35 Burst results for "Cornelius"

Government says dogs can dine al fresco but not everyone is on board

AP News Radio

01:12 min | Last week

Government says dogs can dine al fresco but not everyone is on board

"Just in time for the summer dining season, the government has given its blessing to restaurants that want to allow pet dogs in their outdoor spaces, but not everyone's on board. The Food and Drug Administration's updated food code issued late last year, says restaurants can have dogs in outdoor areas, as long as they have approval from a local regulator, Megan Cornelius co owner of San Francisco zasi has jumped on the trend just as the summer's about to kick off. All the dogs are welcome here. We do a Monday night, dog night, specifically on the patio. So all the dogs can kind of commute together. Cornelius adds, it's their night out in the city, and you get $10 off a bottle of wine when you bring your dog, dog owner ilana minkoff is overjoyed by the move. I think that's fantastic. And what that will allow is for people like me who have dogs and love to travel, to go to other states and sit outside and eat. Which means I can now bring my dog when I travel, which is amazing. But even though nearly half of states already allow canine dining outdoors, the issues far from settled, with many diners and restaurants pushing back against the increasing presence of pooches. I'm Charles De Ledesma

10 Charles De Ledesm Cornelius Megan Cornelius Monday San Francisco The Food And Drug Administrati Ilana Minkoff Late Last Year Nearly Half Night Summer The Summer
Missy, Willie and George Michael among Rock Hall inductees

AP News Radio

00:37 sec | 3 weeks ago

Missy, Willie and George Michael among Rock Hall inductees

"The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has announced its new class of inductees for 2023. I'm marches are a letter with the latest. Missy Elliott has become the first female hip hop artist to be inducted into The Rock hall. This year's inductees in the performer category also include Kate Bush, Cheryl crow, George Michael Willie Nelson, Rage Against the Machine and the spinners. Link ray and DJ Kool herc will get the musical influence award. The musical excellence award will be given to Shaka Khan, Al Cooper and Bernie Taupin. Don Cornelius will be honored as a nonperformer for creating the TV show soul train. The inductions will be November 3rd in New York

Kate Bush Don Cornelius Bernie Taupin Cheryl Crow Missy Elliott New York Al Cooper November 3Rd Shaka Khan 2023 The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame George Michael Willie Nelson Dj Kool This Year First Female RAY Rage Against The Machine Rock Hall Spinners Link
"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

Animation Addicts Podcast

02:46 min | 6 months ago

"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

"Right, so this should be going and testing testing. I am going to hello. I mean, it looks like we're good. It does look. It looks so as though we are good. Okay. Well. Okay, well, we can just get started. Okay. Let's make some magic. All right, full. Oh no. Good thing I cut that right now. Yeah. Like right as it happened. Yeah. To 32 gigs on it. How you full? Annoying when it does that. Okay, we're sitting here. Stop it. I'm watching. I know you're fixing your spot, but I just don't like a car backing towards me. Yeah, in any way shape or form. When I made it, I see you. Flash those lights. Yeah, I just had a whole other tangent coming to my mind. I'm going to pass over it though. We are the rotoscopers. No delay. Glorious. But the thing is with these, it's actually putting out right on the same thing. So it's like we have to do this right. There's no way they go in and edit this one. Okay, so I think it's I think our title should be I view con Cornelius or just Yukon curb. Okay. You called Cornelius. I would expect peppermint. I need to watch it. It's a good one. He's great. It's coming up on Christmas time. I need to watch that again. Yes, let's add that one to the list. We need to do the ranking of the Disney CEOs like sooner rather than later. Yes, yes. So I think you've been listening to the animation addicts podcast. If you enjoyed this episode, don't forget to subscribe and be sure to leave us a 5 star review, we're available on Apple podcasts, Spotify, and wherever you listen to podcasts. And if you want to help spread the word, be sure to share the podcast with your Friends on social media. Just don't forget to tag us at rotoscopers on Instagram and use the hashtag animation addicts. For all the links and full show notes for this episode, go to rotoscopers dot com slash podcast. Now if you still can't get enough for your animation fix, be sure to subscribe to us on YouTube and visit rotoscopers dot com for more animation news reviews and interviews.

Cornelius Disney Apple YouTube
"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

Animation Addicts Podcast

08:08 min | 6 months ago

"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

"Was just too on the nose for me. Where I just had a hard time like, okay, you know, you're going to force feed us this message. Yeah. I can learn for myself if I like trees. It's a quote Chelsea way back in the way back in episode 5. We have three or 5. It's a classic. It is, yes, going all the way back. But also, it's like Disney just in the last ten years has just done really well at being a mass producer of giant frying pans. They want to hit you over the head with a message with. So yeah, there we go. Yet another one. Yet another frying pan for your tool belts. So it was a frying pan at the beginning and the food looked delectable. I really liked that they were using butter. I'm sure it was vegan butter, but I'm very much a fan of animal fats because they're very good for your body. Posed to vegetable oils, which are industrial waste that is very highly inflammatory. So he was using butter and then he put that bread on the pan. It was cooking. And then you had the egg, I was like, I like this. So I was a fan. I want to go make some of that right now. The avocado is like, oh, good, healthy fats. Yes. Yes. Yes. So, Chelsea, what would you rate it? This is what a fun discussion. Yeah. Being in person, I feel different about it. A totally different vibe. Yeah, I like it. We've discussed this before many times of every time we do something interesting. We're like, wow, this is so much better. This is so much better and then we're like, oh, logistics. In fact, life. Yeah. Here we go. Okay, so what would you rate this film? I mean, two and a half stars really, it's not something I feel like I'm gonna go back to, it's not something that I feel like I really got any good vibes per se out of it. It was more just like, I just kept seeing the message. And maybe that's just me and I'm just like, oh, hi. Hypersensitive. It might just be me. And so I'm just like, ugh, I don't wanna the message. And so you just see it all over, and I just, I have a hard time with it. And so that's really one of my main reasons why I felt like they did a good enough job of trying to create a cohesive story as far as character driven. And I appreciated the character driven aspects of it and trying to create the family dynamics and I can get behind that. But just my overall sitting vibe of like, what would I give this? I give it a meh. So two and a half. All right. I've said many times on this podcast. One word that describes this movie is disjointed from the character designs where it feels like from where in Sony land hotel Transylvania and then Raya, like they didn't even combine and had a baby. They just like came together and they're two separate Kingdom Hearts, you know? Yes, exactly. They're all together. You know, it all makes sense at the end, but there's some movies where that totally works. But the problem was I didn't like being confused at what I was watching instead of being immersed into the story. You know, there's some movies where oh, wow, like the big, you know, 6th sense thing at the end. It's like, oh, that all makes sense. You know, they were all dead. He's no he said. The whole time. You know, and like watching the movie, you're not weirded out or just confused. And I felt I was confused. I didn't, the strange world itself is like the low point of the movie for me. Just it was weird. And then we have like the farmer aspect and the adventurer explorer aspect and the energy source. And the things alive is in its turtle. And it didn't feel like a Disney movie at all. Having watched this and you're looking back. Yeah, it's like, this was an animated movie for sure. If you would have said, okay, you watch the trailer or even watch the movie what studio is this? I would never have told you Disney. You know, so take it early for what it is, but I won't be taking my family to see this, just simply because I think it's too over their heads. It's going to be just the kids are they are little. Where's frozen? They need they need ice. They need powers. They need Olaf. I really understand the psychic character, you know? Yeah. I mean, we had our blob splat, but it's a little different. Excuse me, our magic carpet. So why don't we always do this? Always do the same thing, but I was thinking three, two and a half, and that's really where I'm feeling. Right now is that it's a two and a half film, which I don't think I've ever given a Disney film with two and a half, maybe black cauldron. I think we give that one like one. Okay, good. Don hall, I think he was around back then too. And maybe the animation department, but I think that was there. Oh yeah, yeah. So I don't know, I feel bad. I didn't have a good time. There were moments, for sure. But at the end, looking back, I'm like, okay, yeah, I saw that and I'm good. And I wouldn't recommend it. I know people are gonna see it for sure. Yeah, you know, people are, you know, Thanksgiving. And there's gonna be a family. There's gonna be a lot of people who really love it. Yeah, for sure. And so we also are, you know, way looking into things as far as the message and this. And hypocritical, not necessarily in a bad way, but that's just like what you do on a podcast. So about movies, but yeah, it'll be interesting to see how this does. Uh huh. You know, the last, it's interesting. We had Raya, which kind of, which basically was a flop, in my opinion, as far as box office, but the reason why box office, but also just as far as a movie goes, it just didn't people don't like it. And then I had in kanto which just was out of this world crazy. You know, so I'm trying to look back, you know, what made in canto different obviously live Manuel Miranda and his songs, the song is so catchy and just had so much to do with it. There were a couple points in time where I felt like this really could have used songs. We got one song at the beginning. At the beginning, but there should have been an I want song where you know comes out. You know where they have this mobile where they come together and they kind of did. Yeah, so they're moments where they could have made this a musical thing. And I think that it might have helped in some ways. Yeah, and I know that they were wanting to do it that way. You know, you think of think hanto and its mirabel story. You know, there's the family all around them. Whose story do you think this was? Searchers. Yeah. But at the same time, they also wanted it to be Ethan. Yeah. And I guess that works. Yeah. We have all three of them. The grandpa, but he's kind of not a he's just like a secondary character almost. Like he's a main character, but compared to those two. Definitely more secondary. Yeah, I think it's searcher story. Okay. But maybe not? It is searcher story. I think it's such a story and he's the only one that he's going to tell you. He's the tie to the dad and the son. And he has to learn to accept the sun for his decisions and what he wants to do. You know, go following in his dad's footsteps, which he doesn't like, and also not repeating his dad's yes. So messy. Family relationships. So messy. So there you have it. Let us know what your thoughts are for this episode of the animation addicts podcast and specifically this movie strange world. This was been a very interesting one. I'm very, this is so fresh. I don't even know

Disney Don hall Transylvania Chelsea Olaf Sony Manuel Miranda kanto Ethan
"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

