, to take over from Hoffman as the new group CEO, dot LTP GT this article was written by finance magnates staff at WWW dot finance magnates dot com.

Marco Magione Finn Alto Maggioni Marco Coit Blanc Fennell COM Europe Ron Hoffman Greenbone Matthew Maloney Leer Fennel Financial Services Fin Alto Hoffman
Coins.ph CEO, YGG COO Lead Acquisition of 0n1 Force NFT Project

BitPinas

00:30 sec | 7 months ago

Coins.ph CEO, YGG COO Lead Acquisition of 0n1 Force NFT Project

"4 a.m. Saturday, February 25th, 2023. Coins PH CEO. Lead acquisition of zero and one force NFT project. OFR plans to invest heavily in the zero and one force franchise and create a community board to oversee the project. The post coins PH CEO YG COO lead acquisition of zero and one force NFT project appeared first on bit penis.

OFR
Rebecca Liao: Saga Bootstrapping Chainlets in the Multiverse

Epicenter

02:37 min | 7 months ago

Rebecca Liao: Saga Bootstrapping Chainlets in the Multiverse

"Rebecca, thanks for joining us on the podcast today. Thanks so much for having me, Sebastian. Felix, it's great to see you guys at the center is regular listening for the entire team at saga. So really appreciate you having me on nice. Well, well, I hope you can return the favor by teaching us a few things today. Absolutely. I would love to learn more about saga and what you guys are building. And I think for me, it's an interesting thought experiment to try to figure out where this sits in the broader app chain, interesting security, modular chain, mesh network, thesis, there are a lot of products right now that are trying to implement different security models and it's interesting to try to reason about where they fit in the broader landscape. Before we do that though, please tell us a little bit about your background, where you came from and how you came to be the CEO at saiga. Yeah, absolutely. I'm happy to dive into all those topics. That's what we spend all of our time thinking about at saga. So no shortage of things to discuss there. But in terms of my background, how I found my way to saga. So this was late 2021. So I'll tell you about my journey before the end. Sock is actually my second crypto startup. My first one was called ski chain. Cofounder there was Psaki, Mannion, who's one of the original builders and customers. So if you found each other a long time. And excuse me, I was focused more on the DeFi space. So it was providing short term liquidity to a small, medium sized businesses. And I was cofounder of COO there for four years, grew the platform to about 5 billion in annual volume and early 2021. I started thinking to myself, okay, I've been here four years. The project is on its way. I would love to see if there's a new adventure. And I've always been involved in politics. So I was part of both the Clinton and Biden presidential campaigns, both in 2016 and 2020. And in 2020, we actually won. So I began to think to myself maybe I should go into service and join the administration for a little bit. So I actually went to D.C. for a few months in early 2021. And went through the interview process, waiting for nomination, but I quickly realized through that process that I'm not really suited for federal bureaucrats, aid no surprise after having done startups for a long time. So I called up sake and said, hey, I think I'd like to stay in crypto. So Henry is me to our cofounding team at saga. Because we all believed that developers needed an easier time. Basically, of building in web three that they didn't have the full tool sets that obviously went to developers have,

Psaki Felix Sebastian Rebecca Mannion Biden Clinton D.C. Henry
Will Hild: Why Are Companies Practicing 'Woke Capitalism?'

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:56 min | 8 months ago

Will Hild: Why Are Companies Practicing 'Woke Capitalism?'

"Are you encountering a sort of the path of least resistance by a lot of these decision makers in these big Fortune 500 companies? That's exactly right because the problem is that even though these asset managers are managing other people's money in other words, it's pension holders. It's a university endowment. When they go and meet with corporate leaders, boards of directors, CEOs, COOs, they represent large portions of these companies shares. So they have to worry that their largest shareholder is upset about something, whether they like it or not, whether it's good for business or not, they have to play ball. And this, by the way, I know your viewers care a lot about this trend of quote unquote woke capitalism. Why is suddenly every corporation, you know, getting involved with BLM or pushing diversity equity and inclusion nonsense, or even in 2021, getting involved in fights over election legislation in states. ESG is the reason for that because they have to answer to people like Larry Fink at BlackRock and just take Exxon as a concrete example two years ago, he helped elect three radical environmentalists to the board of that company to push them out of the oil and gas industry and into unreliable unaffordable quote unquote green technologies. So if you take an example like that, all of these corporate leaders see that. And they see Larry pushing, you know, raises onto the boards of directors of these companies and they know that could be them next if they don't play ball. And Larry's been vocal about this. He spoke in an interview publicly in 2017 with The New York Times that he that he believes behaviors have to be forced to change. And BlackRock, they are forcing behaviors. And he was talking in terms of corporate governance. And literally race and sex quotas on boards of directors. So this is not this explains a lot of why we've seen these corporations going, well,

Larry Fink Coos Ceos Blackrock BLM Exxon Larry The New York Times
Mark Levin: Joy Reid and Tiffany Cross Have Blood on Their Hands

Mark Levin

01:01 min | 1 year ago

Mark Levin: Joy Reid and Tiffany Cross Have Blood on Their Hands

"Joy Reid believes in suppressing the truth She's a hater And worse And she and her friend what is a Toby Tiffany and others and so forth It is there in my view who are blood on their hands It is people like that will never allow this country to come together Ever And it's because big corporations and these corporatists the CEOs and COOs and CFOs and these board members they want this They want the ratings increased If they can get them But if not they figure they're covering their asses They're protecting themselves because we don't spend enough time going into their damn shareholder meetings raising hell Whereas the other side does They do And they trash mouth and they smear and they slander and they libel We pretty much scratch our heads and complain to each other

Joy Reid Toby Tiffany Cfos Ceos
Corporations Now Bow Down to the Marxists

Mark Levin

01:34 min | 1 year ago

Corporations Now Bow Down to the Marxists

"It's shocking And more and more of the corporations let me tell you a little secret Like so many of you I used to defend these corporations because all they are Are legal creations that allow individuals to operate freely To build things to create things to produce things to develop things to sell things to purchase things That's all And aggregate or a collection of individuals who invest who make What's wrong with that And of course there would be attacked because of their belief in capitalism But not anymore Not anymore These corporations are now run by corporatists Their CEOs their COOs their CFOs their board members These are corporatists Many of them come out of the same colleges and universities and graduate schools as the other American marxists Many of them are just bowing to the mob because they think it's good for business But either way it's corrupt When you look back at the John D. Rockefeller's when you look back at the vanderbilts when you look back at the great the great capitalist the industrialists Of course you're now supposed to hate them

John D. Rockefeller
Visa Buys a Punk as Bitcoin Returns to $50K

The Breakdown with NLW

01:39 min | 2 years ago

Visa Buys a Punk as Bitcoin Returns to $50K

"As i discussed on saturdays weekly recap. Bitcoin had just made a nice little punch-up heading into the weekend last night on sunday. Bitcoin lifted its head above fifty thousand where it remained until about an hour ago at the time of this recording. Some have called this last month. The short squeeze rally referring to the fact that it was started as bitcoin held above thirty thousand dollars in the face of numerous short positions that forced those shortsellers to buy more at higher prices to keep their positions open to being a boom short-squeeze. Whatever the cause over the last thirty days. Bitcoin is up around forty six percent and bitcoins peak in the last twenty four hours around fifty thousand two hundred three month high. Bitcoin is now recorded gains for five consecutive weeks. Which is its longest winning streak in september of last year. Matthew did the co founder and coo at stack funds said that this rally unlike some of our previous frenetic moves up hasn't been driven by derivatives bets but instead by spot buying quote looking at funding in the options market. This rally still appears to be spot driven. Our expectation is that this break of psychological resistance will likely result in a rotation back to bitcoin in the coming weeks with the next target of sixty thousand dollars. This idea of a lot of spot buying driving things seems to be affirmed by data from into the block which shows that institutions in. Wales appear to have been accumulating alongside price growth. They tweeted institutions in wales. Getting increasingly bullish on bitcoin as prices have climbed over the past few weeks the volume addresses with at least one thousand. Bitcoin are showing a positive correlation with bitcoins. Price of point seven five in q. Three

Bitcoin Stack Funds Matthew Wales
Can You Really Freeze Fat Away?

You Beauty

02:29 min | 2 years ago

Can You Really Freeze Fat Away?

"Talking about that phrasing today which is very popular. Non invasive body sculpting treatment the scientific name full-fat freezing is cairo lippo. Uscis which i know is a little bit of a mouthful kyra means cold leiper meaning fats and lascivious meaning to dissolve all loosen but you've probably seen it marketed as coo sculpting. Which is the only branch have fda approval however they awesome other names floating around the treatment was actually invented. I think this is so interesting by observing what happens when kids eight. I pose see. Now when like little children alike aiding the icy polls and i kind of just leave them in their mouths this sort of sitting against their cheek so the car founders of this treatment. We're intrigued when something called cold. Induced fat necrosis was reported to occur off. Today's kids eight. The icy post that will sort of left resting on their cheeks for several minutes. Skin samples taken from patients like these showed inflammation in the fight but normal skin. So thus i love using would thus it appeared that that may be more sensitive to cold injury than other tissue types. Using this concept a cooling device was tested on pigs. Sorry pigs in two thousand and seven to save fat cells could be selectively destroyed. The results were very promising. There was was about a half an inch reduction in the peaks. Fat layer in the treated areas so by two thousand and ten the first cairo. Lopo asus technology approved for human use named coup sculpting was cleared as a treatment for love handles and then clearance full. Treating other parts of the body was soon pastas well and those parts of the bodies will like you thought is to saddles. You back saddles. You belly abroa- fat onto side of the bomb bomb and even your chin so all of those have been fda approved as well. But how exactly does it work. Unfortunately no one knows for show which doesn't exactly sound promising but basically a special vacuumed applicator is applied to an area of the body and controlled cooling technique lowest the treated area to minus nine degrees and that's celsius cooling energy traits. The thought la without any damage to surrounding cells and experts. Think that because fat cells cannot survive at this temperate cha a few days after treatment. The cooled fat cells die and over the next few months. You'll buddy will actually digest. The dead fat

