26 Burst results for "Coyne"

Crypto-News
Enjin Coin ENJ and Gala GALA Leave Holders Disappointed As Orbeon Protocol ORBN Sells Out
"8 a.m. Sunday, December 18th, 2022. And gene Coyne E and J and galaga leave holders disappointed as orby and protocol or sells out. Your capital is at risk the value of any investment you make may go up or down, so you may get back less than your initial investment. And gene coin E and J and gala gala holders have been left disappointed as the prices continue to plunge during the bear market. This is in contrast to the immense. The post and gene coin E and J and galaga leave holders disappointed as orbee and protocol or BN sells out appeared first on crypto news dot net.

Money For the Rest of Us
"coyne" Discussed on Money For the Rest of Us
"The reason why is there was a 35% increase in gun theft, with more people having guns even if they're hidden, more guns got stolen. You also found that the police just weren't as effective in prosecuting crime. So here then we have unintended consequence of legislation put in place to reduce gun violence actually led to increased gun violence. Another example was in study, I saw by Sarah pappy titled marijuana legalization and fertility. Many states around the U.S. have made it legal to use marijuana for recreational uses, as well as for health uses. Legalizing drugs leads to more production. And so there was the anticipated consequence that the price of marijuana would fall and it has from about $2000 a pound and 2016 to a $1025 a pound today. Now that has hurt some of the smaller growers of marijuana because it's been a more efficient market, but that's anticipated consequence. What wasn't necessarily anticipated, according to this study, is that the higher use of marijuana has led to lower fertility rates. Fewer births because marijuana uses lowers the likelihood of pregnancy through health effects on both women and men. It's just less likely to conceive. On the other hand, greater use of marijuana leads to more sexual activity. There are two forces there. There's more sex, but less conception. And overall then, the birth rate has gone down about 3% on average. Not an anticipated consequence of marijuana, liberalization. Economists Keras Lambert and Christopher Coyne write that unattended consequences result from human action in complex and open ended systems. The world is a complex adaptive system. So many different linkages. Many which are unknown and as actions are taken as it cascades through the system, it leads to both positive and negative consequences. They're inevitable. It's just the nature of complex adaptive systems and making choices. There's incentives to make choices and those incentives can be changed by the government, or it can even be changed by algorithms. I've been amused over the last year or so. In looking at the algorithm for Instagram, the algorithm started favoring video content. So there's friends that we have that run a retail store that for years have posted pictures of models, modeling, clothing. Now, as photographs aren't getting the type of traction that they used to have now, they have to do reels and in fact the owner of the store is having the dance in front of the camera and do all kinds of different, unique content, different than anything they ever did in order to get engagement on social media, which is a big driver of their business. We're seeing this with YouTube. On YouTube, it used to be if you subscribe to a channel, you saw their videos when they produced new videos. Not anymore. The algorithm won't necessarily show a video of someone you follow on YouTube. And that has led YouTubers to use more clickbait like titles, more extreme titles in the personal finance space.

The Bad Crypto Podcast
"coyne" Discussed on The Bad Crypto Podcast
"So maybe you'll join us as well. Super doge, Zach, thanks so much. Thank you guys for having us. It's been the pleasure. As always, we're not financial advisers and you know, you should go do your own due diligence. Don't ever say, hey, bad crypto told me to buy a token because we don't do that. And that would be a lie. And then you'd have to go sit in the corner and think about what you've done. But we're excited about super doge. I actually tweeted this out yesterday, I said, I don't know if you shit corners or paying attention to what sup dog is about to do, but you might want to check it out, super doge IO. And yesterday, the market cap was 11 million. I woke up. The market cap was 9 million. And but what has happened since then, like this morning, it got down to .0, zero 8 5 at like two 30 in the morning. And then it got listed on coin market cap today. And now as it's sitting at almost 1.6 cents, it's at an all time high. Look at this chart for today. It went with the pal, baboon. It literally, if you've got nan, you know, at two o'clock in the morning. And then you would have doubled your money just today. But here's the thing, the market cap on this thing now is what, I'm gonna go over here to my favorite app because sometimes on Coyne gecko or coin market cap, they don't have the up to date prices as good as they could do. So I'm going over to my favorite BSC chain, which is poo coin dot app. And poo coin it says the exact market cap of this thing right now is 14 .6 million. So it's up about three and a half million from when I tweeted yesterday but is that 14 million? What did she be new get up to?.

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"And you know it's based on our research that we've taught so try to take it because i work with a lot of parents. Lisa and I've found your book really helpful on actress parents. So i'd like to be there because i want to. It's hard being a parent i want. I need all the help. I can get to support parents not to mention being apparent myself about parenting when i have bacon so there you go. I know it sounds so simple until you have kids and then you realize quite complicated and ben. Could you tell us a little bit about your your workshop together on cd for young people salvation. I during a an eight week course starting in october. It's monday afternoons evenings in the states. It's tuesday mornings over here new zealand and it's a cost for conditions. Who work with children. Teenagers families struggling with ocd. When i really love about this course it's about third time teaching it as we go through all the concepts you need to know. The inhibitory learning model of how to exposure response. Prevention acceptance is acceptance and commitment therapy. We have time for case consultations every single week. But the i love about it is. It's pretty much jogging. Free that really early on the coast. We're translating these good. These concepts was strong scientific evidence. And we're talking about them. Using words that curiosity and willingness flexibility rather than inhibitory learning. And so you walk away from the course with a sense of. Hey let's get out. Let's start talking to young people already. And i've got some words i can use with them and it makes it a lot more terrifying for me to teach because there's a lot more role plays in case consultations and questions and you know we've planned out some of the content but there's a lot of room for discussion and it makes it a really fun course for at least i hopefully certainly for me and for the participants and has really good flow on for the young people are cl two people during the course of working with as well. Well if your a clinician check those out that's fantastic and the book is great stuff. That's loud highly recommend. It's really readable and useful at once which is quite a feat. I have to say and thank you both so much. I've learned a lot from your work. And i really appreciate you being here. Expensive time with you again. So rachel one to should we make a side note that we're going across multiple continents. This happened and it's five. Am here it's midnight in new zealand and it's one o'clock one o'clock the afternoon in ireland so all broadcasts normally starts from coast to coast. But this time you've really outdone yourself s. rescheduled. It anyway. really appreciate it. Thank.

