38 Burst results for "Coppola"

The Eric Metaxas Show
John Zmirak: What Can We Learn From 'The Godfather' Films?
"You've written a great piece at stream dot org about The Godfather movies, talk about that. Sure. Well, we just had the 50th anniversary of the first godfather film. And you know, it's kind of something mysterious about art. It's not predictable. The Godfather one and two are among the greatest films in American history. They're based on a pot boiler novel by Mario puto that you would read at the beach of no particular. Yeah, we've got to say this. The novel, it's not like it was a great work of art and they turned into a great movie. It was a middling work of art by Mario Puzo and Francis Ford Coppola, ingeniously transformed it into spectacular film. Two, godfather one and godfather two. They're two of the greatest films ever made. I would skip godfather three. We could talk about that later. Well, I'll tell you that he re shot. He re edited godfather three. It's now called godfather coda, the death of Michael Corleone. And it's actually a decent film. But the new godfather three was not a decent film. It was so pathetic that I was actually shocked. But let's forget that. It never happened. Godfather one and two, two, the greatest films ever made. And now that's interesting because, again, based on a mediocre work of fiction, but then some of the great novels like Moby dick turned out to be mediocre films. Nobody remembers the movie of Moby dick. I remember Gregory Peck. Greg, Gregory Peck as ahab on the whale and they say, look, even in death, he beckons anyway, never mind. But you're quite right, some of the greatest works of fiction don't make great movies, but not so with those great movies are based on middle works of fiction. Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Bloomberg Businessweek
Fresh update on "coppola" discussed on Bloomberg Businessweek
"This, you know, used to be GM and Ford and Volkswagen, everybody went to China and they were forced to do joint ventures with Chinese companies to teach them how to make cars, but make them better at making cars. All the car companies hid their IP about how to make an engine as much as they could. They walled it off, even though they had a partnership, right, because they didn't want China to get that. Well, China said, okay, great, you can have your engines because we're going to make batteries. But still, I think so in terms of the risk, what people need to wrap their head around there is that CATL has the IP that America needs, not the other way around. Okay, so that's one thing to think about. On on the other hand, I'm not going to say that Glenn Youngkin or any of these Republicans are completely unjustified and being very cautious being very careful and looking at this because there are no Chinese companies that are not under the influence of the Chinese government. It's a command economy. I don't think CATL is special. I think that's how it works. You know, so I think that we have to be pragmatic because we are behind. And if you look, if you spoke to Florida, to you spoke the folks, you know, Jan, forget CATL. If you just want to buy processed lithium to make a battery, you can't do that without China yet. You know, I mean, that's what the Inflation Reduction Act and what the administration Biden is trying to really accelerate is building that supply chain so we can do that. But we're not there yet. It doesn't happen overnight. We've been outsourcing for 50 years. Now all of a sudden we woke up and oh, we realize, crap, we need to make things. You know, it's not going to happen overnight. But I mean, I think the biggest risk is that either politicians or investors do not have the stomach for that because it kind of, you know, we have to rethink who we are and how we do things. I'm not at all suggesting you would ever want to lose or diminish the free markets and free enterprise and the freedom that makes all those people want to come study in because of that freedom. So what you're talking about, Gabby, is ultimately America's innovation machine. And has that been the thing that has gotten us where we are. And yet, you're what ultimately talking about here is the lack of an industrial policy, right? America has no industrial policy. I'm curious, when you talk to some of the folks that are quoted in the story, what kind of insights did they have to say about what that could even look like here? You know, I think that's a great question. And I think it's a hard question. And, you know, that's certainly a question for economists and people in government. And, you know, I think that they still want to, people still want to see, they want, you know, private capital, there want to be some competition here so that the best can survive, you know, but I think a little bit of runway. You know, I think if you look at, you know, what the Biden administration is trying to do now, I think being more willing to support, if you have, like, think about, we're already doing this, right? First of all, the Department of Defense does it already, okay? And the Department of Energy does it because all the time they're giving loans and seeding new startups and technologies, and that is also part of what the Biden administration has been doing. But the thing is, they give them money to get it out of the lab, but then when it comes to the hard work of building something, that's when you're supposed to go to the private market. But guess what? Battery manufacturing is really, really hard. Just ask Elon Musk. There's, you know, there's going to be bumps in the road, and the question is, you know, if there's one, like A123, what pushed them over the edge was they had a recall. It wasn't a horrific problem, but it was a problem. But that gave, I mean, there were other things going on, but that gave everyone cold feet and they dropped them like a hot potato. You know, if something is strategic, then you need to treat it like it's strategic. And I think one of the other big risks to us is that, you know, the U .S., every four years or every eight years, we have this major pendulum switch and our swing and our policy, right? We don't stay the course. We're inconsistent. We're not long term. We're short And that was Bloomberg News auto reporter Gabrielle Coppola and Bloomberg Business Week editor Joel Weber on this week's cover story. You are listening to Bloomberg Business Week. Still ahead, we'll stay on the road and hear from the head of a company that aims to create one of a kind luxury vehicles that bridge the gap between today's performance demands and classic designs. the founder of Blackbridge Motors on how the process works and how much it'll cost you. This is Bloomberg. We'll be right back. Bloomberg Radio on demand and in your podcast On the latest edition of the Sound On podcast, I speak with former U .S. Ambassador to Poland, Daniel Fried, about the sensitivity of government documents amid the latest indictment of former President Donald Trump. So, for those of us, for myself and others who have worked for years with classified documents, it is just a damning indictment. We all better. know We all respect the rules that are there for good reasons. And people who don't respect the rules go to jail. That happens. So, this does not seem to be a far -flung or extreme case. It seems fairly straightforward, at least for those of us with experience handling classified information. Classified documents have come up for a lot of

Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"coppola" Discussed on Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"And so I think he just he saw that and when I talked to him, when I went to the office, he basically asked me a couple of he's like, are you, can I trust you to be here every day? And I said, yeah, he goes, no, I mean, do you like do drugs or do you drink a lot? And I said, no, not really, you know, no more than the average person. He goes, okay, good. He goes and you know, we're going to be working really long hours and I'm going to be having you come in at like 5 a.m., 5 30 a.m.. Can you handle that for three months? And I said, yeah, that would be fine. And he said, okay, great, you got the gig. And that was how that worked. And by the time we got to beowulf, the technology had changed and the call times had changed a little bit. And that was a totally different group. You know, we had John Malkovich. We had Anthony Hopkins. We had Robin Wright. We had we had ray Winston. We had Brendan Gleeson. We had crisping Glover. And it was just like the smorgasbord of crazies. Chris, I never heard of any of those people. Yeah. I mean, it was so much fun. I mean, you know, Anthony Hopkins is just like Tom in the sense of, you know, he's like, oh, please, just caught me Tony. And just the most, I mean, just telling you everything about the business, about acting, John. Who seems like he would be totally off putting is the complete opposite, the coolest dude in the world. Ray Winston is about as fun as it gets. Brendan Gleeson is awesome, love to smack me in the head every day. It was like to do. It was so much fun. You know, we were riding horses inside the stage. It was a blast. How weird is it that you've worked with Anthony Hopkins who was in Silence of the Lambs and Ted Levine, who was also in salic the two, I guess, evil portions of that movie, right? I can't imagine those too bad..

Bloomberg Businessweek
Fresh "Coppola" from Bloomberg Businessweek
"That was a bit too early for the EV market. For more, return to Bloomberg Business Week editor Jill Weber and Bloomberg News auto reporter Gabrielle Coppola, who examines the nation's blind faith in shareholder capitalism and our need to rethink our approach to innovation. I wanted to profile this guy named Mungibi Jazz who is an entrepreneur who's to trying build an American battery company now here in Michigan. He's actually a veteran of A123. And as I dug into this story, I learned the story of A123, which as Joel As Jill mentioned, this was a company that had a brief moment. Think back to 2011, 2012. GM and Chrysler had been bailed out. The Obama administration was trying to push them to build more fuel -efficient cars. And A123 thought they had a chance there. But the heart of the story is really this one question is, does America need to kind of tinker with or rethink the rules free of enterprise our American capitalism to compete with China? Because what happened is there wasn't an immediate success. You know, EV range was still kind of weak. Gas prices were coming down. So they were making batteries, but there weren't enough. Nobody wanted to buy EVs. Tesla wasn't a big thing yet. So they went bankrupt and they were bought by a Chinese auto parts maker called Wanshang, which kind of kind of dialed back their ambitions and had them focus on stop star batteries, which is if you ever, you know, driven a car, you notice you're at a red light in your car instead of idling and burning gas. It just shuts, the engine off. shuts That's what they do. That's what A123 does. So, and so it's just just so ironic when you look now at where the country is and there's all this anxiety over, you know, geopolitical tension, economic warfare with China. And I'm not sitting here trying to promote, you know, there's a lot of things you could say about China that are critical. You know, they certainly have violated a lot of American intellectual property. that's And in my story. But the story is really more about looking in the mirror for America. Well, let's let's go there. Like, how did we get there? Like, if you had to point your finger at maybe one or two things, how is it that we kind of screwed this up? I think the biggest thing is that we did not value manufacturing. And I say this as a reporter who worked in New York for a long time and moved to Detroit four years ago and has been covering the auto industry. We for many for many decades, our idea of of economic growth was we don't need manufacturing, we should just outsource it. It's a commodity. And, you know, we can just write apps or work at Walmart or in the service industry or whatever, and that's going to be fine. Obviously, that has not been fine. And, you know, one of the things that is in the story that Joel will know, the former Intel CEO Andy Grove wrote this amazing opinion piece in Businessweek in 2010, where he warned all of this was going to happen. He said, America losing is the means to scale its own technology, and if you don't control the means to make things, then you don't understand them and you're losing part of the process. So what we thought was a commodity is actually really valuable, and we are learning that the hard way now. And then, you know, the scope of the story is this very symbolic moment that, you know, Ford Motor Company is building a brand new battery factory right here in Michigan. know, You big win for the state, lots of jobs, investment, all that, but they have to license the technology from ATL, which is the world's biggest battery manufacturer, and it is a Chinese company that was nurtured on, you know, subsidies from the Chinese government. Now I'm not knocking CATL for, you know, trying to have a big business and being entrepreneurial, that's part of their success. It's not all subsidies. The chairman, Robin Zung, is obviously like a very smart guy, he's built something great. But the crazy thing is that the technology that Ford is licensing, LFP, that's not to get too technical here, but LFP batteries, lithium iron phosphate batteries, are more stable and they're cheaper than what you typically see in EVs today because those are lithium -ion batteries made with nickel. And that technology, the fact that that chemistry works in batteries is by discovered Americans at the University of Texas, Austin. So we discovered this. We had a company that tried to commercialize it and then we threw it away because we believe that a free market is everything and if you can't survive in a Darwinistic moment of the free market then you don't deserve to exist, period. I want to just quickly about cattle or CATL. I was in Detroit a couple weeks ago. Last week? Was it last week? to Talking people at the Ford Motor Company about this and I know that some on the right, including the governor of Virginia have called this kind of a Trojan horse because they have gone to Michigan, the Chinese, to help Ford set up this plant and the Chinese are going to stay there as advisors on the project, is there any concern that it Is this kind of a Trojan horse operation or is this just kind of political thing? I think that's a fabulous question Matt and like most things in life, there's a lot of nuance in that question. It's not black and white. So do I think the ATL has anything but the best of intentions of trying to grow their business? No, I mean, these guys have a lot of capacity in China they and need to find places to sell it outside China. And so they're psyched that they can do that with Ford. I also don't think that, just like any supplier, you don't always, I mean, you don't want to get, just like think about the irony of

Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"coppola" Discussed on Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"But not super, you know, Nick was always, you know, doing his thing and you know, I just brought my a game toward miles and you know, after about, I think about three weeks. I think I did four episodes on that show. About episode two or three miles started, you know, chatting me up and you know we're just talking about sports and things like that and getting to know one another a little bit. I mean, I'm sure if it was something that had gone on and you know we probably would have became friendly after about a year or two, but that's fine. That's how it works. You know? Yeah, and when you talk about meeting Tom Hanks and we're touch upon polar express in a moment, you know, you meet him, you talk, you have your dialog, you work together. Is it tough coming off? I don't want to call it a high. Maybe I can. Is it tough coming off a situation like that where it's like you're at the top of the mountain when you're acting with, in my opinion, the greatest actor in the history of movies and television. And you're acting with him. And then the next project might not be as prestigious, right? Is it tough to have that roller coaster ride crystal like one day you're doing dialog with Hanks? The next day, not to put anybody else down in other projects, but you're in something different. Is that tough? Yeah, 100%, man. I mean, it's like, you know, that's the, you know, 'cause I'm not a recognizable face by any by any stretch. I mean, I probably get recognized, I don't know, maybe twice a year. You know, I don't know. I don't get recognized, you know, that often enough to make me feel like I've been, you know, done enough projects. But yeah, it's hard to do like the AA list projects, and then I have the student films anymore, but let's say I do like a little low budget, something, you know, that's a pile of squirt, you know, but you know, it's also a job. You know, I mean, I talked about that with Tom. You know, a lot of projects, you know, I do to make my insurance or to just have residual mostly how I make my money is residuals become like a revenue stream for me, right? I've done enough where, you know, sometimes I'm getting a nice sized check and sometimes I'm getting a check for 11 cents. Yeah, it's difficult and, you know, but that's it's two sided, right? There's days when I'm like, shit, I don't know how much longer you could take of this. And there's also days where I'm like, I'm one audition away, 'cause I am. Yeah, yeah. No, that's right. I mean, and you got a strong filmography to back that up. Any coincidence Chris working for zemeckis and beowulf and polar express was that circumstance coincidence was that meant to how did that work out for you?.

Bloomberg Businessweek
Fresh update on "coppola" discussed on Bloomberg Businessweek
"This It will materials. depends Trump seek on what the a testimony speedy of is, lying trial Former Trump I mean and it's legal in misleading nice to the team read federal federal it indictment member in investigators Robert against an is Ray indictment in former says and not President understand trial order what to testimony Trump. hold that this on will is the to the prosecution's witnesses be classified The federal important. are indictment actually It going to testify to at trial. The DOJ alleges when Trump's time as president ended, boxes containing classified documents that he was not authorized to keep were transported to his Florida residence. In a post on Truth Social, Trump referred to special counsel Smith as a deranged lunatic and psycho and questioned why the prosecutor isn't going after President Biden for his handling of classified documents. Air quality levels are improving in the northeast and mid -Atlantic, but pockets of unhealthy air still remain. This comes as smoke from the Canadian wildfires drifted down through the US and impacted millions of Americans. A wind shift this weekend is expected to disperse the remaining haze a common drug used to treat diabetes has the power to prevent long COVID. Lisa Taylor has more. A recent study by led researchers at the University of Minnesota found that metformin lowers the risk of getting long COVID. The study revealed that overweight or obese people between the ages of 30 and 85 who had COVID were about 40 % less likely to develop long COVID if they took the drug. Participants who received metformin were compared to participants who were given a placebo. The principal investigator said the drug is inexpensive, safe and widely available so this discovery could have significant public health implications. Teenagers 15 to 19 years old are likely to make 18 up % of all summer hires this leading not guilty to extortion charges. Joran Vander Sloot appeared in an Alabama court Friday after being extradited to the US from Peru on Thursday. He faces charges for allegedly trying to get $250 ,000 from Holloway's mother in exchange for the location of her body. Holloway went missing while on a high school trip in Aruba in May 2005. A downtown Davenport, Port Iowa business is back open after a nearby apartment building partially collapsed, killing several people. Banks Cooper has more. Source Bookstore reopened Thursday among one of the first businesses near the intersection of 3rd and Main Streets to open again. The Davenport partially collapsed on May 28th, killing three people. The state government is asking for federal assistance for debris removal and demolition, as well as reimbursement for actions taken during the response. For more on this, I'm Cooper Banks. The New York Legislature is okaying a bill commissioning a study on slavery reparations. Sarah Lee Kessler reports. The bill passed Thursday night it creates a commission to examine the institution of slavery plus racial and economic discrimination against people of African descent. The first African slaves arrived in New York around the 1620s and built Manhattan's infrastructure. The commission would consider compensation for descendants of slaves. New York now becomes the second state following California to address the issue of reparations. Of all the states in the country New Jersey stands above all others as most the romantic state anywhere. The conclusion comes from a fine jewelry company. Mark Band. The company studied Google data from searches for engagement and wedding rings romantic getaways and romantic destinations. Delaware and New York came in second and third respectively. I'm Brian Shook. Now this Bloomberg Sports Update. One of the games best and longest and oldest rivalries renewed once again in the Bronx. We're talking the Red stocks in town to open up Garrett Cole deep now seven times pins a loss on the Yankees ace for the first time as Cole falls to seven went six innings gave up two runs and he punched out six Garrett Whitlock slightly better though for the or the Red Sox six and a third gave up one run also struck out six Yankees are in third place nine nine and and a half back of Tampa Bay Red Sox in last place. No one has a losing record in the best division in baseball. Game two Saturday at 735 it's Domingo Hermon hosting Tanner Halk. That's taken down in Pittsburgh 14 to 7 some poor defense led to a five -run a third inning Mets got a base hit from every every in spot the lineup. Brian Hayes 5 for 5 though and Jack Sawinski his 12th home run going three 3 for four for the buckles was too much. Tyler McGill took the loss didn't get out of the fourth inning in this one and Rich Hill ran his record record to six and five gave up two were in runs in seven innings for the Pittsburgh Pirates. Game two will be Saturday day at 405 kodai singa opposite Johan Oviedo. Metzer in fourth place nine and a half have back of the Braves and four out of the cellar. To the hardwood game for NBA finals from South Beach Joel all Denver 108 95. They're up three to one heading back to the Mile High City on Monday night. They can wrap up their first title. Aaron Gordon had 27 to lead all scores for Denver. It was Jimmy Butler 25 losing effort for Miami. Nicole Jokic 23 Canadian and 12. opened from That's a double Toronto. double. Golf RBC Aaron Rye and Terrell Hatton of England. They're facing China's Carl Ewan. They're a stroke back heading into Saturday. Tennis French French opened third ranked Novak Djokovic beats Carlos Alcarez number one in four sets with your Bloomberg Sports Update. I'm Rob Bushka. This is a Bloomberg Money Minute. During the pandemic, we could not stock enough goods. boom has That faded but the CEO of one of the big air cargo carriers remains upbeat saying the global air cargo Google market has hit bottom. We went from an environment of fear of running out and access to excess inventory and we know that the supply is greater than the demand right now, but we are starting to see some tailwind. DHL Express CEO Mike Parra spoke with Bloomberg TV. We're optimistic in regards to the US consumer base and optimistic about a good fourth quarter. The International Air Transport Association reported last month that March air cargo volumes fell nearly 8 % overall from a year earlier, but that marked a big improvement from January when volumes plunged 17 % from the year before. Meanwhile, as rivals UPS and FedEx cut jobs in their upper ranks, Parra says DHL has no plans for layoffs. Gina Cervetti, Bloomberg Radio. This is Bloomberg Business Week. Insight from the reporters and editors who bring you America's most trusted business magazine plus global business finance and tech news as it happens. Bloomberg Business Week with Carol Masser and Tim Stenebeck on Bloomberg Radio. I'm Carol Masser, Matt Miller filling in for Tim this week. Planning ahead in our second hour of the weekend edition of Bloomberg Business Week insights including on what to do when money and love converge with life's biggest decisions before you. Plus we speak with the founder of Connecticut -based Blackbridge Motors which transforms vintage vehicles into finely engineered works of art that can drive better than ever before. First up this hour, this week's story cover also related to autos, specifically America's losing battle to take the lead in electrical vehicle battery production. It began with the rise and fall of a company called A123, a U .S. startup that was a bit too early for the EV market. For more, return to Bloomberg Business Week editor Jill Weber and Bloomberg News auto reporter Gabrielle Coppola, who examines the nation's

Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"coppola" Discussed on Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"The ones that stuck out for me. Of late. And every experience, man, I have a great time, man. You know, I had a great time doing with the kid. You know, that's sort of that's sort of the two parts of my career. I'm either a weirdo and a kids movie. Or I'm a weirdo and an adult movie. And it's not much difference. This one's played a little bit of a smile. And the other one doesn't smile at all. Yeah, yeah. You know, I was going to ask you about experience with actors because in your demo reel, it leads off. I want to say with Zach galifianakis, you have a scene with him. Yeah. And then, you know, I want to ask you him in a moment, but you mentioned Miles Teller. You hear things, right? People say, oh, he's a prick. Other people say he's a phenomenal actor. That's not for debate. And I know you've had experiences working with Ted Levine and Donovan, who Ted Levine for those listening is Buffalo Bill and Silence of the Lambs if you have to put a face to a role. So working with actors, whether it's miles or Ted, is it a mixed bag? Do you feel like Chris? I mean, obviously you're not there to get autographs and pictures. You're doing a job. But is it a mixed bag with how things turn out? Yeah, absolutely. I think the first and foremost that you have to do is just be professional, right? Yeah. I think, you know, when you show up on a set and you're a new actor, you know, and you show up on a professional set in the sense that there's going to be someone there that's recognizable or famous. You know, it hits you, man. You're like, oh shit, there's so and so. And, you know, so and so knows that they're recognizable, right? Like when I did polar express, Tom Hanks is so pro. That he must have looked over the casting sheet and knew my name, right? Because he came up to me and said, Kris Coppola, hey, Tom Hanks. Hey, can we get a picture together, man? My wife is going to think this is awesome..

Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"coppola" Discussed on Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"So that was just it was such a fun show to do because miles is playing a guy who's doesn't speak a lot, right? He's sort of a vigilante that's trying to write some wrongs in the world. This show is super strange. It's one of those shows that I've done. And that's sort of the curse of my career where I've done these shows that I think maybe this is going to be the one that's going to get me noticed to take me to the next level and sure enough it's not. But I just had such a great time making that. It was so weird. I think at one point we reenact the crucifixion in the police office and I pull a curtain off the rod and I'm Mary Magdalene screaming and the chief of police is playing Jesus. It's just so out there. And so weird and Nick nicked us some really great stuff where he does a lot. He does like 22 takes. He does a lot a lot of takes. And for people listening to this, you know, a lot of takes is normally 6. So doing 22 is kind of unheard of. So I mean, he just does a lot, a lot of takes. And he's just looking for, I think, and because he never answered the question, I asked him. But I think he's just looking for something surprising. You know, an actor can get in into a kind of groove on how he speaks the lines. And I remember doing the Mary Magdalene thing of all things. And I think around the 18th or 19th, I actually cried. And he loved it. Even though we were being silly, right? It was meant to be kind of funny. But then the character cried. And I think that's the kind of stuff that Nick is going after with a lot of takes. And I was all game, you know? I mean, I know some people don't like a lot of takes, but I think that's what makes that kind of experience fun. You know what I mean?.

Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"coppola" Discussed on Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"And you see me disguised. Do you see me doing different accents, dialects? And that's the other thing I like to show off or showcase when I set my reel. Yeah, I think the ray Donovan movies right around the corner and it's a great show. Liev is obviously the voice of hard knocks the NFL. He's so good as ray. You know, a guy obviously at least can direct can act. He just seems like such a good dude, Chris. You know, really great dude. And my experience with ray Donovan is so unique because we filmed in prim Nevada, right? We found, I don't know if familiar with California and Nevada border, but there's a, you know, right as you cross the border going into Nevada. There's a couple of casinos right off the side of the road. They are shit holes, right? They're for your desperate gamblers, right? Or, you know, either people leaving Nevada or going to Nevada, right? All headed toward Vegas. But this is not Vegas. You're not supposed to stay there more than 6 hour kind of place. We stayed there for two and a half weeks. And it was super weird. The only the only good news was everyone was doing it. The whole cast. So, you know, John voyage staying at the crappy hotel with us and leavis staying in his motor home outside and you know it was kind of a dump and we had run of this casino, which was incredible. We got to see the dark side of casino life for sure. Which was part of what ray dog makes great honor and so good. Yeah, yeah, it's well said. And you know, I was going over a lot of your filmography is there and I hate asking this question, but I feel like sometimes I feel like it's a necessary question. Is there a part in your filmography that you're partial to? Like you mentioned you know you're piggybacking off your demo reel. Is there something that a specific entry that you're most proud of? I guess maybe that's a loaded question because I don't want to isolate you from a great project. It's a great question. And you know, it doesn't limit me to any, you know, listen, there's certain experiences when you're making something regardless of its success level that is just, you know, when you're in your car driving home, you're like, wow, that's really what I signed up for as an actor. It's got great people in it. It's a creative process. It's fun. And of recently, one that stands out as tool to die young, which did not do anything. I don't think anyone watched it. And it's a little, it's a little strange. It's on Amazon Prime, but I play miles tellers, I kind of his partner were both police officers. But Nicolas wind and ref in directed the whole series..

Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"coppola" Discussed on Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"My acting role if you like after this interview and you'll see that one of the things I'm most proud of is is my sort of way of disguising myself, that's how I got on I have a funny can I tell you how I got on ray Donovan? Absolutely. So I'm one of like two or three people that just got a straight offer onto ray Donovan. It doesn't really happen because it's sort of the actors actors show kind of thing, right? It's known for its acting. And so apparently Leah Schreiber will not apparently. He was directing the first episode of the new season. So the director obviously gets to choose cast. And so this is pre COVID and Lee didn't want to. He's like, I hate auditions. This is him speaking to the casting director. I don't like auditions. It's really kind of uncomfortable. They are. You know, an actor knows that. He's like, I don't want to sit through all that. And he's like, can I just look at, you know, demo reels, you know, actors, demo reels. And so he got inundated from the casting director like a bunch of them. And he was like, oh, Jesus, man. This is him telling me this story. He goes, so I didn't know what to look at. There was just so many. He's like, we started getting frustrated. This is just going to this is going to be daunting. And so he goes, look at this Bozo. His name is Chris Coppola. Let me click on this asshole. Like he said he was super frustrated and pissed off and he kind of clicked on mine because the name is a little recognizable and he was like, let's see what this asshole is done. And so I clicked on mine and he was like, holy shit. This is great. So he watched it a few times. And he's like, this guy couldn't do exactly what I want. And so he called casting and he said, I like the cast Chris scope. Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. We sent you a hundred reels. He's like, no, I'm not watching a hundred reels. I clicked on this guy..

Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"coppola" Discussed on Monday Morning Critic Podcast
"My next guest filmography includes the fantastic ray Donovan, polar express, beowulf, and so many more. Please welcome Chris Coppola Chris thank you so much for being on the show today. Absolutely. Derek, thanks for having me. Kris, I feel like the next person that asks you if you're part of the Coppola family, you're gonna punch in the face. You know what not at all. It ends up, you know, especially early on in my career. You know, any reason to keep talking in an audition is a good one, you know what I mean? So if it gets you in the door a little bit and gets the conversation started, you know, it ends up being a really good thing. So, you know, I'm not, there's a long story, but the short answer is, no, I don't go to Thanksgiving and I'm not family and I've worked within and around family with Jason Schwartzman, who is telling you Shire's son who was a Coppola Shire. I think she's Francis Ford Coppola's sister..

Show Me the Meaning!
"coppola" Discussed on Show Me the Meaning!
"You know very very austere in in very like stiff-upper-lip and all that and and scifi movies before alien were just like oh you know floating paper plates and gort walking down. The i love the day the earth stood still but there was there was a look. There was a patina to sci-fi before that kind of felt cheap. And then when you watch alien you're like oh my god this is this is fucking monstrous. I've never seen anything like this. And i think there something to that this this movie really. I can change the game. I think maybe a lot of folks when it first came out if you read contemporary reviews a lot of them are really negative. Because i think people were just like. I don't feel fucking safe watch it's like it's insane it also Yeah because there's the movie the product of the movie itself but then also just wanna filmmaking perspective. The story of the movie getting made is so. I think crucial. Then if you're a big you know filmmakers sinophile type two. It's such an awesome production to go read about and learn about and in terms of also the production. Like to meet all of this. It's kind of the end or the ultimate conclusion to the whole sixty seventies new new hollywood cinema. Because you start out with like easy rider which to me. Easy rider has a lot of same cinema techniques this movie but on obviously super smaller scale. Because it's made for fucking peanuts for nothing and then that was the beginning of people go. Hey maybe we should trust these hippies and give them a little bit of money in the budget and then the ultimate ten years later the alternate extreme of that is oh score coppola. This you know this hippie us against the war let's give them literally unlimited amount of money and have him in all of his friends. Go make this movie out in the jungle together..

Show Me the Meaning!
"coppola" Discussed on Show Me the Meaning!
"It's i mean it's heroin. Some of the things that they described doing i. I highly recommend anyone who hasn't seen that movie winter soldier. It's it's truly truly like heartbreaking and you know you can tell that these guys are broken up about What they were put in a position to have to do many of them weren't like true believers in all of this You know the the draft was tearing people away from their homes and their families. And and you know it's like it really is. It's a devastating and atrocious chapter in american history and Yeah i highly recommend. Sorry to sideline the conversation but you bring that up just just reminded me of that. I highly recommend winter. Soldier fuel. haven't seen it. Yeah and and the last thing. I'll say real quick and they'll kick it over to ryan for a quick thought here to Is i i saw on a panel. Francis ford coppola. Someone asks him about like why they wanted to make this film and he says this film isn't a film about the vietnam war. This film is vietnam. War and of for coppola. I think what he was saying was Was that this isn't a film that is at a distance that is removed from something that is using sort of like objective perspective. But rather it's is it's as as much as it can be done. I'm trying to immerse myself in sort of psychological ethos of war and in particular this war in this context and i think there's something kind of interesting about that. I just wanna shout out a listener in the chat Robertson hausky or shirts announce key apologies. If i'm Mispronounced your last name. They are just said in the chat. When i returned from my first deployment we had civilians. Flown out to our ship to training on how to deal with decompressing. They talked about how you don't enjoy doing the things you once did cetera. Robert i just wanna say i think you for your service and thank you for taking a moment to open the chat about that stuff. That's really fascinating absolutely. Have either of y'all seen aguirre wrath of god. Oh my god and fitzgerald. Oh well because france for coppola specifically says guerra wrath of god inspired you know the split inspired the whole movie and especially just how he filmed it for..

Show Me the Meaning!
"coppola" Discussed on Show Me the Meaning!
"Or maybe it's just a world that's not for you anymore So there's something about that and then you start to get this discussion. You know with with the senior officers when they're recruiting willard for this mission where they're talking about how there is you know Like evil in the hearts of men and how I love the phrase that they use that kurtz. His methods have become unsound right. Like i almost think of logical soundness like as it being something that and they're it's unsound as a violation of logic. It's a violation of reason. And one of them even says there's a difference between rationality and irrationality good and evil. And i think this also maps onto what you get like the jungle people going into the jungle going into the wilderness is where wild is and that's where nature is bad and that's where the evilness comes out right And and so. I think you get that into what i wonder is then. Is the horror the horror. I think that there are two readings on one could be like the moral reading. Which is the one that i think ryan kind of espousing that yeah in the hearts of men there's some fucking darkness and kurtz says at one point he says horror has a face and that means that it's not this abstract evil devil demon like metaphysical thing. That's out there bubble. No no it's human horror is human and all the horror stories all the ghost stories all the monster stories. That's just us. And that's just us being afraid of the things that we've seen within our own capacities to either. Imagine her to carry out into perform and he becomes the embodiment of that. Because he's almost like a fucking monster by the time you seem like there's light the way they even shoot him like he's kind of like he's a little overweight he's got that bald head and it's almost kind of his monstrous. It's almost like body horror the way that he's like scraping his head and it's almost like his hand is sticking on his head at one point when he does that tapping thing and you're like oh it's it's kinda gross like the fly or some shit like that like his body is is monstrous right. So that's the warming. Lemonade with those lemons. Like i know about like the the visual conceit there but when marlon brando was cast he was like thirty pounds overweight. or at least. That's what francis coppola wanted him to lose before the production and he was like. Don't worry i'll do it..

Show Me the Meaning!
"coppola" Discussed on Show Me the Meaning!
"All right first thoughts that you want to really start digging into here. What is the horror. What do we think. what is the horror. That kurtz talks about at the end of the film. the horror. the horror raymond Take this. I always love. Being the first to sum up brief brief moments as possible. Give us a soundbite Boy oh boy Well isn't it his diary that he's looking over at the end. That just justice like nuke them all. I think there's this interesting conflict with with kurtz where he recognizes. He has sort of reached the edge of the world. And there is there is like no coming back from this even if he wants to. You know like you said you didn't understand his performance. The first time you saw austin but marlon brando also didn't totally understand his. There's this great story. On hearts of darkness where francis ford coppola is like..