Cairo Lippo FDA Lopo Asus Cairo LA
"coo coo" Discussed on KGO 810

KGO 810

07:32 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on KGO 810

"Earthquakes What I was noticing with the earthquakes. And we went into the break into my inbox in my emails at 12 31 came from Sandra felt patch. I live in San Ravel. And, um, this is a it sent me this story. About these. These earthquakes is swarm of earthquakes US. In Walker, California A 6.0 earthquake struck near the southern the Northern California Nevada border. Yesterday, it sent items flying off the shelves triggered rock slides. A swarm of aftershocks also followed the quake, hence the term aftershocks and kept residents on edge Friday. The larger quake it was originally recorded at 5.9 later revised to six point out was felt as far away as Las Vegas and the San Francisco Bay Area Red Residents of Sacramento County in Carson City. Nevada, also felt the quake and some of its residual aftershocks. Um it was reported just before four. It was centered just south of Lake Tahoe and near Walker in Mono County. The shaking sent rocks tumbling into roadways and Walker and Colville, causing road closures and traffic delays. The larger quake was followed by dozens of aftershocks, including at least a half dozen of magnitude four or above, according to the USGS. All aftershocks felt on Friday. As of noon. We're a magnitude 3.7 and below. So you know, Since since I came on the air, there are still aftershocks, but they're diminishing in their intensity, so they're below 3.73 point seven and below. Experts are telling people that the aftershocks are expected to persist for several days. This one that happened yesterday was the largest earthquake recorded in the area since a 6.1 In 1994. State. Emergency crews worked through the night to survey for damage. Minor damage was found. There weren't any significant effects to infrastructure. Um, you know, and this is just a reminder. I mean, there's more about this, but it looks as if you know there wasn't significant damage because of the area in which this occurred. And then, of course they give us the tips that I think most of us know. Drop cover. Hold on in a safe place. If you don't have sturdy, finished furniture, sit on the floor next to an interior wall and cover your head and neck with your arms. You know, we used to say, stand in a doorway, and now we're told. Do not stand in a doorway. Pick a safe place in each room of your home, workplace or school that might be under a piece of furniture. If it's nice and sturdy against an interior wall away from Windows bookcases are tall furniture that could Fall on you. Um yeah, and be aware of evacuation plans as well. And you can take some certain precautions. Um, like, keep a flashlight and good shoes by your bed. In case it strikes in the middle of the night. Make sure your home is securely anchored to its foundation. How would you know? How do you know? I mean, do you have to bring an inspector around? I mean, how do you know? It should be aren't all houses securely anchored to their foundations? Uh, bolt embraced water heaters and gas appliances to wall studs. Both bookcases. China cabinets. Other 12 furniture to wall studs. Hang heavy items like pictures and mirrors away from beds. Couches in anywhere, people sleep or sit Brace overhead light fixtures in straw install strong latches or bulls on cabinet. Larger, heavy items should be closest to the floor and learned how to shut off your gas valves in your home. Keep a wrench handy for that purpose. This is that's really good advice. Usually they just tell us make sure you have plenty of water. Get you have a phone A handy make sure your phones are charged. I think those are really, really good pieces of advice. So anyway, I I one of the reasons that I'm paying attention to this is because of my earthquake alert system. And I have that. Because we're prone to earthquakes, and because it seems as if we're do So the swarms that we're experiencing recently, although there have been some where the epicenter has been in the Bay Area. Um, the ones that we've been experiencing the strongest ones seem to be closer to Nevada, you know, really close to the California Nevada border. I don't know what that bodes for us here in the Bay Area, if about anything at all or if that's just completely different, false system and we don't really have to worry about that. That that's a precursor to anything that's going to happen here, in any event were in earthquake country always be prepared, and when these things happen, whether it's directly in your area or just outside of your area or on the state line Um, take it just as a reminder that we need to do what we can to be prepared because there's no question that there will be an earthquake. The question is, when we never know exactly when it's going to strike. Look, I have a story that I want to share with you. And this is such a good story. Have you ever been in a position where you've watched, um restaurants? Throw out food. Um It seems like it was a long, long time It was. I guess it was a couple of decades ago, I worked selling Nordic tracks in a mall and this was in South Florida. And what was very upsetting to me was that I would say every single evening I would see in the food court. All of these places and some of the food was pretty darn good. They would, you know, pick up all the food that they hadn't sold and they would throw it away. Now they would spend just before closing like 15 minutes before closing, you could go and you could buy everything was really cheap. They would discount everything. But whatever wasn't sold, they gathered it up and they threw it away. And I threw a little hissy fit. I said, What are you doing? There are people who are hungry. There are food banks. There are places their shelters. There are places you can donate the food, too. And I was told that again. This was in Florida. I was told they can't and they can't because of, um health code violations that you can't just donate these foods from a restaurant and I thought it was cuckoo crazy, and I still think it's coo coo crazy. Well, now comes this app. It's a food waste app, and it's called too good to go. And what it does is, it saves leftovers from San Francisco restaurants. What it does is, it allows you to buy this food that otherwise is likely to go into the landfill. Now I want to share with you. This the writer of this article at SF Gate I want to share with you what she says as she experienced this, she says, as I walk out of San Francisco grocery chain Lukes local on a recent Tuesday evening I feel an unexpected wave of guilt wash over me in my hand is a heavy brown paper bag packed full of eight pieces of produce a ham and goat cheese sandwich, a loaf of seeded country bread. Fancy looking almond poundcake to chocolate sea salt cookies and a pack of pita bread. Somehow I only paid 5 99 for this hall that will feed me in various ways for at least a week. The pound cake alone has a price sticker on it that says 13 99 On this day, the day I feel like I paid a small fee to rob a bank. I decided to get all my meals at least for a 24 hour period through the new app too good to go. An anti food waste company that helps facilitate getting excess.

South Florida Florida Las Vegas San Ravel Nevada Bay Area Friday USGS 24 hour 1994 Walker Walker, California Carson City Sacramento County Sandra Tuesday evening yesterday Yesterday San Francisco US
"coo coo" Discussed on MyTalk 107.1

MyTalk 107.1

08:21 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on MyTalk 107.1

"All right, We have got to do a dive into our real housewife world of Beverly Hills in New York. If you were to give last night's Beverly Hills episode, uh, a star rating out of five. What would you give last night's episode? Okay. That's a great question. 3.5. I give it a four. Okay? Good. Yeah, Before I thought it was good. I thought compared to the one star I gave New York Oh, I knew even giving one star is it's like it's like a yelp review that you have to give one because I wouldn't even give it that New York is having the worst season I've ever seen. I'm not Yeah, I I mean, we we both know there is one person that needs to be gone. She doesn't have any connection to anybody. Ramona Singer Bona. Meghan McCain of the Real Housewives franchise, said even her really and truly is nobody wants or there. There's no reason I should have an even a letter. Come back this year. Even Sonia are Sonia, who depends on you say it because I mean, sometimes people say song, but even Sonia Pretty much called her a racist. On a random episode. She got drunk. Um, and that's supposed to be her one of her close friends. So when your When your friend is calling you out like that, you have no ties. You're so fake and phony. Her emotional breakdown she had when she had Ebony over was correct. It was like I didn't know whether it to call 911 on her. I don't be concerned about her. It was coo coo for cocoa pop. It was cuckoo for Cocoa puffs and it shows you how on it, she She's she's epitome of white fragility. Exactly, and she is so aware of the cameras and like what she needs to be and what she's trying to be. And she tries to use people like chess pieces, and she's not smart enough. She is the Meghan McCain at the real houses. Second McCain of the Real Housewives. I could have you right? I could have just stuck to that because that's pretty much what I'm saying. Right and then Beverly Hills. It's having one of the best seasons. I agree Kathy Hilton. I mean for somebody when she for that first episode, Julie and I were like, were so struck because she would appear maybe once a year on Real housewives like at a Kyle fundraising thing, and it was so obvious. That she'd had a fresh face lift because it kind of just her mouth moves. But what comes out of her mouth is so draws soap hot story. She's so I I had no idea. She was that rich. He's so rich and so funny and so quirky. Everything about her. I mean, they rolled up at her house, and it was like almost 11, and she's like I just woke up and she's so rich. She her pajamas, matched the room and matched all the whatever you call it, the Twal and and Delph China, and when she looked and said, who's hunky dory? What I was trying to look up just I was like, what was the thing, she said. So they Um Sutton has a mental breakdown and I suddenly hold up season arc is she's unstable. I think in general in her real life, she never. She's another one who's white fragility. You can't handle that sudden, said she felt violated when Crystal said that Crystal said she felt violated when sudden walked in her room with a brief knock and and sudden, and crystal wasn't dressed or whatever. And sudden is so fragile. She's they've now spent four episodes arguing about the validity of somebody feeling violated although to be fair, this is kind of one of the things that we do like about. There. You know, the real Housewives? Uh, is the fact there's the good the bad and the ugly, but they're squabbling over nonsense, and that's what's been missing. For years. I know. And so there was another aspect to Of, uh, Chris was trying to move on from it and satin is death grip into it. And I do think that Sutton lives in a world that she's so wealthy that most interactions she has nobody challenges her because she's so thrown off that nobody's everyone is not stopping what they're doing and went, But it's crazy because she is so crazy Town USA. And still these other women because she's so wealthy and gives all these gifts and all these presents are like Kyle acting like she. She's the Are you okay? Uh, what about the fact that like she's ruining this party for nothing, Right? And you got what you know, Um They're Garcelle is opening president. Our president's presence. And Sutton's over there having a maybe setting out if it because she didn't bring a present. I know brand for her. Yeah, yeah, And it's you know, uh, the thing is, I I applaud. The Bravo producers because they Erika Jayne is supposedly very unhappy with the editing. But I am I loved when the producers after Lisa Rinna went over to wherever you know Erika Jayne is renting a house. Oh, everything is so cute and so tiny, you know? Yeah. And then the Bravo producers estimated retail monthly rent $9500. I'm like where they go their travel way to, like, throw it in there and they show the clothes and she's she's living a fine life. I mean, I like that we all dream of still Her arc is just getting better and better. And it should dream. Yes. Girardi. Yes, And they're going to show she has a next episode starts bawling over the, You know accusations that she's hiding funds. She looks like she's having a breakdown and the fact that the cameras keep rolling. During this part, we were praying that this was true, and the fact that they keep giving us footage means like we are going to watch this. Not in real time, but even better because we know the things that are coming up, right? Oh, there's so many things I mean, like A A judge ruled yesterday that some former clients of Tom Girardi can now pursue a collections lawsuit. Against Erica since it came out in court documents that Tom Girardi gave Erica Jean her LLC, a $20 million quote unquote lone and so they can go after her for this money and specifically its It's like To or friends and, like three different people who were supposed to get burned, So I mean, it's just terrible. It's terrible. It's orphans and burn victims that are going after her, and he transferred 20 million and it was divided between different LLC's that she had. And okay, So what do you have any feeling on if she knew I didn't know it. Oh, hell, she knew. Yeah, it's hard to deny that they because this relationship has been this dynamic for so long and her Acting like all these things she's saying haven't been true for 20 years. Yeah, I mean, I know that Erica's wheelhouse is smoke and mirrors and ice cream, and that has been her M O since she's been on the show, but a lot of this I don't know that she could have been that greed. I feel like Erica. If she really if life was that bad with Tom, she would have left. Yeah, left long ago. It's gotten so bad for Erika Jayne GM a covered it this morning at their 7 45 woah. Oh, we've got the audio here. Oh, my God. Yes, This is a high profile case, and it's getting new attention this morning after a California bankruptcy judge Has given the green light ruling that former clients of Tom Girardi can now go after Erica Jean for up to $11 million in payments. Trying to motivate myself to get out and do things not wallow, Offering a glimpse into her thoughts on the new episode of Bravo's Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Reality star Erica Jane now faces an $11 million lawsuit. Judge ruling the 49 year old housewife known for her lavish lifestyle can be liable in a collection suit brought by three of her ex husband, Tom Girardi's former clients, one of them telling G M a overnight. I just think it's a good step forward for not just myself, but other victims. I entered this marriage 27 years old..