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"The ninja level parenting is. I'm sure that's necrotizing fish itis. It's gonna eat your whole arm. Maybe maybe not you know deliberately trying to trigger those exposures so those would be some examples. I don't know ben. Have you got some for more parenting tips. It's parents to say partners. Took because they don't have to say when someone asks for the question. Say who wants to know that you will the see. I can answer that for you. But who wants to know that and we're parents can't do the exposure response prevention for their child or they can do is help. The child with attain learned are actually. She is playing up again. It's trying to find a new way to get my attention. And then i can make a choice with our one that reassurance right now. I don't want that reassurance right now. Reassurance is interesting. I see it a lot with adult clients. Maybe without ocd Who are say. They're having a relationship with a partner and they just get to the point where they're worried only gonna get abandoned and rejected here and so they seek reassurance sometimes to the point where it's really interferes with the relationship and it is like we're looking for that quick fix but in the long run. Usually it does not help and actually de. That's i'm glad you brought that up because that's one of the lesser known kinds of ocd right. I mean certainly. These are things that people experience relationships sometimes generally but relationship. Ocd is about this persistent recurrent dow at this person might be right for you or whether they might or might not betray you or be disloyal or cetera. And that's something that can often show up people to Instinct yeah no that. Yeah yup one of the things that. Ocd really hates his uncertainty and limited uncertain world. There's so little in our control. And i think that urge to control the uncertain Is at the heart of most if not all of cd and so really learning to make friends with that uncertainty and maybe even not just surface to enjoy appreciated to cultivate it to to lean into it when it shows up. I think is a really important part of treatment. What a skill for all of us in this room on. I think the last year and a half has taught us anything. It's that uncertainty as part of life and we need to learn how to roll with it right now. I mean think about all the things we thought were so that the pandemic taught us. No actually it could be like this. You know what a lesson. Well i really appreciate both of you being here. I know you have a couple of workshops coming up for clinicians. Maybe lisa could you tell us a bit about your parenting workshop to start share so I am teaching workshop with practice with dr evelyn. Gould who is a colleague and research are eric friend of mine for years. And we've done this kind of John research Clinical were treatment development work with parents for a long time and that of course focused on Evidence based parenting principles right like positive behavior support use of us agree Had set limits and all of those things also reducing accommodation but comes over knack perspective because one of the things that we feel is often missing in work with parents is acknowledging and teaching about Elaborating on the function that their thoughts and feelings might have right as triggers of either helpful or unhelpful. Parenting behavior so if you are condition who works with parents and you want to add that to your repertoire. You know if you are carpeted hugo percent your cycle dynamic Doesn't really matter come and hang out with us. It's a really fun class..

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"That was gonna be my next question here. So that's a perfect setup in and i'll read your mind yes he said Well let's turn it over to lisa. Could you speak about more about the role of families here. Both in terms of maintaining ocd. But then also their role in helping the client. Yeah sure So i think that whenever you were with young people it's really important to notice that they are nested in the context of family and again. I want to start with this idea. All behavior that we do make sense. There's a reason that we do these things. And so when parents cedar children's suffering or feeling anxious they want help and usually that help looks like doing something to make them less anxious. And you notice that that's the same thing it's the same functions rituals have cd and so in the same way. That cd spirals Young people it can also spiral in their parents right. Who feel like good parenting needs. I need to fix things. I in the to fix this discomfort. Otherwise i'm not such a great parent and unfortunately it is what allows of cd to rent and continue to rent space in that family and so in the name for that is accommodation rental accommodation. And it happens not just young people but even in adult relationships when you have partners as found them and things like that so a critical cheese of work with young people is to make sure that parents become aware of what they're doing in response to the child's Expressed fear of comfort and helping them to slowly and hopefully collaboratively but sometimes not Holdback those accommodations to allow the young person to have the opportunity to learn a different way to handle them. So what might be. Do you have an example of that. Like what what might be an example of how a parent would try to help and of course you know as a parent. I think all three of our parents want nothing more than to help your kids at too. I think is just so distressing in a when you're a parent. Your child is suffering But alec what might be an unhelpful way that a parent might accommodate. I think one that most of us can relate to whether or not we have kids with. Ocd or anxiety is reassurance seeking is this okay right kids asking is this okay is okay and you know in our family. We tend towards anxiety across generations and a little bit of cd also across generations. And so when i was younger and she's very anxious our health she would come to me with lake. Hey mom what is this. Spun on layer. Does that. And if i didn't no right what i know about. Oh cd i might say. I'm sure it's fine honey. I'm sure it's totally okay in joining the doctor. Check it out. Let's check it out but you wanna tell k. k. You can ask me anytime. Celestial and of course that feeds it and so what we did instead was. I'm sure it's cancer gonna die. Maybe will maybe you. I'm not sure necrotizing fasciitis was our favorite. That's flesh-eating bacteria and so whenever she would come to me and of course. We did this in this joking humorous way and she was very well I in handling it. But that's an example first of all not giving reassurance labeling that question you can answer it once and then you've already asked me. I'm not having that conversation with your. Ocd right. i love you. And that's joe cd talking knocking to give. Reassurance is one way to do it and then when you get really good at it..

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"Impossible or might lead to my death rate and then it's the best job ever watching people find their straits it really is mazing and it's challenging and hard it's amazing and also it can be hard been Was wondering if you could speak to some of the challenges both for clinicians also for clients and doing some of this work in your experience. What are the some of the things that can make it difficult or where people might get stuck. That's a nice big question. Oh i can lots of directions first. Few thoughts i had was. It's scary for the client and scary for the commission and you are asking people to do things that they tell you. They can't do and as a condition. I often feel really worried. If someone tells me this could kill could kill me or kill them. And you're like oh boy. What if i'm going to find one of them gonna do something they can't do and i- traumatize them or and so it's about being willing to have the fear as well and that's is hard for collisions To that was one thing. I thought of with conditions and often kind of person who goes into this job but somebody likes to talk and it's much easier to stay seated safely in your chair talking about things rather than doing things. Which is what we magic is with things happen. As exposure response prevention therapist for the client can be just so scary and you can feel coerced. You can feel like how. Do i get this right for the commission rather than on generally doing it to see what happens or you can feel like my therapist is asked me to do this. So it's probably okay and i'm not actually challenging things. The worst case fears. I'm just expanding my comfort zone a bit and i'm doing a few more things i wouldn't normally do but they're not really challenging my biggest fears because my therapist will not meet to do this if something really bad really could happen so the real change only happens when someone's able to say i don't know what's going to happen let's find out and that's something that's it's quite particularly on the therapy. It's easy to mess and to thank someone's doing it for those reasons but actually they're just trust in the therapist and not actually leaving the comfort zone yet. They've expanded the zone and one more thing jumps to mind. Mike therapy really hard as the accommodation as the family. The parents that parents love kids to bits and they support the child and to the teenager and they don't want to see the stress so they do things that helps them avoid those things that they must terrified of doing and as a therapist we need to identify and challenge accommodation. That's going on in the family as well because they can take over whole family can just move into the house and get really comfy around..

