28 Burst results for "David Bar"

Abide in God's Love

Pray the Word with David Platt

01:40 min | 16 hrs ago

Abide in God's Love

"John chapter 15 versus 9 through 11, as the father has loved me, so have I loved you, abide in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love. Just as I have kept my father's commandments and abide in his love. These things I have spoken to you that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be full. I can keep going like it's so hard to pick one verse from John 15 and I'm certainly drawn in this chapter to John chapter 15 because it's the verse upon which this podcast is based. If you abide in me and my words abide in you ask whatever you wish and it will be done for you. We pray according to God's word and the more his word fills us and we abide in it and we pray according to it, we ask whatever we wish according to his word and it will be done for us. But then you get two verses later and you see this amazing breath taking life altering verse John 15 9 as the father has loved me. So just think about that. How much does the father love the sun a lot? An infinite, perfect love. She just says as the father has loved me. So I have loved you. You just soak that in today. Jesus loves you with the same intensity and breadth and width and depth of love with which the father loves him. He loves you and so he gives this command. Abide in my love. Just live in my love for you. That's a good command to live in today live today and God's love for you.

Jesus One Verse Today TWO John 9 John 15 9 John 15 GOD John Chapter 15 11 Verses Chapter 15
The Bible Is Under Review for Removal in Davis School District

Mike Gallagher Podcast

00:56 sec | 1 d ago

The Bible Is Under Review for Removal in Davis School District

"I want to give you Utah as an example of why parents are concerned why Americans should be concerned. Did you hear what they were thinking about doing in Utah? A school district in Utah is very well going to ban the Bible. The holy Bible because one parent complained that it contained inappropriate and pornographic material. That led to a committee review, the David Utah school district received a petition from a parent to have the Bible removed from schools for being what the parent calls a sex ridden book now, according to the parents petition, this falls under the sensitive materials law in Utah. And as a result, the Bible might wind up getting banned from this school district.

Utah Bible One Parent David Utah School District Americans
Pastrnak gets 49th goal, Bruins top Montreal, 5th win in row

AP News Radio

00:31 sec | 1 d ago

Pastrnak gets 49th goal, Bruins top Montreal, 5th win in row

"The bruins made it 5 straight wins by doubling up the Canadians four two. David pasternak notched his 49th goal and the bruins 55th win. 7 off the NHL victory record with 11 games remaining. Pasternak also had an assist, giving him 95 points. Tyler bertuzzi had a goal and an assist, Jake de brus scored on a breakaway and David Crecy added an insurance goal. It was bertuzzi's first goal since joining Boston this month. Jeremy swayman stopped 29 shots for the bees, allowing power play goals by Nick Suzuki and Kirby dock. I'm Dave ferry.

David Crecy Jeremy Swayman Pasternak Jake De Brus 29 Shots 11 Games 95 Points Bertuzzi Tyler Bertuzzi Nick Suzuki David Pasternak First Goal Kirby 5 Straight Wins Dave Ferry 49Th Goal This Month NHL TWO 55Th Win
Forthcoming Clarity

Pray the Word with David Platt

01:49 min | 2 d ago

Forthcoming Clarity

"John chapter 13 verse 7. Jesus answered him. What I am doing, you do not understand now. But afterward, you will understand this first has meant so much to me over recent years amidst challenges and trials of various kinds to use language from first Peter. And I just want to encourage you with it today, especially if you were walking through challenge trial in your life. In any way, this picture of Jesus washing his disciples feet and Simon Peter sang. You're in a wash my feet and he's resisting what Jesus is wanting to do in his life. And she just looks at him and says, what I am doing, you don't understand now, but afterward, you will understand. And there was a moment. I was a year plus ago, and I was walking through something in an older brother in Christ, I passed her for decades who I respect deeply. I was sharing with him some of the struggles that I was walking through and he looked at me and he just quoted this verse and he said, David, you don't understand now what God is doing. But afterward, one day, you will understand. I was talking to another pastor friend later that exact same day who said something very similar. He'd been studying heaven and he said David I just don't think based on what the Bible teaches about who God is, what heaven is like, that we're going to get there one day and God's going to say to us, you know that trial, that difficulty, that challenge you walk through. Yeah, I don't know what that was about. No. And one day, we're going to understand that God was working in ways we couldn't see and didn't understand. But all throughout that challenge and trial, he was faithful, and he was wise. He was loving toward you.

David Peter Jesus Bible Simon Peter Today First Christ A Year Plus Ago Chapter 13 Verse 7 John GOD One Day Decades
Life Through Death

Pray the Word with David Platt

00:56 sec | 3 d ago

Life Through Death

"John chapter 12 versus 24 and 25. Truly, truly, I say to you. Unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone, but if it dies, it bears much fruit. Whoever loves his life loses it, and whoever hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life. There's so much we could talk about in these two versus, but just meditate on this principle. If you want to live, you must die. Jesus makes that very clear, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone. But if it dies, it bears much fruit. The key to bearing fruit, the key to experiencing John ten ten abundant life is dying. And specific ways and dying to ourselves in our ways and our preferences, what we want, being crucified with Christ,

Jesus Christ 24 TEN Two Versus 25 Chapter 12 Earth John
Ullmark's 40 saves carries Bruins past Senators, 2-1

AP News Radio

00:21 sec | 3 d ago

Ullmark's 40 saves carries Bruins past Senators, 2-1

"Down one zero midway through the first, the Boston burns scored two straight goals in the period to come from behind and beat the Ottawa senators two to one for their league leading 54th win. David karate started the scoring for Boston on the power play, and then four minutes later, Jake dubrov added the game winner on an assist from Brian marchand. Linus Olmert made 40 saves for the victory, including 22 in the second period.

Linus Olmert Jake Dubrov 40 Saves 22 David Karate Brian Marchand TWO First ONE Two Straight Goals Second Period Boston Four Minutes Later 54Th Win Boston Burns Zero Ottawa
The Recession Is Here

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated

01:04 min | 4 d ago

The Recession Is Here

"Also, Wall Street CEOs are trying to come up with a new plan to rescue the first republic bank. We'll see about that. Amazon announced it's cutting 9000 workers. Recession is here, Friends, recession is here. It doesn't mean you're going to lose your job. It means a lot of people are going to get laid off at places that are big and want to get small when demand drops for prolonged period of time. As I've already mentioned to you, the Trump grand jury is hearing from a likely final witness on a hush money payment. It was Robert Costello, a partner in the New York office at David hutcherson in citron, who has previously waged his attorney client privilege with Michael Cohen, will be testifying about why Michael Cohen is not exactly the witness you want to hang your cash testimony on. But this Politico piece by the book DA confronts unpredictable opponent in Trump. Prosecutor and Trump, that's from Politico. It's just so crazily left wing. Prosecutor and Trump case, wades into treacherous political waters. That they're not treacherous. They're disastrous for the United States.

