35 Burst results for "Daryl L"

Knowing the Shepherd's Voice

Pray the Word with David Platt

02:00 min | Last week

Knowing the Shepherd's Voice

"John chapter ten first, 27. My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. I love John ten. It is filled with such incredible imagery of Jesus as the good shepherd who lays down his life for the sheep and protects them, cares for them. Won't let anyone snatch them out of his hand and in verse 27, I love this picture of my sheep here, my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. I think about a shepherd, I heard, share recently, his name is Daryl, and he was sharing about how he leads his sheep and they know his voice. He said, if anybody else were to come and call my sheep to do this or that, the sheep would not respond, but when he speaks they respond. This is what she do. They know the voice of the shepherd, and they follow him. Don't you want that to be true of your life today? Just think about today. We want this every day, but today that you would live, hearing his voice, him knowing you, and you following his voice. You know, it's interesting. I use the illustration sometimes of how obviously we don't know everything Jesus is leading us to do in a given day. Where to go eat if we're going out to eat or what to do in this or that moment. We don't have a word from God in the Bible about every detail of our day today, but that doesn't mean that his voice can't lead us, he's put his spirit inside of us in such a way that when we meditate on his word, that we do have, we study his word, we hide it in our heart. We're getting familiar with his voice so that as we make decisions during the day that we are familiar with the voice of Jesus, we're familiar with his spirit and how he leads us and so to live today, listening to his voice in his word and then following his voice as he leads us by his spirit according to his word.

Jesus Daryl Bible Today 27 John Ten GOD Verse 27 Chapter Ten John First
Congressman Greg Steube Talks About His Recent Fall

The Doug Collins Podcast

02:30 min | 3 weeks ago

Congressman Greg Steube Talks About His Recent Fall

"Let's bring this up because I mean, one of the things that I'm going to get a lot of folks and I've got calls when I first happened, your accident and everything. I saw some great stuff here online recently about the gentleman who stopped and helped you. As much as you want to. Share a little bit with the podcast listeners who may have heard about it, but they're still hadn't heard a whole lot completed. What was actually happening, how did this guy and especially this tale of people helping people, I think, you know, look, we all have access. We all follow. We do, but that idea that somebody would come along and help is just pretty amazing. Yeah, and you really have to back up. I mean, if you're not a believer in God, you will be after hearing the story. And if you are a person of faith, it'll completely renew your faith. So the gentleman's name is woody that it's Daryl woody. I just call him woody. His friends call him woody. Who was the Amazon driver, but a week before this occurred, the Holy Spirit woke him up in the middle of the night like two 30 in the morning and told him to fast. So fast forward a week, he's standing in front of my gate. He hadn't eaten in 8 days and had only had water, and that's why I think he could spiritually assess and deal with all the things that he dealt with in a very quick manner. He was at the exact moment in time that the lord put him. If he would have been 5 seconds earlier, I'd have seen him out of wave. He'd have gone about his day. If he'd have been 5 seconds later, I'd have been on the ground and where we have 5 acres from where the gate is to where I was. He wouldn't have seen me because there's a berm in the way and I'd have been laying on the ground. So if he wasn't there, that exact moment. So I was, we're still dealing with the aftermath of Ian down here in Southwest Florida. We were going to have a church. Gathering at our House on that Saturday. And so I was up trim and trees, and I was on an extension ladder, easily 25 feet up because there were 6 by 6 20 foot 6 by 6s right next to when I was well above that. And woody, I'm trimming trees with a large chainsaw. Woody pulls up. Is there at the exact moment, sees someone trimming with a chainsaw, didn't know it was me at the time. And then as he's walking back to the truck, here's the branch snap, turns around, and at that moment, he sees the limb come down, hit the extension lottery jacks me up. So I didn't just get knocked down. I went up into the air. Wow. And he said it that moment, I looked at him while I was midair and we locked eyes from the gate to where I was falling. And fell 25 to 30 feet down straight down to the ground.

Daryl Woody Woody Amazon Southwest Florida IAN
Raleigh police release video of stun gun use before man dies

AP News Radio

00:59 sec | Last month

Raleigh police release video of stun gun use before man dies

"A criminal justice reform group in North Carolina is calling for a ban on the use of police tasers. After videos released of a deadly stop and Raleigh last month. Police body cam video show 32 year old Daryl Tyree Williams was repeatedly zapped with police tasers during a stop January 17th. Again. Police alleged they saw drugs and alcohol and had him get out of the car. Wow, birthday was wrong. And that he struggled after they tried to put on handcuffs after finding white powder in his pocket. At one point, he tells them he has heart problems. They say he's breathing, but later they're seen on video doing chest compressions. While the cause of William's death is still under investigation, the group emancipate NC is calling for the officers to be fired and for tasers to be banned. I'm Jackie Quinn

Daryl Tyree Williams Raleigh North Carolina William Jackie Quinn
Chris Kohls Reviews the Performances in the Original 'Blade Runner'

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:59 min | Last month

Chris Kohls Reviews the Performances in the Original 'Blade Runner'

"Into Blade Runner, go and see it, I've seen it. It's there, it's real. Let's talk about the rest of the cast Emmett Walsh of Byron James, I think this must have been her first or second movie. You look at Chris and Daryl Hannah as an actor, talk to me about these performances. Yeah, I mean, it's similar to what I said about the last couple of films. There is this sort of cavalier nature to the way that people talk. I know this is kind of supposed to be this stylized film the war, but everything does come across as naturalistic. And in a way that they don't really act and people don't really act this way anymore. And I really loved it. I especially loved when the cop was going through the list of androids that he has to kill. I mean, just the way that he talks about it is I felt like it was like I was really, I was really there. This was a real life thing. These guys are who they are pretending to be. And I don't know, I don't know how they cast this so unbelievably well. Rutger Hauer, how do you tell people, okay, act a little bit unnatural like an Android. But don't overdo it, but don't overdo it. Yeah, yeah, just so subtly that people get the hint that there's something a little bit off. But, you know, and this guy, he was in everything in the 80s, like being a psycho. You know, he pulls off that weird. I think there's something about, in the 1980s, there was something about how they figured out that like, okay, let's cast normal looking folks to be the good guys, and let's cast people that are a bit off looking to be the bad guys. And now it's sort of reversed. They're like, oh, the good guys are all the weird looking folks. And the bad guys are all like the very handsome attractive people. They kind of messed it up in our world. In our current time, Hollywood. I think Harrison Ford, you know, I wouldn't have thought Harrison Ford would be a good choice just because he was so famous from Star Wars. In the glass. I'm sorry. Subtle things. What an amazing moment.

Emmett Walsh Byron James Daryl Hannah Rutger Hauer Chris Harrison Ford Hollywood
"daryl l" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show

The Rich Eisen Show

07:04 min | 2 months ago

"daryl l" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show

"Yeah, I think that there's merit there. I really do. But I tell you this offensive line has gotten better and better and better. We had them in the opener or I think week two, we hadn't been week two and the big concern was the inconsistency through training camp of being able to establish that starting 5, especially guard center guard area, lots of injuries. The wide receiver position was not addressed in the off season and where are we going to be there? And you look at the evolution of the offensive line and you look at the evolution in the emergence of some of these players at the wide receiver position and they are night and day from what they were early in the season. So yes, the Philadelphia defense is much stouter than Minnesota's was, but this offense is much better than it was the last time Philadelphia saw them. So I'm excited to see and take away week 18. There was no Daniel Jones, no saquon Barbie. No Andrew Thomas, no Evan Neal. They're going to see a team that's extremely confident right now in the two big question marks on the offensive side of the ball, played extremely well against Minnesota. This is a tougher challenge, but I think it's going to be, I think it's going to be really interesting to see because I really feel that that matchup is going to be a lot closer than that Philadelphia defense is expected. Daryl Johnston here on the rich eisen show from Fox Sports, you and Joe Davis just going to call giants and eagles you just finished up calling the first game of super wild card weekend Seattle and San Francisco. When I see Brock purdy man, I just see a baby faced kid, but you seeing him in person when you met him in all honesty when you saw him walking in that room between embryo and teenager, how young does he look? What do you got for me? He did not look like he was going to be the starting quarterback in the super wild card round trip. It's unbelievably a few years away from that. So what is the secret sauce? What's happening there? What did you glean when you talked to him and Kyle Shanahan before the game and watch the game? What did you pick up, Daryl? I think he's fearless. I really do. I think he's played a lot of football and he's seen a lot of things. You know, you're a four year starter at Iowa state. I think he's already walked this path. Going from high school is lightly recruited quarterback to Iowa state. He told us, you know, I was third string quarterback coming in. My freshman year. And I learned a lot about the process and the patients that's needed to kind of get through that and you just have to be ready when that opportunity presents itself because you never know when it's going through. So you have to be prepared. And I was able to take advantage of it at Iowa state and I kind of used a lot of those lessons I learned there to help me to be ready here. And we had that game. We had that Miami game when he came in. I tell you what rich I mean, he made, he made a couple of throws into some windows, one in the red zone. So you knew there was there was no doubt that he felt confident in his ability to throw into tight windows at the NFL level. He made a couple that were outstanding. I think he's very intelligent. I think he embraces the diversity of that offense. How dynamic it can be. We hear a lot of backup quarterbacks say, I don't have to win the game. I just have to use the talent that's around me. I think he does more than speak that. I think he really does live that. But then he's got that ability to make those off schedule plays that a lot of quarterbacks, a lot of young quarterbacks don't. And the throw to Brandon IU in the back corner of the end zone that unfortunately Brandon dropped was one of the one of the better places I've seen this year. I mean, to scramble left, circle all the way back to your right and get that ball into a spot where Brandon could catch it. Only Brandon could catch it was really impressive. So what we hear from the older guys is that they say brought pretty walks into the hud, from day one, and it's his huddle. And you got Trent Williams, George kittle. I mean, you got some dynamic personalities and some really good players in there. And it's Brock birdy's huddle. And so I think he won them over immediately. His performance on the Miami game. The way he kind of came into that next week and just really kind of took charge as a third quarterback. Those guys have all bought in they all love them. Well, for me, moose, you know, the first touchdown that the niners scored 68 yards comes from just one touch from McCaffrey. By the way, great first touch for him, huh? Is a niner in the playoffs. And then he finishes it up that drive with a touchdown grab that helped create by avoiding a sack. The time to use the Bill Parcells phrase where I thought he dropped his Huggies was the drive to start the second half. Coming out of the locker room, the Seahawks had just taken the lead because of that boneheaded penalty on Jimmy ward and boneheaded squib to be very honest with you. I don't know why they Squibb kicked. But the way that he performed in that drive and the throws he was making and the confidence that he had, I thought to myself, okay, we might look back and say, this is when he settled in after that first half. And because this team can win it, right? I mean, we should stop even asking that question, even though I'm going to ask it to you one more time. About 9 or no, they've been talking about that since week one. Right. This is a Super Bowl ready roster. They've got Trey Lance and, you know, everything's ready to go. And the one thing I've been impressed with with San Francisco is the amount of adversity you have going through the course of the season at the most important position. And they've never flinched. And it's a credit to John lynch and Kyle Shanahan. To have that covered, right? You've got your guy that you want to be the guy moving forward and Trey Lance and he gets hurt. And then you found a way to keep Jimmy Garoppolo around. And then he gets hurt. And then you got this guy that, you know, we were thinking about maybe just waiting and maybe picking him up as a free agent, but hey, what the heck? You know, we like the Kennedy checks all our boxes. Let's just grab them with our last pick. So you've backed up the most important position. And it's paid huge dividends for you because your defense is championship caliber. Your skill players on the offensive side are as good as anybody in the NFL. You just need somebody not to get your beat with turnovers at quarterback position and somebody who understands I'm the point guard and I've got a lot of weapons that I can put the ball to and that's what Brock Cody's doing. So yeah, it's funny early in the year when we did that first giant eagles match up and it was 48 22 and you kind of come away from it and you're like, wow, that's a good eagles team. I don't know if anybody can beat them. They're going to have to help the opposition, if anybody's going to knock off Philly, they're going to have to have some turnovers. They're going to have to have some penalties. They're going to have to make a few mistakes. You are kind of thinking about that same thing now for San Francisco. With the uncertainty of Jalen hurts and what he can do at the quarterback spot with lane Johnson, is he going to be able to play how long will he be able to play Yvonne Maddox is still out of line up on the defensive side of the ball? Not only in San Francisco talented, but they're extremely healthy right now going in. We're last year.