Show Me the Meaning!
"coppola" Discussed on Show Me the Meaning!
"Young like must've been like around. Like when saving private ryan came out or something. Because i was like i wanted to watch all these war movies but this this movie does not play as it's not as accessible as saying ryan to a you know twelve or thirteen year old kid And and but. But then i remember the first. I really sat down and absorb this movie and kind of felt like i got. It was in film school. Walls emerged edited this and famous editor walter merge and and you know they kind of teach you as a master class or the beginning of this movie is like a masterclass and editing. Especially with the whole. I remember especially the helicopter Match cut with the fan. You or at least the sound effect not the match but like the you know the sound effect playing over the fan. Yeah and that whole sequence of him kind of just you know you're really kind of getting into willard's psyche through the cuts and through the ways filming it and through the music and yeah like you said total cinema using. He's playing with all the tools and creating this creating this atmosphere that especially when it came out. I'm sure it was super innovative and awesome and really creates this this tone but even now holds up like it. It feels very much from its time and place. I mean it's interesting now after with after time goes by just looking at it with a two thousand twenty one perspective. I will say that the theatrical i doubt i have not seen the final cut which i regret not using this time to watch the that are just have access to it. I couldn't founded but whatever. When did we did that. Come out it was just recently a couple years ago i still. I still haven't seen the final cut either. The conventional wisdom from what. I've read within reason of the theatrical cut is that the actual and then the redux they put in. Yeah like like an hour worth of stuff which to me is agreed. Just i've seen the redux version. I really kind of don't like it and look fuck that dogs. It's cool but it's just to me like you were saying before and i'm sure we'll get into this like just added so much and made it so bloated like your movie should be arrested if you're over three and a half hours for no reason and but then i heard that the final cut kind of takes the super weird psychedelic elements of the of the theatrical and then also adds back in a few some of the added stuff to kind of. I don't know it's kind of it. Sounds like they split the difference. Put somewhere yeah you lose a little bit of the psychedelia in the redux because it is so elongated. The the pacing. I feel like kind of it doesn't feel as as trippy whereas i feel like with the theatrical you constantly are kind of placed in a your own kind of like psychic state where the film is kind of like tweaking with your mind a little bit you know and it's consistent throughout because it's it's a little more tightly packed so much of the movie feels like it was kind of found in the edit You know the total that that opening sequences a perfect example of that. I highly doubt. I've never read john melia script. But i highly doubt it says you know match. Cab stands in the hotel room. Tai chi like accidentally cut his hand on the mirror. There's there's so much stuff throughout this movie. Where like when. When i was reading a notes by eleanor coppola. There's one segment or one diary entry. Where she says like today's shot is a helicopter. Landing framed by robert duvall shoulder from behind or something to that effect. It's pretty early in the book..

Show Me the Meaning!
"coppola" Discussed on Show Me the Meaning!
"Review so that it helps boost the algorithm so more and more people can join and on the show me the meaning fun so yeah that'd be great or if only if you love it. Travelers need not apply. If there's another way like if you listen to us on a different app and there's another way like a spotify rating and review. Same sort of thing whatever. It is Love you would really appreciate that okay now housekeeping stuff out of the way. Let's get into first impressions. I don't know what it was like the first time that y'all saw this because it may have been when you were super young imagined that we've all seen this multiple times so let's try to scrape beneath the layers of butter no popular hype and all of the shit that surrounds these films. That are canonized as classics. And let's say what was it like the first time you watch this. What do you think about this film. How does it stand up. What's it been like on repeated viewings. Let's start with raymond I think. I i watched this in high school and it was probably on turner classic movies or something. I i know i saw it on. Tv and You know. I don't really remember what my response to it. Then when i was when i was in eighth grade high school in started becoming more interested in movies i think my response to a lot of stuff was like oh this is a classic so i'm going to force myself to like it and even if i didn't really have a good read on it or anything like that. I didn't really learn how to watch movies until later in my life. But i knew that i wanted to learn and then i re watched it probably ten years ago and i loved it. It was just one of those movies that it kind of reaches through the screen and really really pulls you in a lot of a lot of longer movies like this that that getting your three hours. They can be a bit daunting for folks. It's one of those things where even the essentials you kind of put on the back burner because you're you're not ready to to set aside that big chunk of your day but as soon as you put this one on it. The same thing happened to me. This morning i. I turned it on from the first shot with the fucking trees getting scorched and the doors playing. You're just like yeah. This is this is fucking cinema man. It's it's pretty great. I also re watched the The documentary about it's making the eleanor. Coppola directed foam heart of darkness. Yeah hell yeah it. Just the the stories about making. This movie are fascinating also she. She wrote a book about. It's making called notes. Which was just her diary from the production process. And that's also really really telling there's a lot of great stuff to talk about this film. It's legacy its value as just a piece of filmmaking itself a the behind the scenes stuff things going to be a great conversation. Gentlemen sweet sweet ryan. What about you brother yeah. I the this movie's gone through evolution. In terms of of how i view two very similar to raymond i i saw this movie way too..

Show Me the Meaning!
"coppola" Discussed on Show Me the Meaning!
"Yeah in the evening wherever you are in the world. What up everybody. I'm austin hayden. i'm joined by the show me the meaning. We've got ryan haley stop band. And we've got raymond the mind sinophile kramer home That's right this week. we're talking about the classic apocalypse. Now francis ford coppola starring martin sheen marlon brando robert volley young laurence fishburne dennis hopper harrison ford's in their etcetera etcetera etcetera we. I watched theatrical version this time around So there's like the redux version which is like four hours long There's like the four k. version. So i mean. We'll talk about some of the scenes that aren't included in the theatrical. One like the What is it the french french. Y'all babylonia planned. Yeah the plantation. That 'cause there's some interesting like history staff that helps you understand about a little bit more about the conflict of the vietnam war so some interesting things there also. It's just an interesting scene. Why was it cut. Is there something valuable in it. Does it need to be retained for you to to get the gist of the film. So we'll talk a little bit about that. But i mean i re watched that the version even though i have seen redux In the past but yeah. So that's what we're gonna be talking about this week. Do real quick before we get into our first impressions. I want to just remind people that we have a new twitter page so please go and give us a follow s. m. t. m. underscore pod that's s. m. t. m. underscore pod raymond's been like after we record an episode or after releasing episode. He's been doing threads like last week. What was your threat on. Was it on south. Korean cinema in general. Or yeah i some folks in the chat were asking for recommendations on south korean cinema and i posted a whole threat of recommendations breaking down a handful of prominent filmmakers more prominent works So yeah if you're really if you're looking for next steps after watching Snow piercer parasite. There's tons recommendations there on twitter belly. Look at that list. Yeah fuck yeah. So you can follow raymond individually and then we're going to start making sure that we share those things on the twitter page extra tidbits in bonus things things like that so give us a follow s. m. t. m. underscore pod also favor. If you love show me the meaning can you. Please run over to apple podcasts..

Double Toasted
"coppola" Discussed on Double Toasted
"They they are there to do what every white person comes to the hood to let me said. Let me see. Let me see by drugs from black people. That sound like puerto ricans out of the car to do. What's going on with this well. He drops that. I thought he was. I thought he was like afro cuban. Not much that. I figured you knew something about him. These d- sounds like these remember. He was in a little cool as ice k. Black yellow shirt. All what is black sock. Emcees a sweet man. Funny thing is to to get the drugs. They had to pull out the side of a building. Nice not only. Did i say building. No not just any building. They the building. The side of the building is attached to the only hunted hood mansion. In the who you mean that building shaped like a skull shaped like a skull. Have e- man inside catholics. Coppola powerbook go. People need to do is get shaved to the haunted hood mentioned as funny. They hit a cops instead. I'm going like hey be cool. Be.

Italian Wine Podcast
"coppola" Discussed on Italian Wine Podcast
"Taste of. Let me see that. The favorite doin for me is now the last released is the aura is a pet not made from grape hundred percent. Priore it has eye-catching pink connor. It's super amazing. Connor that's why we we. We started using priore only for the red wines for for the kon-tiki for example but then we saw the great potential also from cutter point of view and this is amazing being and it has like a ten nova tropical. Hatchery sticks so you can let perceive some tropical fruit southern narrows than obama grade. So it's very easy. Drinking is refreshing and just thinking about this hot summer. We are just approaching here anything. This is the perfect seaver for any operative in this summer season or caso. Most the next project you have lined up for katina sell there's upcoming New opening hearing pizza one of the the main product is A new wine bar that we are building close to the winery inside the the state and this is going to complete an array good spirituality offer that we are already giving to to visitors and to our customers so ideally when the when the wiry has the idea was like to be more transparent customers were searching for sincere producers n faces behind the glass there tasting and in this sense combined to the already existing wine revisits and guided tastings convenience picnics that we are offering we now.

Italian Wine Podcast
"coppola" Discussed on Italian Wine Podcast
"Italian wine podcast sheen with italian wine. People.

Marketplace with Kai Ryssdal
Winter Storm Leaves Many In Texas Without Power And Water
"Texas is paying the price. But the rest of us. We are learning something about the oil market in this economy from american public media this is marketplace in los angeles. I'm kai ryssdal. It is wednesday today the seventeenth day of february. Good as always to have you along everybody. We talked yesterday. For a bit about the vagaries of the texas energy market which along with the cold and the snow and the ice has left millions of people. Three at least more than that probably. That's millions of course without power and the thing is that even after the weather starts improving eventually the effects of this now three day long crisis are likely to linger and to be felt far beyond the lone star state. That's partly because of how the oil market works or in. Some cases doesn't marketplace adjusted. Ho gets going when the oil supply chain for as it should oil gets pumped out of the ground truck door pipe to a refinery and transformed into products including gasoline diesel and jet fuel. All of these your experience some type of disruption because of the weather. That's matt smith. Director of commodity. Research clipper data which tracks the oil supply chain. He says right now. Oil just isn't getting pumped out of the ground refineries or shutdown and companies aren't exporting barrels. Out of the gulf coast. We're seeing a number that he's different pull such is houston coppola's christie being closed the gulf coast handles roughly half of the country's oil refining capacity. That means the effects of the extreme cold will ripple even further down the supply chain throughout the us says michael weber and energy professor at the university of texas in jet fuel. Atlanta depends on a refinery in east texas which depends on oil production in west texas when it comes to gasoline refineries have a certain amount stored up that trucks can deliver to retail gas stations. For now that's because earlier this month. Gasoline supplies relatively normal levels but energy. Professor tom sang at the university of tulsa says if they're not replenished the question becomes okay along with these refineries to be shut down and how much how many days it supplied is. This actually represents in the meantime prices of oil and gas futures have started rising. Sang says that means all of us could soon start paying more to. I would expect that. Certainly electric bills and natural gas bills are gonna see. Spikes sang says that might be further down the line for the rest of the country. But it's already affecting the millions of texans needing heating oil