Animation Addicts Podcast

07:01 min | 6 months ago

"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

"Call it a mutiny whatever it is. You know, I want to worked out was if turns out, hey, well, we still have our pilots. We really don't need her, but then she became extra necessary when no one could fly the pilot. Right. And that random dude that was, I didn't really love him. He was really over the top and just so unhelpful. He's like scared of everything. What is your job? I don't know. You had one job. That was to take care of the three or four background characters that just. And then at the very end, when we're looking at the eye again, there's another, there's like a younger kid that was there to like, who are you? Where did you come? I literally have never seen you. We've been hanging out with the rats in the bottom of the, I don't know. So, yeah, that was a weird thing. There were so many throwaway characters in this one. And as well as, as I mentioned in light year, they always have this like, at the very beginning, they have random characters that you never see again. Yeah, yeah. In light year you had this The Rookie that is literally there just to be dumb and then you never see him again. And here, we have the cartographer. I liked him. And I wish they would have brought him back because he was like, oh, cartographers. That's why. That's live train for. No, no, no. That's not your job. Yeah. I just feel like why couldn't you have brought in those characters again? Well, I think of Atlantis and that crew in Atlantis, very much you get to know there's the doctor. There's this person. She goes, mechanic. Like they all have a purpose. Right. And even though they're kind of background characters, you know, as compared to Milo. Yes. They're there. And they serve a purpose. But this one, I get it because it's like, you don't want too many characters. And even when you look currently on IMDb, it only lists 6 characters. Now there are more than 6 characters when you look at the credits. It's not a huge voice cast, but there were other people who did these voices, but IMDb, since we're still seeing it before the movie comes out, hasn't fully updated as far as total voice cast. But I don't know, I guess, hey, we have these random background characters that we literally they serve no purpose other than occasionally popping in here and there. We're not going to spend time on them. Or do you build them out and make them more important to the plot? I mean, we didn't need anyone else. So I can't hate it, but it's just weird. It was. And yeah, so that's my main thing. It was like, why didn't they bring you gave him a line at the beginning? Why didn't you just let him stay in the film? If you kept her in there, you might as well kept other people. Well, combine them. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. We want to keep a small mission. There's only four of us. Just like the beginning. You know, I don't know. Right. So let's talk about the actual world. Okay. Because this is really what they're highlighting in the trailers. And it's the most confusing part of the movie to me. The most unenjoyable part is when we go Joseph system. Yes. Yes, and once you finally get it all at the end, you're like, oh, okay. I did sort of when they had the trees that were, they look like on your lungs. They basically look like little branches. And they were kind of breathing in and out. And I was like, oh, they look like those on the lungs, you know? But I didn't at that point make the connection like maybe we're inside a body, 'cause I thought we were in sight. It almost felt like we were inside of an ocean without the water. Yeah. So I'm like, what is this? And then it has kind of like the color scheme of Pandora at times. Like the bright neons and the pinks and the purples. And I just really struggled in that world because I didn't know what it was. Because in the main world, it felt like a normal earth. With this other element of the energy source, then to like, oh, actually, we have this subterranean world that's just totally crazy. That's fine. But it just something just didn't click with me as far as the design of the world. Everything was weird. The animals I didn't love. None had eyes. And now I get why. Right, right. They were supposed to represent, you know, like mitochondria and red blood cells and white blood cells. And this and that, you know, okay, cool. So are you telling me that the humans are basically like dust mites on the skin of this giant creature. That's basically what it feels like. What's the creation story on this one? Right. Okay. I mean, it's kind of like in there's just so many movies that they pulled from for this thing. So that you're pulling from that I'm calling from. I guess I just watched a lot of movies. You can only do so. Well, there's no original ideas anymore. Yeah, they're not. But it's kind of like in how the Grinch stole Christmas with Jim Carrey where the on the back of it or on a snowflake the entire time. Oh gosh, yeah. And it was just like microcosm that you your world is important, but then you step back and oh my gosh. I mean, it's like, once again, you know, captain planet situation where you're trying to let you see mother earth has got this whole thing. But it's like, all right. On the back of a taffy. On the back of a giant turtle. That's our title. Gotta be. Well, maybe not because it's like a huge spoiler. It is a huge spoiler. It's like literally really beef spoiler. Yeah. That was my least favorite part of the movie. I don't know. I mean, the majority of the movie is there. I just didn't, everything felt so random. You know, we got the animals walking around. We have this, and we have that, and we have the seat looks like sea anemones almost. And then splat, whatever he was supposed to be. And then the creatures that were attacking, you know, now it makes sense what those are, but I was like, why are they attacking them while you're only those attacking? Why are these things the ones that build? And it's also you're showing and now I can't think of anything but the other for you concrete. Cornelius coming in with his flamethrower. What is he using for power that? I know. I mean, that thing should have ran out of gas or whatever. Eons ago. I thought the same thing. What are you doing? That is the eternal flame. I mean, that exactly. That is. Why are we not so excited about that? That is amazing. Yeah, so he's just like bulldozing everything. It goes through, oh, going back to the gamer thing. Sitting around playing the game. And there was the one part was like, so there's no enemy. Kind of crap riding is this. There were some self referential, the one where he's like, oh, merchandise. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yep, yep, that's exactly what we were going to do. We're going to sell plushies and squishy pillows out of this. And the hand things that you can maybe squish exactly. You're going to have lots of these around. I'm not sure if that's going to be worth it though. I kind of feels like those geck. Yes, yeah. Oh

Milo Joseph Jim Carrey Cornelius
"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

Animation Addicts Podcast

07:56 min | 6 months ago

"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

"So leftovers. I don't know. Leftover models they already did. It really liked this one. Okay. Yeah. So you're looking at the relationships between everybody. And was that her name? Meridian, yes, Maria. Yeah. And I love her. Me too. I thought it was classy and classic. The fact that they are like dancing and kissing or whatever. And then the sun is just like Aristotle and they're like, but every teenage who likes to see their parents and I'll be honest, like, you say no, but you really do. You want to have that in the other. Yes. And so it's like, you would just hate each other. Exactly. I did like the like we're all sitting around dancing and making dinner thing. I thought it was weird, though, that she was leading, oh, I didn't notice that. Yeah, I noticed that. She was like the one spinning him and actually leading dancing. I was like, okay. Of course. Whatever. Well, then there was the one moment where Ethan was putting some salt into the pan and it was that it's based off the meme where the guy's like sprinkling a little bit. Where he has his arm tucked up like in the swan pose where you're like, it's like biting. The biting swan, you know what I'm talking about. My name is sprinkling a little. I was like, oh yes, I got that. I caught that meme. Yeah, you know, the family was great, and I really liked the dynamic that they had. And they're working together, you know, on the field farm. Yeah. So I'm glad to see in this society farmers still are able to make substantial living. Well, I guess what energy is what your heart was seeing. There's big money in energy. Nowadays, nowadays, the small family farmer is not a thing. And it's such a bummer. It is, except, so I used to work at a bank. And there was this guy that I worked at the business side, so the business window. So this guy, he would drive in every single day, basically. And he had the most worn down pickup truck, you know, you can think of just like falling apart basically. These things coming through. And he would he would deposit $10,000 every single day. Because it was like a little known fact. Maybe some people know some people don't. If you do anything more than 10,000, you have to do a whole bunch of paperwork. Yeah, yeah. As far as cash goes. And so he learned that pretty quick. And so he found the number that he didn't have to do. He would good for him. Yeah, so every day does not need to be in your business about your money. Exactly. So he would just come in every single day and just like, over time, he would just be doing his deposits and whatnot. And as the teller, you're able to see what's in their account. And there's a lot of money in that account. And so for somebody to say, or to think that just because somebody is a farmer, oh yeah. That they are maybe less well off or they don't have things together or maybe less educated or whatever, and I'm just like, that's funny. But yeah, the fact that he's got this big old farm and he's basically the hero of the town that he has a statue. He's got a statue, his dad's got the statue. His is taller. Yes. Because apparently that matters. Yeah, there was a lot of innuendos in this. There were a lot of innuendos. Yeah. And so it goes into and they actually show more of Ethan the sun, the grandson eats grandson. Yeah. And he's got his crowd, his what do they call him? His crew, maybe I think that the crew, because that was the fight at the very beginning. Oh, yeah. Where it's like, no, the crew says, nah, they're not talking about us. This is also touted as the first Disney film to have a same sex attraction for a TV. A main character for a main character, because there's been other characters that are in the background. Really subtle. But this one is not. No, it's 100% there. And this is obviously not a thing that is second guessed. Right. Culture. From there, it's like, which part of me wondered when Jaeger, I have a problem with that. I want to call him Jaeger or as I like to call him Yukon Cornelius. Ah, yes. It's so 100% what do you see that? You can't unsee it. Oh my gosh. It is 100%. I thought when he went Ethan was telling the grandpa that this was because of the generational shift. It's been so long. It's been great. He's been alone in exactly. Society changes a lot in 25 years. But clearly, you know, that wasn't an issue at all. So I think they just didn't want to present this as being anything different or weird or something the second guess. It just isn't. Right, right. And so that's part of the commentary throughout the whole film. It's always brought up. Yes. And it's like some people, I know are going to be so on board and be like, yes, this is my jam. This is everything that I need. And then there's going to be others that aren't. And so I'm really curious to see how it looks out as far as how the box office takes it. This is definitely an older film, I feel like. You know, just like seeing red, not in the same way at all, seeing Regis had period talk, you know. You know, but this one, it's not even the gay relationship. It's just that it's an older film. Like, I was thinking in the beginning. I'm like, would I take my kids to this? Because it's really kind of convoluted, like the storyline is hard to follow. It's not that super funny or engaging or just really, it's just the creatures. That would be interesting. I don't think my kids would like this. I think my kids would get bored. Very, very quickly. Because they can't really relate to the right, you know, eventually the magic carpet comes in. That scene is the magic here, but there is 100% what I thought too. Yes, he is carpet. And I looked and he was based off carpet. You know, his flat was the name of this blue character. But the moment where Ethan, you know, he falls into this pit. The cave of wonders. He falls in the cave of wonders. And then he finds this creature. He's like, hey little guy, come out. And he taunts him out. He says, I'm not going to hurt you. And he says that. But there's even them always like, oh, I'm looking for this lamp. And he shows in the way, and it's the exact same thing. Oh my God. Well, I'm looking for a way out of here. Dude, takes him off, you know? I'm like, wow, they just ripped ripped carpets lines. From the movie we really did. Well, and the other thing later on, I was like, oh my gosh, from Aladdin and the king of thieves. Where it's like, you deeply called I totally did. So at the very end, they go out and they see that, oh, my goodness. It's been a creature. We've been inside of. So misses frizzle's class magic school bus goes inside somebody, this creature digestive system. And they're like, oh, that's the heart. Oh, that's the digestive system. Right. This was a lung. Now windy area. Oh, goodness. Buckle up class. That's really what it was. Right. And then, but you go out at the very end and they go outside of the animal or the creature. It's like a giant eyeball and all I could hear was Aladdin saying on the back of a giant turtle.