Robert Costello Michael Cohen Amazon 9000 Workers New York Donald Trump United States First Republic Bank David Hutcherson DA Politico Wall Street
Grading the U.S. Rule of Law With Joe DiGenova and Victoria Toensing

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:42 min | 5 d ago

Grading the U.S. Rule of Law With Joe DiGenova and Victoria Toensing

"Talk to me about if you had to, if you arrive from another planet? And you were an expert in the law. How would you grade the rule of law in America to David Victoria? Where do we stand? No, it's an F and because not only just the things that are done, but people are watching this and now no longer have trust in the judicial system. With violent crime in New York on a rampage and then this and the Bragg, this is the priority for Alvin Bragg. We've had bad cases in our career of U.S. attorneys being corrupt. And we had one case where U.S. attorney took a misdemeanor local election law and tried to make it be a RICO. But you know what happened? We got a good federal judge who said, this is not, this is not a RICO. This is a misdemeanor and let our client plead to a misdemeanor. Where are those judges now? That's what bothering me. Do they got frightened by January 6th? Especially the judges, the federal judges in the District of Columbia. They got frightened by January 6th, and they don't want to be blamed for being too soft on anybody involved in January 6th. Whether they did harm or not. And as a result of that, they have advocated their responsibility to be fair and impartial to the people appearing before him. The fact in front of the fact that there are defendants who are still incarcerated two years after this. Before trial. Before trial are still in court is an absolute national disgrace and

David Victoria Alvin Bragg New York District Of Columbia America January 6Th One Case Bragg Years TWO U.S.
Knowing the Shepherd's Voice

Pray the Word with David Platt

02:00 min | 5 d ago

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
Swayman stops 26 shots in Bruins' 7-0 rout of Sabres

AP News Radio

00:32 sec | 6 d ago

Swayman stops 26 shots in Bruins' 7-0 rout of Sabres

"The bruins continued to take aim in a pair of NHL records with a 7 zero pounding of the sabers. Jeremy swab and picked up his second straight shutout, stopping 27 shots in the bruins third straight win. It wouldn't be possible without the guys taking initiative in the defensive zone. And blocking big shots all the way to the end. You know, it's special to see with a group like this. David pasternak tied a career high with his 48th goal for the bruins who scored on three of their first 7 shots. Patrice bergeron scored just 15 seconds in and had to assist. Jake had a goal and three assists in the route. I'm Dave ferry.

Jake Patrice Bergeron David Pasternak 27 Shots Three Assists 48Th Goal Dave Ferry Jeremy Swab Three First 7 Shots 15 Seconds Second Straight Shutout 7 Zero Third Straight Win NHL Goal
Pastrnak, Ullmark lead Bruins past Wild 5-2

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | Last week

Pastrnak, Ullmark lead Bruins past Wild 5-2

"David pasternak continued his march toward 50 goals by netting his 47th in the bruins 5 one victory at Minnesota. Pasternak has 6 goals and 7 assists in his past 8 games. He second in the league and goals after helping the bees are in their second straight win since a rare two game losing streak. Pasta naka Patrice bergeron each had a goal and an assist. Brad Marshawn set up three scores and Lena su Mark stopped 29 shots. It was Minnesota's first regulation loss since February 15th as it battles the stars in avalanche for the central division title. I'm Dave ferry.

Pasternak Brad Marshawn 29 Shots 7 Assists 47Th 5 6 Goals 50 Goals Patrice Bergeron February 15Th David Pasternak Lena Su Mark Two Game Second Three Scores 8 Games Each Dave Ferry First Regulation Loss Second Straight Win
Living for Another World

Pray the Word with David Platt

01:07 min | Last week

Living for Another World

"John chapter 8 verse 23. Jesus said to them, you are from below. I am from above. You are of this world. I am not of this world. What a statement. I love the book of John. I love all these words from Jesus. Every reverse is just, with meaning. It's hard to pick a verse, like John a 12 Jesus says, I'm the light of the world, whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life on a picture. And then, so first 23, so a lesser known saying, you are from below. I am from above. You are of this world. I am not of this world. Just meditate on that. There's another world that Jesus is living for, and he is calling followers of his to live for that world, not for this world. I look around you at the world today and consciously say, I'm not living for this world. I'm not living for the pursuits of this world, pleasures of this world, possessions in this world applause, praise from this world. I'm living for another world.

Today Jesus First Chapter 8 Verse 23 12 23 John Reverse
Jordi Baylina on the Tie Between Polygon and Polygon ZkEVM

Epicenter

01:17 min | Last week

Jordi Baylina on the Tie Between Polygon and Polygon ZkEVM

"What's actually the relationship between polygon, zca VM and polygon? Because polygon is kind of the stand-alone side chain kind of thing. And polygon GKE VM is going to be like a proper layer to on top of Ethereum. So what's kind of what's the relationship and what are the plans for chain architecture and planning for the future? Well, polygon POS is the polygon is running now. This is the team. Polygon is providing service today. The relationship is clear because we are shipping a new network. We are building this CPR roll up model which is a completely layer two. And we are in the beta version in maintenance. So it's the first release. And we have plans to just let this network be modeled together in parallel. Because they are different. One is as I change with cost model and running service. And we will have a different technology with a different cosmos and a different characteristics.

First Release ONE Today Zca Vm Polygon Layer Two Ethereum GKE
We Are God's Representatives

Pray the Word with David Platt

01:52 min | Last week

We Are God's Representatives

"John chapter 7 18, the one who speaks on his own authority seeks his own glory. But the one who seeks the glory of him who sent him is true and in him there is no falsehood. Oh, what a great reverse Jesus talking about the authority of the father on whose behalf he speaks for the glory of the father. It's been the whole theme as you read through John 5 and 6 and 7 in John 5. Jesus describes how he discerns what the father is doing and joins with how the father is working everything he does and everything he says is from the father on the authority of the father for the glory of the father, and it makes sense, right? Just think about when you are talking to someone who's an expert in a subject and they're describing to you basically things that they know because of their expertise and you're like, wow, that person is really sharp. They really know what they're talking about when they speak with authority. It causes glory to come to them, and it's not that that is bad to be an expert or something in ways that show your authority, but this is in a spiritual realm and this is so important for you and me. Think about the great commission. Jesus commands us to go and make disciples of all the nation. On what basis are we to go today and tell people that they need to repent of their sins and believe in Jesus that that's the only way they can be forgiven of their sins and have eternal life with God. On whose authority are you going to say that? Well, that's the great commission, Matthew 28, 18, all authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Jesus and we go out as his representatives, so you and I have opportunities today to speak the gospel, not based on our own authority, but based on the authority of Jesus

Jesus Today John 5 GOD Earth John 6 Matthew 28 Chapter 18 7
The Future Geopolitical Order and Bitcoin, Part 2 by Matthew Pines

Bitcoin Audible

03:24 min | Last week

The Future Geopolitical Order and Bitcoin, Part 2 by Matthew Pines

"Let's go ahead and get into today's read. And this is part two of the future geopolitical order and Bitcoin. And initial assessment. And we are starting in on this section titled. Scenario analysis. What goes on inside is just too fast and huge in all interconnected for words to do more than barely sketch the outlines of it most one tiny little part of it at any given instant. David Foster Wallace every scenario in the arago of Pentagon wargaming starts with assumptions and artificialities, and then presents a ground truth. The former fix the parameters of the notional future, and the latter unpack the salient context and detail to examine the issue under analysis. Our assumptions and artificialities defined over the time horizon of interest. 2022 to 2030. One. Putin does not use nuclear weapons or mass use of chemical weapons beyond irritants in Ukraine. Two. Putin does not get deposed or assassinated. Though he may die of suspected disease, we assume his replacement is another style of Vicki, and won't fundamentally liberalize Russian society or change foreign policy. Three. China does not launch an unprovoked full scale invasion of Taiwan. This doesn't preclude actions against offshore islands like dong Ying, pratas, or other provocative moves in the South China Sea. Four. The Chinese Communist Party remains in power. Most likely with Xi at the helm, but this is not assumed. 5. No new breakthrough technologies or scientific discoveries are made that change the fundamental productivity or energy capacity of society, or destabilize human social order. For example, UAP disclosure. 6. No existing nuclear powers collapse or engage in nuclear hostilities. For example, Pakistan or North Korea, and new nuclear powers, examples of Saudi Arabia and Iran do not engage in nuclear conflict. 7. No debilitating attacks on global Internet infrastructure are launched. This includes cyberattacks, cable cuts to undersea fiber links, destructive anti satellite attacks, et cetera 8. No new COVID variant or other pandemic brings civilization back into a 2020 state of lockdown or worse. 9. The global food fertilizer system does not collapse and lead to multi continent famine, killing more than 5 to 10% of world population. Destabilizing social order throughout the world, including the west. And tin. The United States or Europe for that matter does not experience a political crisis that leads to a breakdown in constitutional order, a fundamental change in the federal structure of government or a secessionist breakaway block of states.