Kyle Shanahan Philadelphia Evan Neal Daryl Johnston Brock purdy Iowa Minnesota Brandon Daniel Jones Andrew Thomas Joe Davis Brandon IU Trey Lance George kittle Brock birdy Fox Sports eagles San Francisco Miami
"daryl l" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show

The Rich Eisen Show

03:38 min | 2 months ago

"daryl l" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show

"Loves talking about he's talking about how great sabonis is. He's like, whoever has the bonus is doing very well. By the way. All right, so you do not accept. Here's the deal. Fine. What about one day? If it happens, there's no way for this bet to be even. I'm just going to say that, but fine, I'll go ahead. Bang bang. 9. One day. In red mark. In red marker. Yeah, I'll do it. We have a red marker in the back. I'll do it. One day. Good. Because here's the deal. By the way, I would have allotted from the budget to get a red one. And the reason I'm going to agree to this is because I wasn't able to pay off my Atlanta Braves, but that I lost with her color. That Al. I'll go ahead and remember names of our fans. What's going on with them? Bro rich. When you get recognized at the forum. That's right. You know, there's a lot of names. You know how many people on this plane and I know people remember name of a person who calls on the phone. I've never met the Forrest Gump of the rich eisen show floats through life and meets the most famous people and his friends with them. Bang bang, niner gang. Yeah, I'll do it. Whatever. Bang bang 9 or you know what? I was today years old yesterday when I learned that that's a phrase. I'm sorry, niners fans. I feel good. I've been around for a long time. Yeah, there's t-shirts with bang bang. Dang bang. Okay. So I will accept Jordan's bet even though it's a lopsided bit. But I accept it. All right, so Jordan, if you're out there watching the rich eyes and show. We're out there. The bed is accepted. We have honed it down to just one day. If the niners beat the cowboys, that you will have to hold up a grease board of bang bang niner gang and if the cowboys win, he has to hold up a grease board of how about them cowboys and we then put it on the air. Fine. Once an hour, three times, that's fine. Three times. Okay, once an hour, and then the bed is settled. Settled. And Jordan, while you're still watching, if you're watching. I'm leading the rich eisen show fantasy basketball league. Wow. I'm leading it by a wide margin. It's not that wide, bro, you're like two games up. Oh, someone just sent me a bang bang niner game music video E 40 did it. Oh, okay. If one's a rally, that's my man. It's a real thing. Very good. Settled. See what happens when you respond to text chants. Good things happen. Yeah, when I have time, which I didn't have time yesterday, which was taking videos of the Bongo cam on crypto dot com. By the way, I do believe embiid and the rest of the sixers were playing on the clippers. Though, the fact that Joel embiid's name isn't being tossed around in these MVP cars. It's very maxi playing like that. I'll have a better record. Lights. They're in third place. Tyrese maxi playing like that with harden and embiid healthy and Tobias Harris and my heart and melted the nails are Milton's show. Jefferson, I like your team, man. And I love that, you know, I love the coach. James harden knows me some money last night. By the way, the clipper, I mean, the clippers are still, they're working out the rotations and things we were kind of in that stands like, why is Terrence man not in the game? But his death and taxes in this year is my fantasy alert that Kawhi Leonard is a game time decision for the back end of a back to back. He can't play. He ain't gonna be there. Kawhi Leonard is so cute. He's so good. And he's been on, he's been on fire ever since I complained about him, but now he's gonna take a few games off to make you mad.

sabonis cowboys niners Atlanta Braves Forrest Gump Jordan Al Joel embiid Tyrese maxi Tobias Harris clippers sixers basketball Kawhi Leonard James harden harden Milton Jefferson Terrence
To heal after parade tragedy, the Grannies must march again

AP News Radio

00:52 sec | 4 months ago

To heal after parade tragedy, the Grannies must march again

"Nearly one year ago three members of the Milwaukee dancing grannies were among 6 people killed when an SUV plowed through a Christmas parade in near by walk of shell Wisconsin Betty string was one of the dancing grannies struck at the parade She sustained a head injury string says she hasn't focused much on the incident Throughout all of this I was probably just focused on me and trying to get better String says she's back to dancing in the group why would I not go back Why would I limit my life Because I'm afraid of something The man who plowed into the parade 40 year old Daryl Brooks was convicted of all 76 counts against him and was sentenced to life behind bars with no chance of release I'm John awarder

Milwaukee Betty Wisconsin Daryl Brooks John Awarder
Darrell Brooks Guilty on All Counts in Christmas Parade Attack

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:51 min | 5 months ago

Darrell Brooks Guilty on All Counts in Christmas Parade Attack

"News, Daryl Brooks found guilty of intentional homicide. You might, if you are asking the question who is Daryl Brooks, that shows how corrupt dishonest and evil the media has become. If you do not know, the name Daryl Brooks, that shows how the media has intentionally covered up what was nothing more than an anti white massacre on the eve of Christmas, not Christmas Eve, but in Christmas season of last year. Don't remember what I'm talking about. It was the Waukesha massacre. Daryl Brooks should be a household name. This guy is a murdering maniac, some would say that he had black supremacist inclinations and Daryl Brooks has now been found guilty of intentional homicide of killing 6 people. 6 people, 6 dead and 62 injured. Now the reason I'm just mentioning this briefly is that the fact that most of you might not say, well, who is Daryl Brooks, who's Daryl Brooks again? Goes to show exactly how dishonest the activist media has become. He had 7 convictions and prior cases plus two open felony cases when he committed the massacre. He was on the street because our society is so sick and refuses to keep dangerous psychotics like him liked up all under the idea of racial equity. 6 dead and 62 injured. And look, he's crazy, obviously. He's insane. He should spend the rest of his life in prison, and the problem was that Brooks was on the street with his extreme criminal record, but he was radicalized by the media by the press with their constant anti white hatred.

Daryl Brooks Brooks
The Media and Their Selective Outrage

Dennis Prager Podcasts

01:49 min | 5 months ago

The Media and Their Selective Outrage

"Why is it that when the targets are the wrong color or the wrong political ideology, the media goes dark? Why did they just go completely silent on these extraordinary cases? And by the way, the fact that Daryl Brooks mowed all of those people down in Waukesha Wisconsin on Christmas in a car or in an SUV rather than taking what they like to call an assault rifle to the crowd had to be extraordinarily disappointing to the media. No opportunity to blame the weapon and say we need to get these guns out of American's hands to stop these murders and to stop these mass attacks. I haven't heard Joe Biden call for some sort of restriction on assault SUVs. I haven't heard them talking about registrations where they're going to come and check your garage and if you've got one of those assault SUVs, it's being confiscated because somebody else might use a similar type vehicle in a homicidal attack. They haven't done that. It's kinda hot, isn't it? Because if it had been a gone, they become in your house and saying you got to surrender your gun because somebody else might use a similar type of gun in another place in an attack. That's the sense that it makes. I just see stories like this and they just, they just rattle my brain. First of all, nobody's talking about the race of the attacker and the race of the victims because it goes in the wrong direction. That's number one and number two. Again, when they did cover this at the very end at the trial, they tried to actually generate sympathy for the killer. It's really quite an astounding thing, the way our media works. It really is.

Daryl Brooks Waukesha Joe Biden Wisconsin
Darrell Brooks Convicted in Deadly Wisconsin Christmas Parade Attack

Dennis Prager Podcasts

01:59 min | 5 months ago

Darrell Brooks Convicted in Deadly Wisconsin Christmas Parade Attack

"Listen. About the time this show was coming on, literally 22 minutes ago, at the top of the hour, this came down. Daryl Brooks, the Waukesha Christmas parade murderer, was found guilty. First degree intentional homicide in that massacre. You know, I don't want to say it's received no coverage. But this was a Christmas parade murder, so we're talking ten months ago, you know, Christmas of 2021. When this angry, violent, criminal man, 40 year old Daryl Brooks, assaulted his girlfriend, then climbed into his SUV and plowed through that Christmas parade of almost exclusively white people. There's a reason I brought that up. Intentionally according to the eyewitnesses and the prosecutors swerving and veering to maximize the number of people he could hit. He didn't plow straight ahead, giving people at least a chance to dive out of the way. He targeted and swerved and hit as many of them as he could. Killed 6 people, injured about 70 more. He has been convicted of first degree murder after representing himself and turning this entire thing into his show trial. It's just been a circus. He represented himself. He continually threatened the judge, the media coverage of this has been interesting to say the least, the media coverage of the Darryl Brooks trial at the outset was almost sympathetic to Daryl Brooks, a black man who ran down about 70 white people.