Lisa Rinna Kathy Hilton Erika Jayne Erica Jane Meghan McCain Tom Girardi Sonia Tom $9500 Chris $20 million $11 million 20 years yesterday Erica Jean Ramona Singer Garcelle one star 20 million Crystal
"coo coo" Discussed on KDWN 720AM

KDWN 720AM

06:27 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on KDWN 720AM

"Like a karaoke night on Friday. You should do like that. The night show that maybe I think that would be awesome. Yeah, well, it started because JD sang out of the break. And I said, Oh, you did that. Let's go up asked is a nothing about love. I don't want to sing. I'm still in love with you to cash to Brady. I don't want to do that. But Bernie would like that. No, no, no, please. All right. What do you got today? But, brother, I happened to hear WalMart Carl on a little while ago and you guys were talking about the solar And what they're finding out with solar energy. It is absolutely about 50 times more worse than they thought when it comes to the elements that used in the production are leaching back into the environment. It costs more to dispose of a solar panel than it does to make and the ones that were made. Like around 20 are the year of 2000. All them panels are no. Basically dicking or not providing any electricity, so they have to go to the landfill. Once they reach the landfill, and they start sitting there in decaying there, it reaches into our water. What's used in the production of solar panels? Lead, cadmium nitrate chloride, some of the worst greenhouse stuff that you could possibly put into our drinking water. So and you're seeing what happened in, uh, about few months ago in Texas. Why everything went down. That had nothing to do that was strictly mismanagement in Texas to do with it was mismanagement in Texas. They were told it would fail. When Obama was in power. He did the Texas grid that was his fault. Cash. Come on, You took my You took my fun day and you threw it out the damn window because there's no way Obama, the Obama administration told Texas there. People went in and said, If you don't fix it, it don't work. Come on. Naive, Nick. Come on. Come on. Naive boy. Oh, too cool. Cash. Come on. Corn pop could hang in there could cook Coo coo cash. Hey, hang on notes. So what happened better than Ku Klux Cash environmental policies that were implemented by the government. Coal fired electricity, electricity supplying power plants had to be eliminated. So almost 40%. The power that Texas was getting was eliminated under Obama, Nick The grid that they own privately that has nothing to do with the grid across the rest of America failed for poor it did was not. It was not maintained properly. It was they were told they needed to do Listen Cash. I was having a good day. Give me a favor called Brian back Monday or Tuesday, because right now you're not ruining my day. I'll talk to you later. But the truth of the matter is the truth of the matter is they were told. They were told they were told. That they need that there were issues there. They were told they were prepared for the cold snap that they got. They just weren't That's just my opinion. No, no. But they also one of the reasons why they were not able to inspect it because of Covid 19 regulations, but also their Brady's right to a degree. There was significantly more solar integrated into their power grid than than usual and it prevented them from being able to recover quickly that that's true. I don't know how I don't know how much Obama was involved in that, but as far as his explanations of solar panels being Yeah, That may be true. You had the research that you see what those solar panels look like out there like if you have if you have solar panel, and it's on grass, and by the time that solar panel is dead, that grass is dead. I mean that that that kid about that land, I would imagine that once that solar panels removed that that grasses isn't a really tough situation. Once again, I started a conversation just talking about an infrastructure deal that turned into solar panels. One on one, and I was not. I was not totally looking. I was just talking about it in its totality, not in it. Not breaking down each individual, you know, I mean, I'm sure every every piece of Whether it's whether whether it's fossil fuels or solar energy or when there's there's negatives and positives to all of them. We know that I mean, I'm not naive. I don't nothing is perfect. Right. We've already talked about God and the show. You know, Nothing is perfect. I get that, But I wasn't. I wasn't prepared to argue the merits of the recycling of solar panels. I was not. That was not in my thing. Now, if it goes in the Blue Republic tote. I know it recycles if it doesn't like like my TV monitor. My computer monitor. Then I know they've got to figure that out that brother or my paint cans. I know those aren't good. So solar panels go in with my, uh, l e d or tubed TV? They can't go in my blue. Can I get it? Yeah. I'm sorry. I'm making a very simplistic right. Very simple. Hey, back to the phones, we go, Ty. Welcome back to the show. You guys. How you doing this morning? Great. Ty. Hey, Uh, well, this is we're not gonna talk myself anymore. Well, I mean, it's up to you whatever you want to do. I was just saying that wasn't really that it became the the The Center point. The thing with me, they they need more technology. They need to To get this where they can like. Like I said, You know where you can have a battery in your home or if you sold her power all day you can. You can charge your battery and have a battery power all night. That would be true solar power well and not get that, But and that's part of my That's part of my argument on the entire Infrastructure plan being show heavy on the technologies of, you know, wind and solar, that that's part of my point that if we do not If we do not invest to make them better than they stand today, then they won't help us. Don't agree with that. They they won't help us. It's useless where you didn't you can. You can do these things and live and tribunal 1000 miles on the car, right? You know, with the battery to me, Why don't they have shoulder patterns on top of the cars? Well, I like that idea. Until the pigeons hit him. Well, that's the car washes will be good business. Hey, I heard you. I heard you and I cheated. Not another station earlier. I heard you doing the news. Yes, itself. Yeah, well, you know, honestly, to be honest with you..

Obama Texas Tuesday JD 1000 miles 2000 Bernie Friday Nick today Monday Brian WalMart each individual one about 50 times Blue Republic America almost 40% about few months ago
Ironman Duo Team, Brent & Kyle Pease, on Training and Racing Together

Ali on the Run Show

02:41 min | 2 years ago

Ironman Duo Team, Brent & Kyle Pease, on Training and Racing Together

"Do you remember your first round together. Once you've got the chair and all of the proper equipment in place for you to train together what were your first runs together. Like our first one park and it was one of those weird days in atlanta on february where it was just perfect. Whether you know it was like sixties low seventy something like that and it was just it. it fell. you know we had done all these different things. We had done the wheelchair soccer. We had done the. We had done the modified sports in the backyard. But this for whatever reason just felt different felt like we were both going in the same direction at the same time So it was just it was. It was a lot of fun and we were already at an age. Where maybe you're not hanging out with your siblings like that. You're not competing together anymore and here. We were at in our twenties getting ready to tackle these huge goals that we had never thought of and what about the physical component. What was it like. For each of you brent. What was it like pushing a chair. Because it's very different than say pushing a stroller. Like i'm i'm a mother. I have a two year old and running with her a stroller. Like i'm i'm very weak. I do my best. But like i hit a slight incline and on my coo. Get out and walk. Andy like it. It's hard and so for you brenton. Obviously you're you're in incredible shape with a twelve hour iron man but tell me about the adjustment to running with the and then kyle. I wanna hear about from your perspective. What it was like to By the way. I'd rather push kyle than my three year. Old strollers are not. They're not like pushing. Kyle like we're in this now. But the original chair we had was basically an adult jogger or an adult stroller so is meant to hold somebody up to two hundred fifty pounds and so was very similar. My arms were kind of locked out there long and my back would get really sore in my last. I just. I would be really sore. Because i've lost that arm swing and you know we eventually got better equipment but even then you don't get the extra stuff that a normal runner does again. You're not swinging your arms. You don't have that extra motion so you're you're kind of just stuck right behind the chair and then of course there's the just the sheer weight of it There are parts. that are easier and also scarier. I mean the first ten k we did was downhill ten k And it's at the. Time was the fastest that i had ever run a ten k because it was all i could do to hang onto that chair as kyle's wait in the three wheels pulled me straight down at the bottom of the

Kyle Atlanta Soccer Brenton Andy
"coo coo" Discussed on The Nicole Sandler Show

The Nicole Sandler Show

06:14 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on The Nicole Sandler Show

"He believes this shit or he you know he talks about he says it enough so that his sycophantic followers believe it. And that's all you need. You know you heard marcy wheeler you heard that clip he. He started a a a coup before he has no compunctions about another coup. It's the coo coo the coo coo coo coo coo so yes it's coup so c. Span know what they're going to carry it because they carry a state political conventions and things like that they're carrying the whole day kristi. Nome governor of south dakota is speaking at twelve noon. She's also on the schedule. So i honestly. I don't fault c. span but let me tell you something. Cnn don't blow it. i really doubt. Msnbc will carry it. live. I'm sure they'll tape it and and show some highlights. You know the really bat. Shit crazy stuff Cnn i'm never quite sure and they're hurting ratings wise lately so this is my warning to them. Don't do it you know. Cnn is just made some really good change. If you're like me and you couldn't stomach watching morning jerk in the morning anymore. You know. I always have the news on in the morning when i wake up too so i know what you know. Just set the stage for the day and I used to put that on but now. Cnn has a brown briana keeler on in the morning and she's really good. I'm telling you if you're a regular like morning jerk viewer. Check that out next week and then tell me what you think. I'm i'm impressed all right. I thought i'd throw that in there. Few other items to get to. Before before marcy wheeler allen west is in the news again. Oh yeah my nemesis. My former congressman a few weeks ago. When i was on vacation or took take a day off. I haven't taken a vacation in years. When i was on vacation when i was taking a day off. Anita friday need a weekend I played a you know an older show. Best up and i played The show from eleven years earlier when i was arrested at the town hall meeting alleged townhall meeting. By then congressman. That was him allen west who then thankfully lost re election. He moved to texas. I guess that's more his speed and he became the republican party chairman for the state of texas. Well today. he quit resigned as of well. Five o'clock i guess texas time. So maybe he's still in office for another another hour or so but Yes so allen west and some of the the comments on it are just hysterical but he is just a story. Excuse for human being and the thing is you know and people are calling him out for what he has. He's leaving his post head of the republican party in texas in much worse shape than he then it was when he got in. He's he's bankrupted them and left them hurting no surprise there. And the the the belief the rumor is that he's going to announce that he's primary ing the governor of texas. I wouldn't put it past him because that's the kind of shit he does. And i hope he goes down in flames. You know when it. I my response on twitter when someone said someone tweeted this story this morning that he was stepping down and i said What a shame rest in peace. I know he's not dead but wishful thinking anyway Okay out of news out of israel. Looks like netanyahu is out. They formed a a a government with eight different parties. Maybe we need to start in with some of that. But eight different parties have joined together to oust netanyahu ranged from the ultra far right much further right than netanyahu if that's even possible to a little bit left i mean it's not really liberal But a centrist party and there's an israeli and arab israeli party to first time in arab israeli A party representative is part of the new government They just have to get it through the knesset. That's israel's parliament. And when they meet next week and that's all that's left. So what does netanyahu doing. He's going out calling it a fraud and it's like fake news and he's echoing all of trump's bullshit rhetoric that got from you know the the people who came before him vladimir putin and other dictators dictator wannabes. So that's going on next week. Hopefully we can celebrate. Maybe we'll we'll try to place a call to israel again to talk about them at least being rid of netanyahu. Because i don't know who's going to you know the the guy who's going to be the next prime minister is the head of the the more the further right group but that's only for two years and then A number one takes over so it's going to be a revolving leadership thing nobody. I don't think anybody will ever be prime minister of israel for another twelve to fifteen years or i hope not anyway hope not anyway Job numbers are out. It was good report up about double what it was last month. Even though the the analysts thought it was going to be a little higher. It's a good sign. It looks like things are progressing. The way they're supposed to The one other story that that caught my eye that i don't quite believe it. The whole ufo thing right. We're hearing all these stories about the ufo's and now the military and the government is admitting that navy pilots have seen these things and see them all the time but what. They're saying they're report..