Ethan Jaeger Meridian Yukon Cornelius Maria Disney Regis frizzle
"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

Animation Addicts Podcast

07:28 min | 6 months ago

"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

"More external driven. So yeah, so he's become a celebrity or kind of a savior in the world because he brought this energy source. And I'm like, oh man, here we go again. Yet another movie that's fighting over the energy source. How many superhero movies do we see? Were there some sort of energy force that's going to either save the world or destroy the world? Right, right? So as soon as this energy source is introduced and like, okay, they're not just going to leave it at this. No, no, no. And they did not. Oh, no, no, no. I'm just going to be honest at the beginning. I feel like this was this movie was one of the most complete versions of propaganda that I have seen in a really long time. And it's just like, I need all you really needed was captain planet to come out for sure. At the very end, at the very end. Literally heart. I know. At the end to get a heart beating again, heart. Well, I thought at the end, you know, when the heart had died, essentially, you know, we needed to basically a defibrillator to the introduce source. To bring it back and it would have been so just classic, I guess, for, you know, the tears of the one who was the feeling, he literally, if you were to give captain planet powers to each one, Ethan was hard. For him to be crying over the heart and then his tear to go down. You know, he's waiting for the tears. Yes, the tier needed to come. And I was like, oh, it's so stereotypical. And I feel like I needed that. Yes. It was such a mist this moment. I mean, so cheesy. Like, hell yeah, the critics would have just been like, oh, are you kidding me? Right, then when you give us the fact that you didn't give us this, it means my heart broke right there, right? Right. Come on. You're so close. The fact that they're using this energy source. So basically, it's like he's come in, he brings in, he plants this energy source as he would call it, which is like, okay, is this a message of basically over nuclear Brussels sprouts? Right. Which goes back to our one conversation where our favorite vegetables and Brussels sprouts really are. One of the king of all vegetables for sure. They really are. So that's what made me laugh too. I was like, oh, I'm working. But yeah, so at the very beginning, he's going through and he's picking up some of the Brussels sprouts. I'm like, oh, they're magic. Yay. Magic beans. Magic beans, you know, don't sell them. Those other California. Yes. But I guess these are now like little things of energy that this little ball which literal balls of energy that they can really type in. Yes. Like batteries that they shove into everything. And somehow also creates technology, planes that are able to fly without motors, carton wagon at the very beginning. And that was actually a really funny gag. I really liked where he was trying to fix his wagon wheel and he's going about it and the horse just walks off and he's like, oh no. But I have to say I've been in that situation before. Where I'm just like a crap, come back here. It's so great. I was like, oh, I feel this. I mean, the solution to the problem for the energy is nuclear power. Let's get real. The amount of nuclear waste for decades, you can fit into basically a tin can. And it's safe, it's reliable. Now, I think everyone looks at things like Chernobyl and now, suddenly, nuclear power is off the table, but it's like, okay, we're not going to do it like the Russians did it, okay? It's mister fission. Come on. We have power plants in the U.S., FYI. Right, we do. So, you know, that really is the solution, but for some reason no one wants to go there. All these other ways. So I guess like the thing is, so over drilling is kind of something that they would be comparing to in our days. And the fact that we've, yes, it's made our lives so much better, but we're going to sacrifice our lives for the heart of graffiti basically. Yeah, he's going back to, you know, he co directed me. I was like, well, why have the last dragon? So he's like, you know what? This taffy character feels real great in Moana. Let's break her back. And you know what? In Raya lust dragon, I really huddle these extra character designs. Bring them up. That's what it felt like, too. When they were doing it at the credits at the end, they're throwing up random creatures that were never part of the movie. Yeah. It was like, where did these creatures had eyes? And then in the credits, they're showing these creatures that have places and monsters. Yeah, totally. And I'm like, what, that was not that was not what I saw. Okay, going to character design. One thing that okay, so overall, my thoughts with this film is very disjointed. It was all over the place. And going to character design, I felt like the characters, there was two different sets of characters from two different character design philosophies. The first one was the clade family. And also the new clade family. Where they had these big bulbous noses, they had these very cartoony eyes. Jigger specifically was so Chuck Jones over the top squash and stretch. Very much I felt like these were kind of like genbi tartakovsky characters where it's just really overdone, especially with the eyes. Like I felt like when I was looking at searcher, he reminded me of the boyfriend from hotel Transylvania. Yes. Like a lot. Yes, a lot. Where I was like, wow, is he getting the car to gossip in the credits? Because he could have done your character design. So we have them. And that's fine. And then we have just like everyone else. Ran the background characters who don't really have names for, who's like they noticed when they went down into the body of the creature. These background characters that were on the ship were never really around. They just pop in when they needed to. I thought that was kind of annoying, but then the main one, girl was the president of the town, society, kalisto. She was the one from the beginning adventure. And she was this other set of character designs that were more grounded in reality. They had more realistic faces and based on different cultures. That you could kind of tell that they weren't the cartoony versions. Yeah. Literally, I feel like police show. It felt very Raya. I've totally Raya. Yeah. I was just like, you could have been the sister to the one girl with the shaved head. Right. I get you. And I didn't love that. I felt like it really took me apart. It felt like I was watching just a mash up of maybe two different movies. So that's that. Ultimately, they either need to all be cartoony or all not. So I'm not sure why they chose this

Brussels Ethan Moana California Chuck Jones U.S. Transylvania kalisto squash
"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

Animation Addicts Podcast

02:41 min | 6 months ago

"cornelius" Discussed on Animation Addicts Podcast

"We did indeed. First off, Morgan, how do you like my car? Is it nice? It's nice. And it's very toasty right now, which I very much appreciate. I mean, okay, so it's like 66° outside. And so heaters on. Exactly. Because I can not take the cold. We're walking literally from the theater to my car and I'm like shivering over here. Yes. Because I don't have my trusty jacket on. And so I'm like, crap, I forgot. Surprise we don't have a blanket back here. I know, I really should. I really should get on that as well. Here we go. The things we do for you. To be able to get this episode out as soon as possible, here we go. And we don't do this very much where we go and see the new releases. Simply because they're so many, we kind of pick and choose for the podcast, which ones we're going to do. And sometimes Chelsea will go see one, I will be unable to attend. And so, you know, we'll see it a different point and review it on the podcast and then do our traditional podcasts via Zoom. But here we are together, which also doesn't happen very often. No, yeah. And so we don't have a lot of time to really digest the movie. This is our first thoughts, basically review as it comes. Chelsea and I as the credits were rolling or withholding, trying to hold back from talking because it's like save it for the podcast. It was a podcast, but completely impossible to do because we're just over here like nah. So I have this comment, I can't keep it in. So with that, we'll have you wait one more second, save it for the podcast. We'll see you right after this. In early 2020, best Friends Brian and hodel set out on a mission. This whole podcast is easy. Easy. Inexpensive. Easy. You make a ton of money. The result a mediocre comedy podcast. You're telling me there's a chance. I'm telling you, there's a chance. Why wouldn't you do it? Hey, for effort, you two. Hey, four effort. The commercial break on Spotify. Tune it in and ride it out. Prepare yourself for a journey beyond what is possible. Walt Disney Animation Studios proudly presents strange world a new motion picture event. Traveled past space and time to a place of infinite mystery. Unlike anything you've ever seen. Where in the world are we? What?

Chelsea Morgan hodel Brian Walt Disney Animation Studios
Day 331: Peter Preaches to the Gentiles

The Bible in a Year

01:42 min | 6 months ago

Day 331: Peter Preaches to the Gentiles

"It is day 331 we're reading actually apostles chapter ten for Corinthians chapters one and two, probably chapter 27 versus 21 and 22. The acts of the apostles, chapter ten Peter and Cornelius at caesarea, there was a man named Cornelius, a centurion of what was known as the Italian cohort, a devout man who feared God with all his household, gave alms liberally to the people and prayed constantly to God. About the 9th hour of the day, he saw clearly in a vision, an angel of God coming in and saying to him, Cornelius. And he stared at him in terror and said, what is it, lord? And he said to him, your prayers and your alms have ascended as a memorial before God, and now send men to joppa. And bring one Simon, who is called Peter. He is lodging with Simon, a Tanner, whose house is by the seaside. When the angel who spoke to him had departed, he called two of his servants and had about soldier from among those that waited on him, and having related everything to them, he sent them to joppa. The next day, as they were on their journey and coming near the city. Peter went up on the housetop to pray about the 6th hour. And he became hungry and desired something to eat, but while they were preparing it, he fell into a trance, and saw the heaven opened, and something descending, like a great sheet, let down by four corners upon the earth. In it, were all kinds of animals and reptiles and birds of the air. And there came a voice to him, rise Peter, kill and eat. But Peter said, no lord, for I have never eaten anything that is common or unclean. And the voice came to him again a second time, what God his cleansed, you must not call common. This happened three times, and the thing was taken up at once to heaven.