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"So that curiosity about the tone of voice that we talked trust housing and then we get to what we call them. The book willingness which is the exposure and response prevention. That's when i take a step. I say okay. My is telling me i shouldn't do this. Let's take a staff and find out what happens and that might be a huge. That might be a small step. It might be some a step that looks mold to other people. But phil's huge to me. But i'm gonna tell you i'm gonna do it. I'm gonna do while. She doesn't want me to do and i'm going to not do whatever oecd does want me to do to find out why happens to learn more about myself to learn that most saying i can't cope with the anxiety distress. That's coming up right now. And actually i can is room inside me for this level of distress. Eighty the live rings audio gardell. Do some habituation will maybe winds and either way. I still learn something really cool about myself. The i am bigger the cds telling me i am and then the final section is flexibility which is wants have taken. Those steps whatever steps. Ocd is going to keep moving. Keep changing keep china. I throw me off. And so i've got to be willing to be fixable and miss with. Ocd wherever it shows up in my life whenever it shows up in my life and so we talk about that and the flexibility section so one of the things i really love about the specifically about the exposure work as a therapist is i have integrated some exposure work in but just talking to other clinicians and my own experience with exposure work. Does i think it's essential with anxiety. Creativity right like you have to sometimes. Just come up with some outside of the box ways to get people to approach whenever you know. They're afraid of at least that you mentioned playfulness. You enjoy your considerable. I don't know just some examples. Maybe are some of your thoughts of of the creative ideas. Yes with young people. You all sorts of fun exposures everything from like you know going to the checkout aisle in the supermarket and deliberately not having any money or having five hundred items in the sixteen item. I'll to.

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"Really. You know the stereotypical ones of washing your hands or counting or checking and we see lots of people who have those rituals about his also. The less common ones have just trying to get things just right this the mental rituals of going through your home and your mind going going through your whole day over and over until you're sure that things didn't happen. The treatment can become another ritual as well am i saying this is just. Ocd over over nervous. Just an intrusive thought can become a ritual or trying to get my therapy. Just perfect can become a ritual f. It's if you during behavior with something that other people can see something that only you can observe if you're doing it to get rid of the stress from intrusive thoughts. It's a compulsion. Okay that's interesting. Yeah even the the way that people might engage in treatment itself could become that if it has that quality of trying to get rid of the interesting. We psychologist o'clock.

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"'cause you know the stereotypical view of cds. It's all about contamination germs. And things like that but it is absolutely far diverse annette and you can have intrusive images. That are graphic or horrifying so for some for some younger children I used to have little guys who will be watching cartoons. And then there would be an ad for scary movie and they would have those images in their minds and they could stop and they couldn't figure out why they were happening and just terrified them. It can be There's harm ocd. About the doubt that you might harm someone. You love either physically or sexually. It can be the doubt that you might have done it. And you don't remember There can be doubt about who you are as a person whether it's an existential doubt right or whether it's about your sexual orientation when there's no you know data at all that you might be changing or shifting. Here's this your that shift into something. What if i am. And i don't know my bed. I'm sure you have good examples to ask. Thinking of the one with is not intrusive thought the more just right. Yeah feeling that just doesn't feel right and needs to be done this way or feel rights and does a psychologist like what's the thought that there is no thought it just doesn't feel right That's a good point. It's not always this really clear identifiable thought you know. And what's interesting as you're talking. I don't know about the listeners. Out there but i think every single one of those that you're talking about at some point has popped into my mind i if we could see into each other's minds that'd be so embarrassing because like we all have these kind of thoughts from time to high. It seems like the human mind doing it seeing but these these get kind of really repetitive. In just is that right. Yeah and actually. It's what i want to point to things from what you're saying. That are really important that everyone has these thoughts. There is data on this and yeah sometimes people feel so terrified to tell you even as psychologist or clinician at the happy thought so isolating but there's actually data on this suggesting that like people who don't have ocd. The have exactly the same frequency of these kinds of funny weird odd bothersome thoughts. The only difference is that folks with cd for some reason get stuck on the and when they start to engage in behaviors to make them go away rather than just letting them come and go and be like well..

