35 Burst results for "Dickerson"

"dickerson" Discussed on Thinking Crypto News & Interviews

Thinking Crypto News & Interviews

04:30 min | 3 months ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Thinking Crypto News & Interviews

"Is Greg Dickerson, who's no stranger to the show, great, great to have you on. Hey, Tony, it's good to be back. Good to see you. Greg, well, you know, I wanted to start the year off with getting a holistic perspective of the markets and you're the person that I thought of to speak to to talk about real estate stocks and crypto. But we have the fed still at it, you know, still looking to raise rates to fight inflation. What is your outlook for this year? What the fed may do? Yeah, so I'm very optimistic. I think we may find a bottom in the markets. We might start to see, we'll talk about real estate later, but we're going to see where that's headed. So we're going to get a lot of information here in Q one the next few months. So as far as the fed goes, the information they're going to be looking for and looking at number one is going to be the inflation report. That for December, we're going to see what that looks like and if we continue to see the trend of inflation declining, that's good, positive news for the fed, the job market is still a little bit strong for them. Inflation is still high in two main areas. Food and housing and shelter and as we both know in real estate, you know, rents are really high for a lot of people, a lot of areas starting to correct a little bit in some areas, but that's off a very high distorted levels. So there's still some work to do there. So that's what the feds really looking at. So the fed is going to continue to potentially reduce the pace of the rate hikes. But they're going to leave them there as long as it takes until inflation is down to 2%. They have not come off that 2% target yet. They might potentially have to this year, depending on what inflation really looks like. How things are going and we're really going to learn a lot about the consumer once we get through the holidays because what we're coming off of is pandemic cabin fever. So people were getting out, traveling, spending, then you add the holidays to the mix and that stimulated a lot of spending and stimulated growth in the economy. So what we're going to see now with earnings and things like that and the consumer, we're going to see, you know, is the consumer really into stress and they really pulling back. We're starting to see some cracks in the real estate market with mortgages and delinquencies and lates. We're starting to see some cracks in consumer debt and the banks are going to be the first to report in queue. Well, next couple of weeks, I guess, when reporting starts, earnings start coming out. So we're going to learn a lot about the consumer, their bank accounts, their credit. Things like that.

fed Greg Dickerson Greg Tony cabin fever
Cardinals score twice in bottom of the 9th, beat Braves 6-5

AP News Radio

00:34 sec | 7 months ago

Cardinals score twice in bottom of the 9th, beat Braves 6-5

"The cardinal score twice in the 9th inning to rally past the brave 6 to 5 St. Louis third baseman Nolan are not overturned from the paternity list to go four for four with a two run home run It's a good win against a good team and you know we didn't want to lose back to back games I know I didn't have a hard time watching yesterday just because when you're not there it kind of hurts you know it doesn't feel good missing games but it was just good to come up with a good win today and we have a chance to win a series of more Koi Dickerson's infield single tied the game before kindley Jansen walked Tyler O'Neill with a bases loaded to force home the game winner Travis Darnell hits a three run shot for Atlanta Mike Reeves St. Louis

Nolan St. Louis Koi Dickerson Kindley Jansen Tyler O'neill Travis Darnell Mike Reeves Atlanta
 Cardinals' Goldschmidt has 2 HR, 5 RBIs in 8-3 win over Cubs

AP News Radio

00:34 sec | 7 months ago

Cardinals' Goldschmidt has 2 HR, 5 RBIs in 8-3 win over Cubs

"Paul Goldschmidt hit two home runs and drove in 5 as the Cardinals defeated the cubs 8 to three Goldschmidt has a great chance of winning the Triple Crown as he leads the national league in average RBIs and second in home runs If anything happens and you know I'll be great and if not that's great too and for me just try to take it day by day try when I said literally just help us win we're in the race trying to win the division so that's where all my focus is and like I said if anything happens it is what it is Tommy Edmond and Corey Dickerson chipped in with three hits each with Dickerson at one point having ten straight hits over three games The Cardinals took three out of 5 in the series David Schuster Chicago

Paul Goldschmidt Goldschmidt Cardinals Cubs National League Tommy Edmond Corey Dickerson Dickerson David Schuster Chicago
Zach McKinstry homers as Cubs beat Cardinals 7-1

AP News Radio

00:30 sec | 7 months ago

Zach McKinstry homers as Cubs beat Cardinals 7-1

"Zach mckinstry and Nico Horner were two of the cubs hitting stars in a 7 one downing of the cardinals that gained street belted a two run Homer and had three RBIs while Horner had three hits Jan Gomes drove in a pair for the cubs who have split the first four games of their 5 game series Lars nubar homered for the red birds and Corey Dickerson went four for four The cards dropped to 17 and 5 in August Rowan wick got 5 outs for the win after Luke Farrell had his first cubs appearance since 2018 Miles Michaelis took the loss I'm Dave ferry

Zach Mckinstry Nico Horner Cubs Jan Gomes Lars Nubar Corey Dickerson Cardinals Horner Homer Red Birds Rowan Wick Luke Farrell Miles Michaelis Dave Ferry
"dickerson" Discussed on Longform Podcast

Longform Podcast

05:10 min | 7 months ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Longform Podcast