two years Five o'clock netanyahu Anita vladimir putin trump marcy wheeler texas twelve today next week last month twelve noon republican party eleven years earlier twitter eight different parties allen west israel first time
"coo coo" Discussed on KUGN 590 AM

KUGN 590 AM

07:51 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on KUGN 590 AM

"Them past the hour. Now, this is the overview of what's going on the world. The news talk radio, courtesy of the D. J. V. Show's hosts. Jennifer Horan is here. Victoria Keelan. J. Kerschner is here. I'm Doug Stephan, with an overview of the top 10 stories and perhaps anecdotally during the hour will have time to get to the people who are on the list. As well. Maybe that's a good place to start because a lot of people don't know who Rochelle Wollensky is. She's number three on the people list. This week's did a lot of testifying. S so what's the story? Ladies? What do we know about Rochelle Wolinsky and why she had She took up so much space and oxygen this week. It's surprising that it's not Dr Fauci Rachelle Belinsky. If you don't know if that name doesn't sound familiar, is the CDC director and a lot of this story. In fact, I think the biggest story nationally this week Maybe even globally is whether or not the cove in 19 virus came out of a lab in China. And for a while, people called you a coo coo or conspiracy theorists, If you believe there's even a possibility, I think all of us the word games, conspiracy theorists and cuckoo because we all believed that There was the possibility that it came from a lab in in Wuhan, the Wuhan Institute of Virology, and this week. More and more evidence is stock is stacking up, and it's really is it's funny because the evidence has been there. It's just what evidence World Health Organization covered it up like that, but also the meet the media. I think in reporting it in this country also covered up. I mean the same information. That's out there right now was out there at the end of the Trump administration. When Secretary of State Mike Pompeo did this high level hush hush investigation into China and whether or not This was an intentional breach, whether it was an accidental breach of this lab, what was really going on behind the scenes, and it wasn't until this week when the Wall Street Journal broke the story that the Biden administration's scrapped that on day one, saying that they would rather favor in international investigators to come in. And take a look scrapped it for the reason was was very vague and I would like some clarification from them because they said that something bad practices or something like there was something about. The way that they have obtained the information or that they got the information. And so what does that mean? You don't like the information? So does that mean it's too anti China to approach it like what's the deal? And I think that's one of the questions that should really be called on for transparency, say, because it is vague. You're right about that. And it's Vegas toe, why they would kill an investigation. It seems to just be in an American interest and not political. For political reasons. Perhaps I don't know. But anyway, so now Biden has come out, said after saying that they're just gonna let international investigators deal with this like on Tuesday of this week by Thursday, by and I think maybe saw internal polling or Whatever and came out and said, Well, I want a 90 day report on whether or not this was created in a lab or whether it happened naturally in animals and part B, whether it was released on purpose. And whether you're going to get to the bottom of that that G and Americans funded it. I mean, there's a lot to this and it's not about you know so many. I think so many people want to say Oh, this is about gotcha. We just want to gotcha. 2000. No, no, no, no, no, no. There is a function research going? No, I mean, look, that's always fun. But the idea is you want to live through this again? Do you want to go through another one of these outbreaks Because there's gay to function research going on in this country in 12 labs gay to function research is it's BioWare, Iet's bioweapons. Essentially, it's taking virus, making them the world's stronger The Germans started it. And now it's continued. Yeah, Russians air on top of it Perfect Speaking of the Russians and our relationships interesting because we've sort of separated out the Chinese and the Russians as we normally there together. In terms of the countdown, But the whole business of what they're doing, Victoria you've been talking in our tech reports about the cyber security problems. The laughable insert this week is that the T s a is now in charge of security when it comes to pipelines who came up with that wet dream? Is like needs to have their head examined. It's not even funny. It zits offensive. But anyway, going beyond that these attacks continue and the Russians are behind them. On in front of them and all around them. And yet these companies they're still paying for. You know, they're all these cyber attacks using email system, the State Department The International aid agency uses the same system, according to the folks in Microsoft, So that doesn't doesn't bode well, particularly for our state Department. Security, does it Well, it doesn't bode well, really, for you know, for a lot of lot of different agencies and companies. So Microsoft has now come out saying that the hackers who were behind the solar winds breach, which was basically the worst data breach we've ever had. That hit US government agencies. 150 agencies apparently think tanks, other organizations, big companies like Microsoft. So now Microsoft says this group called Nobel. Liam has targeted 3000 email accounts at various organizations this week. Most of them are in the U. S. And so they believe that the hackers are the same group. From solar winds, which is a software vendor. And they say that now this is this is once again ransomware and see this is the problem with the colonial pipeline when we found out last week that they paid $4 million to get their data back well, the average ransom asked in 2019 even early 2020 leading, you know, before the pandemic, the average asked was $10,000. So that Zeus easy thing to pay inflation. Victoria. Yeah, I mean, now, now and and so Now they're you know they're going after insurance companies. They're going after everybody. And it's it's $60 million is the new Ask and you know, and these companies what we say last week in the tech report that ransomware attacks have increased 349%. In the last Like a year and a half. I get paid off, right? And so the more paying, the more they're going to keep asking so Yeah. I don't think the T s a is going to be able to really solve this. What a joke. It really is a fed s. So if everybody thinks the Biden administration is this wonderful group of new finger thinkers, where'd they come from the Homeland Security Department and technically t essa? Yeah, I know. But I'm just saying I don't look there. Obviously the T s a themselves. They're not gonna be running this. We're gonna have some contractor come in. And they're going to have you know, cyber security put in place. That's that's the whole deal. They're running. They're running this operation. But Homeland security created this mess in 2000. This is right after, but this is literally a relic from 9 11. So, Yeah, it all needs to be updated. Needs to be changed. I don't know why. I mean, you know if if the space force that Trump started, If that was supposed to be something about cyber security, I don't know why they're not running it, then that's a good question. All right, coming up. That's probably why a tie connection between number three race relations and police reform in this shooting in San Jose is their connection, plus China, which is at number six needs to be in our focus, and it will be right after these words. Progressive motorcycle presents road wisdom from.

Jennifer Horan Rochelle Wolinsky Rochelle Wollensky J. Kerschner World Health Organization Victoria Keelan San Jose 2019 $60 million $4 million Doug Stephan $10,000 China 90 day 150 agencies U. S. Homeland Security Department 12 labs 349% Fauci Rachelle Belinsky
"coo coo" Discussed on That Superhero Thing presents The Loki Takeover

That Superhero Thing presents The Loki Takeover

08:46 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on That Superhero Thing presents The Loki Takeover

"Get the link on the whole that whole hose of seen like all the all that's going on. Looks like tony. Steve transfixed the allegories go to teased Jerk the whole bit. I think the transformation is brilliant. Yeah it's like. It's like a real horrified today like it's not it's a scary will. I was a bit well. Even some in lake texoma education it became like in a very basic governed bound flight eight hundred horrors itchy. You'll pray gal being a little bit still can your situation and seeing the things attendant horribly wrong yeah. I thought it was that that i loved about because he showed on. It's going to be controlling a lot kinds of stuff. Yeah i was thinking. I just i. I love that. I also loves head movements constantly. Like she's just at one hundred percents all the time like every movement that she adds like if if she was weighed about which traits on the pipe swing in. I just looked at every single thing. It's like how we're watching it. Folks on low key like cozy washed it so many times. Focus more on the ad. Think because she's in a movie on it says it in detroit with the block Here i'm on coke. Yeah it's very easy not to focus on that and not the sierras as like a as she is in a decent inner She's complete berlin. Give any actress but for hours to watch it now on even more carry on with the film so limpkey gets They will obviously get separated. They don't Mcconnell yeah lucky arabic to open when hole in new york to bring in tari everyone heads to new york and the ad on a bone arise the bike on. Then we get the really a really get the great. We get that group shots music in the background. Yes making this whole thing. I mean i'm not gonna go into like Billion johnson at the shop. The hood the whole thing. The whole bottle of you'll brilliance yet the way it's all together. It looks a bit cheesy impossible. It's really good. Obviously group shop. It's still amazing even watching it now. It's still gives you that. Lego to you new play the first time you got it on a the first time it'd watch it was amazing a full even though we'd said like how much attorney seats progress dot seats That the volt type thing imitation with about three o'clock when he gets right to the ball and tens of throws dissolve full full away from to people and it's like shoulder like the well. Yeah 'cause if it's powerful. Ma maybe it's repulsed by the data Once again going back to how much how. Much weeden clearly delight stave don't get. Why when the when they arrive in the carrier. Yeah i'll ikaria mcqueen jazz clinton nathen steve young. I'm not like flying it. Low key sheets that human. And you just see steve. Like holding onto the rock extreme on. It's like ridiculous but what's the denver saw. Also why did they need the by. The jews makes him look capable of a sudden. I didn't like that knows me more. Because he's actually got more power And she's not as well trained now. We've more powerful more powerful than the difference in how the oath showed like she is credible. All the way through the though. Yeah like have seeing the. She's in pretty light but we didn't like female. Heroes became a full fake. I'm Five five serenity nocco like a female version so even though we're not gonna talk about just reading the women that the whole we're not gonna get into seattle group shot All of the whole whole Still brilliant logan hoax yet really does say fight probably only two two moments iraq in in the fill all out cops don in charge based time. You do that. Do this on the bit. Were jump sunset. Lease car and take gitari. Yeah on the placement. Yeah just audience The now he's just no you get shot and he's a fool runs to help him open. Also still these just a bit. Did you all start saying auction maxine when all stop can off that a future in the now. No additions didn't mega off cool. I'm not took the victory. Yeah allow so then after the battlecruiser bill not not figure out how to close the poll at the wiltshire council sent a nuke on the tony senzo space on the mothership. Now this got back all hate because people's nicole in space so when he left our the when. Tony goes into three zero when he. Let's go the nuke you wouldn't talk. Dial through the whole obscene lewd people. Slayton on and it's ridiculous doesn't make sense but when he let go of the nuke like commodities shoulder the action quits as if like has gone right. Let's get him back. Yeah so other. Get y i took. It was thought there was something like that. But it was glenn So don't get why people hey is so much But the thing is well. It was a bad cop out that shunji blow the oldest tolerate. Why wanted the coo coo next iphone type. Why i mean. They don't beat most of the why couldn't why couldn't we just have an extra couple of minutes. Whole control just like take off the last eleven minutes dot com using scenes of captain america. Shaking out screaming. Thought mon ever gonna give joe's read so then after after they've after toadies we will turning data new orleans We get the we get the pirates we get an old punishment stole derby says when it stood up on ifo just the way he act like when he said kind of drink now the last evil straits as if like the link is broke with is on the other we also just mentioned went flunkies address it and it's like not be bullied on edition illinois. A noisy makes the boss but other get. Why did the the rest of the take him they walk them all and then facilitation box god and that's when he gets locked on gap. Why what you get locked up on god's full because think it's a bit. I can only shoe for trying to kill full rather than for all stuffy did on earth because it's pretty I've obviously seen bradford someone now. Either seeing the same way except unplugging From against the dog well the minute he's don't don't just for the attack so that's what i think. It must have been. Yeah now i think i wrote down the end. I mean now from watching out think it must be from watching talk while the by the time of which again person will let me gets to get the mid credit scene which is the first time we see. Yes which isn't just that's an article damian Who apparently is related. Sydney cry out cries like a really old school. All time is not famous Apparently dot was practical. Cdw they've tested propagated Look like fox jake And then we also got before. Would you like a little bit of rockefeller movie. We d trauma scene at the very end whether reading strong team. I wanna trauma..

