40 Burst results for "David's"

The Eric Metaxas Show
How Reading the Bible Changed E.W. Jackson's Life Forever
"Point did you become a Christian? Wow. My father got saved late in life and I went to work at a law firm and stayed with him for one summer in Philadelphia. We lived in Chester, Pennsylvania, but I was working for a law firm in Philadelphia. And before I left, my father said to me, guess what I'm doing now? He saved a different man. OK, I mean, loving father, good father. But now a different man, because now he's an actual disciple of the Lord Jesus Christ. He said to me, I'm reading the Bible from cover to cover. He said, and it's just it's an amazing thing. On my way home, Eric, I thought to myself, well, I don't know about all this Christian stuff, but the Bible is one of the important books in society. And I'm studying the great books. I want to read the Bible out of intellectual interest. And that's how I got started. But that's but that's just true. In other words, if you want to know history, if you want to understand culture, you want to understand anything, you'd be a fool not to be familiar with the Bible. And so just for that reason alone, you're reading it. And it has this magical effect. Oh, my goodness. You know, my wife would come home from church on a Sunday morning before I was saved. And I would look at her and say, how much of my money did you give that preacher today? My wife would look so you married a Christian woman. Oh, that's she would shake her head. The demon possessed right up to the eyeballs. And I was but I started reading in September of 1976. And when I came across David, that's when convictions started to happen. Really? Because David was such a strong warrior of a man, you know, a model of a man. Yeah. But yet tender, loving about God. And it got me. What makes this man talk about God like he's his best friend? Like he's in love with him. And that was when I began to say, well, Lord, whatever you showed him, if you're real, show me.

Bloomberg Businessweek
Fresh update on "david" discussed on Bloomberg Businessweek
"A large plastic bottle in half and fill the base with sand, pebbles, potting soil and your favorite plant. I chose an African violet. Put the top of the bottle over your base and place it in the sun. Your plant will grow sealed in its own ecosystem. Fun, right? Learn more at She Can STEM. A message from the Ad Council. This is Bloomberg. This is Bloomberg Business Week with Carol Messer and Tim Bloomberg Radio. Well, the once hot Wall Street trades of 2023 are all falling apart in a fresh blow to market pros blindsided again and again ever since the pandemic broke out. Nearly halfway into the year, a slew of consensus bets are losing big time as the U .S. economy defies the recession And that's all the time we have for you today. All are in for those talking up emerging markets in China. You better think again. All of this, the backdrop of Bloomberg Live's Invest event this week where my co -host Matt Miller caught up with PGM CEO David

The Dan Bongino Show
Military Whistleblower Claims US Has UFO Retrieval Program
"There's only that that's three right yeah okay here's Elizabeth Vargas a news nation and she's talking about she's talking about what this guy from the Air Force is alleging they have it's a really serious charge I'm gonna tell you is what it I'm going to tell you why I'm kind of skeptical about all this check this out UFOs exist the US government went down quite a number of them and they are indeed of non -human origin those the are explosive allegations from a former intelligence officer tonight in a whistleblower complaint that the inspector general is taking very seriously 36 year old Air Force veteran David Grush is exposing he what calls a top -secret military program that has reportedly found wreckage of fully intact UFOs the government now calls them uaps or identified anomalous phenomena for years there have been whispers and rumors that the government had aircraft of non -human origin this report is the first evidence it might be true the inspector general has called brushes complaint urgent and credible this guy's alleging we have alien spacecraft and the pilots folks that's a

Bloomberg Wall Street Week
Fresh update on "david" discussed on Bloomberg Wall Street Week
"Francisco's economy. The short term outlook is painful. Bloomberg Best. Bloomberg's best stories of the week. Powered by 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries around the world. We heard from just a huge number of movers and shakers at that Bloomberg Invest conference in New York. Yeah, and let's start here, Denise, one with of the most widely followed names in financial markets. We're talking about Ray Dalio, founder, of course, hedge Bridgewater. fund And he tells David Weston there's a lot to watch when it comes to what's happening in the economy and the way it's working or not working right now. Let's listen in. Three things that surprise us that haven't happened in our lifetimes, but happened through many history times are the creation of an enormous amount of debt and debt monetization.

AP News Radio
Beeks escapes bases-loaded jam, Lowe, Siri hit homers as Rays beat Cubs 4-3
"Jose ciri and Brandon Lao each had two run homers as the raised defeated the cubs four to three Laos round tripper helped Tampa Bay avoid a sweep. It's hard to take any win for granted. Honestly, at this point, everyone's big win and coming off to lackluster games. It's a huge step in the right directions for us to go into this off day. The rays manages 5 runs in the three game set, but on this day they got the big hits when needed and their bullpen had three scoreless innings. David Schuster, Chicago.

Sound ON
Fresh update on "david" discussed on Sound ON
"Hours after President Trump announced on social media he had been indicted then we heard from reporting at Bloomberg and other sources as well as from Trump's attorneys in various interviews talking about the charges seven of them in total everything from obstruction to justice of justice to now we understand 31 counts of willful retention of national defense information and as well as withholding a document or record corruptly concealing a document or record false statements and representations again in total seven charges and 37 counts and this is the first time in history that a former president has been indicted on federal charges so let's turn now to someone we are so lucky to have as an internal expert here at Bloomberg David Weston is the host of wall street week yes yes but also an attorney so David if you could put on your lawyer hat for us here what is your read on this well I still have my bar card but I haven't been practicing for a few years now Kaylee but I mean a lot of it is not a great surprise is it I wonder whether you should have kept on going to Miami actually go back to Washington that's the where action is at least as of next Tuesday a lot of it sadly perhaps is not too big a surprise I mean we got 37 counts against the president and there's poor Walt Nada who's a Navy aide who became his executive assistant he he gets gets caught up in the whole thing but the thing that I think is striking and that certainly I think that the Trump camp will not like is some of the verbatim of some of his conversations about these documents because it sounded frankly I hate to characterize a former president this way a bit juvenile on the way he was bragging to this writer and this publisher and even admitting that he could have declassified these documents but he didn't so there's still secret that certainly doesn't help his case that he thinks he has the authority to declassify them or that he had done it before actually transferred them down to Florida so certainly the atmospherics are not pretty but as far as the substance goes I'm not sure it's that different from really what we expected well I want to get your expertise on how this plays on the global stage David as well because you spend so much time talking to global leaders this week I got to hear so many conversations of yours at Bloomberg Invest about US relations with countries from around the globe and I just wonder how an indictment like this plays well it can't help I think it's fair to say right I mean there's a lot going on in the world of very serious things within Ukraine with Russia or whether it's in warships coming close to other each in the Taiwan Strait you name it there's really serious issues and traditionally for many years the United States has played a leadership role in these it doesn't help to have the then former leader of the free world hauled up on charges in this way and I don't know we have to see how it plays plays out I'd haven't seen the evidence I haven't heard the argument but reading this indictment and knowing something about the the prosecutors it involved looks like they have a fairly strong case that doesn't say they'll prevail but they've got strong a case which it which is not good news well it also raises the question David on when they'll actually have a chance to formally make that case in court what should we be looking for here in terms of the timeline we know the as you were alluding to is gonna be in Miami at the court on Tuesday but then when do we actually see him tried on on all of these matters especially considering the clock we're working with is leading up to November 2024 Kaylee but for two things I would have said this is gonna drag out a long time I mean this is a former president of the United States after all these are very serious charges mr. Trump has shown a tradition long before his president of dragging out litigation all over place the all the time he's being sued all the time but he's got two things that are challenges for him one is they brought the case in Miami and if they brought the case in DC as many people thought they would there'd be an argument for change if they call venue to say no no all this happened down in Miami you should do it there they don't have that argument anymore and secondly they call it the rocket docket it's sort of like the Northern District of Virginia where you are Kaley yeah they have a tradition of really moving these cases along so I don't know how patient the judge will be but then that takes us to the of judge course right who was appointed by Donald Trump himself and of course she had ruled earlier in matters that respect to these documents and had been very favorable to the former president saying you know you the Justice Department can't even look at these documents can't even look into the allegations we now have in front of us until their special masters looked at him and that judge got slapped down pretty vigorously by the 11th Circuit which by the way for those of us who know the 11th Circuit is thought to be a pretty conservative capital c court but they had no patience with this judge well how important is the backdrop of Palm Beach County to this case I mean this is gonna be on Trump's turf it is going to be on Trump's turf although we'll see who the jury of his peers would be because right now it's Miami and we'll see who actually gets seated on the jury and how that works but listen as I say this is not good news I think for Donald Trump it's also not good news for the country or as you pointed out Matty it's not good news for the world really you don't want us dealing with this instead of doing so they're issues the United States could help on well speaking of some of those bigger issues in the globe you were able to have a lot of amazing conversations this week David at Bloomberg Invest like we were talking about earlier and we're gonna hear some of those conversations on Wall Street week tell our listeners what they can look ahead to well one of the things just to come back to the larger theme of big issues around the world we had to talk to Ray the Dalio founder of Bridgewater and as we know Ray Dalio has spent a lot of time in China dealing with China investing in China talking to the Chinese authorities and I asked him about where we are he said we have some real irreconcilable differences at the same time we're not talking which he thinks is a pretty pretty bad combination but Ray went on to say he thought look it there's not gonna be one winner and one loser between the United States and China either we both win or we both lose then we sat down with Neil Ferguson the renowned economic historian now Hoover Institution and we asked about that question he had a somewhat different view in Cold War one I don't think there's any controversy that one side won the United States and its allies and the other side lost the Soviet Union which of course disintegrated in 1991 and why shouldn't there be a similar outcome to a second Cold War now I'm not saying there's any guarantee that the United States is the side that wins Cold War China's a much more formidable opponent than the Soviet Union was and I sometimes think that the United States isn't in the same kind of domestic internal shape that it was Cold in War one but I think the key point about a cold war to remember is that if it stays cold it doesn't escalate into hot war at least not at the global level you can have hot wars in spaces like say Ukraine but if it doesn't escalate into World War three then the United States and its allies are probably better placed to win. So that was Neil Ferguson the economic historian and it's good if it stays cold one of the things he also said is if it goes hot with AI it could be really complicated.