Cornelius Peter Joppa Caesarea Simon Tanner
"cornelius" Discussed on WCPT 820

WCPT 820

02:01 min | 1 year ago

"cornelius" Discussed on WCPT 820

"Side While the Democrats are doing they're spokesman Yukon Cornelius on what they've accomplished Nothing For you and your family Katie Porter When you only have two three or four producers in any market you have two big risks We're seeing the consequences of these two big risks Risk one is that one of those producers will have a supply chain disruption We'll go offline We'll shut down And the second risk is they'll be able to play scouts because they have so much market concentration So I think long-term the fix to a lot of these inflation and supply chain problems is making sure we have more producers and more competition in the market So we're not relying on just one company or one entity And how many of these are caught on tape Yeah whether it's oil companies or whatever Who is it the car company They're like you know they're gaming out what people can't do without A Kroger People are still going to have to drive And they still got to pay up their cars fixed and they still got to do it So whatever so we can charge whatever we want basically Katie Porter Particularly with food we have long understood that we need to be able to produce our own food I think the exact same thing is true about other essentials including medication and healthcare supplies And so the solution here is to make sure that there are not just one or two global companies controlling things but instead that we have a lot of different producers in different parts of the country And we have monopolies today in virtually everything There is a bread monopoly in this country And we're seeing it in the cost of loads of bread and the grocery store There's a cereal monopoly And so we just really need beef monopoly So we need to create this competition Yes Wow The answer might be more capitalism Leave a socialist like Katie Porter would suggest that I just had a name for cereal companies off the top of my head But there's four That's it If one of those goes yeah You ain't gonna get your frosted flakes Yeah that would make that last one.

Katie Porter Yukon Cornelius Kroger
"cornelius" Discussed on Elevation Church Podcast

Elevation Church Podcast

02:23 min | 1 year ago

"cornelius" Discussed on Elevation Church Podcast

"But never really dealt with. This word was for you. So you can drag it into the presence. Of the great eye. Am so rich. I gotta stop. gonna pray. One more thing. Remember, God spoke to Peter while he was hungry. So if you're waiting for lunch, this might be a breakthrough moment, okay? Breathe in breathe out. A lot of us feel like things in our life were wasted. Because we gave and we tried and we loved and we cared and we encouraged and we served. How many times did Cornelius pray? And God didn't send anybody to help. How many arms did Cornelius give these God fearing gentiles they were attracted to Judaism but not accepted within it? How many times did he pray? And felt nothing. How many times did he give and receive nothing? Happens to all of us. What's the point in that? Why even try? Three or four years ago, I was getting ready to come back and preach. How to 8 week series plan? I was going to do it. I was going to do it big. Some of y'all are new to the church we used to always have a series in advance. And then the world became so stupid. That I stopped trying to plan God. And maybe we'll go back to that one day, but I told all the creative team what the series should be called. I told all the campus pastures what the series would be called. You remember special Zoom call before zoom was a thing? I was an early adopter. I went to preach the first week of it in. And it wasn't when I say it just didn't feel like what God wanted me to preach. I saw I get it next week, and that happened again. And again, and I preached, but I couldn't preach that. Just didn't feel like I was preacher so I never preached it. They designed graphics they had them loaded in the computers. I don't know what they do, but they do back there to make stuff come on the screens,.

Cornelius Peter
"cornelius" Discussed on Elevation Church Podcast

Elevation Church Podcast

01:39 min | 1 year ago

"cornelius" Discussed on Elevation Church Podcast

"You holding on to something that is hurting you? And we might revisit a little bit of that in a moment, but there's a passage, a story that I want to share with you from ex chapter ten. Did you study it last night, Jason? Okay. I told a few of my guys. This is where I'm gonna be if you want to get a head start. But you will never guess where God took me with this one. I don't care how many times you read it 'cause it just is powerful. I gotta read 20 verses, so you'll listen fast. Ask chapter ten verse one at caesarea, there was a man named Cornelius, a centurion in what was known as the Italian regiment. He and all his family were devout and God fearing. He gave generously to those in need and prayed to God regularly. One day, at about three in the afternoon he had a vision. He distinctly saw an angel of God who came to him. And said, Cornelius, Cornelius stared at him in fear. What is it, lord? Yes. The angel answered your prayers and gifts to the poor have come up as a memorial offering before God. Now, send men to joppa to bring back a man named Simon, who is called Peter. Y'all remember Jesus change his name, right? You know, he can change your name too. What you've called yourself all your life, you get one good encounter with God and he'll.

Cornelius caesarea Jason Simon Peter
Indiana man arrested in Young Dolph's death; 2nd man charged

AP News Radio

00:44 sec | 1 year ago

Indiana man arrested in Young Dolph's death; 2nd man charged

"Some some big big legal legal news news in in the the case case of of the the shooting shooting death death of of a a rap rap star star in in Memphis Memphis authorities authorities have have arrested arrested a a Tennessee Tennessee man man in in the the fatal fatal shooting shooting of of young young Dolph Dolph another another man man has has been been indicted indicted on on murder murder charges charges in in the the same same case case the the US US marshal marshal service service says says twenty twenty three three year year old old Justin Justin Johnson Johnson was was arrested arrested on on a a murder murder warrant warrant issued issued for for him him earlier earlier this this month month authorities authorities say say he he is is now now in in custody custody arrested arrested in in Indiana Indiana meanwhile meanwhile the the grand grand jury jury in in Tennessee Tennessee has has indicted indicted thirty thirty two two year year old old Cornelius Cornelius Smith Smith on on first first degree degree murder murder and and other other charges charges in in that that shooting shooting he he was was arrested arrested last last month month in in the the theft theft of of the the vehicle vehicle used used in in the the slaying slaying of of young young Dolph Dolph the the double double dose dose of of news news comes comes nearly nearly two two months months after after young young Dolph Dolph was was ambushed ambushed during during the the cooking cooking run run his his home home town town of of Memphis Memphis I'm I'm Oscar Oscar wells wells Gabriel Gabriel

Dolph Dolph Tennessee Memphis Us Marshal Marshal Service Ser Justin Justin Johnson Johnson Cornelius Cornelius Smith Smit Indiana United States Oscar Oscar Wells Gabriel Gabriel
No. 14 Michigan rips Wisconsin 38-17; Badgers' Mertz injured

AP News Radio

00:42 sec | 1 year ago

No. 14 Michigan rips Wisconsin 38-17; Badgers' Mertz injured

"Cornelius Johnson caught both of Kate McNamara's touchdown passes as fourteenth ranked Michigan whipped Wisconsin thirty eight seventeen at Madison the Wolverines scored twenty five straight points after badgers quarterback Graham Mertz and tight end Jake Ferguson suffered chest injuries in the third quarter Wolverines coach Jim Harbaugh like their effort to solve all three phases today that's really pleased with that published a tough physical team I thought he played really physical and imagine every bit highly touted freshman quarterback J. J. McCarthy also played and had a one yard TD run plus a fifty six yard touchdown pass to Dylan Baldwin merch was eight of fifteen for one hundred fifteen yards and a TD for Wisconsin I'm Dave Ferrie

Cornelius Johnson Kate Mcnamara Wolverines Graham Mertz Jake Ferguson Badgers Jim Harbaugh Wisconsin Madison Michigan J. J. Mccarthy Dylan Baldwin Dave Ferrie
"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

The Archive Project

06:08 min | 1 year ago

"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

"This <Speech_Male> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Music> is the last <Speech_Male> one hundred and <Speech_Male> this is <Silence> actually <SpeakerChange> a duet. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> After susan <Speech_Male> confessed. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> She wrote <Silence> out a handwritten confession <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> and <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> the first <Speech_Male> half of the poem <Speech_Male> is the actual <Speech_Male> is language from <Speech_Male> that handwritten <Speech_Male> confession and <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> then you'll hear <SpeakerChange> the imaginary <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> guy in response <Silence> <Advertisement> <Silence> <Advertisement> <Speech_Male> <Silence> to preve- <Speech_Male> i <Speech_Male> in the back <Silence> of her mind <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> not even <Silence> an ocean. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> A scrap <SpeakerChange> <Silence> of cloth. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Go away <Speech_Male> a man <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> obst down a <Silence> street <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> later. <Speech_Male> A black women will <Silence> say <Speech_Male> we <Speech_Male> knew exactly <SpeakerChange> who <Silence> she was describing <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Silence> this point <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Male> i have no <Silence> language <Speech_Male> <Silence> no tongue. <Speech_Male> No <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> i <Speech_Male> am not <Silence> yet. <Speech_Male> <Silence> I am <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> just <SpeakerChange> understanding <Silence> <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> as i <Speech_Male> rode and rode <Speech_Male> and rode. I <Speech_Male> felt even more <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> anxiety. <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> Susan <Speech_Male> parks on <Speech_Male> a bridge <SpeakerChange> and <Speech_Male> stares over <Speech_Male> the rail <Silence> below her feet <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> blanket <Speech_Male> river. <Speech_Male> She wants to <Speech_Male> pull over <Silence> herself. <Speech_Male> Children <Silence> at all. <Speech_Male> I <Speech_Male> am not <SpeakerChange> the call <Silence> of the current. <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> She <Silence> is heartbroken <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> cases <Silence> down <Silence> <Speech_Male> and imagines <Silence> heaven <Silence> <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> felt. <Speech_Male> I couldn't <Speech_Male> butte good mom <Silence> anymore. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> I <Speech_Male> didn't want my children <Speech_Male> to <SpeakerChange> up <Speech_Music_Male> without <Silence> a mom. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I am <Speech_Male> not me <Silence> yet <Speech_Male> at <Silence> the bridge <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> one of susan's kids <Silence> cries <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> so she drives <Speech_Male> to <Silence> the lake <Speech_Male> <Silence> to the boat dock. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I am not <Speech_Male> yet opportunity. <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I had never felt <Speech_Male> so lowly <Silence> so <SpeakerChange> sad <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> who <Silence> witness <Music> <Silence> <Music> bullfrogs <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> waterfall. <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> When i was <Speech_Male> johnny long link <Speech_Male> i had <SpeakerChange> never felt <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> scared <Silence> on short. <Silence> <Speech_Male> I've <Speech_Male> yet to <Silence> be called. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Who will notice. <Silence> <Speech_Music_Male> Aw <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Music_Male> dragonfly <Silence> <Silence> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> field. <Silence> <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I wanted <Speech_Male> to end my life. <Silence> So <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> i was in my <Silence> car <Speech_Male> ready <Silence> to go down that ramp <Speech_Music_Male> <Silence> into the water. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> Had <Speech_Male> isn't her <Silence> hand. <Silence> Act <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> on the emergency <Silence> brake. <Silence> <Speech_Male> And i did <Silence> go <Speech_Male> <Silence> when i stopped. <Silence> <Speech_Male> I <Speech_Male> am not <Speech_Male> <Silence> gravity <Speech_Male> water <Speech_Male> lapping <Speech_Male> against <Silence> the crap. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> I <Speech_Male> went again and <Silence> stopped. <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I've been <Silence> got out of the car. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Susan <Speech_Male> stares <Speech_Male> at the sinking. <Speech_Male> My <Speech_Male> muscles are <Speech_Male> her <SpeakerChange> muscles <Speech_Male> burned <Speech_Male> from pushing. <Speech_Male> The lake <Speech_Male> has no <Speech_Male> appetite <Speech_Male> but it takes the car <Speech_Male> slowly <Speech_Male> swallow. <Speech_Male> I swallow <Speech_Male> <Silence> like <SpeakerChange> a snake. <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Why was i feeling <Silence> goes way. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Why was <Silence> everything <Speech_Male> <Silence> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Silence> <Speech_Male> Susan's <Speech_Male> stares at the daylights <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> has slide <Silence> from here <Silence> <Speech_Male> to <Silence> hidden. <Silence> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I have no <Speech_Male> answers <Speech_Male> to these <Silence> questions. <Speech_Male> She <SpeakerChange> only <Speech_Male> has <Silence> me <Speech_Male> after <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> she removes <Music> our <Music> hands <Music> <Speech_Music_Male> from our <Speech_Music_Male> ears. <Music> <Music> <Music> Thank you <Music> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> that was cornelius. <Speech_Male> Eighty