Here & Now
Can schools safely reopen? Doctors weigh in
"At the CDC said yesterday that schools can safely reopen for in person classes as long as they follow safety protocols like mask wearing and social distancing. It'll come as a relief to many parents and potentially a source of anxiety for quite a few teachers. Let's go to a school now. The University of Kentucky we're in person. Classes resumed this week, University President Eli Kappa Ludo is here. Mr Coppola to welcome good to speak with you. Good afternoon. Glad to be with you as well. And congratulations. I know you just started your spring semester on Monday. Maybe there was a time when you didn't think that would happen as planned. How are you going to keep everybody safe? Well, we've learned a lot from our fall semester. We're prepared to retest to surveillance testing, waste water testing. We have all kinds of Ways to keep tabs on our numbers on campus. Those who are positive move into isolation, be able to trace get those folks into quarantine and we built a modern public health infrastructure to do that. Well, as you say, you've had some time to study this because of last semester when you and pretty much every other college campus in the country did have cases of covert. Were you able to learn whether or not people were getting sick from spending time inside the classroom? Through our extensive testing on tracing We saw no evidence of classrooms spread. I think we may have traced some 6000 plus students, not in any of those cases that we see evidence of classroom spread. And so where is it spreading? I know some of your no. One of your fraternities was suspended last summer for breaking covert rules. Is that where people were getting infected? I think some of the harsh lesson lessons we've seen outside of college campuses hold for campuses, and that is When we let our guard down, gather and smaller, large groups, for whatever reason is when you see your outbreaks on Yes. Have there been situations where we had to intervene. We're organized groups wanted to hold things. Yes, way had to put a lid on that. We'll look these air college kids, and I'm not trying to let them off the hook by any means, But they're young adults. Sometimes they make bad decisions. How do you make sure they get your message? You know, are you planning on Enforcing these rules is strictly as possible. We did. We started with a positive assumption, though. And with a strong, healthy behavior intervention, what we called our daily four point of That is our screening testing, tracing all those kinds of things we reinforce. And, uh, yes. They're isolated incidents where people didn't behave as we wanted. It is. I look at my office window today. I'm gratified. I walked this campus. I live on this game. I'm very pleased with the way our students have responded. I think they've been good. Good citizens and something else that has really fascinated me. We've had over 3000 cases. 25% of those have been self reported. And I think it's our connectedness on that. They see us as a resource. And when we come out of cove in and decide who we are and what we want to be, and one of the things we can leverage I think this positive influence on health and health behaviors is one we can capitalize on many schools from elementary schools to high schools to college campuses are worried about students mental health over the past few months over the past year, really, including suicide, Unfortunately, What are you noticing on your campus? Uh, this worries may deeply are students who we have asked physically distant have done so, but it has its consequences. Be able to walk down the hall in your residents facility and get that informal counseling plus the physical counseling we have available on campus. That social infrastructure is vitally important. We tried to replace your students are hurting because they don't have it. Yes. Most certainly, but the resilience I've seen has been a gratifying well, we all hope that vaccinating people can help put an end to all of this right. So you're getting shots into arms on your campus? Who's getting a shot? Who's not? We follow the state guidelines. I think we're one of the most efficient in the state right now is one of the regional vaccination centers. We morphed our football stadium into a site. You register online? All of our health colleges are involved where? Vaccinating over 2000 people a day in the community of Let's just on campus. Well, this is the community of Lexington. Starting first are our public and private school employees in hopes of getting our schools to reopen way have vaccinated thousands of public and private school teachers just in the last week and first responders and then people of the age of 70. So to that point, um, you know what's your best prediction? For the fall of 2021, because I'm glad your classes have started in person this week. That's great news. But what's your best prediction for next semester? In the fall? What will that look like? How close to normal? Could it be? I think if we have adequate vaccine supply and are able to complete that, by late spring, we will reopen, but I think we're still gonna have to be cautious and careful. But as someone who I talked to today said, I know that when I received my vaccine yesterday, I wasn't immediately protected. But the hope that seem to arise within May was immeasurable. Alike. Absoluto, president of the University of Kentucky there in Lexington. Thank you, sir. Thank you for your time. Thank you. Stay say.

Guaranteeing Your Retirement with David Graham
Car Buying is Changing and All It Took Was a Pandemic
"2021 car buyers or again expected to be kicking the tires in person at the dealer. Rumor got a reporter Gabrielle Coppola says predictions that the business would move online have so far failed to pan out the idea that you know the pandemic changed the nature of auto retail forever. With a little bit far fetched because cars they're not commodities. Coppola says online buyer she spoke with already knew what they wanted. I think if you're not sure, then there really isn't a replacement for just going in and doing a test drive and touching and feeling, and Coppola says many dealers are working to accommodate skittish customers. Bring that, Carter, you and Lady, Test it out. The question is, is that really As

Eli Roth's History of Horror: Uncut
Interview With Roger Corman
"The word legendary is overused but in the case of roger corman. It's well deserved. Roger trained as an engineer at stanford but after four days on the job. He quit to make movies. He began producing and directing low budget. Independent films are getting the underserved teen market. What is films lacked in production value. They made up for imagination. And as roger famously declared he never lost a dime on a picture and he made a lot of them. From nineteen fifty. Five to nineteen seventy-one. He directed over fifty films. Everything from monster. Movies to biker. Pictures to his famous adaptations. The works of edgar allan poe. He focused on producing and film distribution launching the careers of some of the biggest names in hollywood including francis ford coppola jonathan demme joe dante and bringing films by autour like david cronenberg. Ingmar bergman federico fellini to america. Rogers sat down with history of harsh showrunner. Kurt sanga to talk about his remarkable career. You started off directing and producing low budget films in the nineteen fifties How did you deal with the limitations. Faced the early films. I directed i was beginning to director with short schedule and i did what i could. I absorbed films saying. I use certain camera techniques that i've seen before and invented some myself. Now i'm not certain. I really invented them just that i had never seen them in other films. They may not have been as original as i thought. Nine fifty seven directed something like nine films Including tack of the crab monsters personal favourite Fm didn't have a lot of production values. But it was packed. Full of interesting ideas. A what are your memories of that film. Well i remember specifically said didn't have very much money and i remember exactly. The crab monster cost twelve hundred dollars and it was paper my shea but it was very big and it looked pretty good but we were shooting at on the rocks at cabrillo beach and the waves were hitting up against the monster and i could see the waves. Were destroying the back of the monster. So i had to shoot as fast as i possibly could and from only certain angles not to let the audience see that. The vaster was being destroyed. Well we shotted speaking monsters. Tell me about the monster from it. Conquered the world well. The monster from saturn was based upon my studies at the university where i studied physics and i tried within the fantastic world of science fiction to be as logical as possible and i realized a giant planet like saturn would have heavy gravity so therefore a giraffe could not exist but a turtle could because it was close to the ground and would be able to handle the gravity so i had the monster built all about the height of my hand here and thus say was physically correct for the planet saturn. I was having coffee as they were setting up the first shot and beverly garland very hip. Young actress came up to the monster and she looked and she noticed that i was watching her

Tim Conway Jr.
‘The Godfather’ Making-of Movie Casts Oscar Isaac as Francis Ford Coppola, Plus Jake Gyllenhaal
"Movie about the making of the Godfather. That's got me pretty good. And finally today and offer they just couldn't refuse. Actor Oscar Isaac is taking on the role of Francis Ford Coppola. Jake Gyllenhaal will play former Paramount studio head Robert Evans in Francis and The Godfather. The movie from director Barry Levinson is about the making of couple is classic. The Godfather. It will show the battles between the two men, including the casting of Marlon Brando, who hadn't had a hit in years.

Afternoon News with Tom Glasgow and Elisa Jaffe
'Godfather: Part III' returning to theaters with new ending, edits
"Part three, is heading back to theaters with a new angle. The film's director, Francis Ford. Coppola, said in a press release that there will be many changes to the film, including a new beginning and ending the movie will also be restored and bear a new title. Mario poses The Godfather. Cota the death of Michael Carr Leone, The film is celebrating its 30th anniversary and Paramount Pictures. Is looking to release it in December time now