"Wayward people who are foisted upon us when, in fact, Americans are clamoring every day to hire undocumented labor. But also the public safety, of course. And just the prevalence of violence and insecurity is, of course, huge for people. And it's far more significant than whatever deterrent strategy one White House or another is cooking up on any given day. There is some evidence that on an individual level, a specific person who's caught crossing the border illegally and is prosecuted might be less likely to do it again than somebody who isn't caught, but it's a really a drop in the bucket when you look at overall trends and overall numbers compared to those other factors. And again, that's something that I feel like is important to infuse in the reporting and remind people of because one of the things that I think the Trump administration did was make people think that immigration is up to The White House. That's just not how our system works. That's not how laws are made. And Trump was so obsessed with the topic that it made people think that now Biden, you're in office and what are you going to do to our immigration system? And there are changes that white houses can make. But I try to make the point in the story that it's kind of the absence of any movement from Congress that gives rise to these harebrained ideas that can be really, really damaging as White House's flail, you know, because the consequences or the situation at the border reflects on The White House, whether or not The White House can do very much to change it. Yeah, and many of the issues that are being discussed in this story are issues that exist in Europe. They exist in Asia. This isn't like a early in the story people sort of talk about it. I was like, oh, this is a problem that we're going to solve during an administration rather than sort of a human constant that is an issue in every generation is a major political force and that very frequently you see sort of like history repeating itself for you as a reporter. Where do you go from here? What do you feel like the next part of this story that you want to tell? Not necessarily this story, but the story of immigration, what's out there that you kind of want to start working on? This isn't totally an answer to your question, but I do want to just mention that when you talk about what's next, do that. A lot of separated families are starting to tell their own stories and their oral historians who are taking those stories. And so I look forward to even though it will be very difficult, you know, hearing directly about the consequences of this one policy so for me, I don't totally know yet, but actually a lot of people have been describing me and conversations about this piece as an immigration reporter and I really am supposed to theoretically write about anything at the Atlantic. That's my mandate. So I'll probably do some totally unrelated stories too because I'm lucky enough to have that flexibility. But like I said, I still feel like there's a lot of good that I can do because I understand the system that's such a pain to get up to speed on. So most people don't want to do it. And so I want to continue in that work. Until I feel like I've been able to make a real difference. If you were talking to a young reporter who wanted to write about this kind of stuff, what advice do you feel like would be helpful getting your start building sources, understanding what's actually going on? I would suggest that a young reporter just really lean into the complexity within the immigrants that you plan to write about within also the people you plan to write about who sit in favor of or in opposition of immigration. All of these stereotypes and tropes that exist about immigrants are just completely useless, immigrants are full people, just like anybody else. And the quickest way to lose your audience is to try to oversimplify somebody's experience or make any one person seem like they're perfect or like they're evil. I think it's not a way to move the conversation forward. You know, in terms of building sources, developing expertise really helps because people who are risking their job by talking to a reporter don't want to have to kind of teach them. They want to have efficient conversations with somebody who they feel like is respectful enough of their time to study up beforehand. And then when it comes to connecting with immigrant communities, I think it's sort of acknowledging, hey, I'm an outsider. And this is an imposition. And it would be very generous for you to give me any of your time. But if you don't want to, that's okay too. And kind of be gentle with it and recognize how scary that can be for vulnerable groups at times. Try to just lay the stakes out for people really clearly and that usually helps. Thank

White House Trump administration Biden Trump Congress Asia Europe Atlantic
"dickerson" Discussed on Longform Podcast

Longform Podcast

07:17 min | 7 months ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Longform Podcast