Daryl Brooks Darryl Brooks
LA Rams rally in 2nd half to beat Wilks, Panthers 24-10

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | 5 months ago

LA Rams rally in 2nd half to beat Wilks, Panthers 24-10

"After losing their previous two games the rams got back in the win column by beating the Panthers 24 to ten Alan Robinson scored LA's first point of the game with a 5 yard touchdown catch When is it hard to combine this league You know again you know being able to come back today you know again was good for us Matthew Stafford threw for 243 yards and that one touchdown Ben scarron and Daryl Henderson each ran for scores Carolina's only touchdown came on a Dante Jackson picked 6 Mark Myers englewood California

Alan Robinson Rams Panthers Ben Scarron LA Matthew Stafford Daryl Henderson Dante Jackson Carolina Mark Myers Englewood California
Join Us in Michigan for the Battleground Talkers Tour

Mike Gallagher Podcast

00:57 sec | 5 months ago

Join Us in Michigan for the Battleground Talkers Tour

"You're in Michigan, you know where to be this Thursday night. Because we kind of kick off the battleground talkers tour with a big event at the San Marino club in Troy Michigan. Now I've already teased Hewitt because I said, I hope we can get Michigan folks to show up, considering you're such a unabashed Ohio sports fan. Big rivalry between the Buckeye state and michiganders, of course. It's going to be a lot of fun, we're going to kick off the battleground talkers tour at the San Marino club in Troy. It's this Thursday night. 7 30 is I believe when the event starts, Daryl wood will be there. He's the terrific host of 6 o'clock talk. He interviewed me the other day. About the event in Detroit and I want you to come join us.

San Marino Club Michigan Troy Hewitt Daryl Wood Ohio Detroit
Sen. Ted Cruz to Join Battleground Talkers Tour in Atlanta

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:58 min | 6 months ago

Sen. Ted Cruz to Join Battleground Talkers Tour in Atlanta

"Just got some good news about our battleground talkers tour in Atlanta. We just got word that senator Ted Cruz will join us on stage. I'll be there with doctor Sebastian gorka, Dennis prager. This is going to be a massive massive whirlwind adventure. We start a week from today in Detroit. I'll be there with my friend and colleague Hugh Hewitt, kudos to Hugh, great interview this morning with Herschel Walker. Hugh is without a doubt about the best interviewer in the business. And he gets all the news making interviews so proud of the work that Hugh often does with some of these big, big names like Herschel Walker this morning. So you and I will be there a week from a week from tonight today will be at the San Marino club in Troy, Michigan. Daryl wood hosted 6 o'clock talk will be, I think the MC, I'm gonna be on Daryl's show tonight at I think it's 6 O 5 this evening, so join me for that. But kudos to WDW TK, the patriot, 101.5 FM, a.m. 1400 in Detroit. We'll see you a week from today, and then Tampa, my home based Tampa Bay, Sunday, a week from Sunday, October 16th will be at the Brian glazer family JCC over there on Howard avenue, north Howard avenue in Tampa. I'll be there along with Brandon Tatum, doctor Sebastian gorka, special guest appearance by wired differently CEO Todd sailor and Todd is a really, really neat guy, had a chance to meet him a couple of weeks ago real inspiring voice, great motivational American and you're going to learn all about wired differently and he'll be along with us in Tampa. Then on to Orlando, faith assembly church. That's Monday, October 17th. It'll be me, Dennis prager, Sebastian gorka,

Sebastian Gorka Hugh Senator Ted Cruz Herschel Walker Dennis Prager San Marino Club Daryl Wood Hugh Hewitt Detroit Atlanta Brian Glazer Tampa Brandon Tatum Daryl Troy Todd Sailor Michigan Tampa Bay Todd Faith Assembly Church
 Prosecutor: R. Kelly a predator using fame to abuse minors

AP News Radio

00:34 sec | 7 months ago

Prosecutor: R. Kelly a predator using fame to abuse minors

"Prosecutors cul singer R. Kelly a sexual predator who used his fame to abuse minors during closing arguments at his federal trial in Chicago I'm Archie Sara letta with the latest Prosecutor Elizabeth postel told a jury that R. Kelly took advantage of a 14 year old for his own sick pleasure She said Kelly and his two co defendants associates Daryl McDavid and Milton Brown recovered videos of the abuse and hid the evidence before Kelly's 2008 child pornography trial at which he was acquitted The legal teams reach co defendant will present their closing arguments with the jury likely getting the case tomorrow

R. Kelly Archie Sara Letta Elizabeth Postel Daryl Mcdavid Milton Brown Kelly Chicago
 Closing arguments set for R. Kelly trial on fixing charges

AP News Radio

00:37 sec | 7 months ago

Closing arguments set for R. Kelly trial on fixing charges

"Closing arguments are expected today in Chicago in the federal trial of singer R. Kelly on charges that include obstruction of justice and child pornography I'm Archie Zara a letter with the latest The defense rested on Friday after former R. Kelly business manager Daryl McDavid testified for three days Kelly and McDavid are charged with fixing Kelly's 2008 child pornography trial by threatening witnesses and concealing evidence which resulted in Kelly's acquittal Another Kelly associate Milton Brown is a co defendant on a charge of receiving child pornography Kellyanne Brown did not testify Kelly is already serving 30 years in prison after he was found guilty of racketeering in New York in June

R. Kelly Archie Zara Daryl Mcdavid Kelly Mcdavid Kelly Associate Milton Brown Chicago Kellyanne Brown New York
Ex-employee testifies he now doubts R. Kelly abuse denials

AP News Radio

00:54 sec | 7 months ago

Ex-employee testifies he now doubts R. Kelly abuse denials

"A key change in testimony by R. Kelly's co defendant in the singles federal trial in Chicago What a difference a day makes One day after telling a Chicago jury he believed his boss when he denied hitting up miners to have sex with Daryl McDavid is singing a different tune he now says he has doubts about Kelly's denials McDavid says what changed his mind was the testimony of four R. Kelly accuses at this trial He now says listening to their accounts in court have left them sad and embarrassed The testimony is expected to tip the scales of justice against R. Kelly's being acquitted but it does help McDavid's status as his co defendant both in charge with fixing Kelly's 2008 champ pornography trial The government says McDavid knew Kelly was guilty heading into that trial and that gave him a motive for suppressing evidence against the singer I'm Oscar bell's Gabrielle

R. Kelly Daryl Mcdavid Mcdavid Chicago Kelly Oscar Bell Gabrielle
R. Kelly ex-manager tells jurors boss never abused minors

AP News Radio

00:41 sec | 7 months ago

R. Kelly ex-manager tells jurors boss never abused minors

"Achilles former business manager is testified in the latest trial accusing the singer of sexual crimes Daryl McDavid is the only one of the three defendants in the R. Kelly case to testify in his own defense the singer's ex business manager says he never believed the claims of sexual misconduct against his boss telling the jury in Chicago that fending all false claims is just part of the territory for superstars McDavid says while he did see the state's main accuser hanging around R. Kelly's studio as a minor He never saw anything out of the way take place He said once he asked Kelly about him having sex with the girl who was identified in court only as Jane he said the singer angrily denied it I'm our school's Gabrielle

Daryl Mcdavid R. Kelly Mcdavid Chicago Kelly Jane Gabrielle
Cops: Suspects in attack on elderly woman are ages 11 to 18

AP News Radio

00:55 sec | 8 months ago

Cops: Suspects in attack on elderly woman are ages 11 to 18

"Three children and a young man are accused of beating and robbing a 70 year old woman in the lobby of her San Francisco apartment building last month San Francisco police chief William Scott and this from KG O identifies a young man suspected of being involved in the attack and robbery of a 70 year old woman 18 year old Oakland resident Daryl Moore and three juvenile suspects ages 11 13 and 14 Scott says the woman's injuries were not life threatening The attack follows a wave of assaults against Asian Americans during the coronavirus pandemic District attorney Brooke Jenkins tells keo what is going on in our society quite frankly and in San Francisco as you all understand very disturbing The 18 year old 14 year old and 13 year old face a variety of charges including robbery elder abuse false imprisonment and conspiracy The 11 year old is too young to be charged I'm Tim McGuire

San Francisco Daryl Moore William Scott Brooke Jenkins Oakland KEO Scott Tim Mcguire
"daryl l" Discussed on Asian American History 101

Asian American History 101

05:44 min | 8 months ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Asian American History 101

"MMA is the ultimate in providing a proving ground for ideas. And Bruce was all about trying things and finding out how well they worked. Yeah. So it's interesting how you also highlight Bruce embracing intersectionality through martial arts and media. This is also a historical theme you talk about in your book, chains of Babylon, intersectionality, and allyship. Was Bruce influenced by what was going on politically or did he come to these ideas almost coincidentally or did he impact the movement? Yeah, and that's such a good question. And I think it's fascinating. I can't tell you that Bruce Lee was influenced by the Asian American movement. But I can tell you that he was absolutely aware of the presence of race, racism, discrimination, and a poverty of opportunities for people of color in the United States. He certainly understood very deeply the racial stereotypes that he was confronting as an Asian Asian American actor trying to make it in Hollywood, right? And one point he talks about how a producer approached him for a role and he said, you know, I'm not going to be wearing a queue and hopping around following my master. And he connected. He connected his struggles in Hollywood to the struggles of Native Americans, who we also saw as people who were stereotyped and not able to portray themselves as full human beings. And African Americans, as well. One of the most interesting things about Bruce is that he trained really diverse crew of students and fighters, right? Not just Chinese back not just Asian American, but African American, Latino, white, he just, he just had a wide variety of friends and people influencing him. And so he learned, right? He learned from them. They're experiences in some cases of brutal police harassment.