Mark Levin
David Jolly: Ron DeSantis Is Far More Dangerous Than Donald Trump
"But here he is hat tip news busters on MSL cut 12 go You and I have talked a great deal about desantis authoritarianism in Florida Nevertheless This is really precious coming from these Democrats Joe Biden just said the other day that he had the power to unilaterally Raise the death scene Which would be the biggest grab of power in American history By one branch against another Ever Go ahead This week that he would quote aggressively go after pardons for one 6 insurrectionists No Matty I say this with conviction I think Ron DeSantis is far more dangerous than Donald Trump Donald Trump is willing to ignore the rules ignore the constitution And hold on hold on hold on hold on down to Trump never ignored the constitution Name once Never ignored the constitution He must have been confused with Biden You moron You know there's nothing worse than a Republican who's gone to the other side

What a Weird Week
Fresh update on "david" discussed on What a Weird Week
"In case you missed it, the US has a task force. It's fairly new under the Secretary of Defense. That task force is supposed to get to the bottom of weird things in the sky. They've been investigating different sightings, but this ain't that. This is completely separate, a whistleblower situation. This whistleblower was a high up in the military and did have access to secret stuff. Reporters have confirmed that David, the whistleblower, is who he says he is, but they haven't seen any documents or certainly they haven't published any documents or evidence. David says he has evidence, but he's filed an official whistleblower complaint with Congress and he gave them the proof. So to be continued, why is this a bombshell UFO story? Because it does sound like a story we've heard before. Insiders saying there's a cover up. My takeaway, and I'm no expert on this, but I think it's the most official statement like this we've ever had from somebody within the military or with credentials. And I don't think there's ever been a whistleblower like an official, whatever the paperwork is, you call it, there an official whistleblower complaint with Congress. I think that is why this is a bombshell. We linked to the stories. Some credible journalists are following this and also some very credible researchers. Some are buying it. Some believe it. Some saying, yeah, I don't know. Do a deep dive if you want. Check the show notes in your podcatcher or you can go to shownotes .page. Another reason to go for a walk, fame and fortune. Citation needed a lady who went for a walk on the beach in California, found an ancient mastodon tooth sticking out of the sand, but then they lost it. Then they posted on Insta. Then they found it again. It was a roller coaster ride. A lady named Jennifer was strolling on the beach, sees this weird foot long tooth sticking out of the sand. Jennifer took some photos, but left the thing there. She posted those photos on Facebook. Somebody from the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History saw those photos and they were like, Hey, that's a mastodon molar.

AP News Radio
Fight still ahead for Texas' Ken Paxton after historic impeachment deepens GOP divisions
"This weekend's historic impeachment of Texas attorney general is plunging Republicans into a bruising fight over whether to banish one of their own in America's biggest red state. Texas AG Ken Paxton says he has full confidence, as he now awaits trial in the state Senate. His conservative allies there include state senator Angela Paxton, his wife, the decisive one 21 to 23 vote in the House amounted to a clear rebuke of the GOP controlled body Republican state representative David spiller. No one person should be above the law. Least not the top law enforcement official of the state of Texas. Audio courtesy wv final removal of Paxton requires a two thirds vote in the Senate. He was impeached on 20 articles that included bribery and abuse of public trust. I'm Julie Walker

WTOP 24 Hour News
Fresh "David's" from WTOP 24 Hour News
"Le Figaro notes this is the first time a former US president has faced federal charges. Elaine Cobb CBS News Paris. Thousands of people are believed to be trapped by flood waters that have spread across Ukraine after a catastrophic dam collapse. CBS's Deborah Potter has the story. Evacuating residents from her son is a Deadly business. The boats move swiftly through flood stricken areas not only ferrying people to dry land but to escape the ongoing Russian bombardment. Ukraine's president has called for an urgent international rescue effort after an explosion at the dam caused that Flooding folks in the northeastern part of the US could soon open their windows and let in the fresh air again and a smoke from Canadian wildfires is moving out. CBS News weather and climate producer David Parkinson has more. Couple things are gonna change going into the weekend. The first is that we are gonna have some rain this afternoon. Some of it might be in the form of thunderstorms that should do a little bit to clear the air out. By the time we get to the weekend and we also have a wind direction shift. The Florida Panthers beat the Vegas Golden Knights 3 -2 last night and in game three of the Stanley Cup finals. That call on TNT.

AP News Radio
Navy SEALs training plagued by pervasive problems, according to investigation after death of sailor
"A report says a navy seal candidate's death might have been prevented if flaws in the medical program had been addressed. The report by the naval education and training command finds the program for navy seals is plagued by a poorly integrated medical program, a lack of oversight, and turning a blind eye to the use of performance enhancing drugs that increases the risk of injury and death to candidates seeking to join the elite commandos, the report was triggered by the death of a sailor Kyle mullin, who collapsed and died of acute pneumonia last year just hours after completing the training required during hell week, its a test so grueling that over half don't finish it. Rear admiral Keith davids said the navy will learn from the tragedy Mullen's mother a registered nurse says there needs to be serious accountability. The report suggests a long list of changes, including rigorous drug testing and education around the problem of steroids and other banned drugs, some candidates use to get through the rigorous program. I'm Jennifer King

The Dan Bongino Show
David Sacks: The Biggest Divide in the U.S. Is a College Degree
"David Sachs David Sachs really really solid strong entrepreneur a guy who's been around the tech business And it's not afraid to air his ideas about where the country is He was asked this question on this podcast about what the real schism in the country is The real the real chasm Where's the Grand Canyon between people Is it black and white like liberals want us to believe Is it Hispanic versus versus white Is it immigrant non new immigrant union non union The answer is no it's none of that The real political chasm in this country if you look at the numbers is this play that cut if you think about this woke phenomenon is that it spans across corporate America you have so called woke capitalism You've got ESG with boards of directors and all these global nonprofits The NGOs you've got the think tank world You've got the media you've got Hollywood It's a phenomenon that spans across virtually every major institution in our society And so the question is how does something like that happen And I think it can only happen as a result of a shift in attitudes of an entire class of people which in this case is the professional class the class of people who have college degrees The polling data really bears this out If you look at polling data on virtually any sociocultural issue the biggest divide in the country it's not over between race or gender It's actually on the single variable of whether you have a college degree or not Yes sir Yes sir Yes sir Bob are in this case David You're damn right it is

AP News Radio
Celtics' 3-0 deficit is surmountable to Boston Red Sox great David Ortiz
"Former Red Sox slugger and Hall of Famer David Ortiz knows what the Boston Celtics are facing and understands about coming back from a three zero hole. He's done it leading the 2004 World Series champion Red Sox from the three games to non deficit in the American League championship series against the rival New York Yankees. If you do it in baseball again and then the next question will be will you do it in basketball. Right. Exactly. And if you're doing ambassador, you gotta be the same city. Big poppy says if the cells believe they can become the first NBA team to overcome an O three deficit. I'm geffen coolbaugh.