Filmspotting
Nolan #3 - Insomnia / Blow the Man Down / True History of the Kelly Gang
"From Chicago. This is film spotting. I'm Adam Kanner and I'm Josh. Larsen can't be easy to keep working after three days. No sleep to keep focus. You're seeing things yet. Cause little flashes tricks alight that's Robin Williams with Al Pacino in Christopher Nolan's insomnia from two thousand and two as the follow up to his mind. Bending breakout hit. Memento insomnia struck some at the time as a frustratingly straightforward thriller. This week we continue our Nolan who've review with a fresh look plus we'll have thoughts on three new releases all available online more. Can I get up Pacino ahead? Unfilled SPOTTING Welcome to film spotting Josh. The theaters are closed. But the movies keep coming at least if you know where to look this week. We've got reviews of three new releases. Include ONE. That's definitely a golden brick. Were the debut. That's the cozy noir thriller. Blow the man down a feature debut set in Downey's main and the down under set the true history of the Kelly gang from director. Justin Kurt Sel and the high school set Sela and the spades one. You caught up with Josh Ross. Going to continue our Christopher Nolan who've review with two thousand? Two's insomnia the black sheep. Maybe of the Nolan filmography. We'll see if it does deserve that reputation later in the show first though let's talk some new movies for a change including that Australian import true history of the Kelly gang mother soldier pan. You cost me you. Can that back a child? It is already traveling. Full tilt toward the men are would become. That's from the trailer for True History of the Kelly gang which is available to rent ondemand this weekend. The director is Justin Kerr. Zal who previously made twenty eleven the snow town murders than in two thousand fifteen. He did Macbeth. Which starred Michael Faster and Marion Cotillard? All three of them re teamed for two thousand sixteen assassin's creed now. Kelly gang is set in colonial Australia. Where Kelly and his group of anarchists violently rebel against their British rulers nineteen. Seventeen George MCI plays Ned Kelly. The film also stars Russell. Crowe Nicholas Holt Thomasson. Mackenzie and Charlie Hunnam so strong. Cast their Adam. You're able to get an early look at this one before. It's on demand release. Did the cast live up to. Its Promise House the film in general some of it definitely did in terms of the cast. This is actually my first. Kerr Zal film. Haven't seen any of the other three that you mentioned despite the fact that Michael Fast Bender has been in those two that you mentioned and I'm always down for Good Shakespeare Adaptation. I can't compare obviously this film the Kelly Gang to his adaptation of Macbeth specifically but there is a lot of the Scottish play in his telling of Ned Kelly. Se Davis from our beloved. The Baba Duke plays his mother in this film and she is not someone to cross. She's domineering she's vengeful. It's born from years of oppression as a woman and as an Irish woman living under English rule in Australia. You hear her in the trailer. Seda a young Ned. You're a man. Now you go out and show the world. This isn't a gentle mother's encouragement. It's an order and like Macbeth himself. As ned gets closer to his fate the matter he gets and that unhinged hallucinatory spirit is. What colonel taps into visually think about the late nineteenth century? We get in. John Hill coats the proposition as a counterpoint. This is not that at all. This is realism clashing with fantasy to the point where there are times in certain sequences and shots. Josh especially a recurring motif of a man riding a horse. That feels more like more door than the Bush way outside Melbourne. And so I've dropped Macbeth. I've dropped Lord of the rings throw in the assassination of Jesse James by the Coward. Robert Ford and the pop aesthetic of Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette. Except with punk instead and you get some sense of what watching the true history of the Kelly. Gang is really like which may sound really amazing to you and other people. Yeah I'm I'm hooked so far. Yeah it's definitely a lot and honestly it was a little bit too much for me. Wants so much to be this fiery sneer. That doesn't conform do conventional biography and it's full of these big ideas about colonialism and storytelling and masculinity and challenging gender and sexual norms. The gang the Kelly gang actually wears dresses for me. It's just all too much of a performance of assault to really embrace and actually MCI is part of it. He's a really intriguing presence and has an unsettling physicality that he definitely brings to this role. A presence was kind of all he was in nineteen seventeen. That's kind of by the design of that film and I haven't read anything about his performance but I wouldn't be shocked to learn that he went really method here that he he went so deep. And as I said there's there's an intensity to it there's a real physicality to it but he's burrowed so deep into it. So deep into Ned Kelly psyche that he never emerges for me and I can appreciate the audacity of what Kerr's doing here and his. I our first shot of young. Ned actually is him peering through a slit in his makeshift home while his mother is engaged in a sex act with a paying customer. That's a British officer played by Hunnam and then later at the end it is big showdown with authorities. He's wearing iron over his head for protection. With the sliver is is that matches that exact same point of view so crucial knows what he's doing absolutely and he does have a really game cast Russell. Crowe shows up for a little bit in this movie. And there's a lot of fun as outlaw. Who Basically pays for? He buys a young Ned as an indentured servant to teach him the trade. And I really like Nicholas Holt. In this movie. He shows up maybe about midway through as a really charming despicable and entitled English constable. Who BEFRIENDS NED in the family? Until the family decides that they're not going to subjugate themselves to him like he expects everyone to do so some juicy fund performances here and crystals definitely doing allot as I said in terms of the filmmaking sounds like there might even be a little bit of animal kingdom in there too with the mother son Dynamic and of course the Australians setting so I. I'm intrigued by those comparisons. We'll we'll have to see if the catch up with if it works a little bit better for me. The True History of the Kelly gang is available to rent on demand right. Now the new one you caught up with Josh is called Sela and the spades the directing debut of Theresa Poh. It had its debut back in January at Sundance and it came to Amazon prime. This past weekend in your letterbox review you wrote any movie that mixes the DNA of mean girls. Brick and schooldays has my attention. We're all over the place with our references in this show so far. Tell me more. Yeah this this could be a lazy short and in some ways doing this exercise. But I think it's it is really helpful in this case because those are great films with distinct styles each trying to do something that maybe you hadn't quite seen before done in that way and mixing it all together is really exciting. That also puts a ton of pressure on a relatively small film like Sela and the spades and so I don't know if it's the sort of pressure this movie can entirely bare but I like that. All of these elements are in here that the basic scenario is selling. The speights takes place at an elite boarding school and we follow the illicit dealings and also the the relationships among various student factions there called and each of these factions. They're essentially like criminal gangs. So Sela played by Lovey Simone. She runs the drug-dealing spades. And you know there are maybe some Macbeth Lady Macbeth specifically comparisons to make here in her ambition and the way she holds grip on power. She does take an underclassmen under her wing. But as we come to learn you know it may not be the most altruistic reasons that underclassmen played by Celeste O'Connor now both of those performances are really strong by Simone and O'Connor There are some good supporting turns to. I could see this being one of those smaller. First films where two or three of the actors in them and this happened with mean girls as well right pop up in later films and you really see what what great talents. They have their There's also the whole criminal element calls on brick of course that this is going on among high schoolers beneath the adults is. It's kind of amazing. How little the adults have to play in in this world And then there are some really striking flourishes by PLO as director. And here's where some of the the school days Spike Lee school days comparisons come in because Sela is also the head of the spirit squad for the school and they have a direct address to the camera routine just about what. It's like to be a seventeen year old

BBC World Service
East Africa locusts threaten food security across subregion
"As billions of desert locust swarm around East Africa today the U. N. is warning that Ethiopia south Sudan Somalia and Kenya stand to face serious food insecurity locusts can eat their own body weight in a day but they don't hunt the balance and then next stop can be hard to predict as to in which found when he was sent to film the creatures in action when does a swarm of locusts become a plague my girlfriend offices I prepared my overnight bag I wasn't sure what point the little insects technically go biblical but I knew we weren't quite there yet what we were seeing was an upsurge over from the pictures that were emerging desperate farmers trying to defend that crops Somali soldiers shooting to scare them off I thought they'd need a miracle to save that harvests the question of scale was just one of many as we prepare to film the insects munching their way across East Africa that will literally billions of them so I was sure it would be easy to catch them on camera there were reports of swarms coming in from the east but that's also where the jihadist group al Shabab operates so we headed north instead the plan was to join helicopter surveillance team we imagine that we champion flights will swarm first thing in the morning while they were still asleep and grab some lovely pictures in the golden lights of the rising sun simple really except that it wasn't you see the locus were on the March because of the torrential rains that have drenched this continent for months and right on cue the heavens opened the helicopter was grounded so we carried on the A. two towards the town of Manali writes on Kenya's border with Ethiopia that would be put in touch with the local agriculture and livestock offices Francis and Coppola they welcomed us to their sponsors office phone calls resting outside Francis the more experienced of the two the motive for nearly three decades he told me he'd never seen anything like this the last invasion on this scale happened more than seventy years ago but despite not for now at least they seem to be coping with the crisis they located a couple of swarms they will be reaching us in a few hours while we waited they showed us the damage the little cross office can do we drove to a farm just outside of town the same rains that have brought the swarms had made the roads nearly impossible an old man holding a flimsy metal sheets stood in the gateway fashion from phone bushes he banged it with a wooden stick as he showed us around his ravaged plots the locust it struck the day before countless millions of them he had tried to protect his field with the dean from the metal sheet but it was no use they'd striptease beans and maize crop at his weather beaten face was a mixture of sorrow and resignation we were getting powerful testimony but we still haven't actually seen any locusts it turns out they are pretty hard to film they move fast really fast unknowingly they also ignore both the roads and borders the swarms we've been promised a turn north into Ethiopia so we headed instead to a watering hole when herds of camels were sheltering from the mid day sun hit the livestock officer Francis explained it's not just hunger that locals can Coles as neighboring counties lose their grazing lands to the insects that hurt his move into new territory conflict inevitably follows then after a few more hours of driving around we got a call from our diets over there they yelled all I could make out was a storm cloud on the horizon or was it smoke as I was squinting cameraman was rushing to set up a man possessed he'd seen what I'd missed millions hundreds of millions of the tiny creatures forming a cloud kilometers long and coming towards us but then the wind changed direction and so did the locusts we jumped into a constant chase the swarm down bumpy roads well when we got there they turned again back towards the very spot we just left by the time we returned they will already passing by we raced into the bushes trying to catch either the insects or the local boys who were chasing them off both were faster than us after a sweaty and frustrating half hour we got a few shots but lots of phones and all legs and a mildly sprained ankle the next day we decided the only way forward was to copy the insects and try and take to the air again as we headed back south the weather cleared the helicopters were flying this time luck was on our site the chopper landed in the middle of a huge sleeping swarm finally the pictures were incredible I know what was done but the Lucas are still in the March they have laid billions of eggs on that way which will be hatching the answer to my girlfriend's question of when they become a plague could soon be a parent for all of us to

BBC Newshour
Turkish court acquits nine civil society figures of charges in protest trial, including Turkish philanthropist
"According to Nike has acquitted of the businessman and rights activist Osman Coppola and several others in the trauma over anti government protests in guess he park in Istanbul in twenty thirteen the judge said there was insufficient evidence more now from canceling Monty the acquittal of all defendants in the guy's a trial came as a surprise there was applause in the courtroom with some crying in disbelief as the ruling was announced a leading civil society activists Osman Coppola spent more than two years in custody he was alleged to have played a role in the civil unrest which initially began to oppose the development plan for is stumbles Gezi park the protests followed the violent eviction of a sitting at the park subsequently supporting protests took place across Turkey over a wide range of concerns including freedom of the press and the government's encroachment on Turkey's secularism

TechStuff
FTC Amps Up Focus on COPPA and Content Creators
"But another controversy. That's also playing Allen. Youtube is one. That's going to roll into twenty twenty and beyond around and it all has to do with a law from the nineteen nineties intended to protect children and that law is a US law. It's called Children's online privacy Z.. Protection Act OR COPPOLA'S C. O. P. P. A.. It was again. I established as long in one thousand nine hundred ninety eight and in two thousand nineteen the Federal Trade Commission can also known as the FTC brought a suit against Youtube and alleged that youtube had been illegally collecting the personal information of children without their parents. Consent the kids were watching videos on Youtube. That what they were watching was being tracked by Youtube and that this was creating a digital title fingerprint. That advertisers were using to target advertising towards those children and the children being too young to consent to this meant that the whole practice under COPPA was illegal and specifically that the company was using this quote in the form of persistent identifiers that are used used to track users across the Internet into quote so in other words. This'll be the sort of thing. Where if you were watching a bunch of videos about elephants and then you happen to navigate over to say Amazon you might see a bunch of suggestions that relate in some way to elephants and the concern was that this was going to be targeting kids and there was no way for kids to give legal consent to allow that to happen and that data has value in it and children's privacy scene security also has value to them so that was the problem? Well Youtube would settle this lawsuit out of court. They paid one hundred seventy million dollars in fines which really sounds like a lot but for Youtube. It's nothing and if that's where it all ended we would just wrap up the story and beyond with it but in in addition to the fine the company had to agree to create a system that is compliant with COPPA so this would mean that any creator who is making child directed content meaning content meant to be viewed by children would be affected by this. They would have to be COPPA compliant. They would have to make. I'm sure that they were running channel. That was not gathering information about the The children watching it that they were not building in targeted advertising That they had to self identify as being a Creator who's creating child directed content. You had to actually go into your low profile and click and say whether or not you're channel was meant for kids or not but this raises questions like what exactly is child directed and it has a lot of creators nervous right now because because there are creators who do for example in boxing videos and some of them are clearly meant for kids some of them are hosted by kids and clearly meant for kids but there others where it may not be kids it may be for people who really are into collecting toys that are from their favorite. You know franchises for example. So toyin boxing would likely be in the spotlight. Creators who use video games are likewise concerned. there are people who are using video games to tell stories. There are people use. Let's plays or play throughs. But they're not necessarily meant for kids. There's also people who are working in animation and that animation may not be meant for kids but the general perception is that cartoons are for children and they're concerned that they will be interpreted as being child directed when they don't intend to be and that they'll be affected by this. There's a lot of fear that this is going to have an effect on monetization so that people might not be able to get paid for what they're making which means they'll probably start making it. I mean you gotTa make your living They may move on to a different platform than youtube. Or they may just stop entirely Every single violation of COPPA can be fined up to a maximum of forty two thousand five hundred thirty dollars. Now keep in mind some of these channels have hundreds or thousands of videos up online so if they were identified as being child directed and that their material wasn't COPPA compliant and they could get that maximum fine for every single video. That seem to be That was on their channel so the cost could be staggering. So it's possible. ospel will see entire channels. Go dark with past videos hidden away or deleted. All Ella fear that mislabeling situation could result ZOLT and massive fines. And there's still a lot of uncertainty around this issue and we're not entirely sure how it's all going to play