Bruce Asian American movement Bruce Lee Hollywood United States
"daryl l" Discussed on Asian American History 101

Asian American History 101

05:37 min | 8 months ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Asian American History 101

"Extraordinary individuals in every era of history. There was not a Bruce Lee before there was a Bruce Lee, right? So there is clearly something historical going on in the world that enabled him as an extraordinary individual to take advantage of those circumstances and ride those circumstances into global prominence. And the more I dug into his history is prehistory, his life, his career, the more I became convinced that really the story behind his emergence as a global superstar lies in the idea of travel transit and hybridity. So Bruce was born into a world in which there was more and more traffic of people of ideas of capital of technology across the Pacific. In both directions, right? This is not a one way flow of flows of people and ideas from Asia to the west to the Americas flows from the west to Asia, right? So Bruce emerged in this world in which trans Pacific currents are circulating and he rode those currents, you know, very famously he was born in San Francisco to parents who were from Hong Kong because his father was in an opera company that was performing in San Francisco. So I traced back the history of the emergence of Hong Kong, the emergence of California as colonial entities that the traffic between China and California that started in earnest. Because the gold rush, but we also see the crossing over a cultural forms immediately. The first Cantonese opera was performed in San Francisco in 1852. So three years after the discovery of gold in California. So that's one thing, right? That we see that there's all of this traffic that brings people into contact with others that are quite unlike them.

Bruce Lee Bruce Asia San Francisco Hong Kong Pacific California China
"daryl l" Discussed on Asian American History 101

Asian American History 101

04:13 min | 8 months ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Asian American History 101

"I think that it's really incumbent upon academy the academy as an institution to think hard about what leadership is, who can make good leaders and to expand its understanding of what makes for effective academic leadership. Yeah, so for me, I think it's just absolutely necessary for us in the halls of power to make sure that we are being representative and making sure that we bring people who have a wide variety of perspectives of histories and cultures of ways of looking at the world into conversation with each other. And so I take that responsibility very seriously. It's really one of the reasons why I was drawn to moving this direction. Because I think it's so critical for us to have representation. Yeah. Thank you. Let's talk a little bit about your latest book, like water, a cultural history of Bruce Lee. So as you know, there have been several different works that have been created on Bruce, whether books or documentaries, most of them talk about his life in general. Maybe his fighting style and philosophies. So what motivated you to do this work and what are some of the unique aspects and mindsets that you had in creating it? So I approached this book thinking that it would be a pretty easy book to write that I could just knock it out in about a year. Here we are. 11 years later. That did not prove to be the case. And the reason why was, well, for a couple of reasons, I got busy along the way with other things. But really the primary reason was that every time I dug deeper into Bruce Lee's life into the circumstances into which he emerged into the way that he impacted the world, I found that it was a deeper and deeper and deeper subject.

Bruce Lee Bruce
"daryl l" Discussed on Asian American History 101

Asian American History 101

03:46 min | 8 months ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Asian American History 101

"You're listening to Asian American history one O one. A podcast about Asian American history from generally known historical happenings to the deeper cuts that we don't hear about in school. We're your hosts, Jen and Ted, the daughter and father team. Welcome to season two episode 38. Today, our guest is writer and teacher Daryl Joji maida, the dean and vice provost of undergraduate education at the University of Colorado Boulder. He's a Professor of ethnic studies and teaches classes on social movements, Asian American history and culture, comparative ethnic studies, and sports. Additionally, he sits on the editorial board of the justice power and politics series published by the university of North Carolina press, and he formerly served on the board of directors of the association of Asian American studies and, as a member of the editorial board for the journal of civil and human rights studies. He's written three books with the previous two being chains of Babylon, the rise of Asian America, published by university of Minnesota press in 2009, and rethinking the Asian American movement polished by Rutledge in 2012. His latest work is like water, a cultural history of Bruce Lee, published by NYU press, where he explains how the iconic martial artist and actor became a global superstar. Enjoy the conversation. So welcome to the Asian American history one O one podcast. Well, thank you so much for having me. It's a pleasure to be here today. Yeah, thanks for joining us. And let's just begin with a little bit on your current role at the University of Colorado Boulder. So what do you do there? And what are a few of the courses you teach?

University of Colorado Daryl Joji maida board of directors of the asso editorial board for the journa university of North Carolina p Jen Ted Boulder university of Minnesota Babylon Rutledge Bruce Lee NYU America
Police: Charlotte comedy club empties before man fires gun

AP News Radio

00:41 sec | 9 months ago

Police: Charlotte comedy club empties before man fires gun

"Instead of labs that were scarce at a comedy club in North Carolina over the weekend Greg Robinson says he's grateful no one was hurt thankful that police took quick action and hopeful that the guy who fired a shot in a venue where he was about to perform gets the help he needs The God best known for playing Daryl on the office was to perform Saturday at a club in Charlotte but before he could take the stage a man brandished a gun and told everyone to leave once the club was empty the man fired a single shot no one was hurt and the man was taken into custody The motive unclear In an Instagram post Robinson describes the scene as wild adding it was a moment for sure I'm Oscar wells Gabrielle

Greg Robinson North Carolina Daryl Charlotte Robinson Oscar Wells Gabrielle
The Common Denominator in the Latest Spate of Tragedies

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast

01:56 min | 9 months ago

The Common Denominator in the Latest Spate of Tragedies

"There's some interesting hubbub on social media about the highland park shooter, this weird kid, I've seen pictures of him, he doesn't look normal, stable. But nevertheless, of course, there's a normal kind of what is this politics, is he a trumpster, apparently he did go to a Trump rally, but he appears to have gone as a protester or a mocker at one point he's seen draping a flag over himself. Again, the question becoming is he putting the flag over himself because he's an America first patriot or the opposite that he's mocking the flag and doing it as a kind of sarcastic imitation of the so called maga movement. But you have a little different take on all this. You've been talking about what is the common denominator of all this? Yeah, so the common denominator of the not only this shooting, but the wagga Shaw massacre, which I don't know if you guys remember. And you've all done, but Daryl Brooks killed these people with his truck or his SUV or whatever it was, is as you feed. So obviously the weapon of choice was not the same. But what was the same is the fact that they're both lunatics. That is the same. So that is the common denominator between these two. However, the media chooses not to look at one and dwell on another. Obviously, they want they want to take away guns. They want to, they really want to criminalize anybody that gets guns, even though they say no, no, no, we're not going to do that. We're just doing it for, you know, tighten tighten the belt for these other people. The fact of the matter is a lunatic will use whatever. I mean, look at this guy that just killed the former prime minister of Japan. He made his own weapon. He made a gun himself. He's a

Daryl Brooks America Japan
"daryl l" Discussed on Untangle

Untangle

06:12 min | 1 year ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Untangle

"Right to say that, because all those things have happened, numerous times with the plan and black people. So I would well be with them all right to make those accusations because they can be proven. However, instead of going on the offense, because if I did that ball would go right back up and his ears would be plugged hearing what I'm saying. I want to keep the wall down. So rather than go on that kind of attack rather than going the offense, I'd go on the defense and the way I go on the defense is actually an attack. It's a subtle fact that you don't realize what's going on. I say, listen, I hear what you're saying. However, I don't have a criminal record and I'm black. Nobody in my family has a criminal record. I've never been on welfare. Nobody in my family's own welfare. As far as brain size goes, I've never measured my brain, but I'm sure it's the same size as anybody else's. And as far as the SATs go, my SAT scores were high enough to get me into college. I have a battery's degree, both of my parents had master's degrees. My dad was working on his PhD. Now I'm saying all this knowing that this man sitting two feet across from me barely has a high school education. So I know that I have more education in my little finger than he and his whole plan group put together. But why would I throw that in his face? I don't want to do that because I'm just causing the wall to go up. So I just talk about myself. And you see in defending myself, I'm attacking his credibility. So he's hearing this. And so that seed has gone across the wall now. And it's being planted. Now the thing of it is is you must come back and water that sea. So that it grows. Now, I can tell you this for a fact Ariel because I've been doing this now next year in 2021. It'll be 37 years that I've been doing this. And numerous people who have left that ideology have told me this. What happens is they've never had a three hour conversation with a black guy without pushback. Now, of course, yeah, I would dispute some of the things that they say. And I would challenge them on it. But I don't let it devolve into a yelling and screaming and just fights and things like that. So that's what I mean by pushback. They go home, and they reflect upon it. They're like, wow, you know, I just had a three hour conversation with the black guy and we didn't come to blows. What he said about such and such, it makes sense. Oh, but he's black. Yeah, but what he said is true. Up on his black. So they're having a cognitive dissonance. They know what I'm saying is true, but they don't want to believe it because the source came from a black person, where they know it's true. So these two things don't compute in their mind. And so they have this trouble. It was back and forth cognitive dissonance. And so their dilemma becomes, do I believe this to be true? Because I know it's true. And disregard the color of your skin and change my direction or do I continue believing the lie just because he's black? That's their dilemma. So in most cases that I've dealt with, they choose to believe the truth as they know it to be true and change their ideology. There will be those who will go to their grave being hateful violent and racist. Even though they know the truth, they'd rather live that lie. And they would die that way. They lived a lot of they died alive. This is unbelievable. First of all that you have the courage to do this and that you were able to come up with this methodology that truly works. It really points the way towards how we can all interrelate with one another with greater empathy and compassion and listening. Can you actually summarize the methodology? Because I think it's going to be unbelievably helpful for people to hear and be able to apply in our own lives. Sure. And let me just put in a little too here. And then I'll summarize both parts. Okay, so what I have found out through all this kind of thing is this ignorance. Let me just give you an example of something that happened in the room that day that caught us all a lesson wouldn't necessarily learn it that day, but the lesson was planted that day. And we learned it later. While we were talking, mister Kelly would have said something about the Bible says. And I would reach down into my bag and pull up the Bible and ask them to show me where it said this. Or if my cassette recorder exhausted the tape, I would reach down and get a fresh tape. Every time I reached down into the bag, the nighthawk, the bodyguard would reach up to his hip and put his hand on the butt of his gun. So I understood that, that's his job. His job is to protect his boss. And he has no idea what's in my mind. So he's doing his job. But after an hour or so or maybe a little bit less than an hour, he relaxed. You know, I went in and out of the bag, he didn't move. He realized there was no threat in the back. But the little after an hour, while mister killing and I were just talking, there was a strange noise that just came out of nowhere in the room, it was very short and very fast. That was it. And because it happened so randomly, we all jumped. Everybody in the room jumped. And first things once in my mind is uh oh, I'm in trouble. And because the noise was so short and so fast, my ear could not discern what it was. So naturally, I assumed it was an ominous noise, created by mister Kelly. I knew that mister Kelly had made the noise because I did not make it. So if I didn't make it, I'm going to blame somebody else. And so I'm blaming mister Kelly for making it. And I'm hearing the voice of that former klansman who told me Daryl do not thought he would kill you. So already, we're in the tenth situation. I'm a black guy. I'm sitting in the room at the head of the plan for the state. And I've always been worn this guy's not showing me. So I'm on edge. And now this noise happen and everybody jumps. And so I'm just going to come across the table and attack him, literally him and the bodyguard because it's a matter of survival at this point. My job is to protect myself and protect my secretary. His bodyguard's job, of course, is that himself and his boss. And so I got out of my chair and hit the table. And when I hit the table, I'm looking right into the eyes of mister Kelly. And I didn't say a word to him, but I knew he could read my eyes..