AP News Radio
The latest in sports
"AP sports I'm David Shuster, one game in both the NBA and NHL playoffs Sunday and they were completely different from a competitive standpoint. We start in the NBA with geth and kuba filling us in on Miami and Boston. The Miami Heat cruise to a three O series lead in the Eastern Conference Finals after blowing out the Boston Celtics one 28 one O two at home in game three. Gabe Vincent pace the heat with a playoff career high 29 points on 11 of 14 shooting. Caleb Martin added 18 points, Jimmy Butler scored 16 and bam adebayo 13. Boston stars Jayson Tatum and jaylen Brown were held to 14 and 12 points respectively on a combined 12 of 35 shooting. Miami can clinch its second NBA Finals birth in four seasons with a win in game four Tuesday. And now over to hockey with Mark Myers reporting on Las Vegas and Dallas. Chandler Stephenson scored early in overtime to give the golden knights a three to two win over the stars and a two O series lead the knights were able to tie the score in the final minute of regulation on a goal by Jonathan Marshall, Aiden hill made 26 saves in the Vegas nets, Jake Avengers stopped 21 shots for the stars who were now zero in four and overtime games this postseason. Turning to baseball, Houston completed a three game sweep of Oakland Sunday's final two zero and how bad are the a's well they're on pace to lose 138 games which would be a record. Other highlights Sunday Oscar Mercado with 5 RBI St. Louis ten 5 over the Dodgers and Cedric mullin 5 hits Baltimore 8 three over Toronto. To golf and Brooks Koepka won his 5th major title, he won the PGA Championship by two shots. That was good. Yeah, this one's this one's definitely special. I think this one's probably the most meaningful of them all with everything that's gone on, all the other crazy stuff over the last few years, but it feels good to be back and get number 5. And in auto racing, Spain's Alex pillow captured the pole position for this year's Indy 500. I'm David Shuster, a P sports.

Mark Levin
'Compassionate Conservatism' Versus 'National Greatness Conservatism'
"Michael gerson the light Michael gerson I'm looking at liberty and tyranny Which so many of you have read It was the formerly the chief speechwriter for president George W. Bush And he wrote a book called heroic conservatism And he said if Republicans run in future elections with a simplistic anti government message Ignoring the poor the addicted in children at risk they will lose and they will deserve to lose And so garrison argued for a compassionate conservatism and faith based initiatives in which the federal government plays a central role This was bush's guy the time and then William crystal and David Brooks they used to both Work for the standard and magazine that is since destroyed itself And they promoted something called and they did a repeatedly national greatness conservative Which also involved a significant role for the central government It seems to me if you're going to come up with a new idea which isn't really a new idea For a philosophy you shouldn't call it national conservatism You got the rhinos using the phraseology And then you have others Like national socialist fill in the blank The great thing about America is that it wasn't founded by a national government Wasn't founded by a national anything There are these disparate colonies that came together They formed a federal government with very very limited powers

AP News Radio
Alonso, Pham help New York Mets beat Tampa Bay Rays 3-2 for series win
"The mets one consecutive games for the first time this month taking two of three from the rays with the three to two victory, highlighting the offense was Pete Alonso, who blasted his MLB leading 16th home run. Whether it be pitching offense, defense, space running. Like we did a lot, a lot of things extremely well this series and I hope that this springboards us in the next series. Tyler McGill tossed 6 innings for the win, David Robertson, his 8th save. The rays went four and 6 on a ten game road trip and sit at 32 and 13. Mike mancuso, New York

Mark Levin
Elon Musk Unfazed by David Faber's Question on George Soros
"You said he wants to erode the very fabric of civilization and saw his hates humanity Like when you do something like that I think that's true That's my opinion Okay But why share it Why share it Especially I mean why share it when people who buy teslas may not agree with you advertisers on Twitter may not agree with me All right let's stop Elon Musk is already demonstrated that he's a free speech guy Now the left hates his guts because the left is about totalitarianism And they dress it up as free speech but the left isn't for free speech show me when and where Maybe when the Nazis are marching in Skokie old time leftists But they don't today they don't represent free speech The whole reason The media matters exists is to destroy conservative talk radio and Fox The whole reason mediocre it exists Same thing Terribly Obama out there that his biggest worry is the division on news What There's a 112% on the left and the rest of us That's Obama's big worry He's a fraud and a phony and anyway so continue please Why not just say hey I think this you can tell me we can talk about it over there You can tell your Friends but why share it widely I mean this is freedom of speech I'm allowed to say what I would say So let's stop right Why am I sitting down with this jackass What kind of a stupid question is that Now that's got to be gone through as head He's a smart dude Why share it with everybody Because I think the guys destroying the country and so I gave my opinion should I not Should I counter in the corner like everybody else Should I worry that maybe I'll be calling anti semite which is what they're doing now And he's not

AP News Radio
The Wembanyama sweepstakes and draft lottery has a winner: It's the Spurs
"The San Antonio spurs won the NBA draft lottery and the number one overall pick on Tuesday night guaranteeing them a chance to select top prospect Victor wembanyama. When Ben Yama a 7 foot three French 19 year old is one of the most highly touted prospects in NBA history and will be expected to make an immediate impact on the league. The spurs were one of three teams with the best odds at 14% to land the number one pick. It's the third time they won the lottery. They drafted David Robinson in 1987 and Tim Duncan ten years later. I'm geffen coolbaugh.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
Is the Verdict In Trump's Assault Case a Political Hit Job?
"The verdict in Carol the Trump is a right strike verdict to quote Luther on the epistle of James. It doesn't add up to a lawyer, 27 years later when she can't name the year. I just paid no attention to it because it's just so profoundly not corroborate it and they rejected the rape charge, but they accepted the assault charge, but they accept the defamation charge their rejected the rape charge, and they did it in three hours. I just shook my head. So a lot of people think it's just a bogus Manhattan jury. They just think it's a get Trump moment. Whether or not they like Trump, a lot of people think it's a bogus lawsuit. So David, why doesn't the media just report just report that half the country likes Trump and half hates him? Or 40% of the country likes Trump and they don't care about gene Carroll. And they put January 6th aside and they don't blame him for that. Because that's basically the fact pattern. That's just 40% of America that's a 120 million Americans. Yeah, look, I don't have an answer for you in part because I'm not a media reporter, meaning I don't ask these questions of them. I don't really look deep into it. When I try to do, is what I did in Iowa this past weekend. It's just asked questions. And in report, the answers to those questions is fairly and accurately and within context as I can, Trump is this unique figure. I will say as a reporter, I sometimes feel challenged in covering Trump because he will say things, you know, I've covered politicians now for 20 years and they all spin and they all try and make things look a particular way when they don't when they're not a particular way. Trump just happens to be the most brazen among them and then he'll say something is blue when it's white and he just does that.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
Trump's Town Hall Audience Criticized for Being Too Partisan?
"Welcome back, America David drucker is the lead political correspondent for the dispatch you see him on all of the networks. Good morning, David. How are you? Good morning, you. How's it going? Good. I am struck David by it's been a week since the town hall that Donald Trump did in New Hampshire. And I'm struck by one thing in particular, which is that the audience has come in for a lot of criticism for clapping at various points along the way. Now the Republican Party is 49% for Trump. 25% for desantis and the rest is split among Mike Pence and some other folks. So the audience didn't always clap and not all of the audience clapped at certain parts, but when have you ever seen a partisan audience criticize for being partisan before? Well, I don't know if we've seen it before hue. But I think that one of the reasons some people may be criticizing the audience is one, it was impossible to tell from watching on television whether it was a partial audience applause or a full audience applause. So you just hear the it's like watching a sitcom, right, where you hear the laugh track. And you don't actually know if everybody in the audience when they hold up that sign is laughing. But that's what it sounds like. I'd say the other thing, and look, this is open for debate here, but Trump was asked about the verdict in Asian Carroll case. And a number of things relating to January 6th and things like that. And Trump was his usual self, which is kind of half charming, half funny, half charismatic. A smattering of this or that. But some of the things that the audience was applauding and laughing at or so it appeared on television were when he was commenting on those things. So it's not like he said, hey, I'm going to cut your taxes, or hey, you know, the border's a mess. And then they clapped or laughed because, you know, set it in a particular way. It's because he was talking about E Jean Carroll in a particular way. It's because he was talking about what happened on January 6th in a particular way. And so I think for a lot of Republicans that do not like Trump for all the reasons that we don't need to repeat here because we already know the answers, they found the audience particularly disheartening because it tells them in their minds that we're still a minority in a party that Trump still leads. Yeah,

The Eric Metaxas Show
John Zmirak Compares Anti-Trumpers to French Vichy Collaborators
"Just got a few minutes left. We're talking about Trump. The way they despise Pat Buchanan. I remember it well. It's now 31 years ago. It seems like yesterday, how they hated him, how they hated Reagan in many ways, but it's very similar. They are, they have lost their minds. When this guy Rick Wilson from The Lincoln Project was on the air, he was just cursing over and over and he just cursing. He's so angry. He has nothing to do, but to curse at the nightmare of CNN giving Adolf Hitler. I mean, Donald Trump, a few minutes on the air. Well, let me just say this very clearly. The anti Trump Republicans were like the French who joined the Vichy government and collaborated with the Nazis. They don't care about the country. They care about their personal profit and their personal power. And they're willing to sell out the country to essentially a foreign totalitarian occupational government so that their paychecks won't bounce. So that they can have still pretend that they control Algeria. That's why I coined the term David Vichy French. That's why when I talk about Russell Moore, I regard him as a stalking horse of the radical left. These people are willing to sell out everything they ever pretended to care about just so they can cling to their membership at the country club and their paycheck.