Steve Tony iphone Lego Slayton new york steve Mcconnell today steve young first time tens of throws captain america damian nicole two Billion johnson coo coo new orleans joe
"coo coo" Discussed on No Agenda

No Agenda

08:05 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on No Agenda

"People were killed in our capital that members of congress or almost murdered almost murdered that the vice president was nearly hung. I love it bed oath. That guy agai so good almost hung calm. They had the noose around his neck so close. Cnn goes off on this with just like the same thing. Bigger promoting the murders. And the whole thing they did and it. Total denial of everything. So i got. I got three clips about. This is cnn Y you can find them here. One two and three i see. Oh yeah one two three okay. Yeah you won't start playing. Is that the idea. Yes sir playing with the one that fed if the the facts of what happened on january six are being whitewashed before our very eyes just listen to some republicans today at a heated hearing about this attack. The fbi is fishing through homes of veterans and citizens with no criminal records and restricting the liberties of individuals that have never been accused of crime. Zero firearms from suspects charged with breaching the capital. So they don't want war he whitewashing saying that this insurrection. Nobody was armed. How's it in insurrection. Nobody's nobody's armed and he went on. This is the bunch of hearings that went on and so and so. Cnn's all bent out of shape about this because it's like a whitewash melissa part to trump supporters who lost their lives that day not trump supporters. Who were taking. The lives of others not true. Let's get to see an justice of these lawmakers before former defense secretary and acting attorney general who were in charge on january. Sixth some of them were not grilling them. What did we learn today. So the guy says. Where's the murders that betas bitching about in this guy. The republican says no. None of this happened that way. The one person was murder. Was ashley babbitt. And they wouldn't prosecute anybody and then not true not true. Now's run true. Not true not true and false not true so by saying not true. I guess that covers your ass in the end of this. Also victor. this was billed as a fact finding hearing by the house oversight committee. But it's been ongoing for four hours now and it is really devolved into this partisan finger pointing democrats for their part. They've been tearing into the former acting defense secretary and the former acting attorney general really allowing them little time to respond on the flip side. Republicans twisting the truth of what happened on january six the heard there and we saw it from republican congressman paul gosar he issued that lengthy full-throated defensive the riders saying law enforcement is going after law-abiding us citizens and we actually just heard from congressman andrew. Clyde he said this was not an insurrection at all he said instead. It was an undisciplined mob in his words. He claimed that they stayed an orderly fashion inside the capitol. Just taking videos and pictures. Of course that's a far cry from what we saw unfold and all of this is amplifying calls from several members of the committee to press for a bipartisan commission. To investigate june sixth the formation of that has been stalled but things got particularly fiery when democrats questioned acting defense secretary of the former acting defense secretary. Christopher miller's response time forgiving the green light to the national guard to move in to secure the capital and then called out miller for seeming to backtrack on previous comments that he made that former president trump's comments are led to the capital attack. Here does sir because of your action. Rate ashton credential police officers on duty. And you weren't that it stays hours only were you last a wall mister secretary. You were a wall before you said before you have responsibility for everything something goes wrong quote unquote. I own a completely one hundred ten percent sir. You partially own this mayhem murderer. Anyway this is going on right now is these is outraged. They want to nine eleven style commission. Nine eleven style commission is purposes a few broken windows and they messed up a couple of offices. They didn't tear the paintings off the wall. They didn't spray paint george. Washington's gilbert stuart painting was two out with red paint. They did stay within the lines. You know they walked down. The red carpet was cordoned off. We saw that we also know that was. Yeah which was ludicrous. Now no as they were trying to they were trying. It was a coup. And i've seen the the idea that disa- coup attempt in all kinds of publications that always with the same kind of left leaning editors which is every editor now Coo coo coo coo. A coup attempt another words the president is trying to create a coup against his self and the ongoing The big lie the big lie. It was the big listed. Connect to trump to hitler and the poor media. They're so desperate for a a a a tweet from trump. You know it's like they need something i mean. We all see the ratings there in the tank across the board fox. Less than the rest. The cnn no joy reid msnbc had an actual asterix the other day on honor ratings at tina alerted me. Explain what that is people that don't know what the hell are you talking about. So in the ratings they'll have overall numbers really. The number. you want is The share in In the target group which is eighteen forty nine typically although depending on the time of day for for some of these channels later on the pharmaceuticals get lake before you continue. Why eighteen forty nine. What's what is the divine cosmic point of that particular age group. Well that's the people who spend the money you mean. Those are the people who who watch advertisements and then maybe byproduct yes no. Actually i rescind that. These are the people who after being incessantly told about to talk to their doctor and asked the doctor about this. H this rash this thing this extension of life who are bombarded with pharmaceutical commercials. Yeah and that's pretty much up to fifty and then later at night you know they throw in some stuff with the older folks like the the the hero helper the pill sorter all that stuff. It's all that stuff There's in fact. I think that the mainstream media m five them. The very disappointed that facebook is still suspended. The former president. I think they're all disappointed. Because it's hurting hurting. The it'll explaining the asterisk so You know typical will be like a During the day a one point three one point five. That's just your number and then it's times typically times thousand But when you're under think as zero point one you get an asterix county maybe zero point four. They don't count it anymore. They just show it as an as uncountable because the percentage of in cable that is the percentage is so small it's just a rounding error. Yeah the statistical number of people watching you can't really be determined in any.

Christopher miller january paul gosar Clyde facebook congress hitler january six Republicans trump democrats three clips miller one hundred ten percent andrew four hours one person three today republican
"coo coo" Discussed on No Agenda

No Agenda

08:05 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on No Agenda

"People were killed in our capital that members of congress or almost murdered almost murdered that the vice president was nearly hung. I love it bed oath. That guy agai so good almost hung calm. They had the noose around his neck so close. Cnn goes off on this with just like the same thing. Bigger promoting the murders. And the whole thing they did and it. Total denial of everything. So i got. I got three clips about. This is cnn Y you can find them here. One two and three i see. Oh yeah one two three okay. Yeah you won't start playing. Is that the idea. Yes sir playing with the one that the fed if the the the facts of what happened on january six are being whitewashed before our very eyes just listen to some republicans today at a heated hearing about this attack. The fbi is fishing through homes of veterans and citizens with no criminal records and restricting the liberties of individuals that have never been accused of crime. Zero firearms from suspects charged with breaching the capital. So they don't want war is whitewashing saying that this insurrection. Nobody was armed. How's it in insurrection. Nobody's nobody's armed and he went on. This is the bunch of hearings that went on and so and so. Cnn's all bent out of shape about this because it's like a whitewash melissa part to trump supporters who lost their lives that day not trump supporters. Who were taking. The lives of others not true. Let's get to see an justice of these lawmakers before former defense secretary and acting attorney general who were in charge on january. Sixth some of them were not grilling them. What did we learn today. So the guy says. Where's the murders that betas bitching about in this guy. The republican says no. None of this happened that way. The one person was murder. Was ashley babbitt. And they wouldn't prosecute anybody and then not true not true. Now's run true not true. Not true false not true so by saying not true. I guess that covers your ass in the end of this. Also victor. this was billed as a fact finding hearing by the house oversight committee. But it's been ongoing for four hours now and it is really devolved into this partisan finger pointing democrats for their part. They've been tearing into the former acting defense secretary and the former acting attorney general really allowing them little time to respond on the flip side. Republicans twisting the truth of what happened on january six the heard there and we saw it from republican congressman paul gosar he issued that lengthy full-throated defensive the riders saying law enforcement is going after law-abiding us citizens and we actually just heard from congressman andrew. Clyde he said this was not an insurrection at all he said instead it was an undisciplined mob. In his words he claimed that they stayed in fashion inside the capitol. Just taking videos and pictures. Of course that's a far cry from what we saw unfold and all of this is amplifying calls from several members of the committee to press for a bipartisan commission to investigate june sixth of course the formation of that has been stalled but things got particularly fiery when democrats questioned acting defense secretary of the former acting defense secretary. Christopher miller's response time forgiving the green light to the national guard to move in to secure the capital and then called out miller for seeming to backtrack on previous comments that he made that former president trump's comments are led to the capital attack. Here does sir because of your action. Rate ashton credential police officers on duty. And you weren't that it stays hours only were you last a wall mister secretary. You were a wall before you said before you have responsibility for everything something goes wrong quote unquote. I own a completely one hundred ten percent sir. You partially own this mayhem murderer. Anyway this is going on right now is these is outraged. They want to nine eleven style commission. Nine eleven style commission is purposes a few broken windows and they messed up a couple of offices. They didn't tear the paintings off the wall. They didn't spray. Paint the george washington's gilbert stuart painting was two out with red paint. They did stay within the lines. You know they walked down. The red carpet was cordoned off. We saw that we also know it was. Yeah which was ludicrous. Now no no as they were trying to they were trying. It was a coup. And i've seen the the idea that disa- coup attempt in all kinds of publications that always with the same kind of left leaning editors which is every editor now Coo coo coo coo. A coup attempt another words the president is trying to create a coup against his self and the ongoing The big lie the big lie. It was the big listed. Connect to trump to hitler and the poor media. They're so desperate for a a a a tweet from trump. You know it's like they need something i mean. We all see the ratings there in the tank across the board fox. Less than the rest. The cnn no joy reid msnbc had an actual asterix the other day on honor ratings at tina alerted me. Explain what that is people that don't know what the hell are you talking about. So in the ratings they'll have overall numbers really. The number. you want is The share in In the target group which is eighteen forty nine typically although depending on the time of day for for some of these channels later on the pharmaceuticals get lake before you continue. Why eighteen forty nine. What's what is the divine cosmic point of that particular age group. Well that's the people who spend the money you mean. Those are the people who watch advertisements and then maybe byproduct yes no. Actually i rescind that. These are the people who after being incessantly told about to talk to their doctor and asked the doctor about this. H this rash this thing this extension of life who are bombarded with pharmaceutical commercials. Yeah and that's pretty much up to fifty and then later at night you know they throw in some stuff with the older folks like the the the hero helper the pill sorter all that stuff. It's all that stuff There's in fact. I think the mainstream media m five them. The very disappointed that facebook is still suspended. The former president. I think they're all disappointed. Because it's hurting hurting. The it'll explaining the asterisk so You know typical will be like a During the day a one point three one point five. That's just your number and then it's times typically times thousand But when you're under think as zero point one you get an asterix county maybe zero point four. They don't count it anymore. They just show it as as uncountable because the percentage of in cable that is the percentage is so small it's just a rounding error. Yeah the number of people watching you can't really be determined in any.