mister Kelly Ariel klansman Daryl
"daryl l" Discussed on Untangle

Untangle

05:58 min | 1 year ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Untangle

"So this man's name was roger Kelly. And I had my secretary give him a call. I'd already been warned by a former klansman. Do not fool this guy. He will kill you. And I wanted to meet this guy, and I had to persuade this formerly glad to give me mister Kelly's number and address and all this stuff. So he gave it to me reluctantly on the condition that if I did get in contact with mister Kelly, not to reveal where his private information came from, I thought, okay. So my secretary called him. And I told her specifically, do not tell him that I'm black, just tell him you work for somebody who's writing a book on the clan, where he consent to sitting down and doing an interview. She understood, and so she did. Now she's white. And the only reason I mentioned that, not because I care, but I did not want to call him, even though I had the number. I did not want him to detect in my voice that I'm black. I said, I'm not talking to you. Click and hang up the phone. And my whole project would have ended before it ever got started. But I knew that if he heard her voice, he would know that she's white. And he would not automatically think that this white woman is working for a black man, especially a black man who's writing a book on the plan, because they did not exist. My book is the first book written by a black author on the Ku Klux Klan from the perspective of sitting down face to face and interviewing them. So she called and he did not ask what color I was, and he agreed to do the interview and we set up a date and time. So it was a Sunday afternoon at 5 15 and married with my secretary and I we went and secured a motel room. And we got there several hours early, and we got some soda pop, put it inside an ice bucket in the hotel room. Get it all cold. I want it to be able to offer mister Kelly a cobra when he arrived. I had no idea what this man was going to do. But when he freaked out when he saw me and attacked me, would he turn around and walk away and see? I'm not talking to you, or would he come inside the room and sit down in any event? I want it to be hospitable and have cold beverages available. So that was all said. And the way the room just happened to be. If you are standing in the hallway by the door, looking into the room, you can not see who's in the room. You have to enter the room turn around the corner and then there's a room laid out. So from the doorway, you can not tell who is in the room how many people are in there or whatever. So I took the lamp table to the lamp off and put the table in the most obscure corner of the room. And I've got a chair on one side from mister Kelly, but share on the other side for myself. And I had a cassette player or rather cassette recorder and a little black canvas bad beside my chair, which I placed in the middle of the table all in hopes that if mister Kelly did come in, he would allow me to record our interview. And I also had a copy of the Bible in the bad because the two clots claimed to be a Christian organization. And they claim that the Bible itself preaches racial separation. Now, in my reading of the Bible, I've never seen that. So I want to be able to pull out my Bible and say, here, mister Kelly, please show me chapter and verse, where it says, blast and whites must be separate. So I'm all prepared, right? Right on time. What do the minute 5 15? There's a knock on the door. Mary hops up one's around the corner and opens the door. And I'm in the corner of the room, see that at the table where you can't see me until you come halfway into the room. So in walks this bodyguard and he's dressed in he's called a grand nighthawk. And I thought his bodyguard grand state level. And imperial nighthawk would be like a national bodyguard, which he would become later on. Anyway, so it wants his grand night off. He's dressed in military camouflage with the Ku Klux Klan in Sydney on his chest on one side, which is a red circle with a white cross and a red blood drop in the center of the cross. And then on the other side on his chest, where the initials KKK and embroidered on his cap and said, and knights of the Ku Klux Klan. And on his hip, he had a semi automatic handgun in a holster. So he comes in and the grand drag and mister Kelly was walking right behind him in a dark blue suit and tie and a briefcase. And so he comes in right behind him. Well, when I turned the corner and saw me sitting there, he froze in his tracks. Obviously, because he wasn't sweating a black guy, right? And mister Kelly did not realize that his nighthawk had stopped short. And so he walked right into his back and knocked the guy forward. So now they've both are stumbling around trying to regain their balance. And I'm just sitting there looking at them. And I'm looking in their faces, and I can read their faces. I can read their faces the same way you could read a highway billboard sign. Their faces were saying to me, do we get the wrong room number? Is this an ambush? What's going on here? And so I saw the apprehension I stood up. And I displayed both of my palms to show I had nothing in my hands. And I walked forward and I extended my right hand and I said, hi, mister Kelly, I'm Daryl Davis. Well, you shook my hand. And so did the nighthawk. So far so good. I encourage you to come on in please have a seat. And mister Phillips sat down, and then I stood out attention to his right. So he asked me to produce some ID, which I did. And we went through that. And then I sat down. So we began with interview. And within about maybe 5 to ten minutes, I'm asking my question after all these pleasantries and stuff. So why is you hate black people? You know, what's going on here? Well, mister Davis, black people are prone to crime. There are more black criminals in this country than white criminals. And he's evidence in this by the fact that he points out that there are more black people in prison than white people. Now, this is true. There are more blacks in prison than whites. But his statement is a half truth..

mister Kelly roger Kelly Mary hops Ku Klux Klan Daryl Davis Sydney mister Phillips mister Davis
"daryl l" Discussed on Here's The Thing

Here's The Thing

02:06 min | 1 year ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Here's The Thing

"He in the my. Thanks to daryl hall and danny bennett. I'm alec baldwin. Here's the thing is brought to you by iheart radio. Listen we all love ice cream. But there's ice cream and then there's jenny's ice cream janis has unique flavors like brown butter almond brittle butter cream ice cream with golden pockets of karen crunch and bramble berry crisp ice cream that tastes just like a fresh berry. Cobbler topped with vanilla. Ice cream. all made from scratch no synthetic flavorings.

"daryl l" Discussed on Here's The Thing

Here's The Thing

07:27 min | 1 year ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Here's The Thing

"What was the best thing before sliced bread. Why does quicksand work so slowly. Is it possible to plan a surprise party for a psychic question. Everything hyundai did. It's how they came up with the new ideas for thinking needed to create the all new totally reimagined tucson. Their best tucson ever questions like just. How big can you make an infotainment. Scream in the tucson on the answer turned out to be a huge ten and a quarter inches wide. Or can your phone be a spare key. Utilizing the tucson's digital key technology. The answer is a resounding yes better yet you can share it with up to three people and how do you make. Peace of mind comes standard in an suv. Holidays reply is complementary maintenance three years or thirty six thousand miles. Every inch of the all new tucson has been completely reimagined resulting in an suv loaded with available innovations both inside and out onto question. Everything to create the best tucson ever from designed to technology to safety every aspect of the new tucson has been improved upon. The suv has been completely redesigned inside and out to create the best tucson ever. It's your journey. Discover all that's new along the way by test driving the totally reimagined. Two thousand and twenty two tucson at your nearest dealer or learn more at hanalei. Usa dot com. Call five six two three one four four six zero three for complete details. That's five six two three one four four six zero three. What are you seek personal or professional success or both unita team of experts and advisers. You can trust for thirty years. Se age group has helped executives and individuals realize their financial and business goals with services that span audit tax and wealth management to investment banking outsourced accounting and enterprise technology clients rely on sc and h to help deliver timely data tailored solutions and proven results. Find the right partner at sc h. group dotcom. When's the last time you got rewarded for brushing. Your teeth with quips. Smart electric toothbrush. Good habits can earn you. Great perks like free products. Gift cards and more. You've probably heard us talk about quip a million times but this is something brand new that rewards you and your mouth. The quip smart brush for adults and kids connects to the quip app with bluetooth track. When and how well you brush get tips and coaching to improve your habits already have equip upgraded with a smart motor and keep the features. You know and love sensitive. Sonic vibrations two minute timer with thirty second pulses for a guided clean slim lightweight and sleek with no wires or bulky charger to weigh you down beyond the brush. Quip has everything you need to build a complete routine. Join over five million mouths who use quip and save hundreds compared to other bluetooth brushes when you get a quick smart brush for just forty five dollars. Smart electric toothbrushes for adults and kids have all the guiding features of their original brush with a new bluetooth. Smart motor that connects to the frequent app. So you can track your brushing. Get tips daily. Coaching and earn rewards for good habits like brushing two minutes twice a day. Start getting rewards for brushing your teeth. Today go to get quipped dot com slash thing right now to save ten dollars on equip smart electric toothbrush. That's ten dollars off as smart electric toothbrush at get quip dot com slash thing spelled g. e. t. q. u. i. dot com slash thing. Quip the good habits company. I'm alec baldwin and this is here's the thing when you have a career as long lasting unsuccessful as tony bennett. It's helpful to have people around who you can trust and danny bennett says. His father respected his opinion from a very young age. It's interesting because we never related that way. So he kind of related to me as an adult. Danny i wanna talk to you son. I don't want you to be my son. I want you to be my account treated you like you were. You were business. Associates produced partner at the age of twelve. He would come to me and go. Like i got this thing and by the don. What do you think he didn't do any. And you know what i mean. you know. it's like. I guess you know the turn-of-the-century kids at twelve and thirteen work in the fields. You know what i mean. They were doing. Yeah and i think a lot of that is working in the fields for you failed. you know. it wasn't like go throw a baseball and you know celebrity. We couldn't go to the zoo. It was impossible. I mean he took me to one movie plenty of the apes. I remember one movie. And that's okay. Daily will never go to the movies together. Again of the theater. Up there inglewood. Exactly we're gonna watch the movies with count basie every friday night and then that's that's that you know but i always dug the fact that like i got to go to the copacabana. You know so the eighties go by and you're in this phase where you're going to build. Rpm you're going to build his your company. You're gonna do what you wanna do your way. When did you know it was going to work. We i mean. I don't mean to be korean cinematic about but are you standing there one night in the wings and he's out there and you go. It's working no. I'll tell you when it was Bob guccione junior editor at spin magazine. And i was reading it. They were interviewing him in his own magazine and asked what he thought was the most influential thing about rock and roll people in rock and roll said to people. James brown and tony bennett as that's wild. James brown and tony bennett suspend magazine. You know it's like the pixies. And then i went onto. Rena goes like well. Why allie understand james brown. Why tony bennett. He said because he's always taken chances. What i said. This is what i was thinking about telling me. i'm picking. he's picking up this violent. Tony you know it's like the i i see tony. Everything's same thing once he's he does. He calls it moving furniture around. He doesn't know there's no such thing as complacency and now we're watching are the big idols kind of corporate. You know with the stones and doing that thing in their third cookie cutter and and about guccione's talking about this being like you know the guys invader so i. I called him up led to kind of the you know they would do these. These fashion spreads. And i said why don't we do something with the chili peppers and tony. We have fun with it so we did a show at the hard rock cafe in l. a. with the red hot chili peppers and tony. The chili peppers were punk at that time right before recruiting and i said been an observational musical logical way. They went there. It was kind of like wait a minute. Because your father snobbish jurist slob come back.