The Eric Metaxas Show
What is "Mere Natural Law"? Author Hadley Arkes Explains
"Why did you write a book called mere natural law? And what is, as you see it, what is natural law? Because I want my audience that isn't familiar with this or at least not very familiar with it. Really to understand it. And in the book, much of which I've already read. But you really get into this in a way that I've never seen it before. So how do you answer? That's interesting. Well, first of all, you'll recognize mere natural art drawing upon a C. S. Lewis. Where he could find in the conversation of children, the rudiments of moral understanding that they get into an argument, not over likes and dislikes, but over matters of right and wrong. They the conversation makes no sense unless they assume that their standards of judgment to tell the difference between plausible and implausible right or wrong answers. And I want to draw upon that in order to take us back to those precepts of common sense that the form the ground of the natural law. I invoked your my friend Dan Robinson. My late friend Dan Robbins, who wrote 18 books. And he wanted on his tombstone. He died without a theory. And when he said that, he was really drawing on Thomas Reid, the great Scott philosopher, with his teachings on common sense. A man who was read closely by James Wilson and John to have us among the founders. And Reed was joined us to those precepts of common sense that the ordinary man has to know just in getting on with the business of life. The things he has to know before he starts trafficking in theories. So before the average man could start bantering with David Hume about the meaning of causation. He knew his own act of powers to cause their own acts to happen. So the pitch in the book is that that's what we find the ground of the natural law. That's where the American founders felt it. The principles that the precepts of common sense, the principles of right and wrong that were there before they framed the constitution and they know that those principles would be there even if there were no constitution, much of the way that John Quincy Adams would say that right to petition the government is simply implicit

The Charlie Kirk Show
Biblical Figures Every Man Should Emulate With Sen. Josh Hawley
"You mentioned something interesting. You say some either biblical or historical figures tell us a couple of those. Teddy Roosevelt, maybe you talked about Moses, who I think is one of the great figures of the Bible who was really a man's man and a lot of different ways. Who are some of the men of the Bible or of history you talk about in your book that we should try to emulate. We'll start, let's start first with the Bible and Charlie, I make no apologies for the fact that I spent a lot of time talking about Bible stories in this book. Listen, the Bible has been the foundation of western culture. It is truly the faith of our fathers. It has been the ancient faith of this nation and the bedrock of our system of government. So for all the haters out there are like, oh my gosh, he spends a whole book and tells a whole bunch of stories from the Bible. Yeah, exactly. Right. And I apologize, not good at all. In fact, if you're offended by that, you probably should read the book and more importantly, you should probably go read the Bible. But I would just, let's pick one of those stories. Let's pick David. He's one of my absolute favorites. A king, a warrior, also a poet. I mean, you talk about a guy who really has it all. I mean, he shows the masculine virtues. And I talk about him as a warrior. I talk about him as a king. I talk about him as a leader as a priest, somebody who is in touch with the eternal, right? And brought a sense of the eternal everywhere he went. Also imperfect. And that's part of the message to men. You know, he wasn't perfect. So it's not perfection that we're after as men, you know, we know that, hey, our lives aren't perfect. It's okay. It's not about being perfect. It's about being better. It's about being what you can be, who got its call you to be. And I hope that the stories that I tell are really about encouraging them to say, okay, how can I get better? How can I be better at my job? How can I be better as a husband? How can it be better as a father? Better is what we need.

Design Matters with Debbie Millman
"david" Discussed on Design Matters with Debbie Millman
"He designed the sets for the recent revival of the Broadway show into the Woods and his company designed the new civilian hotel in Manhattan's theater district. He's here to talk about those projects as well as his remarkable life and career. David Rockwell, welcome to design matters. Thank you so much. Great to be here. In person. Yes, in person. David, I understand you're a collector of kaleidoscopes. And that you started collecting them when you were a little boy. Why kaleidoscopes? Well, I think I was initially attracted to them because I love things that move. I've always been fascinated by how things can reconfigure. Probably driven by a life that was reconfigured a lot. I'm sure, you know, looking back, the fact that we moved around a lot as a young boy as a young man got me interested in new things. And then as I started to really fall more in love with kaleidoscopes and have a chance to analyze it. And I just want to say, I think, designers, in my opinion, do that a lot. They find what they love and then look in the rearview mirror and able to find how things line up and what they mean. But my attraction was, and still is, how they take things that are familiar to us, and then jumble those to create entirely new pictures. With the simple arrangement of lenses and objects in the end of that frame, I think they are the most amazing analog changeable pictures that I still love. I understand you have quite a few original types of kaleidoscopes. I think you have about 75 at this point and I read that one operates with a puff of air and feathers. Is that true? It is true. And kaleidoscopes in many cases from the outside don't show how sophisticated they are on the inside. Because it's a case where what is inside matters and probably that's some of the things that attracted me as well because in the building world, I'm much more interested in how things engage in audience and how they behave than how they look initially. At least as a first way in. So this particular kaleidoscope has a small plastic attribute fabric piece that you squeeze air into into this beautiful cast glass container that has feathers in it and you look through the kind of mirror assembly and what I do when I show it to people is have them look through it before they see what's doing it because it's a total kind of magical illusion. It is. It sounds amazing. David, you were born in deal New Jersey. No. Okay. I was actually born in Chicago, Illinois. Oh my goodness. Yeah, I was born as the youngest of 5 boys. Yes, I know that part. In downtown Chicago. When did you move to deal? When I was four. Okay. I think that we'll keep that in just as is because, you know, it's important to show that we sometimes make mistakes here design matters. It's an interesting thing because Chicago is such a brief stay for me, but there are certain loyalties I have to that city based on family and but yeah, so we moved to the jerseys for quite young and that's where I first experienced many things, including theater. Right. Now, I believe that your dad passed away when you were two. Yeah. So that was when you were in Chicago. Correct. Do you have any memory of that? No, I have photographs, and I have stories from family members of a family that's very different than the one I was brought up in. Because my mom remarried, my dad, who really raised me. I stepped out. And so as the youngest, I got a very different experience and my oldest brother, for instance. But when I've gone back to Chicago, I've gone back to where we lived, and I've done quite a bit of work in Chicago. And it is one of my favorite cities. So I suppose there's deep memories that I don't have real access to that sort of come alive when I'm there. Pull you in. Your mother cofounded a community theater and you and your four older brothers all worked on the shows and you acted, played music, you worked on the sets, all four of your brothers were stagehands. You've said you were seduced by all the preparation and was intrigued by how the theater energized your very sleepy suburb. What was most fascinating to you about that sort of awakening, what was most seductive was how incredibly inclusive it was. That it was for the time that it was happening. It activated every part of the community. And when I say sleepy, you deal New Jersey, it's a beautiful, beautiful place with lots of big homes, where almost all kind of entertainment happened within these big homes. So there wasn't a lot of public realm. There was the beach front in a beautiful beach club. But the community theater somehow got everyone to want to participate. And it was in our little elementary school, which I actually took my daughter back to, not too long ago, and I couldn't believe the difference between my memory of these incredible productions and the simplicity of what it actually was. I think it was an early experience for me of something that I found inspiring in my work. And that is the live experience of creating something like theater takes months or years of preparation community theaters more months. Broadway shows can be years and buildings can be decades.