"And sort of assumed at a baseline that any concerns that people raised were bad faith concerns, just from secret liberals who were trying to stop them from doing what they wanted to do. In some cases, that was true, but in a lot of cases, it was people who were just saying, no, you know, based on my expertise, this actually isn't possible. There's some of this and I'm blanking on the name, but Michael Lewis wrote sort of a short book about the turnover of civil servants during the Trump administration. And both the book and your piece are, I feel like sort of defenses of the apolitical bureaucracy or in this case more cautionary tales of what happens without and apolitical bureaucracy in place. Thinking about this as a reporter, what is the voice of the apolitical bureaucracy and how does the apolitical bureaucracy advocate for itself in the face of extremely political pushback? I think that this story is both a case for the apolitical bureaucracy and also an opportunity to point out to them or to voters who may not understand their role in our society that being sort of too apolitical or feeling too passive or feeling too kind of helpless in the face of changing political wins. I think also gave rise to this policy. You know, to answer your question, the apolitical bureaucracy is huge and often conflicted, they're kind of like any other disgruntled workforce who rolls their eyes every time an administration changes and says, you know, got new people and coming in and they think they know what they're talking about and they don't, but they also have a clarity about what works about what unintended consequences can come from really dramatic policy changes, particularly policy changes that impact children and families. I heard from some career border enforcement officials, for example, folks who really believe in harsh enforcement at the border, that they would never have supported separating families if they know that it was under consideration just based on initiatives in the past that had taken place where there was a huge public backlash. I remember hearing about one operation in Las Vegas at the border patrol did to try to break up smuggling rings by stopping buses that were traveling throughout the city of Las Vegas and just arresting anybody who couldn't prove they were here legally. They ended up picking up a lot of moms, you know, a lot of nannies and house cleaners who were supposed to pick up their kids at school that day. And border patrol officials were summoned to Congress to testify within days of this happening. There was a huge backlash because, you know, it's a subjective business. There's a huge number of people in the United States are coming into the United States every day who can face these enforcement efforts and you don't have to focus them on kids and families in order to be able to utilize some of these techniques. And so based on that alone, if they had been allowed to participate, they would have objected, but what happened here is that they were, of course, just left out of the room. In putting together the scenes that make up the story, you have this blend of incredibly visceral and emotional scenes of kids and detention centers, parents being separated physically torn away from kids. And then pretty banal scenes that I imagine taking place on those kind of like tan facing couches, I don't know, probably like imagining a scene from veep or something as they setting for this ends. How did you strike that balance? How did you decide how much of each world to live in in the story and what kind of a journey that might take the reader on? I wanted to make sure that the reader kept in their mind throughout the story, the families who were impacted again throughout this chronology. You have separations that start in the middle of 2017 and they go on for many months before the administration acknowledges that they're happening while these debates are playing out, perhaps on the tan couches that you're envisioning. You know, I didn't want to let the reader forget about the families. And that was a challenge because the individuals who made these decisions forgot about the families. And in these very, very, very long interviews that I did, they forgot about the families. And as they were explaining to me, why they said X or Y and a meeting or why they didn't, why they stayed quiet, why they felt uncomfortable why they trusted one person's advice, you know, who said this was going to be fine or didn't or questioned it. It was just the families would completely fall away. They would fall out of these conversations. And so I wanted to make sure that couldn't happen to a reader, but I also, I think sprinkled it in for the most part, somewhat gingerly. And maybe there should have been more, actually. I don't know the answer to that. I've written a lot of stories about separated families, and I think there are a lot more to be done, but it's a very painful story. I mean, I've had a lot of people tell me that they are having nightmares after reading the story and crying after reading the story or dry heaving, reading the story, I mean, especially like new parents have a really hard time with the story. It is very painful. I really wanted people to get to the end of the piece. That was my main goal. That was my editor's main goal. And so we tried to strike a balance. I don't know if it was the perfect one. Yeah, I mean, this is a really strange thing to say, but those firsthand accounts of what happened in the descent detention center are sort of nauseatingly repetitious. There's a certain saturation point where it's like, don't tell me another one, you know, don't tell me another person's experience that is similarly horrible. Whereas, as you go through the Washington story, you realize how, for many of the people who are at these meetings, this was probably just like one crappy meeting that day full of crappy meetings. And everyone can have their own opinion, but for me, it felt like the right mix where you sort of you visit that emotion early on and then you're detached from it from a long time and then you sort of come back again at the end. You're right that for a lot of people it was just a crappy meeting. I mean, that's one of the things you just reminded me that I heard over and over again, you know, people would say things in defense of themselves and not realize that it made them sound worse, not better. And one of those things was we were so busy, we had so much going on, you know, you reporters make it seem like we were just sitting around talking about family separations all day.