tucson new tucson tony bennett unita hanalei danny bennett hyundai sc alec baldwin Usa spin magazine James brown Danny basie inglewood Bob guccione
"daryl l" Discussed on Here's The Thing

Here's The Thing

06:56 min | 1 year ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Here's The Thing

"The his right hand man would have never happened right when we don't have to go there but your dad did. Yeah well. he was at a point. Where the thing at columbia they try to know. This happened to everyone barbara strike and it was like. Oh you got to seeing the bills carrying sang barbra streisand. They tried to get barber to sing. Bob dylan i in one thousand nine hundred sixty nine. She's listening to dylan blowing in the wind. This wing in both wins. The answer is below weighing in the win. You know brilliant idea. That's a great one must go again barbara. So anyways so tony. Actually you know worked with climbing and he did an album. That was kind of like that thing and he got physically sick. He said he was regurgitating between takes and so well. That's a great story that that he tells about. Clive davis right where killington went in. And said you know. He thought he was going to get a raise and clive davis said. Well i have some bad news for you. He goes What is it and clive zig. Well we're going to have to try to you from the label. Ellington goes well. Why says william not selling enough records and ellington goes. Oh i guess. I had it missed. I was mistaken. I thought i was supposed to make the records in. You're supposed to sell them. It's a great. Yeah that's my edict. Like and i've heard that story that's every artists but that that was my son said to me. Why do i hate making movies. And i said and i said you really hate making movies. I said well maybe hate stronger. I said i'm very uncomfortable. They say why 'cause you just feel the hand of commerce at your throat every day were chevy. It's never free and rarely fun. It can be challenging but you just feel like every dime is busy counted so they wanted your dad to do what he couldn't do. Yeah and he rebels against that just kind of like they gave him a big contract then he was like no. I don't do this. I wanna start label now now. This is at a time when people weren't doing that. I mean you know. I mean did it with more often. But it was done more on a warner brothers thing And he found Jack rollins Woody allen's manager in you know number of other people to work with them on a on. A label called improv. This is where he made the bill evans records in voice and piano. Those records being made at the time and so he came to me and talk to me about the label. And i said well. That's a great idea and you know it's risky. And he said well. What's risky about. And i said well. It doesn't seem like they have major distribution in this day and age independent distributions. Great you can do it. Internet about but then it was a real challenge. I said columbia's offering you to a distribution deal which is a great. You know it's just great. It's kind of like the leave you alone. You can do what you wanna do. He had me go. Talk to the guy was run a company in buffalo. So we'll go talk them now. You know. I got the long hair and a fringe jacket. And i i go to this. You know this. This hotel owner in buffalo. And i'm sitting there and he's thrown about and i start talking about the distributions it's great boom. There's some other things about the contract that i didn't like that i told them about you. Know in terms of him kind of getting roped into it and this guy just rejected that whole notion. So i went back to tony and i just said look i. I wouldn't do this i think. There's you know. So no improv records Well no he did it. And how long did that. Last it lasted like three years. And they failed because of the distribution right so he does improv records. And then because he can't get the records to distribute exactly. So that's what i told him. He remembered that and then the the label folded and then he was without a contract. For how long. Let's see i'd say three years years Well it's tough because a member at the time this is like around seventy eight okay sinatra retired. You didn't see geez our number one and streisand's doing too wet with the bees are saying. Yeah you know what i'm saying. So like there's that he didn't wanna do it and then he was in vegas and in those days you were doing vegas like you know the thirty two week thing and all that type stuff you know. He just called me up one. Dan just like. I don't know i need some help here. I don't know what to do. I don't know where to go manager. He wanted to be able to do his art on his terms and was vegas like for him. What is that like for someone. Because you always figure i remember reading nick. Taj is book dino about the best biographies of ever and they talked about how martin at one point in the sixties i believe was the highest paid entertainer in the world because he had the He touched every base. He stole four bases. He had a television show recording contract he started films and he appeared live in vegas concerts making millions and millions of dollars back and i was wondering for someone like your dad. I'm going to say that i actually. I don't know what vegas exemplify back. Then like for an actor was that like being on a game show or no no so there was. I mean the idea that you know. This is where they cut their teeth. The lounges louis. Prima in the lounge. You had a fred astaire and cary grant going to see sinatra and then go into the lounge and this is where the onus was like i you know and tony makes a good point these people. We didn't have access to these people except the big screen and all sudden. They're they are sitting there watching louis prima rubbing shoulders with with sinatra and jerry. Gran and whatever this was magic and for for again for tony got remember. Tony's ten years younger than all these guys. These are his idelson announcer. Call them the kid and there he is with them. All spread astaire salon a salon so and nobody messed around for the for the obvious reasons. And then you got into this this evolution where you know the sumo corporation and howard hughes took over and like i had negotiate with like howard using these cowboys. It was really interesting. Was that one. Oh so mazing. And this is like telling i i started working and like you know howard uses on the top of the desert end. I know he's up there. And so there was this guy named lenny they'd go in with me to negotiate the contract and let he'd get on his hands and knees f- seriously gonna lead to like get off knees. I'm not going to get on my knees in big for contract. I'm just not gonna do it. You know.

clive davis clive zig barbara Jack rollins tony columbia barbra streisand vegas killington Bob dylan Ellington barber ellington buffalo dylan bill evans sinatra Woody allen william warner
"daryl l" Discussed on Here's The Thing

Here's The Thing

08:10 min | 1 year ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Here's The Thing

"Two thousand nineteen conversation with daryl hall with partner. John oates hall. An open is the best selling vocal duo in history. They have seven platinum albums and another six gold once they made the billboard hot one hundred thirty four times with mega hits mike man eater which girl you make my dreams come true and i can't go for that daryl hall has sort of second career on television. Two shows live from daryl's house and darryl's restoration overhaul on the diy network. Daryl hall started singing on the streets in philadelphia. So i started at a really young age. Doing you know like busking more. Like the do op. You know street-corner music. There was no instruments involved acapella and all that and it was always very racially integrated. You know that. Whole thing. And then when i went to philly i had already been involved in that stuff and there was this place called mytton hall where all everybody hung out. It was like deplace where the whole temple university wet and people used to stand in the corners and sing. It was that kind of stuff was still going on. So i just walked up one day and started singing along with these strangers. And that's how i got into philadelphia and started Bit at a time when we in my mind. When i think about philadelphia then i think about a lot of racial difficulties in move and historically not not for you. I'm saying the city has always had kind of a racial stratification. It seems like what was it about you that these people welcomed you open arms. I just think. I grew up in a very racially integrated environment you know in pottstown. There's a big black community and my my parents best friends lived right in the middle of the black neighborhood. So i as as a kid. I'm talking like kid kid for the summer. I'd be over there and all my waking hours really. I would be hanging out with white nba kids together. So the music that i grew up with was that our b-e-n-s-o-n music It was really my baby food you know and and it just went that way often. Your dad was a musically and he was a vocal group sang. He sang like gospel. Vocal group and he I learn a lot about harmony from him and my mother was a musician. She did other kinds of music. You know she musicals and she was in a band so very musical environment. Let me just put these cards on the table. Which is you are one of the ten greatest male vocalists and all history of rock and roll. I mean you are and what kills me is like how you've stayed because a lot of these guys have to drop it a key and we interview a lot of my you name it and only you and bano pretty much sound the same now. Almost first of all. I do on stage. I drop a half aquino can i do so i admit it. But but that's that's cool too. It gives me more room to play around up top but the you know voice has changed a lot over the years you listen to those records that i made you know rich girl and all this kind of songs. I'm like a little boy compared to the way i sing. No i have. I sort of have the voice now i always wanted to have. It's that bigger masculine voice. I know and yeah so. But i i like how voices evolved. And i haven't lost any of the stuff that i had i just. It's a sort of got bigger and wider. Did you start singing. When did singing. My mother was as i said she was in a band. But she was also vocal teacher and things like that and encouraged her and she. It was sort of always there and she taught me how to sing. Did they both play instruments. Yeah my mother. Play piano. And i started taking piano lessons around five and took lessons all the way through and then unfortunately was got in Was i once i got into. I was forced forced to play the trombone but that it lasts long but no i've been playing piano since five and then i started playing guitar. Self taught on the qatar. How old were you when you picked up the qatar for maybe late teens early twenty s. When you go then you go to temple the study music y well at first i was going to go. I didn't think there was any money in In in music at all didn't even occur to me and to have a career in music. So i was going to be. I was a. I wanted to be psychiatrist. Why because i was really interested in the life of the mind and i was up against these. I didn't realize my niveau tape that you had to be a doctor. Do his a medical degree. I quit. I wanted. And then i was up against all these kids that were like premed and i failed miserably. It was just horrible i. This is not from the same problem i was like. I have to study chemistry. Just i just want to talk to people. Yeah man what happened. Was i did that for a year. And then i switched to the temple music school and they you know they'll let me in and finished graduate. I finished well i quit. I quit five weeks before graduation. Because i was a student teacher and i was up early in the morning all day doing all that stuff and then i had a a a barg plan. Play music bar band at night till two o'clock in the morning so i didn't work out so well and the teacher said you know we have to choose one or the other and i thought to myself. Do i wanna music teacher or do i want to be a musician for real and there was no choice in my head so i said okay see later by when you leave temple when you when you finish school What happens after that. During my time in temple as i said the whole thing was sorta simultaneous. I was going to music school. But i was also hanging out with tommy bell and People who don't know tommy bell was was the producer and writer behind. Oh a great number of the philadelphia sound stylistics and the phonics and people like that He was very very influential on the sound of philadelphia and he sort of took me under his wing. He was not that much older than me. But but i would just sit around and listen to him right and he was an amazing writer and so i was friendly with him and then i also i. I had a band. The sort of came out of that thing. I was talking about in in mid all and we call ourselves the temp tones. Because we're temple university. Everybody thought it was the temptation. Weird temple and We did a talent show at the uptown theater which was not that far from the university from the campus and it was on what they used to call the chiller circuit. And you know every soul group on. Earth came to the uptown. It was follow. And i used to hang out there and Just like the apollo talent shows and we won the talent show. And james brown's band was the house band back us up. That was i was like eighteen years old. I'm singing baby. Baby with james brown's band back and we won the talent show and the prize. Was you got to record a record with gamble and huff. The songwriters songwriter producers. Who gamble enough. And tommy bell basically created what the world knows as the sound of philadelphia. I did record with gambling. Huff and it came out and and and went on the charts in w das in philadelphia. The army station and I was doing all this while going to school. And so i became part of that whole scene. that's the i started hanging out at sigma sound with studio musicians and i. I wanted to be a student. -sition wanna learn things from them. So that's what. I was doing during white student years. And in the meantime. I met this guy. John oates who are in university. We met going to temple. Yeah we we were really from. He's from about fifteen miles from me. In north wales pennsylvania just north of north west of philadelphia so We were both promoting our singles because he had he managed to get a single to on kenny. Gamble's label He had a group called the masters. And we were both promoting are single at this place called adelphi ballroom and.