Success, Motivation & Inspiration
"david" Discussed on Success, Motivation & Inspiration
"One book that you would recommend or audience if you could only recommend one book? I would recommend thinking grow rich by an unfolding pedal. Yeah. I love that book. I absolutely believe in the power of your subconscious thoughts. I think that's huge. And I think you really can manifest what you want in your physical life. As long as you want it bad enough and you put forth all the best efforts to get there, somehow you'll get the outcome that you're looking for. You might not necessarily know all of the steps, but take a look at that first step and just do that. Don't look at the whole staircase, just look at it and step at a time. That's awesome. I think I read that book the first time when I was 13 years old, my mom used to take us to these business 7 hours and stuff and grew up in a real rough household had a great example of a father there, but then we would get to visit my mom she didn't see seminars and I was reading books and stuff. Thank you, girl, rich, is one of the ones that changed it for me too. Just go on. I can determine what my outcome is going to be. My folder at steps and stuff, so the last thing that was for you, that's amazing. Absolutely. Yeah, that's actually required reading for every new hire here. So I was reading that until I already had my major life-changing opportunity for me. But that's required reading here for every new ire. So I read that and I saw the way that the owner here is truly living that. So I said, you know, there's something here, you know? That's awesome. What character traits devalue the most? Yeah, so loyalty, honesty. Hard work. I think those are good old fashioned character traits that never really go out of style. The timeless classics. So, you know, obviously just being in business, being transparent, and I've always found that the more that you can just layer cards on the table, the better the outcome of that business deal, whether it's even just saying, hey, you know what, there is no deal here. It's better to just you never want to be underhanded in business. And my opinion, I've seen guys try to take shortcuts and do this in the ads and it never works out for them and always comes back and bites them some way or another. So I think being honest and transparent is really important, being loyal, someone gives you a shot. They give you an opportunity. I think you should really give that your best efforts. Be prepared to show up even if you're not confident if you feel like maybe you're not quite qualified for that opportunity at the point in time. Be as prepared as you can be showing up with that preparedness. We'll give you the confidence that you need to carry that out. And sometimes you're going to fall on your face, but you know what? Turn that into a lesson. Big fan of failure to say get it out of the way. As quick as possible. Fail upwards. So that's good advice to you. So many people are afraid of failing, but then you get the other folks that say, well, just bail as many times as you can. That advice is not meant to be failed and keep failing at the same thing without making any changes. It's fail and make progress as you're moving forward. Absolutely. Yeah, it's so important. I know you got to get off here and just a couple of minutes, but what's the best way for me to hold you right now? Yeah, so I'm on all the social channels. You can find me on Facebook, it's team David at amado marketing that's M and O stands for Michigan and Ohio. So we're actually based in Detroit, Michigan, back in 76, we started in Michigan and Ohio before becoming a national wholesaler. So just to call back to our origins there. But yeah, team David Emmett marketing on Facebook. You can find me on Instagram as team David mo marketing and how marketing. LinkedIn, David Wright, WMS. And then you can always find us at our website at M and O marketing dot com. I'll drop those links in the bottom of your shoulders as well and you'll have a permanent page on the website. What dot com slash David hyphen, right? And that'll be a page that you'll have forever. They'll have your podcast episode at the bottom and search engine friendly. Your actual written text to your show. Awesome. Well, thank you so much for having me on today..

Blank Check with Griffin & David
"david" Discussed on Blank Check with Griffin & David
"In home yeah He died but this is the thing. And then you'd be was it covert and it's like no. They were in their late late. Eighties certain generational recognize. It can also passed away fairly recent us very old. Wasn't he has ninety one years old. Twenty seventeen james lipton. Yeah okay carrying has a glass of water. And i'm waiting for the one that will make specific keys. Burn regis regis. I liked reaches that i agree with that. I don't think we're going to be calling regis sexy. But we'll realize redress little richard richard. I don't wanna see as david. Yes this upset. A blank. Check is brought to us by very special sponsor. Our friends at three. Okay they've reupped blank check and you know they released They delta eight products which were the first federally. Legal t. h. i. c. products sold in the usa. Since prohibition started almost ninety years ago. It's a federally legal version of the zip more functional alternative to marijuana for those who want the same great feelings without the negative side effects. Yes you don't have the you get the buzz. But you don't get the laziness. The paranoia the foggiest the anxiety that stuff and i bring up the negative side effects because i am a person who does it does not like being high. Yeah sure that's not an experience you you you seek out. Sure no. it has not happened in about fifteen years but a man. These are our kind friends at three cannot. Stop sending me stuff. I've received three boxes in the last week three three. Can i run down some of these products. David and you can feel free to but in with whatever other must read points from the copy. You feel sharing okay. Box one. three eight balls these they're like rainbow colored. Candy balls Okay he's a good usury right. They got the risk of sushi to give you an idea. They invented this whole industry. It's gonna heavy making feeling amazing yet. Be functional clear-headed. Instead of lazy in paranoid keep going fruity. Pebbles treat is a. This is a sugar cookie of course of course and you.

World News Tonight with David Muir
"david" Discussed on World News Tonight with David Muir
"All the way over to the urban areas along i ninety five could be a problem by the end of the week. Yes we have to watch this all week long and you'll be right here with us. Ginger thank you our coverage of the hurricane and this storm system still on the move tonight but we are going to move on to other major headline this monday evening. The american general who late today declared america's longest war was now over after nearly twenty years. The last seventeen lifted off from kabul afghanistan at three twenty nine eastern time saying every single. Us servicemember is now out of afghanistan. General frank mackenzie the commander of us central command saying there is a lot of heartbreak that they did not get everybody out. There are still some americans. There and there are many afghan allies. Who had hoped to get out more than one hundred twenty. Three thousand civilians were airlifted out since august fourteenth including six thousand americans and flights taking off until the end the last one taking off as i said three twenty nine. Pm eastern which in kabul was one minute to midnight before that august thirty first deadline set by president biden. General mackenzie saying the final chapter is perhaps one of the most painful with the loss of those thirteen u s servicemembers. Abc's chief foreign correspondent. Ian panel was in afghanistan when the taliban was pushed out in two thousand one tonight the taliban back in control and ian this evening and the american general who was asked to reflect on the reality that the us now leaves behind and potential threats ahead with the final flights hours of coupled. Late today four-star marine general. Frank mackenzie saying america's longest war was over after almost twenty years last c. seventeen lifted off from hamid karzai international airport on august thirtieth this afternoon at three twenty nine. Pm east coast time in the last manned aircraft is now clearing the airspace above afghanistan nearly twenty years since the attacks of nine eleven and the killing of osama bin laden in twenty eleven troops staying on the ground for another decade the general speaking of the human cost of war. The american servicemembers lost to it was not a cheap mission. The cost was two thousand. Four hundred sixty one. Us servicemembers and civilians kill and more than twenty thousand. Who were injured. Sadly that includes thirteen u s servicemembers. Who were killed last week by an isis case suicide bomber. He spoke to this painful loss of the service members this week and was asked about the remaining americans and afghan allies the interpreters who helped the us over the years. There's a lot of heartbreak associated with this departure. We did not get everybody out that we wanted to get out. The general saying this funnel chapter was perhaps one of the most painful the crowds outside the gate and the loss of the thirteenth servicemembers. When asked about the us servicemen and women that were in afghanistan. He said this every single. Us servicemember is now out of afghanistan. I can say that one hundred percent certainty and general. Mackenzie who did multiple tools in afghanistan was asked about leaving this country to taliban control as very conflicted. Actually a right now. I'm pretty much consumed with with the operational task of him. The general very matter-of-fact late today but it is a profound day for this country. Nearly twenty years later. Ian panel with us live from doha cutter tonight. In in the general mentioned the number of americans left behind is now in the low hundreds. He said there will still be efforts to get americans out. He also said the efforts to get out. Afghan allies will continue. But of course we know. The taliban is back in control. How is this going to work in the weeks. The months and perhaps the years to come right. The taliban is in control of the country but from the presence of icies k. We've seen them at the airport. They've issued a statement saying the americans have left. Afghanistan is independence the sound of gunfire in the air. The un calling for safe passage for americans and afghans but few on the ground believe. They'll owner that. David ian panel our thanks to you. You've been with us for weeks now on this story and we appreciate it. And of course america will reflect on this war. And we'll certainly honor the bravery of all of our servicemen and women over these twenty years. I wanna bring in our chief global affairs anchor martha raddatz who has been to afghanistan. So many times. Martha you and i have talked about trips to afghanistan here and what the leaders on the ground told us in recent years leading up to this moment many of them predicting some of what. We've seen transpire and we heard general. Mackenzie described the equipment left behind in afghanistan. Today twenty-seven humvees he said seventy aircraft the general saying they have been demilitarized that they'll never be driven again. We'll never be flown again. But he also noted something else that i know our viewers the american people will be concerned about one of the main missions. Here was to make sure afghanistan was never a safe haven for terrorist again and martha. You and i took note of the general talking about the two thousand isis terrorists. Now out of prison in that country exactly david hardcore fighters and the equipment general mackenzie did not talk about is the billions of dollars of military hardware abandoned by the afghan forces including six hundred thousand arms. Tens of thousands of rockets humvees those are all operational and the us continues to say that. The taliban.