BSP: Believer Skeptic Podcast
Aaahh!!! Classic Monsters
"We thought we would talk. Hello Classic movie monsters or I guess. A derivative thereof You know all the films like Frankenstein Dracula creature the Black Lagoon and salon boy. Oh boy so yeah so we are. Actually we each picked one classic creature. We're going to be sharing history in details about that creature in the story about the story about them so should we. Should we drinks. Yeah okay so I'm going to actually hand the mic over to Tracy and you because I she has forty drinks that she's going to be sure they're all so I'm focusing on vampires and at total wine there was actually quite a bit to choose from uh-huh depending on how elaborate you WanNa get with the topic. There was even like walking dead wine assume that seemed like sheeting. That seemed like that would be better for his. Obviously yeah it's because it's actually from the TV exactly. So I can't have rick on the cover and be thinking of Bram Stoker works for me with that said that I brought three drinks because being hungover and being two o'clock in me not having lunch it just seems weird like crack. Open a bottle of wine right now but I do have Francis Coppola diamond red plans talk a little bit about Coppola going on. Because you can't really talk about Dracula directly without talking about Coppola and then I also because I don't like I said if I'm going to open that I also brought four. They use my teeth to pull the bag out. I have a lovely temper neo. Oh I love to drag on. And we'll talk a little bit about what dragons dragons relates reverse dragged him the vampire at least in literature but like I said that's a bit heavy so honestly what I think I'm going to start with. Breath is a nice blood. Orange Margarita and S- To serve it in as they said I just live seven houses down I brought on my own Hamilton Sippy Cup when I say Hola pouring that that's awesome chewing that All amazing choices see. That doesn't take a random rationalization cody did you notice that mixture. You have doesn't actually have to kill it in it. Oh I I forgot I also brought my own patrol. Never leave home without it. So the monster I chose today is Where wolves so what? I'm drinking today. Is a Lithuanian heritage. Beer called where wolf it's literally called Werewolf and it has a quite a high alcohol content. So that's so funny because just right before for the show Tracy and I were talking about how we like picking drinks. That aren't just the name. They require narrative. Chris here's where we'll there's nothing with that sound so bitchy all right so Chris is still looking to see what kind of beer is is it. Strong connect have a taste. Today makes one of us. Oh that is delicious is really good. That's dangerous Oh my God. I'm just GonNa Covet this break a command. It's a Belgian dark El okay. I'M GONNA try that too. Yeah so for my drink. I'm actually Old England. I'm actually doing Frankenstein. And so and that was that was what I was GONNA do. I was I went into English. Oh I hear terrible and like you know what. I just can't drink this after my night. I'm going to get something good. Mary Shelley found something actually liked Mary. Shelley well well I whenever you look at all these old stories. I what I think of it is. They all kind of intertwined sometimes in ways and they're just kind of these wild crazy stories stories. So I've found a blackberry merlot called twisted Vine Ohio. Yeah good expected to get a couple. I rolls maybe like really all right so with that I will get into history I didn't want to do anything like Hollywood movie. Poor history because that would have been very long and excessive in instead I thought I would give a weird overview on the history of monsters the word monster itself derives from the Latin word monstrum meaning to demonstrate or monarch meaning to warn There's also the Latin word monstrum which Just means abnormal or supernatural but can also mean wonder or miracle generally speaking monsters are physical whether real or imagined representation of those things society as Dean leaned unknown or unnatural and most mostly those things that we fear and cannot explain physically. Speaking a monster may have some unusual characteristics. In fact one time things such as two-headed cavs or babies born with abnormalities were considered monsters so basically anything that was outside of what society claimed as quote. Normal aw was seen as monstrous of course as we know in addition to the physical characteristics. Munster's we'll do some terrible things or act out on the way beyond the standing of society being set that any one of us in this room could be considered a monster me with my blue hair and you both being super tall me with my gay so monsters there's all of you There are a ton of tons of monsters that go back in history. There were monsters that were found in cave paintings represented by animal human hybrids which unlikely cliches in real life hence monsters or at least at the conclusion that historians drew in Greek and Roman mythology monsters were perceived as a form of displeasure from the gods examples being cyclops Gorgon. Medusa Centaurs Sirens and so on. It seems that in religion like Judaism Christianity and Islam. They avoided talking about monsters aside from stories related to Satan and the power of evil in Hinduism monsters. A lot more prevalent. you see gods depicted with extra limbs or as an animal human hybrid and in native American culture. You have creatures such as the Wendy Go. Skin walkers and even sasquatch after the renaissance period with science becoming a new a fairly new thing. It really tried to attempt to explain what exactly monsters were to no avail in the gothic period we were graced. With two of the most infamous monsters Frankenstein and Dracula as well as some of the creepiest fairy tales by the brothers Grimm in psychology. Carl Jung tried to explain monsters as any central part of development might in that they were seen as the quote otherness within ourselves. I kind of discussed with this with you. Cody Day in that how I was talking how we need to balance the light with dark so I think that's the same thing it's arguing and our gang. We all have a fascination with monsters. This podcast is an example. Cody are armchair. Chair crypto zoologists. That even if these creatures don't exist it's that innate curiosity of the possibility of their existence as society changes the faces of monsters changing. We'll continue you to do so when before we used to be freed of things like trolls and elves. Today's where we fear things such as candyman or to say that once monsters collection of our society and then all the terrible things in it as well as an escape from those terrible things monsters are ever evolving and as long as we have fears and terrible things going on in our world they will. Oh not go away in my opinion. That's escapism at its best interest inc.. I have like a believer skeptic question but I guess I wanNA save it maybe. For debunk okay. But I'm afraid that I'm going to. I'm going to forget it. I'm going to ask now for both of Y'all are there any monsters or creatures that either of you actually believe in. Yes yes. That's probably what got me. Hooked on your podcast in the first place you were immediately talking about things that I have seen with my own eyes so I can only to Chris as a believer in many of the things. He's seen. Yeah I'm sitting there at work. Listen to going. Oh my God I saw that too says yes shadow people. I can't talk about that right now. Is Definitely I've had encounters encounters with shadow people. But as far as what we're talking about today. The closest is a boyfriend who thought he was a vampire. Oh Shit are you talking about that in your story. No I wasn't going to because it's complicated and messy advocates network. Deep Ball Game L.. Dated someone who thought he was a vampire sidelining. I think he was just really sexually confused. Needed to explore some things and that arena. He had seen the horror many

WIBC Programming
Francis Ford Coppola Backs Scorsese’s Marvel Superhero Movies Analysis, Calls The Films “Despicable”
"This comes as a as an extraordinary surprise in Martin Scorsese's attack on Marvel movies has gotten some Oscar winning back up at a press conference in France Francis Ford Coppola said he agreed with Scorsese the popular superhero films are not cinema calling them the same movie over and over again and

The Adam Carolla Show
Pilots’ Strike Prompts British Airways to Cancel 1,700 Flights
"British Airways has cancelled nearly one hundred hundred percent of its flights for September ninth and tenth amid a dispute with a British Airlines Pilots Association. That's be bapu which scheduled a strike for early this week. announced on August twenty third that its pilots would be striking in September following a pay dispute with the airline which they claimed would not accept any of a number number of solutions that would have avoided this strike. What isn't gonNA average pilot makes who's flying across cross the Atlanta against completely guessing you think to fifty I that sounds somewhere? I don't know Yeah Bach Seventy Five. I was GONNA Guess West because I've heard I have a a friend not that level but like he he says the the the wages have come down salaries so I'll go less but hopefully we'll well the pilot's Union they represent over ten thousand UK pilots across more than twenty companies had accused the airline of profiting at the cost of pilots sacrifice edge sacrifices services that include pay cuts and reduced leave and closing the final salary pension scheme quote unquote meanwhile the cost of these cancelled services is about fifty million per day yeah. It's Kinda tough if you need pilots and they go on strike like you can if you work at tuna canning factory or something then you working out next man then but yet the seven seven seven that's seven eight seven hundred in fact there was a post that said if your flight is cancelled. Please stay home like don't bother coming to not airport Heathrow. It's it's GonNa be a madhouse

The 3:59
Is 5G safe? (The 3:59, Ep. 575)
"The. Welcome to the three fifty nine or about your chain actor, five Jeep promises to radically change your lives, giving us a lightning fast connection potentially powering everything around us. But there's always been a lingering concern about five and cellular signals general. It's really the concern about whether or not, this is actually dangerous after all uses higher frequency radio airwaves five particular will require a lot more cell towers around you that's making people really nervous. So we had our own Maggie ridden breakdown this issue. And well, it's complicated. Technically, all this radiation, really any heat that we give off considered radiation, but cell signals including five G don't fall into that spectrum of harmful radiation, that would actually breakdown, your yourself something like something you'd find with an x Ray or a nuclear power plant, so no studies found a direct link between cell phones and cancer or fertility or any other kind of health issues. But there's a big but is that the World Health Organization sort of left open the? Ability that are f- signals are causing genyk critics say that. They're just haven't been enough adequate studies to prove that science. You need a lot of studies, you need to have different variables taken out of the equation. You can't be like okay, all we're going to do you're going to be subject to five waves, as opposed to WI fi, microwaves or any of those other items or even other people who are radiating heat. So there's lots of different factors on this. So it's just flat out scientists take a lot of time to figure this out, but at times, figured out, sixty will be here. Right. I think that's the big problem. I think this is an issue had with cell cell phone service generals. We don't have five note tests on by the time we do have the network to get those adequate tests were already years into five G exposure, and everyone sort of moved on. Right. And so, yeah, there really isn't sorry, say there isn't a clear. Answer is whether or not it's dangerous. We get we only know that it might be. Yeah. Maybe not I'm leaning towards probably as dangerous as four G bribing, assuming four. Gee is dangerous. That's the thing right there. No say's have really conclusively linked four G to anything. And so the World Health Organization has left open calls it a potentially carcinogenic cereal. But they also say coffee and pickled vegetables and also heard burnt ends can cause. Yeah. All kinds of different things that can be related to cancer or at least be connected to a next up YouTube may face fines from investigation by the Federal Trade Commission, according to the Washington Post YouTube is already reconsidering changing big Elms of service, including the algorithm that recommends what you watch next part of this bigger bait scrutiny over the, you know how it manages content, whether what the balance is between freedom of speech versus potentially harmful content, and this particular case is talking about the child the Coppola where it comes to collect data from children under thirteen without parental consent FTC had an issue with tick tock tick tock that musically. And they actually settled for a s- fine of five point seven million dollars, which at the time was the largest finally settled, if the FTC is looking into YouTube, and they have to figure out kind of some kind of settlement of Suming, this kind of violation of this law, this kind of settlement might be very, very, very, very large. Yes. If, if I boy, seven's a drop in the bucket for for you to take talks a small. Company, probably a bigger blow for them. But yeah, you can imagine this fine would be a lot more significant. Last-minute Mitee, study out says that it can use to figure out how pizzas made is keep breakdown, how this would work. Yes. So this, this. It's using neural networks and what it does taking this giant collection of images of pizzas from Instagram. What this tool can do it can deconstruct piece from layer to layer, two layer two layers can figure out the topping the cheese, the sauce and the way it was the cross was cooked. So that seems a little bit nuts. And I was looking at see what other applications are in the study, they mentioned this could be good for salads, hamburgers sandwiches, but other applications outside of food would be digital fashion shopping assistance shirt, under that blazer. What's at teacher weren't under that shirt scary? But also useful, potentially essentially, I've of casino Chang actor. Thanks.