"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

The Archive Project

05:08 min | 1 year ago

"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

"Baby sister. How the radio works. How on a clear night nashville memphis in chicago are able to twain shout and holler at us. I tell her what broadcast means a hand tossing rips chroma sack who the world. The big adventure. She thinks i bring to her attention. Alex in roman collins. I bring her charlemagne and louis armstrong. She is restless are huck half flow is like riding secret highway out. I'd tell her as we tune in the evenings is a.

roman collins memphis nashville chicago louis armstrong Alex
"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

The Archive Project

05:48 min | 1 year ago

"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

"A little bit from berlin tonight. I'm going to read both cycles. Poems cycles bought the running man and from the susan smith cycle though the running man. Poems aren't the poems. I'm not the libretto that we actually used in the end for the show. I thought like give you a little sample of what that was about. Roman actually everyone. Because everyone that i'm running man. I was doing an interview with another poet a few years ago after i just after the book came out and said well where you run into now but it was really kind of sort of odd in a way sort of like paul's back idea. What the general theme of the book is about identity adding merican meals and how people make assumptions about african american males and that was one of them. So that's how people go away with the idea. And i am not running man. The prison actually running man is my collaborators brother. Deidra murray who is it. Data murray has a jazz musician composer and her brother was a brilliant guy. Who couldn't find a place in the world and basically destroyed himself and so the peace running man was really hurt her meditation upon her brother and herself and what all that meant to her and to him and to the family family and went through a lot changes nothing for people who have the running of the book. The running man pumps are not the show to knock the show. If you actually came to see running man ever runs against gives is becoming mythical now of course it'll only man wants in new york for about three weeks and then ran for about a month in philadelphia and then there was a two-day in massachusetts summer stock and the reading are sort of like a hybrid of the workshop was a small place called. Ross base in midtown manhattan and the and then the full production. That was not done at here. What you get here is slightly different reality than the show actually is and i'm going to start off with a character that never made into the final show up astir who we call mamie and actually decided takes place in the times kind of where it's located in time kind of shifts a bit too. We're going to spot the purposes of the reading. We're going to say this starts right now. Probably in the thirties or forties is called. Hold the line about to get the news. That brother's dead. This is the voice of many when the only telephone is apartment house rings. Everyone listens hard for attempt to run up. The radiator says the way we get news from home..

merican Deidra murray susan smith berlin murray paul midtown philadelphia massachusetts Ross manhattan mamie new york
"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

The Archive Project

05:11 min | 1 year ago

"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

"My sister her best friend. Linda in i are out in the neighborhood. Et nights talking cars. We wheeled homemade bows tall. Green stem we call a ragweed cut occurred with string found lying around for eros we have waited and selected the right dried branches and notched one and for the twine. Arrowheads us pop bilo caps. We all did on by rocks or the sneakers. We are at war in an easy confused. Jumble kids makeup history we set out to destroy nazi tanks with bows and arrows. Tonight we fight both the germans and the cowboys we were doing. We are out doing. The kids love to do without thinking without asking if caught. We'll call it play. Whose idea was this. Probably my sister's at least he's at the age when my parents begin to falter curiosity and willpower. What are we doing at night since everyone in the neighborhood knows everybody else and we rarely travel any further than four or five blocks the stops on west main street the edge of a bit too far at one end. The railroad bridge on commercial street at the other parents let us roam the summer streets until we run out of fuel. Im seven radio's old lender and my sister. Just entering their teens. In a few years. I will be a guy and too old to be a mascot but for now we are team we are at war we are indians. We are tank killers. We are trapped behind enemy lines. We are also scientists. We are curious to know the physics involved when arrow. It's speeding car. We are small buys into the damp along of the railroad bridge in wait. We hear the first car before we see it. We hired we hide and then we spring. I will not grow up to peel hunter. But i do know how the blood pounds and the ear the second before you draw in your breath and take a bead. We are too scared but light comes at dan. Rocks and reels for a long after the sound of the skit fades. There's nothing but the car. The bridge the summer stars winking.

Linda cowboys dan
"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

The Archive Project

04:46 min | 1 year ago

"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

"Years later as an unwed. Mother hardly to escape her daughter. Marie my big sister. Gloria will move down to my mother's hometown of gainesville florida. And when she does no one will make of her because she grew up in the north in fact she will fit in and stay for years. The reason for this as well my parents house my sit in upstate. New york the truth of the matter is that we will raised in florida. The smells rising from the skillets florida. The car parts on the line. Florida switch across the lakes florida. The back that resided in the deep black south even when we were walking around in a blizzard were sitting at a lunch counter without giving it a second try barbecue pits in the backyard. Florida the black cats in the ghost. Florida the sunflowers in the front yard and the collard greens and the back and then the house next door. Maybe georgia maybe the carolinas and in the house of the middle of the block maybe alabama maybe texas. That boyfriend keeps his hair in a net. Maybe memphis maybe louisiana the pig knuckles and the pickled eggs. The hot comb the holy goes. That's where we actually lived up north and that's what the neighbors see my sister steps off the bus. She is poor but well dressed. A trump might be dented. But the clothes inside of it are clean although not there to see it. I know whenever a fool approaches. He saluted with black women's this passport and everybody on her new block stamps. It the.

florida Florida gainesville Gloria Marie upstate New york carolinas georgia alabama memphis louisiana texas
"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

The Archive Project

05:58 min | 1 year ago

"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

"For all audiences..

"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

The Archive Project

01:40 min | 1 year ago

"cornelius" Discussed on The Archive Project

"We bring poet and dramatist cornelius eady from poetry downtown event in two thousand and two cornelius eady published his first book of poetry cartoons in nineteen eighty at the age of twenty six. He would go on to publish seven more collections over the next twenty years winning numerous prizes and being nominated as a finalist for a national book award in the nine hundred ninety s and early two thousands easy also wrote for the stage collaborating on projects that resulted in several more national awards and the distinction of being a finalist for the pulitzer prize in nineteen ninety-six eighty co-founded with toy. Derek covey conham a nonprofit organization serving black poets to remedy the underrepresentation an isolation of african american poets in the literary landscape this organization has played a crucial role in fostering several generations of black poets. Over the course of nearly thirty years in nineteen ninety-six for his work as a convener educator and mentor the national book foundation gave him an award for outstanding service to the american literary community in this episode eighty read and discusses selections from different works and from different parts of his career but despite the varied selections his rating presents. A devastating arc. He moves from stories and poems centered in the innocence of childhood to work. The portrays and meditates on violent racist acts physical emotional legal and how those acts effect and what they mean for his characters and those they love portions of this episode contain explicit language and content which may not be suitable.

cornelius eady six eighty co Derek covey national book foundation pulitzer prize
Roundy's warehouse shooting suspect identified as employee of more than 20 years

Wisconsin's Morning News with Gene Mueller

00:33 sec | 2 years ago

Roundy's warehouse shooting suspect identified as employee of more than 20 years

"Yet to announce what prompted a longtime employee to shoot two co workers at the round his distribution center in a condom walk this week, heaven cloth of German town and Kevin Schneider of West Allis shot and killed Tuesday night. Police say Fair on Cornelius of Wauwatosa later took his own life Walking County Sheriff Eric See Person enforcement is in a Difficult situation where we want to answer the question why, but we also want to be sensitive to all of the family and the friends in the community. Recognizing that there is no justification investigators have instead of race played a role. The victims were white. The suspect black

Kevin Schneider Walking County Sheriff Eric See West Allis Wauwatosa Cornelius
Hitman 3 Review Round-Up