Conversations
"david" Discussed on Conversations
"This is an abc. Podcast the age of seven. David mcallister win to his first ballet class in fully shorts he took to it away. The australian ballet was david's life for almost all his life growing up in suburban perth from a young age. David was pretty sure there was nothing else he wanted to do with himself..

Conversations
"david" Discussed on Conversations
"This is an abc. Podcast the age of seven. David mcallister win to his first ballet class in fully shorts he took to it away. The australian ballet was david's life for almost all his life growing up in suburban perth from a young age. David was pretty sure there was nothing else he wanted to do with himself..

Blank Check with Griffin & David
"david" Discussed on Blank Check with Griffin & David
"Ooh okay wait. Let's the lemme lemme. This is on the high rainer than i would expect way here. I wanna get i. Listen then it's off the tent so okay here we go. So here's darkstar road when you when you zoom even more. It looks like there's like one property off of that road. That's great pence. And last night i was. I was trying to figure this out because here. Here's a little line of mailboxes wrestling. That presumes there's some properties. Because i was trying to think like yeah. Could we like you know. Get a compound on dark star road. You know like david. This is what i was gonna suggest. We're starting to like look into getting now that you know the pandemic is easing up getting a studio blank. Check offices where we can record the show. We were thinking go downtown. Yeah what if we just go fucking compound benson arizona coach. Dan obey stepped pillows. Check productions on dark side star road and benson miller address to have though. At least like you could maybe get a post office box. Get mail forwarded from their whatever like is that no. That's just a weird plant. Maybe we this is turning into like a like a horror movie. I was gonna say. I find a murderer darkstar road and like shit where was taken or we see like you standing on the side of the road. But you're entirely wash. let's wait. This is from twenty twenty three all of our involvement zoom anyway. Look here's a property. is it for sale. This is twenty six straight easy. Ba- where i you guys need is a nice little double wide on on on dr darkstar road and rpm now. Now if we're being responsible david blank check recording studios should have aware of the dog sign on the door..

Blank Check with Griffin & David
"david" Discussed on Blank Check with Griffin & David
"I do not like the men on this spaceship they are uncouth and failed to appreciate my better qualities. I have something of value to contribute to this mission if they would only recognize it. Stay over lunch. I tried to improve morale and build a sense of camaraderie among the men by holding a humorous round robin discussion of the early days of the mission. My overtures were brutally rejected. These men do not want a happy ship. They are deeply sick and try to compensate by making me feel miserable. Last week was my birthday. Nobody even said happy birthday to me. Someday this podcast will be played. And then they'll feel sorry. It was too good an option not to do because for tape ray right but i just wanna share the other one. I wanted to do which david fuck. Where was it you would have had to give me. The alternate lines here The other one i wanted to do was what are you going to name it. What the new star. What are you going to name it. who cares. Don't bother me new broadcast because that is the first question right off the bat. I wanna get into this right off the bat because david texan about it but ben in our guests have not part of this conversation. I'm a little bit curious. To hear their opinion this is a podcast called blank. Check with griffin david griffin. I'm david and it's a podcast about demography directors who have massive success early on in their careers and are giving us blank. Checks make whatever crazy passionate products they want. Sometimes those checks clear and subtypes they bounce baby brew and this is a new miniseries on the films of john carpenter and david texted me about two hours ago and said what are we going to call it. What are we gonna call. Is this baby born. What are we going to call it. He said what are we going to call it. And i didn't say i don't care. I gave him two options. And david seems to have a preference. But i'm curious to hear. I don't have a strong preference than i need to hear them. Out said out loud and you guys can figure it out too because we can all figure this out milk any i may. I share an idea. I'm having please. How do we feel about the podcasts. How'd add one letter day podcast. Oh oh daily. Podcast is.

Blank Check with Griffin & David
"david" Discussed on Blank Check with Griffin & David
"On a beach. You have heat stroke or doctor and nurse and like a fucking master and all the sort of stuff right. I do think especially with how much movies are about children. There is this. I wanna say sort of like. There is a point of view too that it is not arbitrary. Even look at like a jeffrey rights. Like i don't know. I understand puzzles puzzles. That the only thing i understood all these people who are caught up in these codes and these languages and these like knowledge basis that they can right. And i think it's all about people trying to make sense of a nonsensical world especially in movies that are increasingly about absolutely bonkers bananas. Things happened to quote unquote. Everyday people right because he doesn't make movies about extraordinary heroes. He makes movies about people who somehow have these things foisted upon them right and i think there is that element of just like it's about people contending with a world that doesn't make sense and it doesn't make sense even before the nonsensical thing happens. Also think he is somewhat still confounded by the way that adults talk to each other. And i don't think he is failing to write adults directly because he doesn't get it i think he is sort of saying like it is weird that grownups just go like. Oh yeah the dow and this and that and the numbers on the dutta and that he understands more kids who are able to just sort of go like who are you. What do you do for a living. Am i sad. You know who aren't obfuscating their language and all these weird sorts of codes and no shit like that. David david david david liar. You signed griffin. I'm stressed that's why. I'm saying maxine feeling. It's a physical ization of my internal stress okay. I'm sorry you're not gonna ask why my friend obvious reasons but okay why signing the world rotten tomatoes audience scored the reason is because i got a rusty ip a rusty ip. I got a rusty. I p your ip address the thing that that's sort of like your You know what. I can't explain. Why p addresses. I don't really know. I explained the premise of what. I'm setting up here. Which is that. I rusty and i need some ip varnish okay. Did i misread. Yeah you mis read it's ip vanish. Being a little there's a new companies show and like you never know what your takeaway from the copy is going to be taking varnish. It's like some friendly hazing. Ip vanished welcome to the fam- vanished their virtual private network. Vpn dp super important tool helps.

The My Future Business™ Show
"david" Discussed on The My Future Business™ Show
"When we're told talking about his business order president network and we're gonna take a deep dive into the important role of the order appraiser and what makes a successful and the different ways to determine replacement value that say a mouthful. Isn't it data work to the show much. Here's absolutely great to have you here now. I've david inaugur just speaking little earlier about the ins and outs of the auto prize and network and it's for us to cover in a relatively short amount of time but first of all david let's say a little bit more bad. Where are you located time for you right here in the point so fantastic and it's obviously summertime they is. It is now being that. You're in the automotive industry do you. Do you have hobbies. It would wanna them because yes obviously. Yeah i spent a lot of time. Going car shows and lot of my friends have collectible cards. We i work on my own personal vehicle and settle the me and all my cures. All how automotive bug in common do you have In particularly and you collection do you just have one. I don't have you know. It's funny as appraiser. I don't have a collection. I i have a lot of clients with cars it. I end up with a lot of friends with the asked me to hold their vehicles so there you know one of my friends getting divorced we stash this car for me. And i'll keep it shirt and registered and you can drive. Different cars porsches. Ferraris exotic cars cars. Yeah i love a love having cars an always had some some really nice cars in our in our office data favorite as far as a favorite. I don't have a favorite har i. I like some obscure hers. These moscow panshir is one of my favorite ours. If i had to have one right now on san i love you know you what we've got a place called. The bird would a museum here where i live and have all of the ears of vehicles and it is an amazing experience when you go to these places and they start off with the wooden wheel type vehicle all the way up to current day and everything in between it's like going through a times and like a time warp do you. I guess my question is how back in the order appraise business. Do you go with the vehicles. We all regular basis. I appraised brass. Eric cars to eighteen ninety. So they're all you know some of their original vehicles that you know from the from the day i remember that stands out the most one of the original portions a big wagon wheel type of vehicle but it was electric back in the day. Those those original cars. That portion was a chapter man and so one of their first cars was actually electric. So when you when you're in the the guy can only imagine some of the exotic you would say guess. What are the some of the most expensive ones that you've seen there. There's been a couple that are just like my dog. just i can't believe my eyes when i see it. So one of them would be one of my clients has what's called a worry. So back in the sixties furry did not produce any convertible cars and the local importer in the united states. Wanted to import believed that they would be easier to sell flory's if they had a convertible and keep in mind back in the day. I didn't have a jewish network or part serves and so one of the first cars. They came out with a car that he wanted import. It was called was was a it was actually a. It's called berlin at convertible so his organization was called the north american race team. So they those early cars. There's ten of them in called mark in a rt. And i got on praise one of those and client one in his other update on the radio basis. And it's probably in the million dollar range that's blow and i sit he thinking to myself. I'm looking at and speaking with an encyclopedia of knowledge as somebody who has started the business in this game. I'd love to. I learn about the genesis of the organization. How did they come back. Was purely on the sesame. I needed to stay employed. And my my. I've always pardon me. The appraisal business engineering background. So i work as a as a as electrical engineer. I worked in nuclear physics and worked on all kinds of accelerator part. Quick slow readers for universities. And my job i had right before doing all appraisal business be were acquired by a company that is headquartered in colorado. And we're in california and They said that they would relocate all the everybody that needed to go out there and i declined the relocation because i'm from california i i do something california. Get another job you get and so basically out on the sesame. They offered me position. I'm helping them. Transform all the price of the californian support and everything to colorado and during that time they financed my office. My internet might cell phones. Everything i needed to run a business except for i wasn't working full time. I help them. Transition everything out where to go on the in that time period i had been doing some some some might form of appraisal or it was and my friends with asked me to do these things for him. I do it and developed a system for sending him photographs and in communicating with them value and conditional this since i had developed that i use the time that my employer with pain for to look into if it was a viable business for me to do appraisals in if i did appraisals if i wanted to do a big how would i how. How can i utilize people and local markets in florida and mean orland san diego and all different people to work together to do these appraisals on a national basis and what legal requirements to do that pitfalls. Try to try to put together some kind of a business model to wear. I mean the people people in those markets. Can you got and i can utilize.