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"And to help them shipped back around to that joy is really important. It's really important. It is really important at that age. Too great okay. So i agree. And that's really exciting. So we're here today. To really to focus particularly on young people with anxiety and specifically obsessive compulsive disorder. Ocd and it's funny because well not funny really but it's interesting. I think the way that that term cd is sometimes thrown around is pretty inaccurate. And there's some real misconceptions about what it is so lisa Wondering if you could start us off here with a brief description of what is ocd. Really what does that really like. Yeah and i think. I'll start with what it's not. It's not being overly neat. It's not being a you know. I need things to be neat and tidy in. It's not when people walk around and go so. Ocd in fact. That's incredibly incredibly disrespectful. To people who are struggling with it so obsessive compulsive disorder is a condition in which someone experiences recurrent intrusive thoughts urges feelings images that they find scary uncomfortable can be anything that just unwanted can feel imperfect not just right incomplete and when they experience those things The engaging compensatory behaviors to to get some relief and we call those poulsen's or rituals and the reason that they do that is because those compulsions are rituals work. So it's what they know to do. It's what they have at hand and the only thing often that they know can give them some grief leave. The problem is in the long term it feeds the disorder and it makes it worse than it creates sort of spiraling loop that people find it very very challenging to get album. Thank you yeah. That's i love that definition. Because i think you help make some sense. The behaviors make some sense as a relief from anxiety. Because i think sometimes when people see the surface of the behavior. They're like well. Why would you do that. You know what i mean. It doesn't make sense but it's like well there some media feeling of relief and that's important to know it's not for no reason fix it feels better so you know in the book and stuff. That's loud you write about spiralling and i hear that word i work with adults only and i hear that word a lot from clients with different kinds of anxiety whether it's worry or i don't know just different forms of anxiety. That word spiraling seems to really resonate for people a lot. And so ben i was wondering. Could you describe a vet. What do you mean by spiraling and when people get into that place. What does that look like to spiraling is in terms of. Ocd your anxiety. It's i'm doing something that works for me short-term that doesn't work for me longtime long-term so i have to keep coming back and doing it again and again and again and the more i do it the more traps i feel the more limited my options are and the more i have to keep doing. The thing that i'm doing try medusa anxiety or take away the on wanted thought and goes round and round and i feel more and more stock okay. What are some of the types of thoughts. Maybe lisa you can feel this order. Could you kind of describe what the thought patterns are like. You mentioned this last. Kinda keep going maybe some examples or what would that would like well. You know for younger kids and really what i'm going to describe can happen at any age. Do not tied to age. So you may be. I think the listeners might be surprised. So these things..

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"Acceptance and commitment therapy for adolescent anxiety and ocd a family based approach and acceptance and commitment therapy the clinicians guide to supporting parents. I'm so happy to have you both here while All right so nice to the air low. And hello and lisa's been on the podcast before so talk about parental burn out. And you have a couple of practice trainings coming up. You're doing one together for clinicians on stuff that's loud which is about integrating exposure and response prevention act for youth and exiled with ocd. That's in starts in october. And into december on mondays. And least you also have one on act parents coming up as well right. That's right around the corner. Yup exactly rate is gonna be fun. Yeah so if you're a clinician in you wanna dive more into this definitely check out the practice website. You can find out more details all right. We'll let's dive in. And i want to start with a question actually asks to both of you. I don't know who wants to start here. But here's the question. So you both specialize in working with children and adolescents. And you both work a lot with anxiety. Ocd and i was wondering if you could speak a little bit about what you like about working with young people. What drew you to this area. We do rock paper scissors van for lisa place. Well i think first of all. I just want to say i love working with bannon writing with bennett's really fun and i think one of the things that draws me to my work with ben is the same thing that draws me. My work with children. Lessons is that there's this very playful side of me. That i feel like i can continue to stay in contact with when i work with young people and in fact it's essential to that work right so it's really something to have a science background and then have the silliness And it's just a lot of fun in fact it's essential to that work to really be in the room with them to really be connected with them. I think it really helps but the other piece of course is that you know the younger folks are when they get treatment the more powerful i think the treatment can be and the better chance we have to really help because with ocd. You know it often is a very long. Wait time before i'm children. Find good care great. How about you ben. What draws you to this work. Mauvais stays my workers adults and teenagers. I don't see children much anymore. Having my kids just made me want to not tell the parents wants to do ever again can relate but i remember early like first year working finished my clinical psychology degree and i was trying really traditional. Cbt how do we help. People get their thoughts rise and get rid of the depression anxiety and my first job was youth specialty service and wellington and was just having this discussion with his teenager about the meaning of life and i suddenly thought. Wait a minute. I could get paid for this. This could be my job talking to someone about not how to get them out of negatives beck desirer.

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"That's my mind. Having a weird thought like that happens to all of us. And of course i mean in a million years. I would never ever do that. I had no temptation to actually do it. But i think sometimes what happens is that we start to feel really disturbed. I thought gosh. I can never think that way. I'm a terrible person data where we get into that spiral been at least talk about right where we go round and round. We find it distressing in. We do things that are unhelpful. To try to get rid of it. And i mean i'm able to tell the story now like it's kind of humorous or like. Oh isn't that interesting. And that's i think partly because you know over time we see it differently. And also i was able to just think well the mind can be weird sometimes like we all have thoughts. Don't make any sense. It's not really a big deal. Yeah the the mind is a weird and wacky place to be. I love that title and it is. I love that story. And i just appreciate you sharing it because i think you know even just you sharing that personal story is so normalizing that we all have those kinds of weird and wacky thoughts and that the problem is not having them. The problem is problems can arise based on how relieved to them in what we do with them. And one thing that. I just wanted to add because i think it's hard enough to sort of hold lightly our own weird and wacky thoughts and it's even harder as parents to know how to respond to children's weird and wacky thoughts and to teach them how to hold their weird and wacky. It's more lately. And i love that you only set and ben kinda dived into sort of. How uncomfortable that can be as a parent. That are impulse is to respond. Because we don't want your our kids being uncomfortable with those weird and wacky thoughts but also your we worry about the meaning. We worry about you. Know what it means to.

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"At off the clock site. This is debbie. I'm here with l. To introduce an episode with lisa coin and been sibley on their books stuff that's loud teens guide to inspire rolling when ocd gets noisy. And we're talking about ocd and anxiety among young people in particular. Although actually i think this is kind of helpful conversation for young and old alike. Who are getting into anxiety spiral and who are kinda stuck around ham. I get out of the spiral And y'all what are your thoughts. Well i this is just a timely episode. But as i say that and thinking maybe it would be timely at any time because childhood anxiety is just so pervasive infectious. This morning. i got an email from a client whose child just started. I'm sorta down her own anxiety spiral and it's a client who herself has anxiety. And then recently. I had sent your past episode on anxiety in children and adolescents with ronca reggie as well as an atlantic article about all linked to in our show notes that has the title childhood in an anxious age to a family friend who has two daughters that are struggling with serious anxiety. So you know. There's clearly a lot of anxiety going on right now and a lot of uncertainty about how to deal with it. I mean it's strange. Because uncertainty is a part of what causes anxiety and one of the things that i love that you guys talked about in your episode is how uncomfortable. Uncertainty is for us to deal with and at the closer to the start of the pandemic. I had co authored. A piece.

Psychologists Off The Clock
"coyne" Discussed on Psychologists Off The Clock
"The.