Putin South China Sea 2030 Ukraine 2022 Today David Foster Wallace Chinese Communist Party UAP Vicki 2020 XI China Pandemic Pratas Dong Ying Europe Pakistan Iran Covid Variant
The New York Post, The Atlantic Attack Ron DeSantis on Russia-Ukraine

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:10 min | Last week

The New York Post, The Atlantic Attack Ron DeSantis on Russia-Ukraine

"Here's the New York Post editorial board, desantis must show leadership on issues like Ukraine. Territorial dispute is a lame, a pretty lame way to describe an unprovoked invasion. Desantis was on, he must know this. But he's hedging rather than risk losing voters who don't get it. So they're criticizing him. Over at the Atlantic, David frum, big time neocon. Rights the desantis is flaming out already. Question mark. Desantis statement on Ukraine, David frum writes was everything Vladimir Putin and his admirers could have wished for from a presumptive candidate for president. Here we go again. If you question and support for Ukraine, you're a Putin apologist. That's what they do. That's exactly their default reaction. I mean, it seems to me that desantis reaction or his written response was a completely normal American response to a very difficult issue.

Putin Vladimir Putin David Frum Desantis New York Post American Ukraine Atlantic
Judgment Day for the American Economy With Edward Dowd

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:37 min | Last week

Judgment Day for the American Economy With Edward Dowd

"Now is Ed dowd author of cause unknown, an author and founder of finance technologies portfolio manager at BlackRock for ten years managing $14 billion equity growth fund. I do want to talk to you today about the vaccine issue. I think it's really interesting. But I want to start with Silicon Valley bank and the bank run that almost happened didn't happen signature bank at how should we think about this? What are the big lessons and what do you think is the most obvious truth in media is missing? This was going to happen regardless. At the end of November of last year, N two money supply did year over year negative growth. Okay, so the last time that happened was 1930 and so this is the 5th time since 1868, that's occurred. And the other four times it happened is associated with financial panics. About a month and a half ago, I put out a tweet talking about we were seeing a setup in the capital markets, different asset classes lining up to agar poor things for financial assets. And SVB just happens to be the headline. And we're going to see what I think is rolling thunder rolling financial crises throughout the next year or two. I think it's going to be a controlled implosion on the way down because the fed and the government are going to come in and do this whack a mole thing. And every time something weird, it's like we had, they're going to respond, the markets will think everything's okay. But I think this is the beginning of the end of the global financial system, as we know, and something new is coming in the next two to three years. I suspect

$14 Billion Ten Years Blackrock 1930 Next Year Today 5Th Time Cause Unknown About A Month And A Half Ago Four Times Ed Dowd 1868 SVB TWO End Of November Of Last Year Three Years Silicon Valley Two Money Next
'Superpower in Peril' Author David McCormick Talks About Justice

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:57 min | Last week

'Superpower in Peril' Author David McCormick Talks About Justice

"As we talk about this rallying cry against China, it has to be an above all approach. And what I like about what you've done in the book is you talk about it in military terms, battle plan, with your experience being in the military. And I want to focus on the specifics of one of the things you mentioned, which is holding China accountable because that's a question about justice, right? Justice for fentanyl, justice for hacking our cyber grid, justice for spying on us, justice for having a spy balloon over our sky. You know, justice for whatever happened in the Wuhan institute of virology, which could have been attributed to sloppiness, but definitely there was a cover up, right? In the days and the weeks that followed, what does justice look like then, David, to hold them accountable and make them pay an appropriate price? Well, I think it starts with calling balls of strikes. And the Biden administration hasn't done that, for example, on the Wuhan lab. And that's a real problem, because you're not constantly bringing forward the things that are unacceptable behavior. And taking steps to mitigate them or taking steps to hold accountable through sanctions or a variety of other things, then that behavior gets validated. And the belief is that that's okay to do again. And so this balloon is another example that should have been handled much more decisively with a clear line established that, hey, this is unacceptable to be over U.S. airspace. And all of these things are part of a leadership under Joe Biden that's very ham handed. It's very uncertain. We saw that in Afghanistan with the bungled withdrawal. We saw that in Ukraine with the Nord stream two and the invitation of Putin. And we see that with the Chinese and the problem with the ham handed and bungling things in a leadership perspective, if you're up against an aggressive opponent, as much easier to have a miscalculation. So you need to be strong. We need to build muscle at home by going to the gym. We also need to reflect strained

David Putin Joe Biden Ukraine Afghanistan China ONE TWO Wuhan Wuhan Institute Virology Chinese Biden Nord Stream U.S.
"david bar" Discussed on The BosBabes

The BosBabes

04:23 min | 11 months ago

"david bar" Discussed on The BosBabes

"We got married on Valentine's Day on our one weekend off and we never we didn't go on a honeymoon because we were both working. So, yeah. Love it. I totally get it. I totally get it. So you guys are now listening to Jenny Dell. She's talking all about meeting former boss Red Sox, will middlebrooks. He obviously was a third baseman. I have some really cool stats on him. So will was actually a 5th round draft pick in the 2007 MLB draft. He grew up in Texas, will was originally a shortstop, which I found super cool. I found this obviously by doing my research, but was converted into a third baseman by the Red Sox. Super freaking cool. I know that that happens sometimes. So I wanted to ask you, how is it experiencing the World Series together? Obviously you guys were both involved in the 2013 World Series. Did you guys obviously enjoy celebrating it together, you guys allowed to celebrate together? Well, so the whole team obviously knew we were together. So after each division win. So after the ALCS after mail DS CS and then the World Series, David would throw David bar cheese with her like a his house. To celebrate each kind of next step. So I was at the party as will's girlfriend, but then it's like, oh, but the reporters here. But everyone was like super cool. And I think that we had a very good understanding of, listen, I know how to keep my mouth shut on certain things and that's part of my job and whatnot. But those were some of the most fun events that we would be able to celebrate. And then it was funny because after when the Red Sox finally did win at Fenway, I'm down on the field and there's like champagne being popped and cameras everywhere and whatnot. And all the players were coming up and giving me big bear hugs. And then I saw will who's my serious boyfriend who I live with, and I was like, congratulations, will. 'cause I didn't want people to like capture us hugging or people be like, question anything. So I'm like hugging everyone else on the team. I'm like, oh my gosh. And then I'm like, mister middlebrooks, like, congrats on the World Series one. How does it feel? So it was funny, but then we went out that night. I mean, I don't think anyone on that team or significant others slept for a while. But it was a good time, but the initial interaction after they actually won the World Series was something I'll never forget. That's awesome. It sounds like you guys enjoyed celebrating together when you could, especially at the after party with big copy and some of the former teammates for the 2013 world champions. Speaking of celebrating, we'll kind of wrap up the segment about you and will because I want to switch on over to Cameron Stewart shortly..