Kinda Funny Games Daily

08:05 min | 2 years ago

Hitman 3 Review Round-Up

"Hitman three reviews are and the embargo has lifted. As i let you know. I love you eco. Exo right now has our impressions of roger corner here from kinda funny is already beaten hitman and then it was me and bless you talking about our initial impressions in review so far but the metacritic as it stands which were not and of course is at eighty eight. This is as eight or nine. Am this morning Games beat gave five out of five. Jeffey grub grub rights hitman works because developer iowa interactive bills the games as predictable and rigid machines and as players. We control the key to this machine in asian. Forty-seven io's job is to make sure that when players insert forty seven into this massive cogs moving parts that other parts of the machine awaken in present new opportunities for creativity hitman three in particular works because this machine is more intricate and fund to explore than ever thanks to its incredible levels overnight over an idea dot com luke riley gave it a nine point zero and wrote rich will warning in highly reliable. Hit man three is a superb installment of i os idiosyncratic and much but much love style series. The fundamentals haven't changed since two thousand sixteen but it's collection of outstanding maps for a refined reliable in robust curtain. Closer to the current hitman trilogy. Six maps may sound slim but each one is huge and designed to be played several times over. And even that. It's very unlikely you'll ha- you'll have uncovered all of its creative. It surprising assassination opportunities. There really isn't a week one in the bunch. This barcode butcher has made a lot of appearances over the past twenty years but hitman three is definitely one of his best and then at dual shockers. It got an eight point zero chris. Cornelius rights still the modular nature of each games. Entries means that all three play extremely similarly. Here's of course talk about the them so if you played hitman one or two already you know exactly what you're getting with three there's nothing new or groundbreaking here just honestly though that's perfectly fine for those who like this style of game. As the high quality of level design carries forward. You might not get a wholly original concept or sequel hit ansari. What you will get is the same intricate set of levels. Apply to new areas and concept's whether it's trying to uncover covert operatives in berlin berlin rave or a weaving through the secret passages in dartmoor mansion This these locales and their implementation really are treat. I mean out of jail with game. Play as much as i could have but i certainly loved exploring these areas in plumbing their secrets mr gary widow. What is your history with the hitman. Franchising where are you with hitman. Three my my My history with The hitman series intermittent played the since the very very first hitman gained back in to die. It's a franchise that has has come and gone and has at various different reboots and it seems like re in recent years. It's really coming to. It's the most recent iterations hitman year when they were rolling them out as episodes that was really really popular with people really likes them. I've always tried to get into them. And i've heard something about them just never quite connected with me and i think that's just more to do with that's less to do with the game's not being good games and more to do with him just being somehow like just incompatible with my own tastes gators off you no matter how but i feel i feel like that but not like in a big way is a big disconnect some like. I know. there's a game here that i would really enjoy. If i could just get into it. So i feel like this with this new hitman. Three is the perfect opportunity for me to give it like one more. I'm really gonna try. I'm really going to try to get into. I'm excited about it. I think my wife my About her favorite. Pop the assassin's creed. Games sneaking around us astern people. That's literally all you do so might be it might be hookup as well. I'm very keen to try. I'm also very glad patrick. Click onto the question for me. Hold on because. I think that question might lead into diego's question he wrote into patriots dot com slash. Kind of funny games says hi guys. First time longtime reviews for main three are out and largely positive. My question is simple as someone who never played one of these. Is it worth starting with three or their changes to the mechanics so minimal that maybe i should start with cheaper option of hitman to grabs me from their. Thanks much love. This is a big question. Not just the hitman to the back levels legacy stuff but is hit. Hit me in three a great jumping off point if you've never played before right. This is what you were talking about with club. We and we and we see this every time a big new game series brings out a game right like like one of the most commonly asked questions i've heard in the last year is like where do you start with for example the yakuza games. Many of the right should you. Can you start with like a dragon. You wanna stop zero. Always different ways to get into it. And so i'd every game is different right and every every series is different understand. Why the questions coming from right especially. Since i saw recently that i owe think tweeted something about it. Meant three being the the concluding chapter in a hitman. Trilogy edgy when i when i hear that that makes me a bit nervous like you wouldn't for example to just jump into light. Return of the jet is the first hours from the emerson right. Still be a great movie but a lot of stuff wouldn't make sense and you'd be a bit lost because you know it's picking up story threads been percolating through the previous two films. You would be like who's this guy share. What's going on. And on. I wanna you don't wanna have that feeling but i feel like these days especially we've really games when like years between games. It's it kind of behooves game developers to make sure each new game can function both as the continuation of what's come before legacy players but can also be on boarding can be an entry point for people like you as a game developer or published. You really know helping self if you say oh yeah. This is really only accessible to people who have already played hitman. Because you never gonna grow your your fan vice that what you've got to You you've you've got to have each game be an accessory. An accessible new entry point. And i was very glad to see. Patrick clinic. Asked the same questions anything's into similar position to me intrigued to try. The new one has spent a of time with hitman before. Certainly no up unlike the balaji in the lower. What's happening with like agent. Forty seven's store. I couldn't tell you a single fucking thing about agent forty seven and now he's a ball dude with a barcode on his on the back now and that's nice people is the. Is there much mortar. No probably any of it. But i was very glad to see this morning that apparently a lot of people had replied to patrick and the consensus. Yet you can just jump into say hitman three and whatever problems with like not knowing what's going on so that's what i'm gonna do. I also do have. The hitman wanted to legacy editions. That came whatever deluxe super duper pack. The i got so. I might try those as well but i'm just going to jump into three because that's going to be the one that is most optimized for next gen and like you know it's gonna it's gonna it's gonna have the most valuable learnings from one and two right and i think it's you and me. Gary have a very similar hitman story. Where i remember getting that i hitman. Ips two and bringing it home in popping it. It'd be like oh. This isn't what i thought it was going to be. I thought it was going to be more like a metal gear at the time and so i fell off and so every man. That's come but let's talk specifically about this trilogy hitman one and two i pop on. I usually play the first map in the first couple mission. Maybe i into a couple of maybe one more. And i'm like i get it. I see what this game's doing it's not for me like something about it doesn't click and i'm right there with you of like. I know that there is a game there that i could get into but i've struggled to do it and so hit me three. I m coming in very much. And i've played on part of the review on. Ps i love you so far. I'm three missions into the six maps or whatever so there you go it. Was this idea that i'm playing it. I like it. But i don't and i don't and it's the hold up for me is in the over the you know. There's the individual individual maps with your targets and their intricate plots. And what to do. They're right over over. That is layered this the end of the trilogy story. That's happening right. And i think even for me starting at never having beaten hitman one or two but starting those games they do a great job of like. Here's what's happened in the previous games here. Who's these other two players. You're with our this is what's going on. Go for it.

Luke Riley Dartmoor Mansion Mr Gary Widow Berlin Ansari Cornelius Roger Iowa Patrick Patrick Clinic Chris Patriots Diego Gary
"cornelius" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

04:26 min | 2 years ago

"cornelius" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"Over 36 degrees now in New York City. Going up to 41. Today. It's going to be mostly sunny. A few more clouds overnight tonight with a low of 31 degrees and then tomorrow back up to a high in the low forties are high 43 tomorrow, sunshine expected all day. And a free Manus. Oh, it's morning edition from NPR News. I'm Noel King and I'm Steve Inskeep. Good morning. Countries like the United States, The U. K and Israel have a head start on providing covert 19 vaccinations, which has led Europeans to criticize what they say is a slow rollout for them. NPR's Rob Smith Reports. For a month. Now Europeans have sat inside there locked down homes, watching news reports of Americans and Brits getting the world's first vaccines for covert. 19 and his commentator Stefan Cornelius says they've spent the holiday season quietly stewing as their own European Union finally got around to proving its first vaccine a few weeks later. Just in time for a two week Christmas break. People want to see these vaccination happening, fostered quick, and that's not taking place. Cornelius, political editor of the German daily Pseudo genocide, Song says Germans in particular have been sour about how slowly they think Europe is moving on the vaccination front. German politicians and newspapers have blamed European Union leaders for moving too slowly and for wanting to control the entire vaccination rollout. For all its 27 member states. There is obviously someone who has to be blamed because there is not enough vaccines in in Germany at the moment. So who can take the blame? It's normally do you but Brussels based correspondent Venom Muslim writes for the newspaper Frank Photo album. ANA says the truth is more complicated. Last summer, you leaders agreed to order two billion doses of the vaccine from six different producers and effort, says Moose Lor to diversify risk. Nobody knew exactly what Which kind of facts in would be would be successful in the future, So the approach was to negotiate with really every potential producers in November, when it became clear the Fizer by on tech and modern of vaccines were further along in their trials and the others, Boosler says the you could've ordered more from those particular suppliers, but it didn't Partly, he says, due to cost materials vaccine caused $22 a dose of Fizer Biotech one round 15 a dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine cost around $2. In the end Stefan Cornelius says these delays will likely soon be for gotten as the EU is on the brink of approving both the Moderna and AstraZeneca vaccines and biotech is finishing construction of a massive production facility in Germany. Cornelius. Thanks German Health Minister Jens Spahn is prediction that all Germans will have access to a vaccine before July may likely pan out. He says that use approach to the vaccine is an easy target for criticism. Especially for politicians in what is an important election year for Germany. But in the end, it'll prove to be effective. Just imagine Tony would have sort of stepped forward with a higher IRS power and board supplies from one producer in huge quantities and left other European countries behind. That would of course, huge outcry and political trouble within the European Union. So you have to act unified. With Britain gone from the EU, and with countries like Hungary and Poland threatening to unravel the block. Cornelius says Germany cannot afford to be a vaccine Nationalist Acting as one European Union, with the buying power of 250 million citizens has not only helped negotiate good prices for vaccines, but it's also insured a unified distribution that he says will be more obvious once the block approves more vaccines in the weeks ahead. Rob Schmitz. NPR NEWS Berlin.