Gary.club
"coyne" Discussed on Gary.club
"You can get a creator coin. Now i have the gary coyne. I know creator coins or not for everyone but they will be soon and there is gold in my gary. Coyne for me my personal rewards. This week will be about twelve thousand dollars now. I didn't have to go. have people. Pay me twelve thousand dollars. But because russell owns a little bit of gary coyne then that helps us all make a little bit of rewards and because april owns a little bit of gary coined. That helps us all. Make a little bit of rewards. Because i on a little bit instead of as jin soo and sodas many other folks here and because you all own a little bit of gary coyne we all get a little bit of rewards. Now i own get chunk gary coin and it allows me to provide great access to you without having to charge you like it allows allows me to really get in and serve in her discord community. It allows me to do a supporter mastermind for every person. Who owns gary coyne. It allows me a lot of opportunities to help you. It allows me a great income path. That's money from clubhouse because that got the opportunity by being in clubhouse that grow my brand on clubhouse at grow my community on clubhouse so creator coins or an amazing opportunity for you do you wanna learn how to launch your own creator. Coin avid training over and discord. That'll teach you exactly how to do it. All you have to do is own one of my coins. Because let's just be real if you're gonna go launch your own coin. You don't own a crypto currency. If you don't own a gary coyne and you want to watch your own coin you don't need to launch your own coin yet. You can't do what you don't own. You can't do what you've never done. You have to play in a you have to see what it feels like. So pull out your credit card. Go by gary coyne and then type in exclamation point creator coin. And when you do. I will send you a direct message over on discord that will give you a recording. So you know how to launch your own creator coin too. I don't wanna be the only one making all this money. I don't wanna be the only one with this opportunity. I want you to get the opportunity to. I want you to go launch your own creator coin so you have the exact same opportunities that i have all right number. Five of seven monthly memberships monthly memberships recurring revenue. Now some of these monthly memberships are going to be low cost. John lee has j. l. dot club at seven dollars a month. The cost of a couple of coffees. I have clubhouse coaching..

Marketing Trends
"coyne" Discussed on Marketing Trends
"Last. Like no doubt about it. Okay do you have a favorite book podcast. tv show even check out recently I have a favorite book series. That i just read the ready player. One ready player. You serious that. I just read those mazing and i've been binging on podcast with todd Tom coyne the writer he just. He wrote three bucks. One is golf courses in ireland versus scotland. Any just released his one about america. This do travel. Fifty states played three hundred rounds in eight months and wrote a book about it in so that's might be treating for This is westchester the best chester move. Absolutely i grew porchester new york. There's nothing better best advice for first time chief. Revenue officer boo him being an active listener and learner. For as long as you can before you create any action. I love it ed. Thanks again for joining any Any final thoughts anything to To plug here in i am. I am so thrilled to be able to get to spend this afternoon with you and and to have this conversation again about what i think is the most incredible topic and opportunity out there in this world of marketing and very should've of you in the michigan dot org team. So thank you for having me awesome. Thank you so much for joining as always. We'll have you back sooner next time. Not more and more time with that is better for everyone thinks again you..

San Diego's Morning News with Ted and LaDona
Flaming Lips fans attend concert in bubbles
"Concert over the weekend, the van finally hit the stage in Oklahoma City Saturday after the show was delayed due to high coronavirus cases there. At the concert, each fan or fan group got to enjoy the concert from inside of a large plastic bubble. The band was also inside of their own bubbles ahead of the event, front man, Wayne Coyne told Rolling Stone. It's a very restricted weird. That's understating it. Just a little bit. Wayne concert

Podcast RadioViajera
"coyne" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera
"We need them. Throw of respiratory maneuver india bengal. We're not no no proposal for remove know that most in seems less noble noble. Almost nobody apollinaire we to strategically kia. Nacchio strategist kim. What does he gave. Alaskan frontier prematurely hispanic. This one on getting dominating mentor. People are together your mental. I study whenever you're gonna today. And when i'm eating my no he's got to leave you. The forming consoling entering. You know the fan and he jemma quarterback course. How do you wind down on this gone. There is not as if he gets hit from india. So kate coyne other local.

Z Morning Zoo
The Flaming Lips performed a concert with the band and fans encased in plastic bubbles
"That friend of yours who told everybody at the beginning of the quarantine? Oh, they'll still do concerts, but everybody will be in giant bubbles. Somebody is actually doing that the flaming lips That band was talking we can lead singer Wayne Coyne said that this seems crazy, but it's kind of serious. We're starting to get to ready to an actual show. There will be three people in each of these big plastic space bubbles, and we play two shows a night and we get a huge audience in there each time, so that's actually really happening. And