Red Sox Jenny Dell middlebrooks David bar Valentine ALCS MLB Texas mister middlebrooks David Cameron Stewart
"david bar" Discussed on The Big Picture

The Big Picture

08:32 min | 1 year ago

"david bar" Discussed on The Big Picture

"Parking lot parties. I mean, I still to this day, I'm like shooting in LA because I feel like when you shoot in LA, it's a job, and when you shoot on location, it's camp. Here's Matthew Lillard. The camaraderie was established all the way through. Like, you know, ski and I would go with my golf, we'd hang out. We know we get weird together. And we say that this double tree in. In the middle of the countryside. So we were all alone, really. Basically a motel at cookies on your bed every night. Like every day they give you a fresh cookie. And it was like, I know it sounds stupid, but it was just so good and every day I felt like I had a little treat. I did a good scene. I eat my cookie. We had basically blacked out all our windows 'cause we were shooting nights every night. So we would get home covered in blood at like 6 a.m.. And then we'd wanna have a drink and we wanna have unwind. Here's skeet Ulrich. Wind up and David Arquette's room where the bar was. I went to the local head shop and bought all these blacklight posters and lava lamps that got it all funky feeling. I just love that whole vibe. David is not so he bought every toy possible that you can buy. In Santa Rosa and there were hanging from his ceiling and it was cold. I think it was called David's bar. David's club or something. The most important scene in scream is the first. Casey Becker slaying, and the introduction of the killer set the tone for the rest of the movie. Getting all of the details right took an extraordinary amount of effort. The opening scenes Northern California. And one of these houses at the middle of nowhere, it was interesting is there was two houses in these huge fields. It was just nothing was there. And our base camp was at the other house. And the other house was where they shot couches. That was our first 5 days shooting. Yeah, it was magical. That was in The Rain and we had the killer roger was in another tent talking on the phone outside because drew didn't want to see him, just wanted to hear the voice. And which I thought was very super smart. Here's roger Jackson. You know, it's like old radio theater. The scariest monsters are the monsters who don't see, but the monstrous you make in your mind. So just having the voice to react to made it larger in their minds. You know, you always get people walk on the set from another reality and they're like laughing and giggling, you know. Best Andrea would yell at them. Like, you know, read the set, you know, don't laugh, don't giggle. We've got an actress here who really has to perform. And she was so good. She was so prepared. The night before filming, Barrymore told craven about an article that she'd read about animal abuse. When it came time to shoot, craven brought up the horrifying article. That helped trigger Barrymore's emotions. Here's how Wes craven remembered shooting the scene. Well, as a matter of a drew, but in an enormous amount of trust to me. And we had a couple key sentences of key situations that we would refer to. The night before we started shooting, you told me a horrible story of a newspaper article of a dog being burned by its owner and set a fire. And she started crying as she was telling me this. So every time that I needed her to get over that edge into complete tears, I would just say drew and lighting the lighter, and she would just burst into tears, you know. So not every party will tell you a story like this. That's so close to the hard drives very much of an animal lover. So that allowed us to just get to that place of sort of ultimate horror where people are doing things you can't comprehend why they would ever do such a thing. Like you just hear drew like screaming and howling and I'd be like, what the fuck is he going on in there? And it was less like amping her up. The studio just got the daily and we're watching them and that's when we had to sort of give an education to the studio and had to hold their hand through it and sort of walk them through it. Explain to them what they're watching. Because they're like, is this a horror movie? It's a comedy. What is it? What's the tone? It's both. Here's dimensions, Richard Potter everyone's heard stories about the studio not liking the opening sequence. That's not true. That's not what happened. What happened was we were shooting the opening sequence withdrew in Santa Rosa. The dailies were being sent overnight to New York where bob Weinstein and some other people were watching them. I've been asked a bunch of times what the reaction was when they watched them. And I have to tell you, I don't know what the reaction was in the room, because I was in Santa Rosa shooting the movie. But I know that bob was not happy with what he was seeing. The issue was not that bob wasn't happy with the opening sequence that he didn't like the opening sequence or that he didn't get it. The issue was he thought what he was watching felt flat. They just had a whole picture of what they thought it would be. And they weren't seeing that in the dailies. And they were just being such assholes about it. And really making west feel bad. It's not what a director needs to hear in this first shooting a movie. It just broke him. Here's craven's editor, Patrick lucier. He was very despondent, you know, a few days in when he, when he was just like, you know, all the studio called up. They're very upset. They don't think it's getting good. They're sending me dailies from night watch and telling me it needs to look like this. Freedom if I lose all my memory, you lose you. What? Why? It's fun. Said they told him he was a TV journeyman and a hack. Wes had his own style in his way of doing things and shooting things. And his editor Patrick Lucy a knew what west wanted out of the scenes and out of the shots and out of the tapes. So you might see a take that's a minute and a half long, built around, let's say, drew in the kitchen and the popcorn popping. What's that noise? Popcorn. You make him pop. And you watch that. And it's flat and boring for a minute and a half. But Patrick know, they only want ten or 15 seconds of that particular take. So I think by Tuesday, Wednesday the next week I had it all cut together and I set it up to west on a VHS tape because that's what you did back then. And he watched he had one music note and then we conformed it on film and sent the work print and a piece of mag track to New York. I set up the screening bob flew out. It was himself Cary granted and Andrew rona. I remember all of them being there. We had a little meeting in a conference room and then we screened the opening sequence called together, not complete missing in search missing a bunch of stuff. Popcorn. Pretty much what was in the movie cut together right there. Really? It ended distance scary movie. Bob turned to west and said, what do I know about dailies? They saw it and they shut up. And they were like, oh, this is great. You're right. We're sorry. I don't think they said we're sorry, but they shut up. Part four. Jesus Christ, you don't know the rules? Have an aneurysm why don't you? There are certain rules that one must abide by in order to successfully survive a horror movie. You didn't need to be a scary movie superfan to enjoy scream. But it paid tribute to the genre like nothing else ever had. The film is stuffed with references to horror classics. Kennedy's character Randy, a video store clerk, is obsessed with horror. Halloween plays on VHS at a high school party. Linda Blair of the exorcist appears as a TV reporter. An even craven himself makes a cameo as a janitor named Fred. As in Kruger. The movie, however, is more than just a pastiche. It's an intricate whodunit that manages to balance comedy and ultra violence. Rose McGowan's character, Tatum Riley, dies when a garage door crushes her neck. Henry Winkler, the high school principal, gets stabbed and strung up on a football goalpost. Almost the entire third act takes place at a house party. In the end, the audience learns that there are two killers stew and Billy..

craven Santa Rosa Casey Becker roger Jackson David Barrymore Matthew Lillard LA David Arquette Richard Potter drew Ulrich bob Weinstein Wes craven Northern California Patrick lucier bob roger Andrea golf
"david bar" Discussed on Take 2

Take 2

04:35 min | 1 year ago

"david bar" Discussed on Take 2

"Problems and were the moment that we recognize I hope this mayor will. Because i like her. I want her to succeed. We cannot hope she doesn't two more years. We have to succeed but we succeed when we say we have a problem and we look for the solution and put it into motion and get rid of the but brothers and sisters that are going to point out. Aeroperu reason that homelessness is not unique to a metro. It doesn't have to be this. What what would you do if you were in charge and you. You're in the mayor's office right now that i'm going to do is change the dialogue between state and county and mostly state. I think that they could depend on. They have to dependent accidentally. Cut us off mid thought here with david bar. You said that we really have to join together. You said with the county in the state. Why is there a divide their oil. The city is like is not part of the state and when it comes in. It's because of the political divide republican democrat. I look at it as a business person. It's a problem and when you can come together around a table and not just to have dialogue. i hear one more. We're going to have another a dialogue. i'm gonna throw up. We have to have an action plan. And we've got to get together. Who's going to do. What are we going to participate. But i we gotta divide the problem into two parts one of it is homelessness and that is about moving people off the street who wanna be off the street into a resource center. That's real nine points of entry that we have a program to put together so that they can come out in thirty sixty ninety days and go in to affordable housing or housing like the other side village. The other one is more problematic. It's shelter resistant on that. One there can be no is right to sleep on public space and at night we should be able to move folks to a safe place field house where they can stay low entry. You stay there and if you resist then you should go to seventy two hour lockup and we have a gel available to us Ox boat that is it that has three hundred and something beds but it's just not manned with personnel so we already got that facility built. We need to build the overnight stay facilities and they ought to be next to a resource center in. It shouldn't give you a lot of peanut butter sandwich. A baloney sandwich. Why do i only get that. Because you're always staying here overnight and the heck with you david. Well i love you the heck with you. I love you every day until somebody gains the dire desire to say. Hey greg i kind of like to talk about maybe going into their. Maybe i need help someone until they're ready until they desire..