Trump administration Michael Lewis Las Vegas United States Congress Washington
"dickerson" Discussed on Longform Podcast

Longform Podcast

05:34 min | 7 months ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Longform Podcast

"With Caitlyn Dickerson. Hello, welcome, Caitlin. Hi, thank you. Very nice getting to talk to you. You have a pretty new story out and the Atlantic. I have to make a confession actually, which is that I'm 15 minutes late to this interview and the reason is that I decided I was going to reread the story and massively miss gauged how long it would take me to read it. So how many words is this story? I think I saw somewhere that it's like 28,500 or 29,000 words. So I've miscalculated in the same way that you did several times. My editor did the same thing as we were working through it. Every time we passed it back and forth, we said, okay, I'll get this to you tomorrow and then like a week would pass and one of us would have to send an email saying, I'm so sorry. It just wasn't done yet. For people listening, tell me what the story is and sort of the journey it took from it coming to you to getting published. I know that's a broad question, but we can dig into that progressively. So to start this is the story of family separations, more than 5000 families that were separated while Donald Trump was president. I was covering immigration for The New York Times when this took place. For the first year and a half, it really wasn't being openly talked about by the administration. And so there was a fair amount to figure out there in terms of why this was kind of kept secret or denied for as long as it was, and then you had zero tolerance, this policy that was announced in the summer of 2018 made it all public when you had far, far more separations that took place. And it's really the anatomy of family separations. Who, when, where, why, how? How did you think about structuring the story and what were the major strands that you felt like you needed to weave together to tell that story? There were a lot. So let's see if I can remember all of them. My editor Scott stossel and I talked a lot about structure as I was reporting because the amount of material that I had was just massive. And we wanted to get it all in. And in trying to figure out how to do that, we of course talked about a more conventional approach, which might have involved close interviews with one or two families whose stories you'd weave in and out throughout the piece, going back and forth between Washington and one family's experience. And we decided not to do that for a few reasons, one is that interviewing separated families is really hard. I mean, for years, have been asking people to sit down and tell me about the most difficult things they've ever experienced. That's kind of the life of a reporter, but interviewing separated families I've found is just on a whole other scale of pain and trauma. I've watched people have really intense PTSD flashbacks right in front of me. And I never wanted to risk asking a family to open up in that way. If I didn't know I was going to be able to use all that material, the worst thing that you can do is waste somebody's time in a way that causes them pain. I was also really cognizant of the fact that the media and the media coverage of family separation is part of the story. And I found during the separations and also in my more recent reporting, a lot of the people responsible told me they felt that reporters had exaggerated their coverage of families separations that they cherry picked the worst cases to make it seem worse than it actually was. And of course, that isn't true, but I didn't want to write a story that would be vulnerable to that kind of accusation, Caitlyn just picked the worst possible story that's not reflective of the whole. And then I think there was kind of just a time and space consideration and there was just so much material about the bureaucracy and about the people who are responsible for this, that you had to kind of throw structural conventions out the window and just go with for the most part chronology in order to get it all in and have it make sense to a reader. Returning to the story I was struck on the second time reading that really the bulk of the story is mostly located within Washington, bureaucracy, which is not a place like if I was like setting a movie, I would be like, oh yeah, this is fun and entertaining, which is part of the story. But I was struck that the stuff about family separation was stuff. I was previously aware of. I remember when this stuff started coming out, the part I was completely unaware of was the story of how that became policy. So when did you pick up the policy strand and where did it start for you? I picked that strand up almost right away because like you, I was really deeply familiar with the stories of separated families. I spent a lot of time with them during 2017 and 18. I also relied on a lot of government sources during that period of time, but it was a subset of people and I hadn't talked to everybody who was in positions of authority who had made decisions. And so I started my reporting with them. And right away, all these complicated workplace dynamics, these personal identity dynamics and political dynamics.