daryl hall philadelphia John oates hall mytton hall tommy bell temple university daryl darryl pottstown temple music school mike nba qatar uptown theater james brown huff gamble Huff John oates
"daryl l" Discussed on Broken Record

Broken Record

05:49 min | 1 year ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Broken Record

"Love. This is the one. I'm happy to to play. I like seeing sara smile because it's so real and and so personal i like. There's a lot of them that way. One on ones one of those I don't know. I can't really say there's a that i like more than another one because i i wouldn't sing if i didn't like the song or i was tired of the saw. I we just drop it. We have a lot more to to fill in the blank you know. Are there like well known. Hits years that people show up for. And you're like yeah. I can't do that tonight. I tried doing that and people get angry. You know you didn't play private is like okay. Sorry then and that's a good problem. You know because we have an obligation to play all the songs and that we actually can't play them all in a set an unless we were going to do one of these ridiculously long sets. We have so many songs to play and we try to throw we try and throw things in our less known or whatever and things like that but most of the time we're obligated to play certain songs contractually obligated. You've got a well the the contract of the between us and the public yes. So what are you writing now. I've been coming up with ideas. But i don't like to take things to completion until it's time to complete it and i've been in sort of creative hibernation. I have a lot of songs i did. A lot of false starts. And i'm but i believe next year early next year. I'm going to start really getting serious about putting these things down. Are you one of the songwriters who in the songs. Don't make sense until you're in the studio. No they make sense from the get go. you know. Be sitting at the instrument. And your other outlet i have to ask you about is Are you buying more homes now. You know anything big. I'm restoring. actually. I'm still restoring the same home that i was doing. I backed off it for a little while. And now i'm back on it again and actually. That's what i was doing during this whole lockdown thing is. I would just working on the house so that at least there was something to do. What does that give you that. That's different from music. What kinda satisfaction. Well actually gives me the same satisfaction in some ways. It's not that spontaneous. Birds gotta sing kind of satisfaction. But it's there's a certain kind of creative stimulation that it provides restoring an old house or anything like that. It's it's not that dissimilar to getting a group people together who you really think are amazing and doing an album you know. And everybody's contributing their little ideas and it's the same thing with these artisans you know guys that build antique style chimneys and people that know this no that and i. I'm sort of producer that holds it all together and i. I have a lot of knowledge about About antique architecture especially between the seventeenth and nineteenth century. So i you know. I like to do it. That's all i can say. I've done a lot of them. Well you know song architecture to so best of luck on the tour. I don't think you're going to need it for me but it'll be fantastic for people to see you guys again. Well it'd be great to be out there and see them so it works both ways all right. Well thank you so much for doing this. Okay thank you. Thanks the daryl hall coming on the show and chatting with bruce. You can check out all favorite hall note. Psalms at broken record podcasts dot com subscribe to our youtube channel at youtube dot com slash. Broken record podcast. we can find all new episodes. You can follow us on twitter at broken record broken records this help from the arose jason gambro martinez dollars sandler and jennifer sanchez with engineering. Help from nick. Chafee or executive producer is about broken record is production pushkin industries. You love this show. And others from pushkin industries. Consider becoming a push nick bush a podcast inscription that offers bonus content and uninterrupted ad. Free listening for four ninety nine. Look for push. Nick exclusively on apple podcasts excursions. And if you like our show please remember to share rate and review us on your podcast and music by beats just enrichment. This episode of broken record is brought to you by seaney wine. Seamy wine was born from the grit. And perseverance of its tenacious. Founder isabel cmih. Because when life gave grapes she knew exactly what to do. And that's why glass of wine as a reward worth having because good things come to those who are card. Even a small goal achieved a moment worth celebrating whether to sip of their medium bodied white wine chardonnay or the full-bodied red wine cabernet-sauvignon raise a glass to the moments that make us seamy wine. Goodness from grit enjoy their many varietals. Wherever fine winds are sold or visit online at shop cmih dot com to learn more about their premium selection of california wines that shop s. I m i dot com to learn more order yours. Today please enjoy their winds responsibly. Seamy winery geyserville california. If you're a small business owner growing your business is what it's all about. That is if you have the space to do it. Keep smart self. Storage has the solution with a variety of storage unit sizes helpful online resources and easy to access facilities cube. Smart self storage provides a self storage experience that puts the focus on you. Because you and your business matter most and help you grow cube. Smart is offering up to twenty five percent off your monthly rent. Say goodbye to crowded inventory. And hello to your business. Success story with qb smart self storage cube smart dot com for more information..

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"daryl l" Discussed on Broken Record

Broken Record

08:36 min | 1 year ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Broken Record

"But did start. Well really amazing because you hear about like other groups. The everley brothers or simon and garfunkel. Initially some moment where they of ever brothers were their father made them do it but These voices to sound incredible together. That never happened now. It actually never af- there's still a chance. Maybe you're going back out on the road. You could have that magic. Hey we sound pretty good. Yeah you guys got signed to atlantic well first of all. Tell me about your cell because it was produced by a wreath martin who's grow just a legendary producer. I think he did this donny. Hathaway roberta flack records. He did so many great albums he did so many things. You can't even name them all. We got together with reef right at the peak of his time he was he was he was coming off such a well not coming off. He was involved in such a such a dynamic role of working with such disparate musicians. I mean everybody from country artists to jazz artists to carly simon artists to to aretha to donny. Hathaway to you name it. I'm it's like on and on and on and on. And we were right in the smack dab in the middle of all that we couldn't have been in a better place to to make our first couple albums and the thing. I like so much about a reef. Beside the fact that he was the only person i the was was or is better as good as his quincy and in the same way he knows how to draw the best out of any kind of music any kind of artist and work with them and suggest things and molded and and turn it into something that is bigger than what it was. And i learned so much from him. I can't even tell you how much i learned from a re. I loved the guy and so sorry is going on that album you did. She's gone which is just one of the great are in be songs of all time. I mean system incredible song but it wasn't a hit for you not originally no atlantic puerto. These things are. I mean it hits are funny things atlantic put it out. It didn't really do anything it would. They they played it on what they called underground radio back then. Fm radio right then. A group cultivars put out a version of it and it became an rb. Hit on the charts and then Cup a couple years later we we released. It became a number one. Oh i don't know if it was number one but it was definitely top five. Yeah was encouraging that other people are having with your music or discouraging that it it wasn't you that was frustrating because i knew that our version was still the best one and We were starting out. And i felt i felt a bit like okay. They're stealing or steam messing with our momentum but all worked out a couple of years you know and we get out on the road. We we i. I wrote sara smile and that became an rb hit and then she's gone jumped right in after it was it because you were wight artists. Do you think that it made it a little harder to get on the charts just the way the record business works no no. I don't not for us we're different. We're nominees I was on rb charts of philadelphia with group called attempt tones. We had a hard time breaking into pop radio. The black community embraced us really early on in our music so he came in through another another way than most people do when. Atlantic drop jude. What didn't they see that. They should have seen well. I don't blame them. I lost it for a little while there. I we had just moved from philadelphia to new york. And i made made a record. And i will say i made it because it was mostly me and todd rundgren. We made a recco war babies and it was not what atlantic wanted all. They wanted You know our buzek and which is cool. That's what i that's my heart anyway. But for some reason. I decided i wanted to make that record and it was a bad idea really now. A look back line was certainly a creative. That's all it was was a creative. I album but it was sort of mutual. We thought okay. Maybe we should try go. And some other label that would be more willing to run with our expanding creative style And later you jumping ahead here. And i do want to go back to when you guys really started your run of hits but you then when did to really great albums with robert trip and a lot of people would not put together with robert trip he loved. You talked about like the vocalist. Who could do anything. Yeah tell me about meeting him how this came about well. I've been living in spending time in in the uk for ever since really philadelphia. I mean The mid seventy s. And i was interested in robert his music. I love king crimson. And i got to know him and we'd became. We became friends and then after that we both said. Why don't we try and do something together. Nobody expected and our our roots are so different. But yet we've have sort of the same sensibilities and that's what we did and we decided to go for it and make a record and i. It's one of the best things i think i ever did. And him to Do you still play things from it today. On live from daryl's house i do. Yeah i do. Yes okay do you. Keep up with him as well Every once in a while we check in you know he wouldn't have him on the show I just watched the broadcast of his where he said he wanted to have a former super group that i was going to be the lead singer and then i just saw that a couple of days ago. So i mean we're still sort of circling around each other. Well you should do that because that'll be amazing. Yeah i think it'd be great then you did this. You know starting in the early eighties. You'd had a couple of hits. He'd had rich girl. You had sara smile but then you just went on this tare of hits. I think he had sixteen top ten. Hit six number ones. You know you'd kiss on my list and you make my dreams come true. Private is one on one At this point did you just feel like you were a single span. As opposed to an album band at that point they. This is what you visit what you're doing. That's how it turned out. But not at all. I'd never felt i don't really like pop music for you. Want the truth participate in it and obviously my style fits into a what people call pop mode. But i never thought of ever thought of myself as a singles artist. I i when i make an album. It is a complete statement and the the single thing comes after the fact. That's that's somebody wants to sell something so they pick a song and then they pick another song but it's not it's not intent. There's no intent involved in that. We'll be back after a quick break. With more from daryl hall and bruce had this episode of broken record is brought to you by see me. Why hard work and persistence have been a way of life for senior wine since eighteen. Seventy six but the tastes for goodness and unmatched termination. Isabel simi has been the backbone of the winery for over seventy years because when life gave her grapes she knew exactly what to do. And that's why glasses seamy wine as a reward worth having because isabel believes that good things come to those who work hard. Even a small goal achieved as a moment worth celebrating. Whether it's a medium bodied white wine chardonnay or full-bodied red wine cabernet-sauvignon celebrate your grit with a bottle of goodness with notes of green apple tart pair and citrus too dark fruit flavors like black cherry and black currant. Seamy winds are an excellent way to acknowledge achievement or well-deserved pause for those who know grit and persistence is the hard work. That happens when no one is watching. Seamy y goodness from grit. Enjoy the many varietals. Wherever fine wines are sold or visit online at shop cmih dot com to learn more about their premium selection of california wines. That shop sim. I dot com to learn. more order. yours. Today please enjoy their winds responsibly. Seamy winery.