Aeroperu david bar david greg
"david bar" Discussed on Louder With Crowder

Louder With Crowder

03:40 min | 1 year ago

"david bar" Discussed on Louder With Crowder

"Well i think it works because of our history. There has been a reason for us to consider our race as something that america uses against us and so we have placed a higher value on our skin color than we probably should and we've certainly we've been susceptible in this new air to identify more black than christian. Yeah we prioritized skin color over our religious faith. And that's a mistake and i think if you understand the history of america. The african american journey has been the steroids for american greatness. And so if you go all the way back to sixteen seventeen hundred the sin of slavery and the black people's fight for american freedom made america live up to its best ideals. Eight america live up to what was promised in the declaration of independence and which promised in the us constitution and so our history is something. We should be celebrating and not looking at as like Then it dams america right. He should be looking at him like no. No your history made america great. Your pursuit of freedom made america live up to its best ideals your essential to american greatness and we thank you and have gratitude and respect for that and less. Don't cover this all with with shame in its damning of america Your essential especially to because so many white americans shed blood to make sure that we ended the the unique sin of slavery. I mean people don't realize this. I was from was raised in. Canada was born in raised in canada and When i started this show. I guess about a decade ago. When it was on radio someone called in and said something. I don't remember but they listed the year. They said you know my so-and-so grandfather how many how many years how many generations back said you know fled to canada. And i did the mental math. There was slavery in canada. Everyone slavery obviously in the english empire long after we abolished it. Not just britain but the not in england but the british empire. Oh you know what would have said in canada if you fled their great more slaves because it existed there we did the we are singularly unique and fighting a really really bloody battle to end it And and it's one of those things that i think people overlook when they look at jefferson or washington and people who always autism idea that it was unanimously accepted look it was unanimously unanimously accepted by Slave traders in africa for example was a business that had gone on and it was a way of life but a lot of people in the united states always had a problem with it. even people like jefferson who owns slave right. You knew was morally wrong and needed to be corrected. And that's why he wrote the declaration of independence two way that he did you and i think are both friends with glenn beck have you ever. Glint got rough draft. Oh yeah from the art of independence. Yeah that show you what. Jefferson really thought about slavery. But we couldn't get to the colonies to sign and they couldn't retrieve their own slaves until death. And so there's have you have you met david bar glenn beck and with all the historical documents. Oh man we go there and he has this building where it's you know. Basically hermetically sealed humidity controlled and he has all these old documents. And because i'm i'm often an idiot with important things..

us Canada jefferson britain england autism glenn beck washington africa Jefferson david
"david bar" Discussed on Up First

Up First

08:03 min | 1 year ago

"david bar" Discussed on Up First

"Dan we come out. And i came out and i thought oh my god that was so terrible. I can't believe that happened. My colleague sylvie says that there's footage of you after this action talking about it. What did you say then. I said that. I thought it was bad. I'm sarah schulman. I was sitting in a pew. And i watched the die which i think was pretty effective but When people from act of started standing on pews and screaming it really alienated the people who were praying. I saw people get very angry and upset. Well i was wrong because we made the front page of every newspaper in the world. That action did end up on the front page of every newspaper in the world. I think and mostly because tom keene crumbled the host. We are gonna group at the demonstration. And what can we went up there. Their plans out. I'll suddenly i have my hands. And the pre says. The body of christ is say opposing safe. Sex education is murder in some sense. Some part of me surf saying well. You guys think you can tell us reject us that we don't belong so i'm going to reject you so i took it at night crushed dropped. The catholic church has never new york rebounded from that action. Never no matter. what even though. They're very strong still. They have never had the same profile member going into the meeting after it everybody was terrified after because every been in the paper and everybody in every every editorial page in town dumped on us and people were scared and i remember saying are you crazy. Are you crazy. They're afraid of us. Now that's the best thing that ever have happened to us and it was true. My favorite story actually is from gabriel. Rotel who several days after the action talked to his mother in suburban danbury connecticut who said to him you know my friends. I have been talking about this and we've decided that before this demonstration. We thought gay people were sort of week and wimpy but now we think gay people are strong an angry. I just thought that was that was for me that That did that was exactly what i wanted to accomplish. And i couldn't have been happier anyways after the action active always had a post action meeting and people came. They were really nervous. They're really excited. And a lot of people are mad at michael because he went against what the group decided. But no-one ever suggested kicking him out because nobody could be kicked out because it's only people with dominant view themselves with some kind of supremacy ideology that kick out exclude other people. If you're a highly oppressed group you see yourself as a community at a community is for better or for worse. That's really interesting anyway. Years later i got to interview. Michael and i asked him you know. Why did you do that. And he said that he was angry because nobody would let him in their affinity group and he just acted out and it was one of those human moments of vulnerability and rage and loneliness. And there's a lot of that an act up act up really recognized. We were all going through something. That was a disaster and a cataclysm people were young they were suffering and dying and nobody cared and there was a lot of acting out and act up but we accepted that because we know that people are complex it you know it was not all respectability politics. Yeah you know. There are so many questions to ask about what lessons can be applied from act up to activism today. But there's also the question of whether or not we actually see that same kind of activists energy anywhere right now. Are you seeing the same kind of bold. Whatever it takes tactics happening inactive is spaces in two thousand twenty one. Are you hopeful about that if you see it. I see the beginning of a very strong people's movement in this country. But you know we are in a period of great repression and backsliding and black people. Losing the right to vote whatever was had already been one and yet there are some really important radical movements in this country right now so movement against police. Violence is crucial national movement. That's locally based with local leaders. In every city the movement for black lives the movement for immigration reform the movement for for solidarity with palestine is growing in growing up around the world. And what's really interesting about these movements. In relationship to queer people is that even though in the past the left did not want gay people in their movement. Now they run it now the queers run these that's right. That's right openly queer people and trans people in leadership of all of the radical movements. Right now you know sharing leadership but right out there and so it's a very exciting time and we have to learn to have big ten politics. You know so that we're not constantly trying to force each other into our own analyses or trying to force each other into one strategy but it said that we're facilitating people like act up to have radical democracy so that everyone can respond effective way from where they're at and that's how i build it so would that be your biggest lesson to offer to these activist groups today. If there's one big overriding lesson from act up for them would that be it. I think the biggest lesson is designed your solution become the expert on your issue and build campaigns around things that are reasonable. Winnable and doable. And we're seeing that you know the movement against police violence. It's different in every town right. It's different in every city and it has local leaders and people are working with their municipalities or against Or but they're coming up with plans for where they live. That are reasonable. And that's what we need to be doing. I have learned so much from reading your book and asking you these questions now. And i'm gonna take off my interviewer hat and just say thank you. You know. I am a gay man who was on prep and i've been taking it for a few years and for the longest time it was free for me. And now it's like ten bucks a month and that kind of privilege to have that kind of health care and that kind of safety and freedom. I also so much of that freedom to you. And the other activists doing this work for me. The overriding lesson. All of this is like every bit of comfort. I have as me in this world right now at twenty twenty one somebody. A lot of bodies fought really hard for all of that. And i to tell you that i'm grateful. Thank you so much. Thanks again to my guest. Sarah schulman her. New book is called. Let the record show a political history of act up new york nineteen eighty seven through nineteen ninety-three. Sarah is the co founder. Along with jim hubbard of the act up oral history project. You heard clips from interviews at sarah and jim conducted with act up members including kin being greg boorda wits michael trellis david bar maxine. Wolfe bob rathausky and northrop. Jim i go. Robert hilferty tom. Keene and larry. Kramer you also heard an expert from vito russo speech. Why we fight. You can watch more of these interviews at. www.