Let's Talk Bitcoin!
Paypal, Banks and Real Life Infrastructure Inversion
"When the hit reactions were dramatic CEO of Wyoming based Avantis Bank and passed on the showcase on long tweeted game on USOC sees announcement that it's following Wyoming allowing national banks to custody digital assets is great news for Crypto long-overdue, and hopefully we'll help the US regain ground. It lost to other developed world countries by dilly dallying for so long winters, equal customers and crypto venture capitalists. This will spur emanate boom as us. Banks acquired digital asset custodians, and that was only the first two of her twenty four tweet storm on the topic link in the show notes for those who missed it. In other parts legal mind mark, Coyne hoarder, and passed on the show Preston Burn tweeted I've never been more bullish on crypto today crypto lending, and saving maybe how the payment of interest becomes thing. Again, thanks are desperate for yield the faster they move the more market share there will obtain lawyers and bankers are definitely excited. But why does this matter and what is it mean? Jonathan let's start with you today. Well looking at it from my perspective of someone who's tried to do startups in the for some time, the largest filter that is a had versus half not versus based on the technical or Business Acumen. Or Merit of your company is to do with getting a bank account and keeping a bank account and being able to even have customers in every state I mean the whole point about the bit license was the fact that banks were refusing to service customers of people running crypto startups. So what this does if? The executions being the statement says it is is it means that we're going to enter an age where crypto startup can actually have a bank account in America and actually be serviced and not just be a crock in or a Gemini or Aucoin base, but actually be three people you know asking for bank services. So you know the government tends to break your legs and then ask you to thank it when it gives you a crunch and it's really glad to see that at least now, they're giving entrepreneurs a crutch. Because like spin broken for a very long time hang on. I'm a bit confused here because this regulation is about freeing up the ability of banks to directly custody Crypto, and at least what you're saying seems to be more about whether banks are allowed to extend. Fiat. King Services to crypto companies why do you think the two are related one of the purposes? As to why money transmitter licences became such a big deal for crypto services is that the act of transmitting your token your value instrument is itself currency or is considered a value transfer, and so banks would onboard in dollar terms the ability for people to get crypto. But if you actually wanted to engage in crypto related services with Crypto you yourself had to. Take. That on, get a custodial and become a money services business because there weren't any financial service providers that would do that for you, and so there are a lot of projects that I know of that have lodged. That are in existence that can't even deliver the tokens to their system to people because they're waiting for money transmitter licences because the act of. Giving it to their customers would be considered money transmission, and so I think that we become so blinded to think that banking means crypto banking for crypto means the dirty Fiat side of it and not the awesome crypto side of it and a lot of the crypto related activities now can be done natively by a bank, which means that as a small startup. Become a bank. I don't have to become a crack in order to be able to do trivial thing I wanted to do with bitcoin or a colored coins. So I, just want echo that on the one side our experience on the show with trying to have a bank account. Well, we've actually been d platform because the word bitcoin is in the name right and that was for a while fairly controversial, and then on the other side of things, the work that I did with token Lee we often found ourselves without the ability to have a credit card processor because even the. Idea of touching tokens that were non speculative in nature that did not have prices that could appreciate. Well, that was still something that was on the other side of we know what we're talking about right and so you had banks that were just wildly uncomfortable with this and even the high risk tolerant ones you know the ones that specialize in dealing with really kinda sketchy applications, even those oftentimes wouldn't deal with noncontroversial uses of. Tokens and sort of anyway. So just the clarity that. So long as a company is following, the law banks can interact with them that I think is a pretty major statement and a major change from the way the banks have at least behave to this point. We'll see if they actually do anything differently with it but I think again, we're going to talk a little bit later about kind of the pay pal announcement and Sort of this shift that we've gone through where Crypto was on the one hand kind of in the very early days, people would adopted or companies would adopt it and get kind of an earned press boost, and then that went away for a while as things got boring. Now we're kind of on the entire other side of that curve, but we're going to have that conversation for just a little

Unconfirmed: Insights and Analysis From the Top Minds in Crypto
How Avanti Will Be a 'Not Your Keys, Not Your Coins' Bank
"One other question. When as he was. Who Do you expect your customers to be well for Vanity? We're going after the institutional market there are a couple of others that are hanging around the hoop and Wyoming who are going after the retail market. And we hope to be able to do some things with them if we all make it through the process and get our licenses. But there wasn't anybody stepping up for the institutional market which is where I saw a need in particular. The best example is the universities that would like to receive digital asset gifts from alumni but are not in a position to accept them because there isn't a third party that's willing to work with them to provide the services that they need for example under an in in the US under the custody rule. Asset managers are required by law to have a third party store their assets that the the management of the assets has to be separated from the custody of the assets and again the big custodians are FDIC insured banks so as a result were in that catch twenty two where there was a log jam that needed to be broken. And so I was GonNa ask you like who your competitors would be but I realized in a way. Maybe it's set your sort of forming a new category. Or would you say like are you 'cause Gascoyne base does serve some institutions right with Coyne? He's custody and stuff like that. Sure source her. I think the difference is the definition of institution. There are a lot of folks in the crypto world who look at You know small. Twenty five million dollar Crypto Fund and say. That's an institution and technically it is. But what I'm looking at is the markets that I came from earlier in my career. The Pension Funds Endowments Foundations Sovereign Wealth Funds. These are the really big money. Investors for whom the ASSET CLASS UP UNTIL. This point has actually just been too small and not investable will. Now we're getting to the point where it to the extent that Bitcoin does continue to go up. It becomes a bigger asset class. It starts to become too big to ignore and then they start looking around and saying where's the infrastructure. One of the other points that that I've noticed is that the the institutional infrastructure in this market isn't ready for primetime with these very big traditional big asset owner institutions again. It's more more aimed at the the smaller. More risk risk-taking institutions like hedge funds or small small funds that already exist and most most folks when they say there are institutions in Crypto. That's what they mean again. The big guys really are not there. They have a much much much higher standard of professionalism that they require and when I looked around at the folks that are that are that are serving the institutional market right now first of all their trust companies from a regulatory perspective and there are two issues with trust companies for the big big investors. One is that they're not directly connected to the Fed because they're not banks and there's a reason why stay straight and Bank of New York you know in the securities industry are banks. They're connected to the Fed and that's what the institutions WanNa see And then the other is that the the trust companies are that you don't know what your status in bankruptcy is and again. This is another one of the reasons why the banks win from a regulatory perspective. But there's a there's also another issue that I I started looking at the terms and conditions of the folks that are serving the quote unquote the institutional market right now and it is it to be honest in in some cases it's a joke There there's one that serving the institutional market that defines bitcoin as quote a digital asset. If they all of a sudden wake up and decide that bitcoin suddenly bitcoin cash and the customers go to sue them. They would have no claim in court because the contract was so vaguely drafted. There was really nothing promised. The four policy is another one where I was looking at one again institutional firm and the Ford Policy said that they had in their sole discretion the ability to follow a fork. If any and again what's the legal legally enforceable promise in the language there there's nothing So when when an institutional attorney and again I'm talking about a pension fund type of attorney starts looking at the terms and conditions in the contract. They're they're going to say look that that's not even close to the standards that I need. And lastly there's another piece of this you alluded to it in in your question. Why Oh Ming defined the status of digital assets under Wyoming's commercial law. We're the only state to have done that. And that would therefore the only state that would be allowed to start a bank because you have to know what the status of those assets would be in in a legal dispute again. This gets back to institutions needing to have clear clear rights and obligations in the transactions. And if you don't know what the status of the asset classes in a legal dispute. You're taking a lot of risk that a judge is is Is is going to determine a lawsuit you rather than in your favor and institutions. Just can't take that risk they also can't take the bankruptcy risk and again if a judge doesn't know what the exact status of the assets are under the law. Then then you don't know what your outcome is going to be in bankruptcy so all these things are important building blocks that had to get put in place before we really go prime time.