Caitlyn Dickerson Scott stossel Caitlin Donald Trump Atlantic The New York Times Washington PTSD trauma Caitlyn
"dickerson" Discussed on Longform Podcast

Longform Podcast

02:43 min | 7 months ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Longform Podcast

"And welcome to the 500th episode of the long form podcast. I'm Erin lammer. I'm here with my co host Evan ratliff and max linsky. Aaron, I thought you said we weren't going to make a big deal about a 500. It was a fake out. I wanted to get you back on your heels. It's not only the 500th episode. This month marks ten years of the long form podcast. Hello. Any feelings? Any reactions? You guys, like always, I have no feelings of any kind. Feelings free over here. Max numb to it all. I just want to send a big thank you out to everyone who's been a part of the show over the years all of the guests. Everyone who's worked on this show. We've had many editors, many interns. It's not just the three people who are presently on the microphone here, but dozens of people who've helped us make this show, whether they were guests, collaborators, thank you to everyone and of course the biggest biggest thank you to all the listeners. Ten years. It's a lot of listening. Yeah. I wonder how many listeners we have that have made it all ten years from the very beginning. A lot of people have told me that they've listened to every episode now, I wanted to do like a quiz that. Yeah, I guess I have one feeling also gratitude for all of those people, including the listeners who write with constructive criticism. I just think to shout those people out, too, because they validate my fears. And so it's nice when those people write and tell us how we could be doing a better job. I don't think those emails go to my inbox anymore because I haven't gotten constructive or non constructive criticism since like 2017. Listeners for a ten year anniversary gift. Sundar and an email. Aaron Lamar, Gmail dot com. And Aaron, who is on the show this week. This week, I talked to Caitlin Dickerson, you may have seen her article in the Atlantic about family separation under the Trump administration. It's an incredible story. It's a continuation of reporting that she's been doing about immigration previously at The New York Times and before that at NPR. It's one of the first stories that I've ever read that really explains how policy gets made at the Washington level and then follows that policy to where it affects people's lives at the border. Really interesting discussion very, very complex reporting task that I think she really has built the skills to do over time. Very, very glad that you got to talk to her. Thanks to vox, our partners with whom we make this show. And now here's Aaron

Erin lammer Evan ratliff max linsky Aaron Aaron Lamar Caitlin Dickerson Max Trump administration Sundar Atlantic NPR The New York Times Washington
The Democrats' Inflation Reduction Act Isn't Reducing Anything

The Ben Shapiro Show

01:40 min | 8 months ago

The Democrats' Inflation Reduction Act Isn't Reducing Anything

"What is really sort of floating the democratic vote here is not the polling data. It is the notion instead that somehow spending more money is going to fix this. So they are all hot and bothered. Very, very hot on the idea that this quote unquote inflation reduction act is going to fix all of their problems. So what exactly happened here? There's a giant Bill. We are talking about hundreds of billions of dollars in spending. Joe Manchin, who had been concerned about both deficits and inflation. He said that he was not going to sign on to build back better. But now he's signing on to this. So why exactly is he signing on to this inflation reduction act? And what exactly is the inflation reduction act in the first place? Well, first of all, it's another one of these misnamed acts. So Democrats come up with names for the acts that really have nothing to do with the content of the act. Build back better, had nothing to do with the actual infrastructure. Inflation reduction has nothing to do with actual inflation reduction. In fact, according to heritage and Matthew Dickerson, who's the director of the federal budget at the heritage foundation, he says after more than a year of expressing his concerns about the inflation of impact, the impact of inflation. Senator Manchin has signed off on a massive tax and spending bill that would only push prices for working families even higher. Biden's $1.9 trillion American rescue plan, a stimulus spending bill in March 2021 was the match that lit the inflationary fire. Well, now they're back for more. The so called inflation reduction act of 2022 only would add to the inflationary pain families are already feeling thanks to hundreds of billions in new government spending and job destroying tax hikes. The legislation's proponents argue that over the next year the bill is higher taxes would offset new spending. And it's true that recent massive federal deficits financed by the Federal Reserve and driven by excessive government spending have resulted in crippling inflation, but the inflation reduction act doubles down on the same bad fiscal policy that has caused inflation in the first place.