Michael Sarah schulman Robert hilferty Sarah sarah schulman michael trellis Dan sylvie jim sarah larry gabriel vito russo two thousand tom keene jim hubbard greg boorda Rotel michael Kramer
"david bar" Discussed on Up First

Up First

07:52 min | 1 year ago

"david bar" Discussed on Up First

"Help their constituencies. Yeah there's a line that you have in the book talking about using resources and power you wrote that women and or poc members did not stop the drive toward action to correct or control language or call out bias instead like you said they were trying to get those resources in help actual projects and when i read that i said i am not sure if activists today for mars communities would be okay with that tactic there seems to be an extreme concern about language about bias about micro aggression before the action can happen. I dunno one. Do you see that to be the case. And which is the right approach. Well i think that's a generalization. But i think that that does occur in places where people don't feel that they must have changed immediately when people need change right away they become much more effective. And let me lay out a little bit. How active was effective. So the first thing. Is you become the expert on your issue. So you design the solution instead of being in an infantilized relationship to power where you're saying to the government or to your school or whoever. Please please fix it. You figure out how the policy works. How 'institution is structured. And you show them how it should be by. Creating a reasonable winnable and doable. Concrete solution and act up did that. They became experts in policy. They became experts in neil exchange in housing in drug creation and they created solutions. Then you present your solution to the powers that be and if they oppose you you do with. Dr king called self purification or what. Act up called nonviolent civil disobedience training and you create the actual and creative non violent direct actions that attract the media so that you can communicate through the media to the public that you have a solution to this problem and these institutions are not listening. And that's how you pressure institutions. Yeah yeah one of the things. That really blew my mind in the book. Were just the ways that you detailed how fragmented act up was from the start and how that was the you talk about several affinity groups coming together but also working individual actions separately and on top of that there was this inside outside approach working outside of systems and also within how diffuse if you describe for folks was this movement. Oh it's incredible. The range of work that people were doing. I mean on one hand you have people sitting down with pharmaceutical companies in their offices over catered lunch negotiating right. Then you have. People the asian pacific islander caucus going to asian bars and wrapping condoms in lucky red chinese new year paper and bringing safe sex information to communities that have been completely ignored. Then you have youth groups organizing and public schools to have condom distribution. Then you have people interrupting ask saint patrick's cathedral when colonel connor tried to stop that condom distribution then you have people trying to pfeiffer housing for homeless people with aids and then you have people going to decide in illegally exchanging needles into the law getting arrested and having a trial and winning and making neil exchange legal in new york city. You've all these different actions at the same time. What allow that to happen. Was that people in october. Not forced to agree with each other. This is the thing that was so profound. No-one whatever really say. You can't do that. they would just say okay. Do what you're gonna do that. That just blew my mind. There was a bottom line. There was one line of unity direct action to end the aids crisis. If you were doing direct action to any aids crisis you could do it. And if. I didn't like what you were doing. I would fight with you because act up. We fought a lot and conflict was good and fighting was okay but in the end i would not try to stop you from doing what you felt was right. I just wouldn't do it. And then i would find my like minded people and we would organize what we wanted to do. The awning levers where from act with the power tools. And we're the group the shut down the new york stock exchange invisible. Women were active new york. We are those and war which wiped out eight and racism on this radical democracy and big ten politics allowed people to be where they were at and people can only be were. They're at you cannot force people into one common analysis or one common strategy so when your movement empowers people to respond in the way that makes sense to them you get this simultaneity of response on so many different levels that really. That's how the paradigm shift occurred coming up. The ins and outs of act up's largest direct action. The following message comes from. npr sponsor. We work with. We work all access. You can finally leave behind all the inconveniences and distractions of working from home. At the swipe card. You can unlock hundreds of nationwide workspaces actually designed for work and with a month to month membership. You can get workspace when you need it no matter where you take issue. That's smart flexibility. Sign up today to get a free trial for new members at we work dot com slash. Npr terms apply. This message comes from npr sponsor. Rei being outside is in our nature and there are more than a million ways to get outside. You can hike up a mountain or down the stairs in your neighborhood. You can roller skate or sunbathe. You can mountain bike or rock. Climb paddle board. You can set up camp or a picnic and eat yawkey tori or a la- gobi or papooses. Is anyone else. Suddenly hungry explore limitless sides to outside at an rei store near you. You know. I want to talk about some specific actions. That really lay out what act up was doing. And there's two that was really obsessed with the book the stop the church protest which you mentioned and then the other one the seize control of the fda movement can we talk about fda. One i because. I think people sure seeing that church one. Fda one was really incredible to me. Well these are two different. Actions are different as night and day. So seized control the. Fda was the absolutely brilliant concept of david bar who was one of the leaders of act up and still is so david bar realized that demonstrations were repetitive and people were always going to the capitol or the white house the capitol or the white house and it was getting boring and that we needed a target that was literally people who were opposing us. I was heavily involved in fighting with the fda over expanded access and felt like that is our key. Issue is is access to experimental drugs and dealing with the fda on this. We need to go. There haunted house so he came up with a brilliant idea of going to the food and drug administration which was in like a crazy supper of maryland. So he and.

october saint patrick first new york new york city two david bar one line white house today hundreds one asian pacific islander david Fda one hand one common strategy more than a million ways maryland asian
"david bar" Discussed on KQED Radio

KQED Radio

03:07 min | 1 year ago

"david bar" Discussed on KQED Radio

"It's been a minute from NPR. I'm Sam Sanders, speaking with Sarah Schulman about act ups direct actions to end the AIDS crisis. You know, I want to talk about some specific actions that really layout. What act up was doing And there's two that I was really obsessed with in the book. This stopped the church protests what you've mentioned, and then the other one. The seize control of the F D a movement. Can we talk about that? FDA one first, because I think people sure seen that church one, but that FDA one was really incredible to me. Well, these are two different actions that are as different as night and day. So seize control. The FDA was the absolutely brilliant concept of David Barr, who was one of the leaders of act up and still is so David Bar realized that Demonstrations were repetitive, and people were always going to the Capitol or the White House, the Capitol or the White House. And it was getting boring and that we needed a target. That was literally the people who were opposing us. And I was heavily involved in fighting with the FDA over expanded access and felt like that is our key issue is access to experimental drugs and dealing with the FDA on this, we need to go there on Nass. So he came up with the brilliant idea of going to the Food and Drug Administration, which was in like a crazy suburb of Maryland. So he and Greg border wits who was a younger, very popular member of act up. Brought it to the floor Active, decided to do it. And at that point, so New York was the first chapter. But at that point other chapters that started to spring up around the country and they wanted to bring in the other chapters and make it our first national action. So they went out to California and met with people and they were like the FDA that we have to go there. This is the way to go, and they brought in. National groups of people with AIDS who converged on the FDA now at the same time, are brilliant Media team had this idea. That they would match people with AIDS from different cities with the reporters from those local newspapers, So people were there in their wheelchairs or whatever stage they were at with a sign that would say, like Minneapolis, Cleveland, Houston and the media. People would bring them to their local recorder. And that specificity makes a difference between Page five and Page one. Totally. And it was the first time that we really had national coverage that was coordinated where people With AIDS had a platform to speak. Now. The demand was that the FDA was filled with red tape, and there were all these drugs that were not being studied and the ones that had some potential that people couldn't get access because they hadn't been approved. So Jim, I go Who's one of the treatment geniuses of act up? He designed something called Parallel track. People could get access to drugs that had not gone through the approval system and so active design. The solution went to the FDA. I was there. Shut.