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"daryl l" Discussed on Broken Record

Broken Record

07:38 min | 1 year ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Broken Record

"You know that kind of stuff. That's that's gospel. Church music you know and adopted a and i don't know man also. I went to music school. I know harmony and theory. I it goes in. It's in the blood you know. And i know what goes to where. And what can go to where. And when things like that. And and i make use of it it sort of not consciously so much unconsciously. What was music like at home for you before you were at the studio with these guys. My mother was in a band when i was a kid. All through my teens. Who from the earliest childhood. All all the way through my teens so some of my first memories are are watching her on stage. What kind of ban was it. It was like a big band kind of lawrence walk kind of big band but you know like variety show but it was still it was music had an audience and people were playing kind of the pop songs at the time and all that kind of thing and it was at a local philadelphia area pensive southeast pennsylvania thing and i used to go on the road with her and watch. This you know isn't bowed down to the to the band leader. This guy was named bill lamb. I wanted to be bill lamb. And and you know he has baton and his white dinner jacket all that shit and my dad was a vocal group with his brothers and sang gospel. Music and my mother was the choir director of the church. And all that kind of thing so it was all tied together in that kind of you and very gospel e show-bizzy kinda thing. Did your mother teach you to say yes. She was vocal teacher to. She's to give lessons and she taught me from their earliest. I mean my mother is a great singer. She's ninety eight now. She's not such a great cigarettes which pisses her off to tell you the truth but yes. She's she was great cigarettes and she knew how to sing. She you know she always had me panting. Like a dog. So i would get get into using my diaphragm and not sing for my throat. Stuff like that can still do that today. Absolutely once you learn something it becomes part of a singer. You know i mean. It's a very organic thing begin. Singer has to do with your with your head and your physical body. The the way you're the size of your throat and everything everything contributes to your what comes out of your mouth when you when you sing You go so quickly from a serve a lower register to a high register and so many songs she taught you that or did you get that from her. Not so much. I don't worry about that from that's just vocal facility. I'll call it. You know. I just if i feel like doing one thing i do it. Yeah so when. Do you know music. This is this is gonna be your life. I didn't really think about it so much. When i was a kid. I just did it. And i came at a time where i wasn't even in a place where i was at charlotte. Ever make any money on it really. I mean i think when. I finally got involved with kenny. And leon and tommy bell i said okay there there is a career here to be and that's when i realized that i needed to do this. I mean it was a compulsion at were your parents encouraging. Always really oh yeah. I guess they'd been in the business. It didn't scare them now. It didn't scare them. They had a lot of confidence in me. You know they they do. We'll be right back with more from daryl hall after a quick break. It's crazy how much we have to pay for outdated impersonal healthcare and even crazier that we all just accepted. It's time to face facts. Healthcare is backwards. Luckily there's forward a new approach to primary care that surprisingly personal and refreshingly straightforward forward never makes you feel like just another patient backed by top rated doctors and the latest tech forward gives you access to personalized care whenever you need it. Using in-depth genetic analysis and real time bloodwork forwards top rated doctors provide you with in-depth insights to better understand your genetics mental and physical health then create custom easy to understand plans to help guide you to achieving long-term health with forward you get unlimited in person visits with your doctor and access to care anytime via the forward up. Offer one flat monthly fee. It's time to stop accepting backwards. Healthcare and start moving. Your health forward visit go forward dot com today to learn more. That's go forward dot com with discover you earn cashback on every purchase including your dinner for date night out new pajamas and in the past year. Probably that new streaming service to for me. I spend a lot of money on workout gear and work at tire. I'll put it all on my discover credit card. But maybe you're spending more groceries or wanting to spend a little more money on a loved one. The cash back you earn will be matched by discover automatically having a credit card that matches the rewards who already earn is one small thing you can do to stress less about your finances and discover makes it even easier because discover card is accepted at ninety nine percent of places that accept credit cards so when it comes to discover get used to hearing yes more often learn more discover.com/match limitations apply 2021 nelson report. We're back with more from daryl hall and bussan went to temple and then you met john oates. Yeah it's a treat. You met at a fight. Yes sorta dance really. It was a. They used to call record hops. You know it was it. Everybody went and lip sync their songs and did that kind of thing and it was in a in west philadelphia and it was a it was an nba show and we were on. His band was on the bill so mine and about three quarters of the way through the through the show Some gang shit broke out. You know and it got it got pretty crazy and the everything stopped basically and it was a it was on a second floor and we both found ourselves in an elevator going down to the street and a. I guess that didn't work out very well. And that's and then. We got talking. And i found out that he was. He was also a student at temple. We're both freshman and we wound up being roommates. You know of because we both. We both lived. Our parents both lived out outside of towns and we needed to be in town so we are renting apartments together. Did you start performing together or did you write together. I we were friends and writing separately. And we would occasionally. I don't know we really right together. We didn't really start doing that. Until after school and i was already ensconced very deeply in the old sigma sound thing and i brought jon into it. He was a traveling around. He had just graduated traveling around europe. And i said okay why you come in you know and get involved in this with me and then we started writing songs and uh started performing together then that was about nineteen. I forget one seventy. I'll say seventy seventy one and is there a moment you said we'll click with this guy like voices. Were something the writing work. Something works here the first time that we ever recorded together. We said okay. We'll we'll we'll be songwriters but will never work together because we sound so bad together. He sang a little flat. And i was singing a little short. And it's just great it on your nerves. It was horrible and it took a little while for us to adapt our a vocal harmonies style. So that we could that we locked together and then it turned into what it is.

bill lamb tommy bell daryl hall philadelphia lawrence pennsylvania bussan Singer leon kenny charlotte john oates nelson nba jon europe
"daryl l" Discussed on Broken Record

Broken Record

02:13 min | 1 year ago

"daryl l" Discussed on Broken Record

"daryl l" Discussed on The Jordan Harbinger Show

The Jordan Harbinger Show

02:48 min | 1 year ago

"daryl l" Discussed on The Jordan Harbinger Show

"Are they going to a rock at a tank or stick at a tank we laughed. We'll guess what some years later yet though soviets. They rolled right out of there after a while. They wrote out of the extra while those same people who are throwing rocks in the tanks are the same people who took down our tallest buildings and put a hole in the pentagon. So you're at the same analogy as your person you know. Guy doesn't look like he's had a shower for weakening inbred whatever else. He's got eight thousand rounds about munitions. Put it yeah. This is not to be laughed as we take him seriously. Yeah it it definitely should scare us. I mean we see we see this now. We hear the talk all the time. People are shouting it from the rooftops a lotta. These groups are and where ignoring it which is at our own peril. of course. i thought it was interesting though. In the documentary the people that seem to be the hardest on you and frankly the most disrespectful refusing to shake your hand yelling you flying off the handle. Not letting you talk. We're actually the these black activists. And i wonder what you make of that. They were really hard on you in the documentary. Yup well let me address. Cup open one. They didn't know me and they didn't really know my background or understand and didn't want to at the time. Okay they hit me more than white person. Because i looked like them and they felt that i was a race traitor. An uncle. tom orioles. I was selling and i should be spending more time working with them. Uplift in the black community than as a it sitting down with my clan buddies so my clan friends hanging out They don't realize the importance of dialogue and communication. Let's say a clansman saw you out with a black girl. Maybe a married to one of your dating one whatever they would hate you more than her because you are of the supreme race and you have a lower yourself. You have defiled yourself to be out with that thing. That's the mentality you know so you are a disgrace to your race. That's how they thought about me. If i would open up a book or magazine and i saw picture of some black guy shaking hands a guy. A roman hood. I have a visceral reaction. But me. I would turn the page and read the story to find out. Why is this happening. Oh oh i get. It is pretty cool. They jump to a conclusion. Don't turn the page make their own narrative and that's it. Yeah so a year later. They reached out to me and we got together for dinner and we sat down. We talked. they've seen on interviews. It seemed different things and they were beginning to get it and we agreed to work together because what they do is important. What i do is important but the important thing is that we coordinate with each other..

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