Christopher miller january Clyde facebook trump congress george washington hitler democrats Republicans january six three clips andrew one hundred ten percent one person four hours today miller three paul
"coo coo" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

Boomer & Gio

07:40 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

"Give you the final out of the orioles. Means no hitter. Hawaiian first pitch has swing a lie to seattle he s better as the take down the matter six did nothing means joys. The elite ranks up orioles pitchers who have no hitter. I know the horrible. I know i know i know it was almost a perfect game. He had a strikeout. Turn out to be a wild pitch. Runner gets the first otherwise it would have been well. You don't know what happens. Then silly still face twenty seven batters because guy i was thrown out at second trying to steal. So yes so twenty. Seven twenty seven down but in a different sort of way he struck out. Twelve in the orioles beat the mariners. Six to nothing. So good for john means as they would say all right to the other stuff capitals researchers last night in the garden it started with the fight as we know When they did. Get down to playing hockey though and other win for washington. Kenny albert. Nbc sports network at tj. She had three goals the hat trick and The cavs beat the rangers. Four two for oshii certainly emotional lost his dad earlier in the week It was also a game of and penalty minutes as you can imagine because of what happened with tom. Wilson the game prior. Here's ryan strong. Because you also had john davidson and jeff gordon get fired so strom taking notice of everything these last few days have been super challenging. Especially you know being eliminated and just so many guys getting injured in the incident last game. Yep no doubt strom in terms of trying to get back at the cavs wishing. msg was packed. I think it was an appropriate response. I my only wish was at the garden was full to to be rock. And after what happened i would have been like the yankees and the astros. I would imagine in terms of the sound that the garden was in fall for a couple of those games. That's true too very good point where they got. Shut out didn't score that's true. Here's brennan smith. He went right after. Tom wilson He was commenting after the game. On the the idea of davidson gordon out. Now we know juries taken over ball job. So it's tough i mean obviously great guys The done a lot for me. Tough on a game like today but We talked about it. We address it in the room and and move on. And that's that's where the rangers are at right now. They're in boston tonight. The islanders take on the devils as for the knicks. Everything has gone well for them. The last several weeks not last night of thirteen points knicks. Down ten four and a half minutes into it yeah. Yoga scored almost all the points in the first quarter for the nuggets. Who had a big twenty two point lead after one. They wound up winning one. Thirteen ninety seven. But i will say this. Listen to this clip. From michael malone if you want to take anything about your knickebocker They certainly have themselves a solid reputation around the league. This was malone after the wind. Take note to the nuggets are forty four and twenty. Two first quarter was great. Built a big lead. Our starters came out with the the right mindset against eighteen. that's been playing the best best ball in the nba. As of late so this was one of our more impressive wins of the year. One of the more impressive wins of the year for a team. That's forty four and twenty two. That's that's pretty high praise. i would say. I'll take it. I mean this. This is one of those games where i know that people who've been waiting for the knicks to have a little bit of a slip up can pointed see they can't compete with the best in the league. Odds a real. Mvp candidates opposed to julius randle some of that yesterday. But let's see how the rest of the trip goes. Let's see where they end up. They hadn't had a game like this. What was the last time they got blown out like. This was a long time. And i don't know that they have all season now. There was definitely one. I remember early on like this where they were never in the game. Yes there was definitely okay. I was trying to remember when it was but it was early on in the season. It's been a long time and just doesn't happen. It just don't have the personnel to stay with a guy jokic just not in this not for so him to. That's right they call him night about here for that. But i mean that's i know they spelled it out on tv but that's not what they call him. Yeah it's the yeah. I don't know how to say it. I do but it doesn't sound great the it's f. a. c. you. That's they call him but it. Yes yes i got it i. I was kind of staying away from. If you wanna to do you go. Yeah you could do it right right. Jerry you wanna give it a shot. Fu fac who you're factor or falko. I think it's falko. I know but i think fac who is a little safer. Fat coup. yes. Can you say five times fast. I can you eddie. You're on the dump button. Falko you be careful. That's the way fast times. But that's how they say they quite right. I know that. But if you're gonna say fast. Five times i think you're better off going facto fat coo coo coo coo coo coo there you go you got it. It was kuna falko not going there. That's gonna slip up somewhere. Fox hondo far far cuneo kundu composite. So yeah that's That's an interesting one. I'm not going to try to do it. They know all screwing up. I know now. Speaking of weird names not weird but european names. The knicks have signed. Argentinian point guard lucasville dosa to a three year contract. Perhaps for i read three. You saw four either way multi year contract Don't know when we will see him. He's got to get through customs or immigration or something so Could be sooner than later. Knicks half game ahead of atlanta. Where did they get their point. Guard from europe. Argentine europe are argentina. My mistake i apologize the difference. It's not here to different. What's the difference. It's not here at the end of the day. let's put it this way. let's put it this birkin. Take him once he's here. He's lucasville dosa. Yes he's he's european. he's european. Talks is the greatest country in america. That is true. See that's where. Eddie you're asked because that is true There are two countries in north america. South america so there's a lot of good countries assaulted the same thing this morning. I think it's about time. The knicks got one of these like really good european player. Sure like in north america canada. You gonna tell us a candidate better than america. No sorry any of them is us. United states best country in america. Not kidding man. i'm telling ya so. Yes so argentina's somewhere not in europe or whatever. I said argentinean. So anyway. I have him. So he got luka doncic. She got villanova european basketball. Nobody could be if i said. The knicks signed a european. point guard. Lucasville does who stopping me well. But you didn't say that. But i could have. But you didn't use that a european car from an argentine. That's the difference. Thought maybe he's from lithuania. Maybe from serbia he is maybe he made there from latvia but but now he's not they're pretty close why argentina or not close to one another. They're not that far. Emily five thousand. There's only a.

michael malone john davidson jeff gordon Tom wilson julius randle america Kenny albert north america luka doncic Five times boston South america Eddie Knicks Twelve latvia three year Six two countries today
Vixen Labs CEO James 'JP' Poulter: The Future of Voice Tech

Voice in Canada

02:02 min | 2 years ago

Vixen Labs CEO James 'JP' Poulter: The Future of Voice Tech

"We've got jp The coo vixen. Labs joining us. He is incredible when it comes to voice. Technology in general is so knowledgeable. He is such a fantastic strategist. He's got all the tips and tricks when it comes to building your voice application when it comes to marketing and I think you're gonna get a lot out of this talks about the report that was put out by his company vixen. Labs called the voice commerce report. He goes into a lot of the key insights. And i think it'll be very interested in hearing his perspective and what this report showed so Without any further ado let's get right to the interview. Here is j. P. otherwise known as james poulter from vixen labs. Jp great to have you here. Who are you. what's the deal with you. who are you what. What is your story. yeah. I'm i'm james poulter like you say most people know me as jp. I'm finding that I'm the one of the co founders vixen lob switches. We believe one of europe's in one of the world's leading voice consultancies and design studios. We've been around alpha which is crazy even nearly two years now Coming up on all two your anniversary. I'm just off christmas and Yeah we work with global brands to them workout. What voice means for them. from sang strategy building apps and after all partners amazon and google and Yeah in the mocking space as well. So how do you kind of promote actually make voice content and an applications found outside of that father to girls husband. A wife is Diligently put up with me under the lockdown and Yeah kind of trying to push his yet. What the bounds of kind of innovation might mean. Like how do we build innovative cultures and businesses. Last the thing that's always fascinated me inside big businesses and agencies and kind of varying context before as well in the charity and religious public sector. So yeah that's that's what day on a self problems

James Poulter Vixen Labs Europe Amazon Google
Interview With Dr. Laura Forese, COO, New York Presbyterian

Skimm'd from The Couch

02:33 min | 2 years ago

Interview With Dr. Laura Forese, COO, New York Presbyterian

"Welcome to our women's history month series on skimmed from the couch. Where we're telling you about the women who made history. This past year. Dr laura for east joins us on today's episode. She's the chief operating officer of new york presbyterian one of the largest nonprofit hospitals in the country on her leadership newyork presbyterian has been on the front lines fighting the covid nineteen pandemic since last year. Dr freeze thank you so much for joining us and welcome to skin from the couch so much. It's great to be with you. Your resume is very long as as i think. Doctors and chief operating officers at ten to be wants one job or when experience. You've had that means the most you. I started wanting to be a doctor from the time i was a little girl so it really is about for patients. But i really have shifted. After i was in practice for about ten years. i'm orthopedic surgeon. And i moved to become a fulltime hospital executive. Because i thought i'd be able to have more impact in so now is the chief operating officer of big hospital system. My job is really to make sure that the business runs so that our doctors nurses have everything that they need to do what they do best which is care for our patients so in some ways come full circle from where i thought i was going to be when i was a little girl. How did you know that you wanted to be in medicine when you were a kid. You know carly i have no real good answer for that it just from the time. It was a little girl. I thought that would be a great job. Every kid knows what a doctor is. They're going to help you get better and i was say my parents were always very encouraging. I don't have doctors in my family. But i had that as a little girl and i stuck with it when reading about you. What stood out is that you have one of the things that many that stood out was that early on in your residency twins. And i know everything there to know about med school residencies. Because i've seen grace anatomy. So i am very very educated on your fields. I still watch it. So i feel like i'm right in there but i want you to take us back to to that time. What was that time like for you. Especially at a time when there were very few women in orthopedics. Well let me start with there. Were very few women in medical school class. Unlike today where we have more women medical students than men. It was unusual then and i chose a field that had very few women in it.

Dr Laura East Joins New York Presbyterian Carly
Is Tunisia an Arab Spring Success Story?

Post Reports

01:32 min | 2 years ago

Is Tunisia an Arab Spring Success Story?

"When we talk about cooed unquote the arab spring. We tend to refer to tunisia as the one success to come out of it. Be you've been reporting from tunis for quite some time now do. Do the people think it was a success. You get really mixed answers when it. When i've asked that question and i think many people these days say no just looking at sort of day to day living situation the lack of jobs the high prices just the inability to satisfy basic needs and to see opportunity in the future. Those were the main buckets of complaints and where people say that the revolution democracy really fell short clear. Parker is a freelance journalist based in tunis tunisia. But people at the same time are proud of the freedoms that they've acquired specifically civil society is flourishing. There's freedom of expression although it faces some threats but you know a lot of civil liberties especially compared to other countries in the region and a lot of protest movement and right to protest. So there's a sense that at least they have this freedom and that's kind of the main gain of the revolution

Tunis Tunisia Parker
Chicago's Loretto Hospital COO Anosh Ahmed resigns in wake of vaccine scandal

WGN Programming

00:25 sec | 2 years ago

Chicago's Loretto Hospital COO Anosh Ahmed resigns in wake of vaccine scandal

"Loreto Hospital executive at the center of a vaccine controversy, has now resigned. The board of trustees unanimously accepted Doctor and ASHA Meds resignation. Lecture. Black Club. Chicago first broke the story reporting on vaccination doses going to ineligible patients at Trump Tower, Ah luxury watch store and a steak house. In response, the city stopped giving Loreto doses of the vaccine. The board says It'll continue to investigate.