Monocle 24: Section D
Extra: Show stoppers
"So. I'm I'm a designer that is based in the Netherlands in nine eleven. I just made I think fifteen doorstops that are very a specific to each of the doors in detail. I basically made him from waste so they are all kind of different colors and patterns so to be provides the big range of these doorstops. Did you go around and have a look at the doors. or how are you gonNa try and respond to each of those doors actually quite the list of just the size between the floor and the door I had the size of the handle and that was it. I didn't knew what the space look like. I had not that that mini formations which was also quite fun to just go crazy and Not Be Limited by certain expectations that I would set somehow and then the materials they title they look almost cartoony. Happy Mac that I use some kind of Plato that I discovered in Asia. It's some kind of children educational tool so it's not toxic. So you get all you can eat it. It makes really really soft and it just covered them and the ad layers of layers layers and then to finally arrive in to certain pattern that I'm just going to add to bring even more that and fund into these objects. My name is boss Coyne. I'm half of the studio from Saddam. I worked together with my partner. Say Okay I'm Amato. Auto debris was I would say almost like a list of requirements in this case which was also quite interesting. We were asked to create screens as you could see as well they were supposed to be used or they should have been possible to use both indoors and outdoors. There were certain scale restrictions. And that was Morris it and they should be mobile as well like so. The screens are called the great outdoors and inspiration came from the outdoors. Anything from while on one hand like the more individual side like this mountain ridges and like justice line indoor Isan overlapping screen is. Obviously I mean most times would be quite large piece so we're talking about quite large surfaces if it would be just like one whatever rectangular lers traits surface it can be quite intrusive quite distracting or something. So that's something which we tried to soften working with curves and working with transparency. But it's more like to create certain distance within the space so it's not completely breaking it. It's not like putting wall somewhere in between clean but rather it's almost like a mental thing you know it's like something which it's about the perspective of the viewer of user of people around Hello Shylock ally from resign studio I walk with my wife life yet. We design furniture and products and installation and spaces for these showing here at days to rugs from my collection. Shen we designed for gun. It's a Spanish company. The production is in India. And when we started to walk with gun they didn't really give us a brief. They say you. Oh you just hit you make your vision happen. It's often amazing. It's free and you just need to come in idea. The only thing they say is that they do you have a group of women in India did specialize in embroidery and they love to have some embroidery in the collection. Because it means taking Kim Day workflow and it's important for them to keep these women busy because they'd been taken in mind and be independent we had destroyed and you're like okay no way. He's just yes. We are definitely gonNA use embroidery and the body was studying born. We did the research we look at embroidery from Different Cultures Khuhro of North America different places aces and as a kid. I remember going to my grandma. She was from Bulgaria and looking handles embroidery and beautiful. You see those roses and flour and tax and runners the core development. And then when you turn to the other side you see all the mess of their handmade embroidery and we. So let's just take this mess in the back of the stitching them. They make a collection of these. We analyzed different different mess basically because the mass of the roses looks different from the mass of a text of runner. And we just mopped which one can be turned into a recollection. And that's basically what we did just trying to take defend. Take on something that people are doing for for so long. That was

Jay Talking
Key piece of evidence missing in Kevin Spacey case
"There have been some developments in the Kevin Spacey case seems that a key piece of evidence is missing and a catch us up on that. We have Michael coin dean of the Massachusetts school of law. Dean coin. Hello Riley tonight. It's always great to hear from you, and great to talk to you. Can you catch us up? Yeah. I think it's, it's another interesting development to this high profile case on the islands not surprising. I don't think that the key piece of evidence has now been may well have been lost somewhere along the way between Lauren force moments receipt of it, and turning it back to the family. It may very well be the death blow to an increasingly shaky case against Spacey with the loss of this key piece of evidence and you know, that's what I think is surprising, to some, that's such a key piece of evidence could have been handled in so badly. Not not really be preserved so that both sides, get an opportunity to examine the contents. What makes this piece of evidence so very crucial. Yeah. Well, you know, if you think about it today, smoking gun, is really much more likely to be found in our cell phones, and our electronic evidence, it's not the, the old smoking gun of old. And the fact is we all keep far too much personal information on our cell phones, whether it's photographs, whether it's Snapchat, whether it's text messages, and, like, there's very personal and oftentimes key, contemporaneous evidence that is preserved on our cellphones and maintained in that way. So the fact that there is likely text messages and photographs that would have some bearing on the night in question that took place between Mr. Spacey and this individual. The fact is that those contemporaneous records very, very well may be important to both the prosecution and the defense. But the key. Here from the standpoint of whether the case will be able to survive this. And even if it does go forward to not provide extraordinary evidence to Spacey for cross examination in the like is that this may well have had sculptor Tori information on it. Deleted in altered, text messages, as Spacey's attorneys informed, the court at the last hearing, and the loss of that evidence when there's a constitutional obligation for the government to turn over any sculpture, Tori evidence, this could be fatal to the government's case. So this missing phone could be directly responsible for the dismissal of the case against Kevin Spacey. Sure. Definitely could be if you if you if you if you think about how important we've seen electron ick evidence in cell phones, over the course of the last three to five years, marathon bombers in part were caught as a result of inflammation pulled from their cell phones. Aaron Hernandez case. Relied, very heavily on text messages that occurred that evening, and as well as the GPS information on the phone. If you start to think about the, the more recent high profile cases, we've seen even Tom Brady's where he said that the cell phone had been destroyed because he obtained a new one. We know how important these key pieces of evidence that are found on cellphones likely our to our Justice system. So, yeah, this could be a big victory for Spacey. In fact, the court could look at it as potentially being sufficiently sanctionable by the government that would require dismissal. But even if it doesn't require dismissal. The problem is, is that this has given a lot of energy now to the defense case to create a reasonable doubt that there was information on that phone that would have told a different story either by way of government misconduct. Or even just simply neglect that inflammation is now been lost to the defendant, and it helps to create that reasonable doubt. It's, it's a real problem. And the fact is, is that the court now we'll have to figure out well how did it get loss was was this just negligence, or was this, something more at work, here, especially in view of the allegations, that Spacey's attorney has raised with respect to the deleted in altar techs that took place from the night in question the loss of that evidence if it cannot be recovered in some form. And that's the last part of this is that a good forensic examination of the phone, if it's there or of the mirror image that the government may have in its possession may allow them to recover. Virtually all of the information if not all of the information, under those circumstances. The government would argue that Spacey hasn't been prejudice. At all. So there's nothing that would prohibit the case from going full. We may still very well. See the case, go forward. The question is, now is going to be enough evidence or is the government going to sufficiently be able to remove Spacey's presumption of innocence and the fact that there, they're very well may be reasonable doubt. In the case. It's it's a problem. I mean, you know, we don't like to see in our system that the government doesn't do everything they can to ensure that Justice is achieved in part of that means that you've got to preserve evidence and give the defendant, an opportunity tests. The government's proof that, that, that opportunity may now be lost Bradley. So even if the case does go forward it makes it more difficult for the prosecution, because it creates this doubt. Well, doesn't it? If you think about it from commonsense standpoint we've talked about this case before. You know, the was the victim starstruck and interested in, in having some drinks with Spacey that night innocence Spacey has contended all along. There was a consensual flirtation that existed that night. Pot of the proof would likely have been the contemporaneous inflammation, that would be found on his cell phone and the like. And the, the fact that, that now maybe lost, or at least portions of that inflammation, and as Spacey see X information that would have been exculpatory to him has been lost either as a result of negligence or delivered acts that, that absolutely helps to create this reasonable doubt that the defendant wants to do is part of his defense, and it's, it's too bad. Because as the you know, it's, it's, it's pretty sloppy. However, this came about in a case with so many is on it. You. You would've expected there, be a lot more attention to detail. And I think sometimes that's prizes, the all is that we don't see the attention to detail that we would especially expect when when the world is watching does do these developments, make it more likely that mister space for a jury trial or less likely. Well, again, you know, you've, we've had that discussion before, and I you know, act after our last evening together where we discussed this in general, I put it out to some other both students, and criminal defense, lawyers that, that I know. And, and it is relatively still split fifty fifty so I'm not sure there's a definitive answer to that my own personal feeling is that I would prefer jury under the circumstances. Jury sometimes are little more mistrusting, and especially. Really sometimes a little more dubious with the government may have engaged in either neglect of misconduct to, to trust the government at its word and really to hold them to what the law requires to remove the presumption of innocence and prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt. So, my, my personal feeling is I would I would try to jury. But that, that's a actually a question that I think both people and lawyers will disagree on your, your audience, may, well be split as well. Interesting to know what they think, because some of them may well constitute members of the jury and have similar feelings to jurors. So maybe you can throw that out tonight to see what they think. That's a good idea. Thank you very much. Michael coyne. He's the dean of the Massachusetts school of law in a big friend of WBZ. Thanks.