Joe Manchin Matthew Dickerson Senator Manchin Heritage Foundation Biden Federal Reserve
Paul DeJong homers again after promotion, Cards top Nats

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | 8 months ago

Paul DeJong homers again after promotion, Cards top Nats

"Andre Ponte and Paul de young led the Cardinals to a 5 zero win over the nationals Poland scattered 5 hits over 8 plus innings for his first road victory He struck out 8 walked one and helped the red birds finish four and four on their road trip coming out of the all star break De young homered for the second straight day since ending the minor league demotion this weekend Corey Dickerson also Homer for St. Louis which broke it open with a three run forth against losing pitcher Josiah gray Washington finished 6th and 19 in July of mid rumors that Nats are ready to part with Juan Soto and Josh bell I'm Dave fairy

Andre Ponte Paul De Young Red Birds Cardinals Corey Dickerson Poland Josiah Gray Washington Homer St. Louis Juan Soto Josh Bell Dave Fairy
Mikolas, Pujols lead Cardinals over Phillies 6-1

AP News Radio

00:34 sec | 9 months ago

Mikolas, Pujols lead Cardinals over Phillies 6-1

"Miles by close allows one run over 7 and one third innings to lead the Cardinals to a 6 to one win over the Phillies as the redbird salvage has split in the four game series Corey Dickerson hits a two run home run and drives in three playing in just his third game since returning from the IL It is nice to you know feel what I've been feeling since I've been hurt What I've been working on when I went down I felt really good down there and be able to translate have good at bats and slow it down really feel good Rhys Hoskins homers for the Phillies who see third baseman Alec bohm to part the game with a dislocated left ring finger Mike Reeves St. Louis

Corey Dickerson Phillies Cardinals Rhys Hoskins Alec Bohm Mike Reeves St. Louis
Goldschmidt homers, runs hit streak to 25 as Cards beat Cubs

AP News Radio

00:39 sec | 10 months ago

Goldschmidt homers, runs hit streak to 25 as Cards beat Cubs

"Scoring early and often the Cardinals crushed the cubs 14 5 in a Friday matinee at Wrigley Field St. Louis hit 5 home runs on the day including two by Corey Dickerson I try to enjoy the game No matter what But it was a great team victory We battled the plate and got it going It was a good day overall Paul Goldschmidt also went deep his 12th round tripper on the season which runs his hitting streak to 25 games Tommy Edmond had three hits and both Goldschmidt and Nolan Gorman drove in three runs for the cubs Patrick wisdom had a pair of hits including his 12th home run and he drove in four on the day David Schuster Chicago

Wrigley Field St. Louis Corey Dickerson Paul Goldschmidt Cubs Cardinals Tommy Edmond Nolan Gorman Patrick Wisdom Goldschmidt David Schuster Chicago
After Mets lose Scherzer, Alonso HR in 10th beats Cards 7-6

AP News Radio

00:39 sec | 11 months ago

After Mets lose Scherzer, Alonso HR in 10th beats Cards 7-6

"The mets pull down a dramatic 7 to 6 victory over the Cardinals on penal antos two one Homer in the bottom of the tenth inning The cards had taken a 6 5 lead in the top of the tenth when Corey Dickerson scored an Albert Pujols double play grounder But Alonzo with ghost runner Francisco Lindor on second let off with a long blast left thought Giovanni gallegos to give them that's another series win Anytime we can take a series against a really good team it's really special and to be able to walk it off is obviously electric Alonso finished with three RBIs and now leads the majors with 36 Jeff McNeil also drove in three runs for New York Paul Goldschmidt had four RBIs for St. Louis including the one that tied the game in the top of the 9th Tom maryam New York

Corey Dickerson Francisco Lindor Giovanni Gallegos Mets Cardinals Albert Pujols Homer Alonzo Jeff Mcneil Alonso Paul Goldschmidt New York St. Louis Tom Maryam
Arenado buzzed, frustrated Mets brawl with Cardinals in loss

AP News Radio

00:39 sec | 11 months ago

Arenado buzzed, frustrated Mets brawl with Cardinals in loss

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Mets Mets Mets Bush Bush Bush Bush Stadium Stadium Stad St St St Louis Louis Louis Lou Baseball Corey Corey Corey Corey Dickerson Dickerso Dickerson Dickerson Dylan Dylan Dylan Dylan Carlson Carlson Carlson Carlson St St St St Louis Louis Louis Louis Brandon Brandon Brandon Tomas Tomas Tomas Tomas Nido N New New New New York York York Jake Jake Jake Jake Wood Carlos Carlos Carlos Carlos Ca Mike Mike Mike Mike Reeves Ree St St Louis Louis Louis Louis
CBS Sunday Morning Takes Trump Radio Interview out of Context

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:17 min | 1 year ago

CBS Sunday Morning Takes Trump Radio Interview out of Context

"I was watching CBS Sunday morning. Let me tell you a little story about how I found out the lie they've been telling about Trump praising Putin. When John Dickerson from CBS did a commentary yesterday morning, maybe you saw it on CBS Sunday morning. He did the typical bashing Trump. You know, we would never praise Hitler, what's he doing? And then he played a portion of the radio interview that everybody's been referring to. The clip heap, I hadn't heard it yet. The clip he played featured Trump, dripping with sarcasm. He was essentially, yeah, Putin invades Ukraine. Wonderful, great, because I walk by a TV screen. Oh, great. Got a genius move here. Peacekeeping, some peacekeeping force that they've got there. It was all that. That it was typical Trump. The media takes those words and runs with it like he is saying it straight. Without any sarcasm,

CBS John Dickerson Putin Donald Trump Hitler Ukraine
"dickerson" Discussed on Planet Mikey