Sarah Schulman Sam Sanders David Barr Jim Food and Drug Administration David Bar Maryland California Minneapolis Houston Cleveland first chapter New York FDA two Greg NPR Capitol two different actions first time
"david bar" Discussed on ABC Radio MELBOURNE

ABC Radio MELBOURNE

09:22 min | 2 years ago

"david bar" Discussed on ABC Radio MELBOURNE

"Heir, of course. We have the history quiz. Let's not waste too much time. I've got to get to the Chelsea Hotel Hotel checking Staying up for days in the chancy hold. Dale right now said I leave of the load hands for you say yes, That's Bob Dylan name checking our hotel and his song Sarah from his 1976 album Desire. We couldn't do a serious on hotels and not talk about one of the most legendary of them all. The Chelsea Hotel in New York City as we've already heard songs have been written about it. Lou Reed, Johnny Mitchell Jefferson Airplane, all mention it in their musical dispatches famous and not so famous people have lived and died there. Thoughts of broken out. Scandals have erupted in many a party has raged in its 250 rooms on 23rd Street. In Chelsea, artists, writers, singers, songwriters, punk musicians all made the hotel home. From Bob Dylan to Lennon, Cohen said. Vicious Joey remind even Australia's Brett and Wendy widely among countless others will hear some of this story's a bit later. Despite it all the Chelsea hotel still stands and retains, hopefully some of its Bahamian charm. We're joining us tonight for this hotel chicken is author Cheryl Tip ins who's written off inside the Dream Palace. The Life and Times of New York's a legendary Chelsea hotel. Hello, Cheryl. Welcome to night life. Hello. Thank you. It's a pleasure to be here. So just describe Chelsea in New York for those people who might not be familiar with it. What? What kind of neighborhood is it with in New York? Healthiest on West 23rd Street in New York, which at the time it was built in the 18 hundreds was like the Times Square of New York, the theater district. It has the advantage of being within walking distance of almost everything interesting. In the city, you can walk down to Greenwich Village or north to Central Park. And it said, a nexus of the subway lines so you could get anywhere and you can come from anywhere to get there. So it's the perfect location for a cultural nexus, which is what it was designed to be. So so who built the hotel and what purpose was it built for? Because it's got a bit of an interesting history. Yeah, it has utopian origins. This is what interested me about about the hotel initially. We've all heard the stories if you described in your introduction, um it's as far as I know the largest and longest lived artist community ever in the world. And thought wondered why and how it has been created and whether it was an accident of history or whether it was deliberate and it turns out it was a deliberate creation by a Frenchman named Philippe Sean John. Hubert he gave himself in English last name to Americans could pronounce it He created it because it was the gilded age 18 eighties. Housing was very expensive, and nobody bought American art at the time to American artist couldn't afford to live in the city. So he made this cooperative Apartment buildings so that artists could live also was working class people and with wealthy people, all mixed together to try to create an American voice. On American sense of identity in New York City in the 18 eighties, had idealistic origins. Originally on design itself was so that people would live communally or at least spend a lot of time interacting with each other, wasn't it? Yes, he had all kinds of utopian theories about how people could live together and free up their time not have to be waged slaves. Not have to earn very much money by living in a cooperative cheaply and also that it could be an enriching, exciting experience to live communally. If you have the ground floor lobby with the fireplace and couches all around a ladies room where the women could go separately, a billiards room for the men. He had communal dining, a communal kitchen and wine cellar. He had Hey, made beautiful gardens on the roof for poetry readings and musical concerts and looking at the stars, But you could still do Then in the 18 hundreds in New York, hey, built a pyramid on the roof. Um, for as a clinic at the time, so that even if you got sick, you could just recuperate up on the roof in this health, providing pyramid shaped building where your neighbors could visit you and help take care of you. And the walls where he made them three FT. Sick so that if you are a musician, you could practice your instruments without bothering the writers next door. On high ceilings with huge windows for the artists for the painters, and they were wonderful artist studios also on the roof. Um, so she thought of everything didn't stay here, and it didn't work in power into its early days. When it did all that come to fruition that ill. These artists did come to live and work there. Yes, immediately. They came to live there. First. The people who built the building got apartments there in each person who had an apartment could decorated his or her own way. And then s O. They tended to be wealthier. So they had huge apartments on either end of each hall of the 10 floors of the building and then toward the center Central Farewell. He would put small apartments for the artists that were, you know, cheaper and then the artist studios. Course s O U had. He also added a theater in a drama school that was originally attached to the Chelsea. So you have the drama students. In the small apartments with usually with the parents and the Anthony to divorce. Jack was there at the time Writing the symphony is the new world, so his music students, some of the teachers also lived in the Chelsea. And you had some of the first Hudson River school artists living at the top of the top four studios, and they were all really working deliberately on trying to Define what was America because up Until that moment, Americans had only been interested in European art, and now they wanted to sort of split off and think about who they were. And what did it mean to be an American. So they were making a lot of horrible paintings of Barnes and Fields and Meadows? Because that was mainly what America was, Whatever Whatever, Nick, you make her if you're an artist ahead to a place like this, Sheriff Tipton's is my guest. She's the author of Inside The Dream Palace, The Life and Times. Of New York's and legendary Chelsea hotel. So is Cheryl. How long did Hubert on the building foreign and then what happened to us? Hey, didn't own it because it was a cooperative to all of the tenants owned it together, but one by one, they went bankrupt over the ensuing depressions and recessions. Until the Great Depression. The entire building just went bankrupt and was abandoned and it was bought by something Gary in Jewish immigrants. One was a plumber. One was a carpenter, another David bars, Woz worked in hotel hospitality, and they save their pennies, and they bought it at a discount in the Depression. And it just so happened they didn't know the history of the hotel. That coincidentally, David barred as the manager had a reverence for art and artists and realize that they didn't have to spend a lot of money on renovating the hotel if he had famous. Visitors their tenants there, so he invested in hospitality for artists. Rather than in the condition of the building. So during the during the Depression era, it became a bit of a flea bag. But it had all of the Greenwich Village artist who couldn't afford to live in Greenwich Village anymore. During the Depression, it became a haven For penniless artists during that period, you understand one of them was one of them was the parliament powered and rotted. Dylan Thomas, who is sort of a bit of a loose, had a few problems trying to find somewhere to stay. Yes, he, uh, tasted Bard would take in artists who had been kicked out of all the other hotels in New York. Dylan Thomas was one of these, and he was famous at the Chelsea for having knockdown, drag out fights with his wife, Caitlin, throwing chairs and China. You know, jealous fits. Um, uh, but everyone loved him for that. That gave it gave the hotel character He was working on under milk wood there, and Brendan Bien was there. Singing in the halls drunk the soldier's song in the stairwell until he had a seizure and had to be taken back to Ireland. Um and Jack Kerouac on Gore Vidal. We're there for one night for the adult produced Jack Kerouac. They had a one night stand in the room, and then Carol acted want to admit it..

Philippe Sean John Bob Dylan Brendan Bien Cheryl Greenwich Village Lennon Cheryl Tip Dylan Thomas 1976 Jack Kerouac New York Carol Ireland 10 floors David Wendy Nick 18 eighties West 23rd Street Lou Reed
"david bar" Discussed on WSB-AM