BBC World Service
Most senior military officials were surprised by Trump "war games" announcement
"But these speeches are at that's adequate busily may be attractive but it's not like the the arab by any stretch of the imagination since among south korean business leaders the oh here we go again because they must have been several full starts up until this point about the prospects for investing in north korea but that's understatement i mean when you look at the spectrum of optimism to pessimism you usually find the business community of their pessimism aside i mean south korean business for example were badly burned by the case on does park parka debacle and the international community has not been that excited to be going into north korea because what do they have to offer berry is a manufacturing base capacity but it's a lot easier to look for low cost labor and other parts of the world such as vietnam bangladesh indonesia and whatever least relatively greater transparency there's almost no transparency that's tom coyne chief executive of soft landing consulting phil many thanks phil they're looking at the business side of things after that momentous day yesterday in singapore but now also the real work begins diplomatically just a day after us president donald trump and north korea's kim jong signed a pledge to work towards denuclearization of north korea us secretary of state and mike pompeo is on his way to seoul for talks with south korean and japanese officials the officials may have been surprised by the president's announcement of the freezing of joint ussouth korean military exercises it seems neither the south koreans nor the pentagon for that matter were made aware of the decision before the announcement speaking on the fox news hannity program mr trump said the war games would be stopped as long as north korea negotiates in good faith will earlier i spoke to nancy snow public diplomacy professor at kyoto university of foreign studies about the reaction in japan i think the japanese have felt a little bit on the outside looking in and certainly the administration has put on a good front but and what and seem somewhat satisfied that trump brought up the ongoing issue of the abductees in in north korea but i think that like everybody else this idea of getting rid of the war games in this possibility of pulling out us forces not only in south korea and japan that causes a bit of angst here in that it raises the question of.

News, Traffic and Weather
Tears as one-handed Shaquem Griffin joins twin brother in NFL for Seahawks
"Paint was very on fire and that just you know sparks the data that immediate you know there's smoke there's fire i need to do something bonito's owner wasn't home his roommate says he had his headphones on and didn't even notice the fire at first he grabbed a hose and tried to control the fire until crews got their seahawks fans you will see a pair of brothers playing for the hawks on defense this coming season seattle drafted she came griffin the twin brother of hawks cornerback shaquille griffin in the fifth round of the nfl draft komo's patrick quinn says twelve are embracing this new seahawk ser came announced from the swiss bore into coma we got goosebumps i really like bringing the brothers back together from tacoma to texas at twenty sixty phone industry came soon after and heard how he got the life changing phone call in the unlikeliest places i was using the restroom and my brother the two together in december when the hawks play jacksonville former teammates at central florida they'll soon lace up together once again in seattle right writing the emotions shaquille stepped on stage at the nfl draft headquarters in dallas it's been a long and historic path to the pros becomes the first player in the modern era with only one hand to be drafted for twenty two year olds linebacker was born with amniotic band syndrome his left hand was amputated when he was four inundate it'd be one of the only have pity on me what are they going to be the one to get up with the story is resonating nationwide and houston juliana lynton who lost her arm due to the same condition wish your team lucked today on social media joanna jumped on the central florida bandwagon because of shaquille and now she's the newest member of the twelve anything stop him from playing football his dreams continuing to inspire now the linebacker we'll take the field with his twin brother right nightside seattle patrick coyne komo news time to check more komo's sports they've lewis has the latest on the mirrors mariners's still cooking they won five out of six home for the next six after one of cleveland.