Planet Mikey

03:59 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Planet Mikey

"You can come back anytime. Anytime you don't tell me that 'cause I'll just show up. Well, that's all right. Because I not know where you are and where this place is. I'll just show up. And we do this at the amazing pillow island studios here. And it's a quality that notice the sound quality is perfect. That's spinny did that. I caught a sound like Gary tank. That's right, I can make you sound like Gary. We record all kinds of music here too as well. And in fact, Joe and Jerry come by every single week and do our closing number for us. And the quality of that is just amazing. It sounds like it was recorded in Abbey Road or something. Studio two, you know? Yeah. So everybody hired Greg Dickerson. He's worth it. Even if it's not in broadcasting, I'll take it. Whatever it is. Shaw's market basket, whatever? Chars. They're hiring. I've always mentioned Shaw's is Joe when he does. Would you be willing to work in the deli department? I would. Okay. I used to work in the fish department at stop and shop back in the day. All right, so we do have some experience. Thank you very much. I used to steal the used to steal the lobster. Don't say that part in the interview. That's right. I don't know what that looks like. That was like 30 years ago. Yeah, but past the statue of limitation. He did it once. He'll do it again. That son of a bitch. You're listening to the crustacean station, where we teach you how to steal lobsters and wet your whistle on this.

Gary tank Greg Dickerson Shaw deli department Joe Gary Jerry
"dickerson" Discussed on Planet Mikey

Planet Mikey

08:10 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Planet Mikey

"A lot of options. Oh, who's the biggest deck? Biggest dick you ever should not have. Yeah, sorry, my bad. Raise that differently. Frank Robinson, by the way, the answer to that, yes. Frank Robinson? Huge. Really? He's sitting on a folding chair playing cards in the Orioles locker room and his thing was almost on the floor. You wonder why I was a 5 legged chair. I said, no. That's a Hall of Famer right there. There you go. This guy, jeez, it was scary. Anyway, Dave Winfield two. Amen. Who was the biggest dick? Of the people I ever had. Yeah. Billy Martin, no question. Really? Asshole. Why? Well, he had just gotten to him, he was just a mean ass drunk. He was a son of a bitch. He got in a fight with somebody the marshmallow guy, whatever it whitson hit some kind of brawl. And we covered the Yankees Red Sox at Yankee Stadium, and he was just coming off in fact, he had his lawyer with him in the locker room because he was afraid someone was going to ask him a question about that. And he was a prick, Billy Martin. So he had gone out in the third inning and demanded that oil can board remove the gold chains around his neck because it was distracting the Yankee hitters. Oil can't pitch three perfect innings. He goes out in the top of the fourth complaints about the chain around oil cans neck and then oil can just get pissed and blew up and you start walking guys. He was really angry about it. Shocking. Not the most stable human being from what I remember. So the Yankees win the game, so I have to the game I go to Billy, I say, okay, I said, I said you kind of yanked oil cans chain a little bit there. Didn't shoot in the fourth inning. He goes, I did not, because we won this game with our bats and he starts yelling at me. In front of everybody, you know, there's no camera. He's yelling at me. So I said to the camera guy, I go. Let's get the fuck out of here. I walked away after that one. 'cause I didn't want to deal with him. You know, he's an asshole. And then he slammed into that telephone pole, or tree, whatever on his way home, and I thought to myself, it worked. He was nasty. Who's the biggest asshole for you to deal with? You know what's funny? He was the this guy was the biggest asshole, and then I absolutely fell in love with him. He was a great guy, rasheed Wallace. And he was with the pistons. I'd be trying to do an interview inside the pistons locker room. And he'd be blaring rap music in every N word and F word. Blaring at the, you know, at 11 and he was just a jackass. He comes to the Celtics, couldn't have been nicer. He would bring beers on the plane because you weren't allowed to have beer on the plane with Danny ainge roll, but he'd have the ball boys give him a 6 pack of beer and it'd hand out beer on the plane. He was a great guy. He was a great guy. He went from being the biggest asshole to one of the nicest guys. I ever interviewed. I shouldn't be the nicest guy ever Ernie Banks. I'll never go away from that theory. He was a nicest man ever. And I talked about him at length with Ferguson Jenkins when he went out to dinner with Billy and Fergie Jenkins. He says, everybody feels the same way about Ernie Banks. Everybody. Isn't that nice? Every teammate, every media person, everybody that's ever met him. Loves Ernie Banks and to this day, you know, God rest his soul. I love Ernie Banks. I talked to him. Every night. I go, hey, I'm a 14. How's it going up there? He talks back. He says, oh, it's great. Sex in the morning, sex in the afternoon, sexy. I said, oh, that's what happens like that. I'm a jackrabbit in Arizona. Okay, so now I've watched I watched two imbeciles. I watched two okay, here's what I gotta be honest with you. So this freaked me out a little bit. What is it? I'm watching TV. And here's this guy. It's a commercial for eHarmony. And here's this guy making toast and putting peanut butter on the toast. He's all smiling. All of a sudden, someone comes bounding down the stairs and it's his lover. Oh. Another guy. Okay. And I thought to myself, when did eHarmony start doing ads for gay people? When the gay people started to complain. But will they complain about that the gay people weren't being represented? They go any harmony. They can find them, but you don't have to have a commercial about it. I think they always could, but they just weren't being represented. But do you need a commercial for that? Does it make you uncomfortable? The more you tell it, the more you sell it. Well, I just think if you're a kid growing up and you're trying to decide. Which turn you want to make here, isn't it, isn't it kind of weird to have, you know, again, I don't know how many people out of a hundred would be gay. What's the, does anybody know? Ten, 5, 7. 31. And someone's a good job. I'm just wondering if that's if it's going to be normal now because right after it was a big ad for if you have aids. Right after it. And I'm thinking there was a time when you watch TV and you never had to worry about trying to explain something like that. To your kid. But now you do, I guess, because it was a prime time. No, I just avoid it. What TV? No. Explaining stuff like that, I'm like, yeah. Anything that's controversial. I avoid it. Currently, 7.1% of U.S. adults identify as LGBT. Did you know that? Is that just a guess? It was a good guess. A little too good, I think. Somebody knows a little bit more than they're letting them. Where do you think the .1 comes from? All right, let's talk about problems in sports, because Greg Dickerson spent his whole life in the world of sports, basketball and sports talk radio and let's get some opinions from all of us on this. All right, go ahead. Let's start with baseball. The biggest problems in baseball. Right now, they're not playing. That's the biggest. That's the biggest problem, Mark, yeah. And they may not play for a while. And I've been through this before. The strike season in 94, they sent 95 neck and sent me down to cover them. And there was no one there. 81, 81 was a half, yeah, a little bit of a fraudulent situation. But they're doing it again. And I think it's a great thing. What do you think? Because the average salary for major league player is like, you know, $2 million a year or something. Yeah, but that's the average salary. You're going to look at what your 23rd guy 24th guy is making. Those guys are getting pork and the minor leaguers are getting pork, too. The thing that I love is they want to take away minor league jobs. Did you see the one thing? And I forget who it was. Did you see, I think it was with the Padres as a minor league with the Padres. And he showed his W two. You know how much he made last year? $11,000. $11,000. Did he get it? Did he get daily stipends for meals? Probably not. Probably includes it. In this day and age, you go to the grocery store, that's a lot of money. But the owners know against the players, here we go again. But I look around and I say, oh, this guy's making $30 million a year to pitch. Every 5 days, I could David price, for example. Yeah, but those guys are screwing up that curve. Those guys are making that average. So much higher. But the regulars, the guys that start on the team, their average salaries are all 10 million, 12 million. I mean, where's it end? We won't be happy till we get 50 million, are you? Yeah, but it's not them. Again, the majority of the guys out there are making a million half million, $400,000. Those are minor leaguers, though. Those are major leaguers. And think about it, if you're making a million bucks, 500,000, 400,000 after taxes. After aging fees? I'd like to know what that number really is, though, for the average, the average seller, even if you were in an entry level, you're on the team for the whole year, let's say. And you know, come up and down from Tripoli, but you run the team the whole year. What do you make? And how much do you need to make really 6 to 8 months worth of work? And if they pay for your food and their travel and your hotels and all that stuff, I don't know. He's still playing baseball. If you want to get better and make 10 million, you can do steroids. You know? It's the only way to get up to that scale. I'm just wondering, the minimum salary, what is this? Well, over $500,000. So that's.