Blank Check with Griffin & David
"david" Discussed on Blank Check with Griffin & David
"He can't imagine being six nine three. And it's like a rock. The wholesome family thing that lebron also had which was kind of a little more authentic with it or also people always in the nba always were part of what they've presented about staff as up rich grew steadily as sort of a basketball player. Happy kind of business. Get back to the fancy point where it's like. Lebron wants to be beloved in that. Lebron you constantly feel that he's thinking about how people view him and he's frustrated by people who just kind of like are comfortable in their own skin and have whatever sort of adoration they have. Bring your brain of okay. We're more phone call. Hello click. Hello hello who's this. Who's this classy man. David beckham david beckham. Yes oh my goodness. The famed footballer watched she play. You know my when. I when you were eleven. You scored the wonder goal against when when you were when i was eleven. He scored the wonder goal. Against wimbledon against neil sullivan and we talked about for days in the playground. What do you mean why would you talk about it for days. Because i went to school in england blocked you. We don't know each other. No no jones so i'm very okay anyway. What's up david beckham. How're you doing. So you in the stands at the england game recently. Doing all right. I'm looking for a way to kick my some often style. Oh interesting you are a famous clothes horses. Well yeah and you kick kick the ball. It's like if you were looking at the sense on paper. That'd be two things to go off of that. Might lead you to david beckham right. Yeah famously actually you have a fairly high voice. But i think you're probably just being a little gruff with me just to sort of sound cool. I'm sorry let me adjust my mic. Anyway look backs snow name. And you're now you own a a soccer team in miami. Thank you. I know you like clothes. I know you like to look stylish. Yeah i want to tell you. The mac weldon is so much more than just underwear. Okay got t shirts okay follows. Yes lot up some shorts. Okay hands all right whims. Ooh and so much more sounds good. I would. It is good for example. I could picture myself diving into macworld and swim. Line with trunk board.

Blank Check with Griffin & David
"david" Discussed on Blank Check with Griffin & David
"They've created versus it being like in an arena but also that when lebron's training them he's training them in marvin the martian spaceship. They're not playing on a court. Original movie has shit where they're like they get this fucking acme like gymnasium right. And they're like working shit out and you get the sense even though it's not some fucking rocky for training montage that jordan has like really work to try to get tunes into shape well and when they show up. They're good like they're good at what they do. And they're playing the game of basketball. Where if you score basket. It's two point is are a little different strands the other thing. I also aren't super power. This is another thing. They're really big. And the really mean and the very top but they don't have cartoon powers. Looney tunes are able to later. Come in with the cartoon powers and use them to their advance. Well and the other thing that we talked about too is that the villain in the first base. Jam is sort of like this. Kim jong il figures huge connect. Thank you yes. He's evil and wants to continue but he wants to because he cares about like basketball and like once these people to play basketball for him. There's a bit lesser yellow is seen as it is swab him or actually like there is a basis in reality for algebra. It's chilling well. It's just the algorithm is like. Look i have solved culture right. I am the algorithm. I have decided that if lebron went to fucking hogwarts that would be good when he's told no he's like all right so w basketball algorithms motivations and that's the basketball has just take him like right. Why did you. Why are you playing this game of basketball Like you understand the first one. At least there's some like okay. The game of basketball is like there's some reverence for the game of basketball. It's okay if we can beat him. We can have. I mean whereas algeria mc delete these fucking people. What's stopping you completely doesn't make any sense. I've heard that if you say server verse twenty times it becomes a thing. It becomes the case just bananas. The millions of people puerta. This movie begins with the brunt being pitch this movie. And he's like this. Is david david david. Correct you because this is my biggest gripe with the entire film They do not pitch him. This movie they pitch him wonders. Three thousand which is stupid. Fucking service where they're saying. We have this whole catalog. They will digitize him and then put him into your social media following so big that that will like add value to our back catalogue. Here's the biggest fucking question about this movie. And the thing i think that is ruinous in this premise. Because i think this is a cursed movie. I think trying to make another space jam as a bad idea. It doesn't make sense the only reason to do it. The only reason for this movie to exist is because lebron is competing in his mind with the legacy of jordan right that he feels like. That's the thing i have to do to prove. I'm always in conversation about who is the greatest of all time and what my influences. And if i don't do this big cultural thing that jordan did he's going to have that up on me right. I do think that sort of irresistible to him right. No it's also kind of like. Can you possibly the challenge of the same thing as saying that. Sort of an the some real feeling of insecurity with this film. But david do you remember after the after the cavs beat the warriors in the finals. Lebron was on the shop..