Joe Walsh
What are conservatives saying about Joe Biden's new video?
"So I looked at what Ed Morrissey had written about Russia. Hangover muller. Hangover said, hey, let's talk about that. But now knowing Ed knowing hot air knowing what he's doing. I just offer the curve ball of front and safe. Hi, welcome. It first of all have you caught the Joe Biden video this morning. I've got some of it. I just I I was kind of ripping through it right before I came on the air with we would probably come out interesting. Probably one of the more effective campaign videos that I've seen so far the ones that I've seen from other democratic candidates were sort of all over the place. At least one thing Trump. I, you know, and I'm just so disappointed, and I'm probably naive to be. I mean, I've I've tried to be a head of the curve on a lot of things and not be surprised by so many things. But I thought we would see Joe come in at his likable best with with some things to say about Trump, and we need to sort of point things in a different direction. And I've got a different view of immigration and a different view in the environment. And I just welcomed the opportunity to become your nominee, blah, blah, blah. I did not expect Trump is Hitler America is Germany in the nineteen thirties under him and only I can save you. And my shallow analysis is to be disappointed. I hate this. I wanted better. But I think you might be honest you called effective. And it probably is for exactly the audience that he's pitching to today's democrat party. Remember what he's probably got the centrist ready enhanced. Right. That's the analysis. That's what he's got to be looking at is that there isn't a lot of competition for the traditional Joe Biden democratic voters there. Everybody's pushing to the progressive so biting I think thinking I got those people just by jumping into the race. What I've got to do is be able to compete for the progressive activists against Kemba Harris, you know? Elizabeth Warren along with a lot of other zero percenters in yield. And so so that's tailoring. The message to to hit those progressive activists to to to take those voters away from that into claims sort of a consensus among all the sides of the Democratic Party. So I see the strategy there. I'm with you on that. I kind of thought that he'd be killer uncle Joe coming out of the gate to. But it doesn't surprise me that that he's seeing as the has the activist blood of the party at the moment. And that's what he's going for. Because the the danger is that by being the likable of jeweler guy that he gets tagged as being weak gets tagged as being unfit for the fight. And he's gotta show that he's willing to throw the sharp elbows. I don't know if it so much that or if it's just the fact that he's got to overcome the fact that. He's an old white guy. I think that's really the big issue. Right now is politics Democratic Party. And he's got to find a way to cut through that. And the one way to do that is to go after Trump. Listen, heavy mentioned identity politics on wanna get to your wonderful piece at the week dot com called the Muller war rages on I've got you and the gift of a little bit of time since identity politics does want so much of the democrat party a lot. A lot of women are having a lot of impact Coppola Harris has the the the double dip of women of color, which is such a shameful thing. Because she is is a smart and talented Makamba person. And yet in today's Democratic Party. It's all about the kind of of identity stuff that you mentioned. But here sitting here in Texas. I'm watching beta meltdown, but the more at least as interesting story is how unaccomplished Hispanic man like on Castro has crickets and tumbleweeds. Have you noticed? He is he conspicuous by his absence in any kind of discussion of. Early buzz. I actually a little surprised about that too. Because this is a name that's been popping up for quite a while. I mean, the Castro both Castro brothers have been talked about for at least three or four years maybe longer than that about being the the the index comers in the Democratic Party. And I'm wondering if. I'm wondering if it's just an issue of. Platform. I mean camera Harris comes from California, California's very blue state. It's very large state very important state in in the democratic primaries now because it comes early in the primaries it didn't use to come early in the primaries. I'm wondering if that if it is media situation when you're in the Senate, it's easier to get media attention to when you're in the house, or when you're mayor of a city in Texas. So the Castro brothers haven't really been. Media dominant, right? See them around the media. Has something to do with it. And then again, you get Kirstin Jill, right? Who also comes from it, very important democratic state, very blue state, highly popular state and she's zero percent to. So it's see I think that's the very good analysis. Right. Let's go to what I actually wanted you on the show for but in today's fast moving world. Let's not part company before we talked about your piece, headlined, the Muller war rages on what is your basic feces there on how Democrats are living in post Muller, America. I think that they can't let it go. And I think that they're going to find the more that they can't let go the more. They're gonna disconnect from voters on this. But clearly what they wanna do is they want to reconstitute the mullahs report under their own steam. And and so they're going to try to do what you especially when it comes to obstruction of Justice. I think that they've given up on the Russia collusion thing. Adam Schiff aside? I think that kind of given up on the Russia collusion. Hardly anything about that really since bars report. But certainly since the mullahs report came out, and so I think it's going to focus on instruction as an impeachable offense. And what they wanna do is. They wanna drag all the different witnesses that Muller talked to during the investigation and Adam testify before congress, so they can try their own conclusions rather than Muller's conclusions are William bars conclusions. I I don't think the administration's gonna sit for that second work. And Secondly, I don't think people really care as much as Democrats things they do about. This is something that I think most people felt the Miller report settled and without the without an underlying crime of Russian collusion that really concerned about whether or not Donald Trump head temper tantrums over this looks something else and how it will play than the next chapter of President Trump's combativeness well seem to be to resist every subpoena that comes his way in order to pile on impost Muller, America. Everybody knows my dog knows that these are punitive subpoenas because they can't let it goes you've described. But there's something about resisting subpoenas that have. It's it's it's dicey. It's risky has that gonna play. You're right about this. And in fact, I think is Jonathan swan Mike Allen, it actually has a pretty decent piece about this today is that you can the White House can simply stall this thing forever by refusing cooperate with subpoenas and congress can issue citations all day. But the Justice department isn't going to force that, and if you wanna get example of just look at Eric Holder with fast and furious. They stonewalled it over executive privilege. The Obama technically wasn't even involved in this discussions, and they didn't settle it until Donald Trump came into office where they Eric Holder. Finally turned over some of the documents that they've been looking for so, yeah, you can still this thing forever. And the question of whether does your political damage, it it certainly didn't with Obama Obama got reelected, even though Eric Holder was found in contempt over operation fast and furious, and he was very popular throughout his presidency. Even though he was stolen that investigation. And in this case. Factor for both sides is that they waived executive privilege for more. So Muller is interviewing all these people. Executive privilege now Democrats are arguing look that the precedent. That means that you that. It's it's waved forever. And that's a legal question. It's certainly going to be. Have to be nailed down. However, the Trump administration can turn around and say, look, we cooperated with the independent counsel cooperated with the guy that we didn't like, and we all these people already talked to investigators, and they have a report a full report that tells them exactly what they found reductions part of the report, and I think that's Trump administration. Can't successfully argue that they cooperated so much during the special counsel investigation that it is illegitimate attempt at congress to try to reconstitute that into a kangaroo court, and they're simply not going to cooperate with necessarily gonna hurt

Mark Levin
Bill Murray, Oscar And Apple discussed on Mark Levin
"TJ teeny Sofia Coppola Bill Murray will reunite sixteen years after the Oscar winning lost in translation in the splash hits feature film yet announced by apple a twenty four says Coppola's on the rocks will be the indie studios first project under its joint deal with apple it stars Rashida Jones as a young mother who reconnects with her larger than life father to

John and Ken
Ken Chiampou, Trump and John Kobylt discussed on John and Ken
"Radio station john and ken show john kobylt and ken chiampou kfi am six forty yes everybody all right coming up after three o'clock we'll check in on trump's little london visit i actually listened to most of that news conference this morning with theresa may just happened to tune in i was like oh this ought to be cool and it's like two people with completely different world views on a lot of things just trying to act like they're buddies i think well it's mostly trump trying to act like he just loves her thinks she's the greatest she doesn't throw a lot of love back but she doesn't stand there and exactly complain about them anyway we'll talk about all this is especially on immigration the story that's big of course in this country right now we'll talk about all this in place of audio on the after the news at three o'clock on the john and ken show i have never heard of and i have to work on pronouncing his name a hockey theater coppola's taki apparently says he's been a columnist john for over forty years forty one years as a spectator columnist is this an entertainment website i don't know i guess he's well known in his world i've seen his name but i don't know anything about him i don't either taki he goes by his first name t a k i at first i didn't know if it's a man or a woman because i was reading the column and then i realized because i googled it is an eight year old greek guy he's eighty he will be se's eighty yes that's why he's been a columnist for over forty one years for spectator i send the reason he's in the news is that he ran a column this morning with an interview with harvey weinstein headline breaks the silence at least that's the way the rest of the media was reporting it and i can tell you now just a couple of hours ago he's retracted the column which again he now says in his forty one years he's never done before well the column is based on a very it's a very short story well he claims it wasn't really an interview it was just a social visit well yeah but i mean there was an exchange and he wrote down the exchange he had with hard director a quotes you can't you can't re how can you retract something that actually happened reported on the conversation they had yes but he's trying to act like as a professional journalist that wasn't the exact setting for an interview and maybe harvey didn't even realize it was an interview and i should not have quoted him in a column because it wasn't really an internal looks like somebody told the truth yes yes people tell the truth the reason this is making news is it harvey weinstein is quoted as saying the following i offered acting jobs in exchange for sex so does everyone they still do he also added he did not force himself on a single woman in fact here's the whole quote which is kinda funny he looked at taki you were born rich and privileged and you were handsome i was born poor ugly jewish defied all my life to get somewhere you got lots of girls no girl looked at me until i made it big in hollywood yes i did offer them acting jobs in exchange for sex but so did and still does everyone but i never ever forced myself on a single woman now he says it took place in his new york office and weinstein's lawyer ben brockman was also there well i mean shortly after the story was published brooklyn's out saying weinstein has been misquoted should and called on hockey to issue a retraction she's now done social call he's not poor gleaned jewish and said i was pressing for the conversation it was not an interview social meeting between old friends harvey kentucky did not discuss the case noone allow him to they talked about old hollywood in contrast to european culture and i think talkie sees harvey in that older light mr weinstein never said anything about trading movie roles for sexual favors you'll have my word that harvey did not say that of course he did and and it's the truth and everybody has known that for for decades but only actresses tell that story so everybody knows it goes on all the time i don't understand what what are we playing pretend about here i you're right trading sex for a movie role is not illegal besides icing yourself is a legal i.