Stefan Cornelius European Union Germany Europe NPR News NPR New York City Jens Spahn Fizer Biotech Noel King Rob Schmitz Moose Lor Steve Inskeep United States Brussels Rob Smith Boosler Berlin ANA
Get the lead out: Zambias toxic mine

The Economist: The Intelligence

07:27 min | 2 years ago

Get the lead out: Zambias toxic mine

"Don been doing into the lead comes in. The central zambian town of kabwe has been called the most toxic place on the planet. It was developed around a lead mine built by a british colonial firm in the early nineteen hundreds although the mine shut its doors in one thousand nine hundred four. it's toxic. Dust continues to plague the town. Some residents try to protect themselves like joy. Bouza who tells her young brothers not to play outside of just in before i went to now a class action lawsuit against anglo american south africa which was affiliated with the mind for fifty years is seeking compensation for more than one hundred thousand women and children. Wade tend to defend positions as. We don't believe that. Anglo american is responsible for the current situation. I obviously understand that. That doesn't help. The people of kabwe. And i realized that and of course we have every sympathy so they applaud whatever the outcome of the case. There will still be a need to deal with the lead that permeates the town's soil and it inhabitants bodies. The most atrocious cliche for any africa correspondent is to refer to replace as hot and dusty but in case the fact that cowboys hot and dusty really matters because it's the dust off the former lead mine. The has blown all of time john. Mcdermott is the economists. Chief africa respondent. He recently visited kabwe. Much of kabwe is a normal. Mid sized. african settee has a bustling market. And it's a hive of activity but there are about half a dozen townships that lie close to the former smelter and they in particular are kind of coated in this fine dust which contains the lead metal. And when i was there a few weeks ago. I went to see a man called. Assail timbo. hello good morning how you move you. Who was a minor for almost two decades and we sat in his front yard. What kind of tree is this smuggle underneath a mango tree while chickens were pecking around his feet and i heard her story of the mind. Gross today it will be became. I think they demo- plus mr tembo worked at the mine after it was nationalized in nine thousand nine hundred seventy until it closed in one thousand nine hundred four and he says he was never really told about the dangers of lead while he was there but that today continues to give him health problems. He says he's got bad eyesight sore head droopy limbs. He can't be sure but he suspects the all of those elements have something to do with the fact that worked at the lead. The hoi issue has come to everybody in this study after the miami has been and presumably if this dust is all around that mr tembo story isn't isn't unique. That's right anyone you speak to in cowboy has some knowledge of the risks of lead and more recently that wellness has grown especially when it comes to the dangers faced by children. Local ngos are hosting radio shows and running courses in schools to educate people. Someone please tell me about what is lead. Leave is a subset benefits as you. Live is very poisonous. Substance that finding the so. That's gonna alert of course. Potentially toxic metal can be poisonous really low levels in the bloodstream. And because children's bodies are smaller they're developing and because kids more likely inhale and ingest the toxic dust there at greater risk and their effects can be profound. We're talking about behavioral problems learning disabilities and ultimately low iq if you have prolonged exposure to the metal and what efforts have been made down the years to to protect the residents from from the the the mines lead. There'd been a few efforts a couple funded by the world bank including one that's going but environmental scientists and experts in this field are convinced that none of them have been or will be sufficient to fully decontaminate the town. I saw this. When i went to the house of a man called cornelius katiti. They went to kidneys. Closed this one at that point. And then they put some blocks so that their wits through this one he has a canal right on the back of his garden which was dredged in the two thousands by a world bank funded project but even today as a matter has grown into it. Every rainy season water builds up and the comes over the of canal into his garden adding to the toxic contents of yard. And that just symbolized for me. How while there's been these piecemeal efforts day in day out to the people in cowboy still face with the poisonous environs and about the court case that that is tackling this problem. Why why is it happening now. After all these years of of half hearted efforts lawyers have been looking at the case for the better part of two decades but they feel they finally got in the necessarily archive over research. Done to bring the case against anglo and the also feel that legal changes in south africa to do with the ease of making a class action suit mean that now is the time to try and seek redress for their clients. And what do you think will happen. The only thing. I know for sure is that the case is gonna take many years to play out the lawyers for the applicants need to first prove that the case can be heard in south africa. That's before it even gets to trial and if it were to get to trial there's no the anglo will vigorously contest the charges so i don't think there'll be a resolution anytime soon and in the meantime the residents of kabwe will will continue to inhale to live around all of this toxic dirt. Subtly that's the case in the absence of any clear plan to remediate the time people living in. Kobe are trying their best to protect themselves. But ultimately many residents are simply too poor to leave and others do not want to go because whatever its perils cowboys their home like cornelius katiti. But you hope that your children your grandchildren will be to play and safety some point. Yes john thank you very much for your time. Thank you jason.

Kabwe Mr Tembo Bouza Assail Timbo Africa South Africa Mcdermott Wade Cornelius Katiti DON Cowboys John Miami Anglo Kobe Jason
Boeing 737 Max jets approved to fly again in wake of deadly crashes

Axios Today

01:25 min | 2 years ago

Boeing 737 Max jets approved to fly again in wake of deadly crashes

"It was almost two years ago. That boeing was forced to ground their fleet of seven. Thirty seven max jets after two. Fatal plane crashes that killed three hundred and forty six people. Yesterday the faa officially gave boeing the. Go ahead to fly again. According brown has axios markets reporter. Cornelius those crashes were caused by both a sensor that malfunctioned that push the noses of the plane downward as well as a lack of training on how to deal with this. What has boeing changed. So what they've done is they've made a tweak to the software that limits the system's capability to force the nose of the plane downward and the faa has been conducting a series of certification test. Flights of the max over the course of the last few months what are you hearing from the airline's about how much confidence they have in these planes now as well as airline pilots association. I think they're confident that the faa has done everything that can queue. Make sure that this plane is safe now. The question is are consumers. Going to think it's safe. That's the huge question. Though courtney i feel like people don't think it's safe to fly now anyway. Because of the pandemic people are hesitant to fly period by the time that people do feel more comfortable flying in theory. The seven seven. Max will be in the air already for a few months and maybe that will give people a sense of

Boeing FAA Cornelius Brown Courtney
The History Of Soul Train

Black History in Two Minutes

02:38 min | 2 years ago

The History Of Soul Train

"Billed as the hippest trip in America soul trained was an undeniable cultural phenomenon. Soul. Train was conceived of as a black American bandstand by a man named Don Cornelius a Chicago Radio reporter and the DJ. Hosted by Cornelius the show launched in one, thousand, nine, hundred, seventy. Initially airing. Only. In, CHICAGO. It was a low budget black and white TV show. But Seemingly Became a cultural phenomenon? And soon, it's what the nation. Hey they. Up to the mind. going. For. Those rain. Cornelius had this vision of bringing black popular culture music and dance to the Stream, and it's not just African Americans who were tuning in clearly you have young black folks who are on. TV being being into the homes of white. Americans across the country. This coming off the heels of the civil rights movement and is the first time that you're seeing. Young black teenagers really not mired in the way that they've been preceded national news. Soul train came appointment viewing. Show wasn't just about sings of their songs. It was as much about the dancers. Dance is that they were introducing two teenagers around the country. Veto regionalized. M made it national suddenly their dance became everyone's days. We're trying to emulate everything that we see. Soul train has the distinction of being one of the longest running programs in the history of American television. Showcasing, black music and culture to Americans of every race. You've always had in various ways, black popular culture being mainstream but for so long it was being mainstreamed with white voices and white vases. So to have then culture on display that way was. Revolutionary. Soul train brought. It's devoted audience love he's soul. The Mantra Don Cornelius. Passionately other. At the end of every episode an Don. Joining. Reason. We would love.

Don Cornelius Chicago America Reporter
Ladies' First

Your Brain on Facts

05:35 min | 2 years ago

Ladies' First

"Valentina Tereshkova was twenty two years old when she made her first parachute jump with a local aviation club in nineteen, fifty nine and she loved it. unbeknownst to her this exhilarating pastime was giving her skills that would bring her to the attention of the Soviet government. The Soviets needed someone who could handle themselves jumping from twenty thousand feet. The mandatory ejection altitude from the re entry of a rocket capsule. One of the many facets of the space race to the Soviets wanted to win was to have the first woman in space in February nineteen, sixty, two Tereshkova and four other women, three parachutists and one pilot began the intensive training to become cosmonauts. My Name's Moxy and this is your brain on facts. We're headed toward another presidential election and it seems like both a minute ago and an attorney ago that we had a female candidate for president would most people don't know is that the first female candidate? Rian before she was even allowed to vote. Victoria Claflin later, Victoria Woodhall was one of ten children born to illiterate mother and a petty criminal father. Would Hell attended school sporadically for a few years. At Age Fifteen, she married a doctor who soon revealed himself to be an alcoholic philanderer. To make matters worse the sixteen year old woodhall gave birth to a mentally handicapped son who would need extra care in eighteen fifty four. Three of would hold siblings had died as children. And she claims she had clairvoyant powers to communicate with them. Always looking for a new scam, to run. Her father put her on the road with her sister Tennessee as a faith healing and fortune telling act selling elixirs that promised to cure everything from asthma to cancer. They didn't. In fact, Tennessee was indicted for manslaughter after one of her patients died. By some good fortune that I don't know the sisters found themselves with a wealthy patron in the form of railroad magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt. He and Tennessee were rumored to be lovers. Stock Tips that she picked up during their relationship came in pretty handy during an eighteen, sixty, nine gold panic during which the sisters supposedly netted seven hundred thousand dollars. With. Vanderbilt's bankrolling Victoria and Tennessee then opened their own highly publicized firm named Woodhall Claflin and company becoming the first female stockbrokers on wall. Street. However they were never granted a seat on the New York Stock Exchange. It would take another near century before Muriel Siebert did in nineteen, sixty seven. In the same year that she became a stockbroker would attended her first suffragette rally and immediately became a passionate devotee of the 'cause. She befriended or beguiled a congressman to get her an invitation to testify before the House Judiciary Committee. She argued that women did already have the right to vote under the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments those granted persons born or naturalized in the United, states citizenship and prohibited voter discrimination. But the house declined to enact any legislation on the matter. Even still the appearance made her a celebrity among suffragettes. In. April. Of Eighteen seventy, just two months after opening her brokerage firm woodhull announced her candidacy for president of the United States on a platform of women's suffrage regulation of monopolies nationalization of railroads, an eight hour workday direct taxation. Abolition of the death penalty and welfare for the poor what whole helped organize the equal rights party. which nominated her at its May eighteen, seventy two. Famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass was selected as her running mate and told about eventually he never acknowledged it officially, and in fact, he campaigned for the incumbent Republican Ulysses s grant. What else name appeared on ballots in a couple of states. Knows for certain votes she received because apparently they weren't counted. All of this was essentially moot. Though considering that would hold did not reach the constitutionally required age of thirty five until six months after the inauguration. It would be nineteen, sixty four before a woman was actively considered for a nomination of a major party. When Margaret Smith qualified for the ballot of six state primaries even coming in second in Illinois. The only female candidate other than Clinton was faith spotted Eagle a native American activist who received a vote from Robert. Sexual. Junior. WHO's referred to as a faithless elector for not voting has pledged section also voted for why known Luke for vice. President. Luke is executive director of honor, the Earth a native environmental organization, which plays an active role in the Dakota access pipeline protests.