WSB-AM

06:09 min | 2 years ago

"david bar" Discussed on WSB-AM

"Okay, So if it's gas, I should definitely have it checked out. Well, you have If you see flames, I'm just clarifying between the two. If you have flames and you have gas fireplace Looks like an electric fireplace will not produce flames. I don't believe right. That's right. Yeah, it'll just be the appear. Okay, Because too many people have had fires from the fireplaces. So people want to save money. That's great. But you don't want your house to burn up. I'm telling you, I don't know Two people now. So you better check it out. And I'm definitely gonna call you guys again. Thanks So much. Have a great one day We'll talk to you next week. Yes, you will. That's all everyone think I said okay. But by 4487207 50 is the number. The information David gave was correct for the kind of fireplace she had. I was just trying to clarify. If you have an actual flame burning, then you do not have an electric fireplace have an electric start gas fireplace. Yeah, that's correct. And this is from the guy who growing up in Iowa. We had actual electric fireplace well and hung on the wall. It looked like you know, the little electric fan would heat up and would blow the warm air out. And then you get the light bulb turning into some fake logs. You make it look like when you looked at it real close. The chimney went up about 2 ft. And he just stopped and we used to, you know, set stuff on top of that. That's an electric fireplace. That Z. Yeah, they make Electric fireplaces. They're very popular. Yeah, and they're Yeah, we'll just let it go that because I don't want to ruin anybody's dream of their fire. Carry this half hour. The home fix it shows brought to my Uncle Guard Foundation Solutions for all 487207 50 is the number. Let's go to Maysville. Talkto. How? How You're on the home. Fix it, Joe. Good morning, Dave. And thank you for taking my call. Um, quick question. I've got a a fairly large screened in porch outside. Have next year. Your fireplace house built a couple of years ago. But one thing I've noticed is that when I light a fire out there, um I really get smoke that comes inside Doesn't really draw really well. Off the chimney. Once the fire gets hot and cold. It does just fine. When I first started, they have lot of smoke that comes back. And if there's any kind of used a little breathed anything I could do about that. Well, you know, it depends on the construction in Might a little bit of height might help on that. But basically when you're when you're outdoors is different than an indoor fireplace in that you have a pressure. Differential on an indoor fireplace that is negative. Uh, negative pressure at the top positive at the bottom so that it's flowing better, but outside, it's more like dealing with a fire pit. You know what I mean? So the the pressure can push directions very easily. Um And it's just, you know, dealing with outdoor fireplaces. There's a little bit tougher. The That's nor not. It's not predictable. Unreliable. Yeah, Fair enough. Thank you very much. I appreciate that. Thank you. Wow. For all 487207 50 is the number A long time ago, I took some classes from the George Association of Home Inspectors and one of the things I learned when you're building Is that a chimney? Has to be I'm going to say 3 ft. Taller than anything within 10 ft of it to have a proper draw. Coming out the time your house was that sound. That is minimum code is 3 ft. Higher than where penetration roof and 2 ft higher than any portion of the structure within 10 ft. Okay, But that means said, you know, like on up exterior ports like that. Often it's AH, route that's much lower than the main part of the house, You know, so it was owed. It may still be, You know, not tall enough that affected draw Now I'm not talking about Of applied fireplace. I'm talking to him just talking about any fireplace in general. Does that affect the draw off? It's too short or too close or anything like that. Yeah, There's usually on most fireplaces. You want a minimum 15 ft height. Okay. If that's something that I can go that you can, I would do it myself. I can call old hat and you could come out and make my fireplace taller after market. Is that okay? And in some cases, if you know masonry fireplaces, we can definitely do that, Um, prefabricated fireplaces. It's totally dependent on the age and the manufacturer Because those are you? L listen appliances and the older models are not supported anymore. If you have an older model that has pipe is not available, and we can't really do anything except replaced the whole system. And that could affect the draw. And that seems to be the whole thing. People. I don't get a good drawing, and it's like they don't enjoy their fireplace the way they should because it doesn't work the way it should. Right? Good thing. This is quite a difference Going between Scott I was born and David Bar held How's that? Well, they Scott would still be telling me about the stack. Look, I love Scott husband. Everybody has a different speech thing. And you know, and you you were just right. Yeah, more. Hey, had more to explain. No, exactly. Exactly. 4487207 50 is the number I really do love that, Osborne. A great guy. We have, Joe. We have Cindy. We have mill and John, Stay right where you are. We're going to the traffic center to see what's cooking over there. In 48 Cool, great carrier WSB 24 hour Traffic center Cooking in Cobb County Day, 75 North found a travel advisor remains with this roadwork. Multiple left lanes are blocked and Highway five in Marietta. Those the Lay stretched all the way back through the North won 20 loot tough delays get over from Delk role in the South won 20.

Joe Scott I David Bar Maysville Uncle Guard Foundation Solutio George Association of Home Ins Marietta Cobb County Iowa Delk Osborne Dave Cindy advisor John
"david bar" Discussed on New Jersey 101.5

New Jersey 101.5

05:32 min | 2 years ago

"david bar" Discussed on New Jersey 101.5

"Remember all those stores we loved growing up that it no longer around Lord and Taylor, the latest the bite the dust there 80% off Now, as the stories continue to close their doors, give me a store. That you miss growing up in New Jersey. Sonia is in Bayville on New Jersey. One on 1.5 high, Sonya. Hi, Steve. Where are you? I'm good. How about you? No, I'm good. Thank you. Just on my way home now, um, one of the stories that I remember as a kid you were talking about Bergen Line Avenue and that really, you know, hit home. I'm originally from North Bergen and I used to walk down dark in line. There were quite a few stories, but the one that I loved the most was your work. Oh, yeah. Yeah, that was the best. I mean, you went in there and you know what was like a smaller version of a Kmart. I'm sorry that it came out of Wal Mart had, you know school supplies? They had a counter, right? I believe they had a counter with through labor stall stools. Remember that to counter all the status spun and they were like, maybe 3 ft. They're really small, 3 ft, tall, and yet it sit down and there was always that hot dog case. It had spikes. And there was I get three day old hot dog that was in there twirl around. That was a great story. Great. Oh, yeah, we used to eat that That was the best thing is it was a treat when you went the world wars and actually got to eat that because you smell the food and you'd want to eat and that was like, well worth five and 10 right? That was like the original five and 10. And the one I remember was on Bergen Late Avenue and I think was like 36 Street. No, I think it was unbroken Line Avenue more like like 40 something maybe 50th street or, you know, the one that I remember. Okay, because you know what was great about Bergen Light Avenue. Remember when Bergen Lane Avenue would be decorated for Christmas? Yeah, like a bell, A Santa Claus. A candy cane, like every wire going across, was all done in. Garland intends to a different like decorations. So beautiful. The ride that beautiful. I mean, every shop was different. It wasn't There were no dollar stores. You know, you had your shoe stores You had, uh How's Army and Navy? A whole bunch of messengers? David Bar. Get up. You know why I didn't go there, but army and Navy You know that that was you know one of the stories that I would go to, but it was great. It was just, you know, brings back memories Are you from that area from Union City from Group on 14th Street. My problem with the Army Navy stores was I went to Catholic school. So I used to have to get the husky size hated the husky pants. Will you that Husky now was over. Then I was asking. You gotta go to the husky section, and it was like it was like embarrassing the gold to the husky section. But that's where I lived. Sonu. Thanks for the call to New Jersey one on 1.5. Let's get Charlie in Woodbridge, New Jersey, on our love 0.5. What's up, Charlie? How you doing? See tonight? How about you, pal? You were talking about the doing our stores. But what happened to me when I was in whispered center has a board papers. It was a long tail in store but there, but they didn't close. Steve. They moved. I'll tell you where they moved to. Where they go. What? They went to West Chester and Union. They did well, now they're closing now. Like, you know, they're gonna be closing across the country. Oh, yeah. What was your favorite store growing up? Well, when I was working in the M P, I went to the Lauren Taylor that point myself it nicely and, uh, chat linen jacket. Nice, much. And just how much time was that? I got that for how much? 40% off 350 bucks. Wow. Look at you know, no negotiated Now, what would you do in the A. M. Pei? A M P. I was a grocery clerk. I lost my job, but I'm bigger and better things down. What were you doing there? Well, you know, I'm in entertainer Garin entertainer, Okay? I didn't tell you this, but we're always talking. You did not tell me this. Where do you entertain? What do you do? Don't pay myself, Stevie. And with the You know why I'm on YouTube. Never thinking program for a long time ago. You want Tell me. Come on. Plug yourself. Where? Where do we find you? Try. Well, that was I don't I don't have that on my I don't have a cell phone or anything. But it was Charles. I has And Charles J. I. Has you really want to put me in there? I just gave you I'm not giving you the chance of a lifetime. I got tens of people isn't in right now. Come on, Charles. Trials I has and you're on YouTube. Yeah, I was on the with the mayor's woman ideas. And for example, a S O I was on the show in 2015, but that happened a long time ago. But I P's in general. Little bit more, Charlie. Thanks for the call The New Jersey one on 1.51 802 831 on 1.5 stores that we miss. Growing up. Rich is in Burlington on New Jersey, one on 1.5 rich. I know it. Thanks for taking my call any time..

New Jersey Charlie Bergen Light Avenue Lauren Taylor North Bergen Steve Army Army Navy Wal Mart Bayville Charles J. Kmart Sonia Union City Burlington West Chester Garland David Bar