Loreto Hospital Asha Meds Black Club Ah Luxury Watch Store Trump Tower Chicago Loreto
Chicago Loretto Hospital doctor embroiled in vaccine controversy resigns

CNN 5 Things

00:35 sec | 2 years ago

Chicago Loretto Hospital doctor embroiled in vaccine controversy resigns

"A hospital official has resigned after covid. Nineteen vaccines were improperly distributed at trump tower in chicago. Coo and cfo. Anoc med submitted the resignation at loretto hospital just days after the city's health department announced it will withhold additional first doses from the hospital loretto. Ceo said he authorized a vaccine clinic at the trump hotel for hospitality. Workers saying he thought they were a central workers off mid owns a condo at trump tower worth two million dollars

Anoc Med Loretto Hospital Trump Tower Trump Hotel Health Department Chicago CEO
"coo coo" Discussed on ROADIUM RADIO

ROADIUM RADIO

05:33 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on ROADIUM RADIO

"Just you know like it was my most game one. You know what. I mean like rousing when that was the most daring yet. Let me share something with you about that and maybe this will help you. Maybe it won't but maybe is just good conversation. There's a group are here. They will call the outlaws effort. This is ninety s of chicken. Rab well. They never referred to themselves as you're gonna wrap but this is what they did with them under k and initiation into lawless curve. They have a song called the enemy. Now the came to my house. Talk to discipline the neighborhood and the kingdom of house and they said hey you know what we got. The song called the enemy. We want you to remake it. We sampled it. We want you to replay. I mean i know exactly what piano the us eighty and the rules piano. I knew it. I knew a remake. It i knew i could. You know do adult version of it. But they were fucking banging horn that motherfucker. I mean they were dissing every neighborhood around us like every fucking neighborhood. So here's what i said. I said you can clean up these lyrics or you can leave it the way it is but you'll never be able to perform and they said this will. What do you mean because if you perform you say the coliseum motherfuckers are gonna come looking for you and he thought about it and they were like yeah. You're right and that's after a long talk. Then say yeah. you're right. that's the short version. We recorded an came out. And it's still a coo coo song but the original obviously is don't because it's awesome gang bang shit but do you. You did that song. Say you would have put out an all out. You always take a chance on repercussions going somewhere performing the end dole's neighborhoods. Whoever you might have this shows up you know. That is one thing that i always encourage a lot of young chicano rappers to stray away from but they tell me a mac. Give up on the hood. This is my shit and believe me..

the enemy one thing ninety s of chicken eighty chicano
"coo coo" Discussed on The Trash

The Trash

05:07 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on The Trash

"Everything. Act zach ertz from the philadelphia. Eagles also danville. I've been calling him the and ville from dan bill. That's good one. You gotta wait for me to finish a three parter health. Got away to finish. Okay okay. what was joey's last name. Who is a famous person that shares the last name what. Tv show were they on. Oh sarah joey sasso last name of will sasso from ned. Yes yes we kept calling him. We call them wills nephew ashworth one point though. Even though i know this is one way not padding my points all right again and then number five based on what you know about me. Who was my least favorite person. There's only one right. Answer is not subject tonight. If someone really bobo. I was answering for her shoe bomb. She bomb incorrect. Going to answer that. I feel like i wanna say it was probably gonna be Rebecca because they were such fucking terrible catfish. Becca was a seabourn right. Yeah the not so incorrect. Hated the guy with the weird pans his name. Alex suck that guy. No the guy is the moment. That was all nearing neely air already. So yeah the one that. I thought was hilarious. The guy bill when they had to do the painting of the other person and he the painting that looks just like the guy who's actually the that looks like the real meat that to me. It was like that was a good as anyway pants was all he was whoever involved in my favorite moment in the show. And we'll talk about that when we get into the trash but you know what i. It's not the pans it was him. It was the pants on him pants. I just hated his whole thing. His design. I'm we run our but like never did ash before exactly anyway was like he loves hats in his wife. And i'm like yeah dude was married to a woman right right ear. That was trashy trivia. Yeah that was one that one right word. Sarah thing rang lowered. I'm rick lower now in the rankings. Saint lawrence reading blocks for twenty twenty one at least or at the bottom winds up. But you know what there's been on a losing streak so she knows how you go right now. I've been on a couple of things. It's not his name all one though. I wouldn't have got any anywhere close to that. That healed me. At that moment. I was like fuck throw in the towel. So gray being the quizmaster. 'cause i never lose anyway right. I mean we. We talked about being. Every you'd rewind. We watched the circle On net flicks Which there was obviously like. We said the report versions in different countries. Yeah this is the one which is the best one. Usaa coo coo coo watch circle so anyone wanna say anything before we start talking about it lane or go into it. I mean going into it. Like i wasn't sure exactly how this was going to be approached like i can tell you right off the bat It was a lot more interesting than i thought it was going to be. Because of the dynamic of how it could work. And i could see the potential of like how great of a game that really could be. If the right people were playing but for the most part i fucking hated everyone on the show. Yeah yeah yeah that. But that's what made that's what kept it trashy. If it was the right people and like they were really good about character development understanding story and that type of shit it would have been great like if there was like six catfish in there instead of like were okay at it i it was. It was absolutely trashed. It was better than i had anticipated kind of. Because he i guess in the british land there were a lot more like older people and like different age groups. Like the only person really was on Hannah already bothered me. That they were already like all super attractive and does not your point of a catfish all they.

dan bill joey Sarah Rebecca Alex tonight sarah joey sasso Becca will sasso ashworth six catfish philadelphia Saint lawrence one right word one one point danville twenty twenty one british three parter
"coo coo" Discussed on Z104

Z104

02:20 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on Z104

"That are trending in Hampton Roads and around the globe. It's the Sea Morning, Zoos trends Day Wednesday before so I came in this week and told Nick Said. Look, dude, there's a documentary who little called framing Britney, he said. First, he's a don't judge. Me. Yeah, I watched the whole Britney Spears document I did, and it was. I watched it. I think either Friday night or Saturday and I was completely intrigued with It's easy to look on the media and see on TV her shaver ahead or drive down the street with a child in her lap for Mary Kevin Federline ago, she's lost her marbles when you washed your frame and Britney documentary Now again, I get it. Whoever made a documentary is haunting and Britney But it's hard. It's really hard to argue why she is the way she is. In this moment. A her dad's a complete D word. We know that her upbringing was completely insane. The pop rocks he ran her into the corner. Justin Timberlake. Pretty much lied. When cry me a river came out, but she was supposed to be quiet. All the actor Sarah Silverman J. Later they all made fun of her. I will save you have Lulu. And you kind of just want some downtime. I think if you watch for him, Britney, you might have a different opinion when you see on Instagram acting weird, and I haven't heard this much talk about the music documentary in a long time and again. It's really I thought I was pretty hip tow knowing all these facts about and I was Was really thrown off and I was almost in a weird way. Almost I have kind of really feel bad for her. You know, I always considered the free Britney people crazy, crazy, crazy little bit will you coo coo and they have their own little pockets. This documentary really became a rally cry for that group. And now they're kind of justified in these feelings. I think if you hate or don't hate or just would think if you watch the documentary, you might see another side of why People are worried for her. This might also be a good thing to watch. If you or somebody your family is considering entering show business. This might be a how to on how not to do it. Yes, if you're bored, it's on a whole Lou, but I think you should watch it. Now, Um, if you are interested in doing a study on and get paid for it, I have a link that I'm gonna send to you. But I know it's happening. Hampton roads I know for right now. I know for a fact, the Norfolk It's a company and I want to say it's it's in symbol E and S. E M B l E is a hazy that word and symbol they want..

Britney Hampton Roads Justin Timberlake Mary Kevin Federline Nick coo Sarah Silverman J. Instagram Lou
"coo coo" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