Blank Check with Griffin & David
"david" Discussed on Blank Check with Griffin & David
"Is narrating john. Cleese right and you have this sort of like planet. Earth cogliano scott. He's style slow-motion yorker footage right on camera hammer in this movie as well in addition and this movie right. Who's this who's playing uncles he jack. Whitehall okay david. This is jack whitehall. British comedian starve his own sitcom now. Hollywood is trying to make him a leading man. He also plays emily blunt brother in jungle cruise. Who is apparently the first openly gay character in the disney movie. They keep saying oh my okay wait not big now and then he grows big overnight. Just beethoven yeah poppy. This is hilarious. Because there's the thing he's huge guys'll how big years i mean look. Here's my i complain about this movie. It takes place in new york city. This premise doesn't work in your city. There is no space big enough for this dog right. But that's the whole the ho- keenan. The whole thing is like there. He broke away. 'cause he's so heavy guys. He's jokes. come on big city. It's like you know we all know. Clifford lives in an anonymous suburban town. But what if you know for the movie we level up. Why are you so in a ball. You know people do that. That's working at no feel like it's a things just looks like shit and he's not big enough. He just ate a dog okay. That was touch. That was good now. When the when the first teaser came out people were complaining about the color of clifford right that was sort of like muddy red saturated and now i feel like he's he's more saturated but it's dark red. It's like a blood red clifford in this movie appears to be like maybe the size of a suv or he's not big enough. How fucking book do you want him to be. As opposed to be like the child you know is like riding on him and his barely noticeable like. He's supposed to be huge well. This is just the first movie they have to go somewhere in the sequels. These may be still a puppy. I'm with david. I think they fucked up. They fucked up big time. I mean here. A couple of things i want to say about it one. I understand what you're saying david. The premise is clifford. Big dog big city. Right as i remember it from the original clifford book. Perhaps i am wrong but my memory is that they live in the city and then once he gets so big they moved to the suburbs because they can't fit him in any more rights. Were this trailer loses. Me and credibility is the moment that they wake up and he suddenly big and he hasn't destroyed their entire new york city apartment. That the ceilings are high enough to fit him that he can walk from room to room that they live wholeheartedly. I mean with high ceilings. No less come on. I think the only place in new york city that clifford could fit into is jeffrey epstein mansion. And i'm sorry does feel like that's the only space big enough for him and i watched this movie trailer and i see that clifford is fitting under the roof. And i ask. How did they afford this place. Where did they work. and what did they know. you know. you don't make this kind of money honestly to have clifford size apartment. Yeah i my problem is that the movie looks just did nothing interesting. Happened except clifford was running around except right at the dog so that was sort of interesting. He spent the dog out but still little tension there. Now let me say this. I hope this isn't breaking any andy. I forget that. I signed the fucking for years ago. Or whatever from my memory of the audition sides that. I read the conflict of this movie. Is that geneticists. Want to use clifford to grow other animals to be this size to solve world hunger. That's part of the log line for this movie so it's definitely leading with that that there's like an oak element to this where where the girl doesn't want clifford to be turned into food. I think that's what tony males who doesn't want to be like a science experiment. Or whatever i think tony hale might be the villain. She doesn't want clifford to be fed to the gaping mob capitalism. Okay whatever. now. I'm not i know. No i'm not gonna truck with this. You fucked up. I don't try and sell me on Well clifford yeah. It's about no it's not. You should just had a big red dog who causes trouble for ninety minutes and then got out of there. You honestly does it. Beethoven have science wanna can have beethoven to write turner member. He's like wait a second. They wanna they wanna capture beethoven to comedy show or they want to capture beethoven second. No no no. That was really great. Hold on hold holds. David hold thank you. I guess for applause david david. They're still going there. I mean those standing. Oh right there. I have to go i have to go. I think maybe beethoven. They're just trying to euthanize them. I just remember beethoven at the end. He's like captured by veteran after free. Beethoven it's a drool scientist. Actually but i think it's just like kind of a classic dogcatcher thing like i don't think they want to do like a science experiment on beethoven. So clifford has more energy. What rosie perez and david alan grier in this movie. I believe david allen gears the voice of clifford the big red dog. Wow i might seek to see that david allen grier vocal for clifford is how he is credited talks. I don't think so. I think he just barks in the books. He didn't talk and then they did. The fucking cartoon show that turned into clifford's really big movie. And that was john ritter as clifford could talk but only two other dogs cool. Sure love to be a fly on that wall. You know what i mean. I don't know what you mean adult here. Dogs talk to each other especially a big dog talking to a small dog. Like i mean what would it be like. That's a podcast right. There big go big dog. Small dog griffin and the episode. Now begging you know some of it's over. I gotta go chiffon fallon's in it yes. She's great rodriguez plays alonzo. bodega owner. Sounds good all right. I'll close it out so this blank. Check with griffin. And david i forgot all of it so actually know griffin has to do it or you can do it. Maybe for listening. Please remember to rate review and subscribe. Thank you to marie. Bharti for our social you joe. Bowen and pat rounds for our work. Thank you lee. Montgomery and the great american novel four our theme song. No research was done for this episode. What's true note you blankie dot ready dot com for.

Photography Radio
"david" Discussed on Photography Radio
"On a rock and the sandwiches than got the sun umbrella they got a rub floss hola and if they ask me once they must have one hundred times. How long is this going to take. We've only got stories. I think. I think they're not stand up snaps. They're not snaps their their their their their experiences. Third package there. There's a story with the morning. I mean there's a little bit of text. She introduced a new book with that says joining us all important walking nookie sitting waiting thinking rethinking and finally creation from putting brackets off the. If you're lucky goes it is a big journey. But i think is. I'm enjoying the journey. That's fine and and being aware that it's going work out David this has been remarkable. I have enjoyed every minute of this. The photography is fantastic. The insights are profound. Thank you very much more than welcome. I've enjoyed frames because photography the lungs on paper visit us at. Www dot read frames dot com..

Emendo
"david" Discussed on Emendo
"Hello everyone. In Japan Neha nominal song, konichiwa I'm David Brom. The CEO of mental Biotherapeutics, we are very happy to become a part of Avengers and just group for us at the men, do as a company that developed its own science and beliefs in and great job, and bringing cures, finding a reliable, and trustworthy partner is a key element and we have found that with the antis off and more than that with Madison. And we look forward for the the collaboration. Hi. Precision is essential for therapeutic Gene editing and the Mandos plant platforms to new Clause optimizations that eliminates off targets and and allow manipulation only at the sites of interest and therefore provide safe and effective. Generic medicines. In addition to that the high priests, our high Precision capabilities, allow us to track meets single alleles, in addition, to bllack Gene editing by doing that, we open the window for treating more than a hundred additional diseases with Gene editing. So beyond being important for safety reasons, and then does high-precision capabilities birth. Was to perform a little specific editing. This actually opens the opens up the option to treat many on otherwise untrue diseases by by Gene editing such as such as dominant negative. Negative diseases. So on top of page performing b, l a big change in editing, which the market market potential of is estimated as eighty billion dollars only in the US Iraq. Had to that, a little specific editing capabilities. You, you get a market potential of additional, a hundred billion dollars and down to is practically pie in the Pioneer in addressing this, this, this vast vast diseases. So yep. Vision, our vision, the lines with answers Division and and fruits. First of all, and above all is to bring cures to as many people when that many diseases and bar as possible combining the, the scientific capabilities of both companies and juices and Achieve therapy, gene therapy world. And the Mendoza, gene-editing space does exactly that. And I believe that together we can become a global gene therapy, Gene editing company and Achieve exactly that. Your mother son, Gumball, thank you..

Blank Check with Griffin & David
"david" Discussed on Blank Check with Griffin & David
"Mouth-watering seasonal recipes delivered right to your door you get to skip a trip to the grocery store and you get to have a little fun in your kitchen. Learning maybe to cook. Maybe if you're not an experienced cook or if you just wanna you know with something really quick. You're you're you're doing that or if you just want to hone your jerry impression. That is the hardest. Jerry do because it's one of the only phrases in which he doesn't go up at the end of the sentence go. He's not asking your question. No question a hellofresh. They cut out stressful meal planning grocery store trips. You can enjoy cooking. Get dinner on the table in about thirty minutes or less. They got all kinds a quick and easy meals. They got fifteen to twenty minutes enters. They got breakfast on the go. They got all kinds of options. You know if you want to maybe go gluten free or you want. i'm looking you know. Gourmet plus surf and turf takeout favorites. They got plenty of different things for you to pick from something for everyone to enjoy. These recipes are designed and tested by professional chefs and nutritional experts they got delicious and simplicity pretty good griffin and it's twenty eight percent cheaper than a shopping at your local grocery store seventy two percent deeper than a restaurant meal. And let's also say in the past you might have heard us do ads for green chef. I believe slimmer some of those ads for us. Sure well well. Green chef is now owned by hellofresh and with a wider array of meal. Plans to choose from. There's something for everyone. I if you asking me. David love switching between the brands. I switch four or five times.

ABC Radio MELBOURNE
"david" Discussed on ABC Radio MELBOURNE
"David Asal on ABC radio. And welcome to Western Australia. Thanks for joining us here on ABC evenings and we were playing around with birds and songs and coming up with some lovely little combinations. Some dovetailing if you like. Of songs and birds, including the likes of Gala Lilia. Yes, that's a thinker or something like the look of Dove and paddle. I was a word that was used The bird that was used no less. And Tracy and Tim Byrne said David because I claim not to know apart alone, at least not to know exactly what one looked like. Diver, You shame on you, David not to know a Ozzy bird. You've probably seen plenty of Pablo's in your garden along with Ravens. In fact, I have been looking at Pablo's and spotted paddle. Oh, it is the most dainty bird. It is a beautiful little bird. It looks to me like a Is it a It's finch in shape, but it has this dusty city wing with White, the Nilla white ovals upon the serving in ascending size on its wing and a little vanilla streak across its eye and this beautiful Ah, some charcoal. Trying to come up the right word for it. It's it has like a frosting. To it with a golden breast. It's a gorgeous bird and try seek Take it all back. I need to know a lot more about Pablo's. Maybe we should get When we get growing long gone, he can tell us all about Pablo's and why I should know a lot more about them. We're gonna be migratory birds very short. They're going to hit off to Sumatra. It is for our founding translation segment. We have it every Wednesday night and tonight we'll be talking. About words that are both in Indonesian and some words that are in the language of lamp, all the lampoon language of Southern Sumatra, looking forward to hearing what those words are and how they can tell us so much about another culture. These are the words that have no simple translation in English. The words that always are the most. Insightful about how another culture think some breeze and talks and X Before we head off to parts. North. West. Let's go to a tune that captures the idea of travel. In keeping with the bird idea. It's from a Canadian singer called till Young Crazy horse, of course, is his backup bands come out in 2013. It's a semi autobiographical song, this one from that album, psychedelic pill on this, If you think about It is very much the road that they're Young has traveled. It's called twisted Road and a society comes out of an album called Psychedelic Pill, Twisted Road..