Valentina Tereshkova Tennessee Cornelius Vanderbilt President Trump Victoria Woodhall Muriel Siebert Victoria Claflin Woodhall Claflin United States Luke Soviet Government Frederick Douglass Rian Margaret Smith House Judiciary Committee Asthma United Clinton Congressman
The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey

Books and Boba

05:02 min | 3 years ago

The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey

"So, re-re yes. What do you want to start with this one? I think we should start with the author's background. and. Just like the inspiration behind Irvine. So. John Massey was born in England and she was raised in the US right now, she lives in Baltimore and her parents are from India and Germany. So she did a lot of traveling. She actually wrote another mystery series back in the nineties which was set in Tokyo while she was living in Japan and it's the Ray Chamara mystery series. But this book was more in the of own voices She did an incredible amount of research for the book I don't know if the people are goods forums read the acknowledgments at the very back but I tend to read all of the acknowledgments because I. I'm usually really curious as to who the author thank and it gives me like a sense of. Their journey when it came to writing the book and she. Massey doesn't have a background in law. She reached out to people reached out to legal historians at universities in. The US who specialize in South Asian law and also in Bombay she contacted magazine editors who are familiar with Parsi customs she went she actually went to Mumbai and she visited all of the historical institutions she reached out to like even railway experts. So she could figure out like how people were able to travel from one place to another and even with the food she I think she interviewed a bunch of like food writers as well. So like the food descriptions in this book are fantastic and our main character per wien is actually inspired by two. Women, attorneys. One of them was Cornelius One of them was Cornelius She was the first woman to read law at Oxford, and the first woman to take the British law exam in eighteen ninety to eighteen, ninety two that's a lot earlier than I would expect the first. First Indian woman to to study law, and the other women that appropriate is based on is Mathon Totta lung who also studied law in Oxford and whisk first woman admitted to the Bombay bar a back in one thousand, nine, hundred, twenty, three. So. Yeah like per Venus. This this book is set in the nineteen twenties. So yeah. It's actually it's really interesting that it's actually based on women who did practice law so Yeah. I mean it's I? Don't think reunite can claim to be experts in the cultures of India but this book real you can tell that the author did a lot of research especially to portray like Mumbai such Mambi during this time period, which was a pre partition it was it depicts a Mumbai that's very multicultural multifaith like a lot of different. People Customs Cultures Religions, and even value sets that kind of coexisting with each other which made for really interesting setting especially in the context of per wien enter father Jamshedi as lawyers who had to. Navigate these. Waters right because every single community has their own set of loss at they have to understand and know how to argue and just also takes place on the backdrop of this was when India was still in imperial colony, right is still part of the British empire and so you have the added. wrinkle of a colonizing power in the form of white people in the mix as well. Yeah Like you said, I'm I'm not an expert with a one thousand, nine, hundred twenty s India But in terms of like England nineteen twenties. So that was during George, the fifth Who was the grandson of Queen Victoria? It's so it's to rains after the Victorian era. So very the the the dad of the King's speech King Yes yes. So this was during time where there was a rise in socialism. And just. I. Think it was like at the height of the British empire and then it crumbled.

Bombay John Massey India United States People Customs Cultures Religi England Mathon Totta Lung Irvine Oxford King Ray Chamara Tokyo Japan Baltimore Jamshedi George Queen Victoria Germany Mambi
3 youth facility staffers charged in death of black teen in Michigan

Financial Issues with Dan Celia

00:25 sec | 3 years ago

3 youth facility staffers charged in death of black teen in Michigan

"Barnes three staff members of the youth facility in Kalamazoo Michigan have been charged in the death of a black teenager who died eight days after being restrained for throwing a sandwich decision comes after the county medical examiner ruled sixteen year old Cornelius Fredericks death a homicide by result of restraint asphyxia an investigation by Michigan's department of health found the staffers used a restraint that was significantly disproportionate with one team sitting on Fredericks chest for over twelve

Barnes Kalamazoo Michigan Cornelius Fredericks Department Of Health
3 youth facility staffers in Michigan charged in death of black teen

The Frankie Boyer Show

00:25 sec | 3 years ago

3 youth facility staffers in Michigan charged in death of black teen

"Barnes three staff members of the youth facility in Kalamazoo Michigan have been charged in the death of a black teenager who died eight days after being restrained for throwing a sandwich decision comes after the county medical examiner ruled sixteen year old Cornelius Fredericks death a homicide by result of restraint asphyxia an investigation by Michigan's department of health found the staffers used a restraint that was significantly disproportionate with one team sitting on Fredericks just for over

Barnes Kalamazoo Michigan Cornelius Fredericks Department Of Health
3 charged after medical examiner rules teen’s death homicide

AP News Radio

01:09 min | 3 years ago

3 charged after medical examiner rules teen’s death homicide

"As the nation grapples with racial injustice three workers at a Michigan youth facility are criminally charged with the black teen's death well what South Carolina officer is cleared of wrongdoing in the fatal shooting of Michigan prosecutors charging three staffers at the lakeside academy with involuntary manslaughter sixteen year old Cornelius Fredericks was restrained on the ground in late April after throwing a sandwich his family's lawyer says he went into cardiac arrest after screaming out I can't breathe in Columbia South Carolina officer Kevin Davis will not be charged in the fatal shooting of seventeen year old Josh ruff and in April body cam video catches the chase the prosecutor says robin pulling a gun this made him a threat to sunny Arizona as police chiefs offer to resign after the April death of a suspect in handcuffs who is placed face down and three officers in Wilmington North Carolina are fired caught on video making racist remarks one even called for a civil war to quote white but black people off the map I'm Jackie Quinn

Officer Involuntary Manslaughter Cornelius Fredericks Josh Ruff Prosecutor Robin Arizona Wilmington North Carolina Jackie Quinn Michigan South Carolina Columbia South Carolina Kevin Davis
3 charged after medical examiner rules teen’s death homicide

AP News Radio

01:09 min | 3 years ago

3 charged after medical examiner rules teen’s death homicide

"Hi as Mike the nation Ross grapples you're reporting with house racial speaker Nancy injustice Pelosi three unveils workers a new at obamacare a Michigan youth facility bill are criminally house speaker charged Nancy Pelosi with the black has announced teen's a plan death that would well expand what subsidies South Carolina allowing more officer people to is qualify cleared of for wrongdoing the affordable Care in the Act fatal this shooting is about the lives of Michigan prosecutors charging the livelihood three staffers at the lakeside of the academy American people with involuntary hello sees announcement manslaughter came just sixteen one day year old before Cornelius the trump administration Fredericks was expected was restrained to file on papers the ground with in the late Supreme April Court after arguing throwing a the sandwich ACA is his unconstitutional family's lawyer says he hello went she into criticized cardiac the arrest administration's after unrelenting screaming out efforts to I take can't down breathe obamacare in Columbia noting there South is Carolina a pandemic was wrong any time now officer Kevin beyond Davis stupid will not be charged in a statement in the fatal White House shooting spokesman of seventeen Judd Deere said year old pelo Josh see ruff is just and playing in April politics body might cam cross video your Washington catches the chase the prosecutor says robin pulling a gun this made him a threat to sunny Arizona as police chiefs offer to resign after the April death of a suspect in handcuffs who is placed face down and three officers in Wilmington North Carolina are fired caught on video making racist remarks one even called for a civil war to quote white but black people off the map I'm Jackie Quinn

Judd Deere Cornelius Officer Michigan Nancy Injustice Pelosi Jackie Quinn Wilmington North Carolina Arizona Robin Prosecutor Washington Ruff Josh Mike White House Davis Kevin Columbia Obamacare
Coronavirus cases have more than doubled in Louisiana since last Wednesday

Jay Talking

00:24 sec | 3 years ago

Coronavirus cases have more than doubled in Louisiana since last Wednesday

"In Louisiana cobit nineteen cases have more than doubled since last Wednesday Dr Angela Cornelius is serving in New Orleans part of a seven member volunteer team from Shreveport other people dying in our units that their family can't be here with them and so that's it's just a difficult difficult it's very difficult the virus claimed the lives

Dr Angela Cornelius Louisiana New Orleans Shreveport
A pot shop at your door: Home delivery surges amid outbreak

AP News Radio

00:43 sec | 3 years ago

A pot shop at your door: Home delivery surges amid outbreak

"Thirty three among the doorman at the green cross cannabis shop in San Francisco calls out for the next customer to come very grateful that they've had it open civil because me I deal with anxiety and you know a lot of people that really depend on the medical marijuana and Jackie Cornelius said you most definitely will feel the ease of the craze of it was over at the apothecary and dispensary where hand sanitizers just as prominent as pot store manager Carrie men's ello says customers have been looting it was a mad dash when people thought we wouldn't be here for them people knew they needed something to get them through not only the time of being maybe trapped at home for these few weeks but just to feel good I'm Julie Walker

San Francisco Marijuana Jackie Cornelius Carrie Men Julie Walker Cannabis