KNBR The Sports Leader

07:56 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

"What do you think of Browns game? And how much better do you think you can get? Because I he Me his. He's one of the real up and coming young players in the league. The I agree Larry's place. You know both sides of the ball. You know it, Z Plane at an all Star level and I die die Greek up. He's been there most consistent and best player. And it's been steady progress for him his keys. He came in really out. Those are rookie was really good, and he just keeps on getting better. Was funny with the Celtics that year. You know, unless you with Kyrie. They got two great start. He sat out and those other guys emerged. And then Carrie never stood back in. But those guys kept improving on some art Tatum, Jalen Brown. You know, maybe placed, um, carry with Kemba Walker. So they've got them kind of nice team, and I think they, you know Brad Stevens obviously coming from the college ranks, he's been able to incorporate a lot of the fundamental Um, you know, I wouldn't say college with fundamental skills of a good team and kind of make it a little more fast paced, Um, they've seen the good They do a good job of moving the ball. You know, trying to spread the spread the ball around for you? Well with potato in jail in brown, there is a beautiful perimeter players are on the league. And you know this to a child that I think that 10 and eight you know, you'd think they'd be a little better, but I think, Taylor Mr Bunch of games with the protocols and things like that. You know, Campbell was banged up, but he hasn't really gotten back out the full strength yet. Women when they're locked in, and they're clicking on all cylinders. I think they're you know, to me on the East Coast, 14, Milwaukee, Brooklyn, Philly and Boston. Depending on you know, the health and all these other things that are going to go into who find themselves. That's you know, it's the four best teams back there. So it's come here. Good, good test for the worst of all. I hope you guys don't mind. I wanted Tonto. Ask Chris about John Chaney, a great temple coach. You passed away last week. Did you ever did you ever run across that matchup zone? Do you ever have to play against that? Absolutely. He was the first one really good friends with coach Carnesecca. So on we played them any for my junior year. But this way I recently you know I was. I went back to ST John's and coach, and it was ah. A little Greek restaurant I was going to on the way home. Alone. Behold, you know, obviously name is Gus. Of course. He's a great guy from the O. But you know he was a manager, a temple, and he stayed there for like. Three years after his graduating was really close with coach Changed, We would jump on the phone every once in a while when I was in rehab anyway, so I called just to daylight. So the news and I just didn't I'm sorry to hear about that. I said to my condolences to his family, and I should just tell him I never forgot that we play. So thank you for we think the first round Of the infidelity tournament. And they were good team that Terrence Stansbury there was solid and we're up. We're up. I think we're up. We're up one. I get to the line at the end of the game. It's the one I wanted, and I think for the I was shooting really well from the season. I was having a decent game, so it wasn't even like that. It's like out. It's not be down. There's no three point line. Somebody knocked these two down. I'm out. And I missed it. I missed the free throw and stands very throws a shot from half court like our season's All of my do Like what? Like, Damn, I'm telling gust about this. You know, He's a younger kid. He has no idea what I'm talking about. Later on that night, he sends me, I guess on the temple. Website. Someone posted that box score. So you're seeing him aren't generally too much shit with Mark Mark. They go through the door. I said, Yeah, I guess I got apologize. I missed that free throw. You know, I'm a bomb. And now I know I've got to take full accountability by lost that game. Sorry about that. But, yes, John Chaney was one of those guys. You know, Coach concept was closely and I had a tremendous impact on his players. No well beyond the basketball court. I'm sure Iolaus was tight with him. You know, the whole silly connection? Yeah, just just a good old guy, man. So condolences impresses family. You know, we all wanted to see what would have happened if you two got to Calipari during that press conference, Chris Stood. That was insane. It would have been attempted murder their lives. You don't doubt my mind. If you would have got to him. He would have. You would have made good on that on That threat tried to be good. Hey, that was another that no, no, no, That was not a testosterone presentation That was righteous fury and anger. He was, Yeah, he wouldn't play and no, it wasn't like it wasn't like the NBA. Chris pretend about the envy and how guys when they swear up their bases squaring up, hoping Somebody'll come grab him from behind. They don't actually have to stand there for more time than they need to stand there, because no one wants to throw a punch in the embassy cause too much money. No one's as tough as they think they are in the embassy, and they don't want to prove it in front of a national audience or our television camera. Have you noticed? And we grew up in a different era to where guys actually were like I tell these guys all the time, but like I was afraid of anybody percent. But I wouldn't have been real happy to square up against Oakland. That would not have been my first choice. Maybe my millions choice but there was some serious dudes back Then, In the end, BA Rod mentioned Buck Williams is this Maybe the strongest guy I ever played against Terry Cummings on Anthony Mason. I mean, there there was some dudes that were legitimately kind of Coo coo and you didn't really you didn't really want to cross a digit No. Then then, And now, as far as Mr Rocca today, that's a good point. You know? I used to work up the next month, Charles. I mean, I've known for a long, long time is a great guy. But he had that switch man, and he did have an off. Switch it on switch. All right, right. No. You know what it was. It was a dimmer switch. So he was always on. It was just the intensity was you know dick did you turn to switch? Did you turn it up? Well, now you're getting slapped because you owe him money. You know, like when you when something happens in the game, like it might compare the fire, but Charles, You just compel it. Fires always burning like, you know. Chevron into class war, she said. Charles Guy's number years ago, Chris, We're I was in Vegas doing the shows from there, and I was sitting in a bar watching the Dodgers and the Cardinals was a playoff game. Remember looking and hey, just happened to pull up a chair, and I So we talked for a little bit. I mean, he's a super cool guy. We're tired. Of course, you know, we went off on the next and all that stuff, So that was kind of funny, But, yeah, he was just that dude because I had to battle against him. What? And you know he would get in there through the elbows. So I gotta throw the elbows. You gotta be a box him off and try to keep up the glass. Every once in a while one of the elbows once stray and it might hit him on the spot that you didn't want to hit him. He didn't mean to hit him, but he'd give me that look and you almost wanted to say Sorry, Mr Oakley. You okay? Yeah, I did that. That won't happen again. I didn't mean for it to happen. He's a great guy who's real, And you definitely want him on your side. All right. There it is. Harlan. Molly, That's the rewind coming up. Next we'll get you some final thoughts, including why One of the main competitors for the 40 Niners. Fits its city, maybe better than any other NFL team. I'll explain Next on.

Chris Stood Charles Guy John Chaney Browns Um Jalen Brown Celtics Larry Terrence Stansbury Brad Stevens Coo coo Mr Bunch basketball ST John Mr Oakley Carrie NBA Campbell Oakland
"coo coo" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

KNBR The Sports Leader

08:40 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

"Do you have to play against that? Absolutely. He was the first one really good friends with Coach Carnesecca. So, uh, we played them 30 for my junior year. But this way I recently you know I was. I went back to ST John's and coach, and it was ah. A little Greek restaurant I was going to on the way home. Alone. Behold, you know, obviously name is Gus. Of course. He's a great guy from New York. But you know he was a manager, a temple, and he stayed there for like, three years after his graduating was really close with The coach changes. We would jump on the phone every once in a while when I was in rehab anyway, so I called just to daylight. So the news I just said, I'm sorry to hear about that. I said to my condolences to his family, and I should just tell him I never forgot that we played. So thank you before we lose the first round. Of the inside of a tournament and they were good team that Terrence stands very. They were solid and we're up. We're up. I think we're up. We're up one. I get to the line at the end of the game. It's the one I wanted, and I think for the I was shooting really well from the season. I was having a decent game, so it wasn't even like that. It's like out. It's not be down. There's no three point line. Somebody knocked you to down him out. And I miss it. I missed the free throw and stands very throws a shot from half court like our season's over my dude. Like what? Like, Damn, I'm telling Gus about this. You know, He's a younger kid. He has no idea I'm talking about. But later on that night, he sends me, I guess on the temple. Website. Someone posted that box score. So Yeah, I said Mark Jackson. Too much shit with Mark Mark. They go through the door. I said, Yeah, I guess I got apologize. I missed that free throw. You know, I'm a bomb, and I said no. I've gotta take full accountability by lost that game. Sorry about that, But, yes, John Chaney was one of the guys. You know, Coach concept was closely and I had a tremendous impact on his players. You know, well beyond the basketball court. I'm sure Iolaus was tight with him. You know, the whole silly connection? Yeah, just just a good old guy, man. So condolences impresses family. You know, we all wanted to see what would have happened if you two got to Calipari during that press conference, Chris Stood. That was insane. It would have been attempted murder their lives. You don't doubt my mind. If you would have got to him. He would have. You would have made good on that on That threat tried to be good. Hmm. Hey, that was out of that. No, no, no. That was not a testosterone presentation. That was righteous fury and anger. He was. Yeah, he wouldn't plan. No, it wasn't like it wasn't like the NBA. Chris pretend about the NBA and how guys when they swear up there, Pacey squaring up, hoping Somebody'll come grab him from behind. They don't actually have to stand there for more time. They need to stand there because no one wants to throw a punch in the embassy cause too much money. No one's as tough as they think They are in the embassy, and they don't want to prove it in front of a national audience or our television camera. Hey, have you noticed and we grew up in a different era to where guys actually were like I tell these guys all the time like I was afraid of anybody per se. But I wouldn't have been real happy to square up against Oakland. That would not have been my first choice. Maybe my millions toys, but there was some serious dudes back Then, In the end, BA Rod mentioned Buck Williams is this may be the strongest guy I ever played against Terry Cummings on Anthony Mason. I mean, there there was some dudes that were legitimately kind of Coo coo and you didn't really you didn't really want to cross a digit No. Then then, And now, as far as Mr Okay, That's a good point. You work up the next month, Charles I've known for a long, long time is a great guy. But he had that switch man, and he did have an off switch only had an on switch. Alright, right. No. You know what it was? It was a dimmer switch. So it was always on. It was just the intensity was you know dick did you turn to switch? Did you turn it up? Well, now you're getting slapped because you owe him money. You know, like when you when something happens in the game like it might compare the fire, but Charles, you just compel if I was always burning, like, you know, See, I ran into war actually said Charles has a number of years ago, Chris, we're I was in Vegas doing the shows from there, and I was sitting in a bar watching the Dodgers and the Cardinals was a playoff game. Remember looking and hey, just happened to pull up a chair and I Hey, So we talked for a little bit. I mean, he's a super cool guy. We're tired. Of course, you know, we went off on the Knicks and all that stuff, so that was kind of funny, But, yeah, he was just that dude because I had to battle against him. What? And you know he would get in there through the elbows. So I gotta throw the elbows. You gotta be a box him off and try to keep up the glass. Every once in a while one of the elbows once stray and it might hit him on the spot that you didn't want to hit him. He didn't mean to hit him, but he'd give me that look and you almost wanted to say Sorry, Mr Oakley. You okay? Yeah, I did that. That won't happen again. I didn't mean for it to happen. He's a great guy, and he was real. And you definitely wanna minus. I'd definitely want him in your fucking soul. Yeah. Persons foxhole. So we're 20 games for the Warriors season now, and I usually wait 20 games before access a team and right now they kind of are what they have been there consistently inconsistent. I mean, they're they have a chance to beat anybody. They have a chance to lose anybody. You don't necessarily get the same team two games in a row, Which is why they've never lost three games and never won three games in a row. So I don't know where they go from here. Chris. How do you see it after 20? What do they need to do to maybe take that next step to being a little more consistent? Yeah, I think you're right. Tommy 20 games. Um, not get their playoff team. I think they're great. It'll be somewhere somewhere between six and 10. Something like that. I think if they've got four or five totally Overachieving in my mind. Um, yeah, but I think you know the offensive. Consistency. That's where the big Did change needs to happen. Yeah. You know, so they're what they're 11 and nine. They've done a really good job of beating a team there supposed to be so they've done a good job with that they've had They beat some really good teams. They have Have a strong a bunch like, you know, two weeks doing together yet? I think a lot of it, you know, doesn't make sense with new roster. No less playing time. I mean, let's practice timeless, You know, training. Tell all those things that does make sense. Um Thea. Other thing I do see is They're getting opportunities. You know, Sometimes you think you have a hard time scoring. It's you guys are not getting old thing or you know the ball is not moving. It has some nice games with 30 assists. I see any round you because you guys almost every night. They're getting good shots and some nights like like the last game. He made them on about not much different in the game before speaks when it couldn't make anything, so it's not. I don't think it's a lack of You know, changing the offense or there's a lot of times. You know, Steve play such a nice free flowing offense anyway. What the defense is making even more simple. I even guys open. You know, they have a lot of teams, you know, have to double it. Triple staff, which is going to open up those opportunities you would. You would probably run place to get so you kind of doing your work for you. They've just got to get a little more consistent, I think little more decisive and more little more selective. Right, like I was talking about. You know your once his k y P, which No. Your personnel is usually referred to on the defensive end. Right Sky report who you're playing against shooting, non shooter, all those all those different things. On the offensive end. Hey, y g know your game. What is your view? What do your strength so early in the shot clock wide Open three. If you're not, that's not your game. That's an opportunity to drive the ball and make another play for someone else and things like that. So figuring that out..

Chris Stood Gus Charles NBA Coach Carnesecca ST John Coo coo Mark Jackson Terrence basketball New York Mark Mark Oakland Mr Okay Knicks testosterone John Chaney Warriors
"coo coo" Discussed on KCRW

KCRW

03:59 min | 2 years ago

"coo coo" Discussed on KCRW

"It's called individuality. Rhythm should be a lot faster than it is. It felt so perfect. That Santa Gold coo coo coo join Off the gold fire sessions anyway. Nikola Cruise new, forthcoming project called so Throw Peak before Santa Gold tones on tale classic gold. Sudan archives gave his Did you know? And cootie man at the top of the set with Coca Savannah? Mm. Coming up new music from a certain ratio beyond fine home Georgia and mold Drew is Jody Got some John Coltrane. I'd like to play for you, Then we'll see what else we can get into. So stay tuned. It's KCRW music. What Mm hmm. You. You. Hi there. I'm Anil.