Ernie Banks Frank Robinson Ferguson Jenkins Billy Martin Yankees Red Sox pistons Dave Winfield eHarmony whitson Billy Yankee Stadium Orioles rasheed Wallace Danny ainge Yankees Greg Dickerson Celtics
"dickerson" Discussed on Planet Mikey

Planet Mikey

07:07 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Planet Mikey

"Oh, it's a bra. Thank you. It's a man's ear. This is something to help you navigate through life. It's the world's largest wallet. It's made of foreskins. Oh my God. So I rub it and it turns into a suitcase. That's right. That's got a phone charger built in. Nice. Everything. Oh, yeah. Oh, that's great. I'm gonna put all your stuff on your bag. You will never use it. That's right. Once. You got a little strap, you can wear it in the front. Made by. You know what you can do with it? Re gift it. You're gonna keep it? I'll give you my old one. So there you go. Very much. That's a very kind and thoughtful. It's a nice little Indiana Jones satchel for you. Happy birthday. You know what? As old as I am now and I had a birthday last Saturday. What is this? Do you want this? I'm still not as old as Oprah. Okay? I'm still not as old as Howard Stern. Okay. Where's rich? I could still catch them both on the financial scale. She might working hard. You do have time. Do you work hard? And you're due for another comeback. I am, yeah. My whole life has been nothing but comebacks. You know, you think that I'm like Don Rickles or something. Anyway, thank you for that. You're welcome. When's your birthday Greg Dickerson? Just happened. When January 29th, shut up. No. Howard Stern's birthday. I think it is. No, it's Oprah's. It's Oprah. Oprah's in somebody else. I'm born the same year as both those guys. And you know, what did I miss in the two weeks? It took me to get born after they were born in January. 1954. What did I miss? What did they miss? No, I missed something because look at them. They got all they got. Houses, talent, boats. But look at you. Look at you, do you think they're really happy with all that money and all the toys? No. Have you ever seen them frown? No. Exactly. I've never seen them nude either, you know? You don't want to see either of them. So I've got to say this is a great Dickerson one time. We're doing a Saturday show, you and I, at WE, I was feeling weekend shift or something. And you, what did I do? You were so, this was one of the great moments ever in my broadcast career. He's talking and he's talking to the guy in the air and the guy on the phone and the guy waits a little second of dead air there. And I hear you shoot yourself on life. And no, then you made a face. None of us alluded to it. But I heard it. Was it a quiz? And I look orange. Great Dick's just looking around like, who did that? It was perfect. It's my dog. I brought my dog into the studio. You're looking all around. She's like, there's someone else in the room. And no one ever said, oh, what was that? You know, it was going to be like 15 or 20 years ago. I do that all the time now. It's like a regular now. You just all of a sudden it's closed the close the alley. So Greg dickers is our guest. He had a birthday January 29th. We're glad to have him in here. We haven't seen him in a long time. What are you doing? Nothing. What do you want to do? Nothing. How's that? Set enough? Success in my book, you know what? I want to do something. Yeah. What? I have no idea, but I'll go back over the years. I've tried. This is going to shock you, okay? Are you ready for this? This is going to shock you. I'm a 51 year old white man. Not a lot of, how do I put this? Not a lot of opportunities for me. There have to be. You're too good not to be and I've tried in the business out of the business. People say to me, yeah, but you don't have any experience doing this. Now, a chemical engineer know you don't have a degree. You don't have the experience. I mean, I can't find anything. I am a I am a hobo. I am like you, except I don't have the bag with the sick. With a robotics. Right. If there was one thing in the world that you could do in your new you wouldn't fail, what would it be? I'd go, just go back on the air. I just missed, I miss this. I miss just being on the air. I just miss talking. Yeah. There's only so much talking to my dog and my 13 year old kid and my wife that I can do. I miss doing that. Do they leave the room when you start? Usually before. Do you have a son who's 13? I have a son is 13. So basically my whole entire life is I'm a house husband and I coach sports. That's what I do. Well, two very noble causes. No question, but that's nothing. Exactly. Right. Exactly. You know, the thing is though there's so many people on the air that are nowhere can't hold a candle to you, talent wise and you know you have a good voice you've been developed experience you were sidelined reporter for the Celtics on television. You've worked at the major market radio stations. On the year that suck. Okay, so it's not just me then. I'm not the only one. And I don't want to shit all over people. I do. But there's a lot of bad radio out there. There's a lot of bad radio out there. It's awful. It is. And the worst part, they keep what frustrates me is I've had my issues in the past dealing with mental illness and I've had, I've had problems, but I'd like to get a second chance. Nobody will give me a second chance. I see a guy like, you know Willie and spitzer is? Yes. Elliot spitzer gets a frigging job at WABC and goddamn New York, a high paid half $1 million a year job. Yeah, and he's a diddler. And he's a dead letter. In jail. He can get a job at I can't get a $15 an hour job. I see that's frustrating. That's a waste. Yeah. Other than that. I'm not upset about it at all. But not your problems that you ever had manifested themselves in a bad performance on the air, did it? I mean, I don't think so. No. So it wasn't like you know, by the way, there's been a lot of guys who've had various kinds of issues who are on the air and still are on the air and work through them on the air and how come why don't you get that second chance? Ridiculous. Nobody will give me a shot. Your first guy. I appreciate that. Will you pay? Mornings. You can do mornings. 16 bucks an hour. That's too early. No, I think we're staying to see a trend here. I need to make more than $16 an hour. 8 o'clock in the morning, okay? Other than that. I tend to noon, you know, 1850 an hour. I mean, that's all. Fine, I'll take it. What the hell? Now, let's just check out his Wikipedia page because we do this with our guests. We say, is Wikipedia accurate with all these people that we have in here, the famous people that come in. I got it right here. Greg Dickerson is a Boston sportscaster who served as a strong and already wrong as wasn't so sideline reporter and co host of sports tonight for Comcast Sports Net New England. Now that's when I thought when I had my wedding there, wasn't it? Yes, it was a great, great wedding. You know, they never let me back on TV after that in that network. That was not my fault. No, I know I'm not blaming you. That was not my fault. Who's the guy Bill Bill bridgeton?.

Oprah Howard Stern Greg Dickerson Great Dick Greg dickers Don Rickles Indiana Jones Dickerson Elliot spitzer Celtics WABC spitzer Willie New York Wikipedia Boston Comcast
"dickerson" Discussed on The Podcast On Podcasting

The Podcast On Podcasting

04:27 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on The Podcast On Podcasting

"Doing all of this organic promotion for you on your behalf. Like we just do so much on the editing plus. So you might be able to win that or the other option is our full service all inclusive. It's all inclusive. It has everything. Branding, marketing, editing, all of that stuff. So anyway, if you want to be entered to win and you haven't done it yet, the first step is to leave an honest review on Apple podcast, the second step is, well, that's already going to happen. You're already going to be added. And then if you want 5 more entries just like Stacy, our winner last time, she heard her review on the podcast and so she just went ahead and screenshotted it and let me know, hey, I heard my name. I want those other 5 and she got it. And then she ended up winning. So good stuff. Let's jump back into the episode. Congrats and good luck. And actually, I have a good friend that is on the show today. Annie Dickerson. And I'm really excited to get into her story. One of the takeaways that you'll see is that she and her business partner planned to not do a podcast. They plan to only get on other people's podcasts in somewhere along the way that change. And their podcast last I checked was ranking top 1% in the entire world, which is insane, their ranking across multiple different countries in multiple different categories like the business category. And I'm going to ask her her process. What did she learn along the way? Because I wanted to pour into you and I want you to be able to gain from Annie's story. So Annie, first off, welcome to Shang glad you're here. Thanks, Adam, I'm thrilled to be here with you and your listeners. It's going to be fun. The first question that I wanted to ask you is just you really don't have just one business. You're really doing more than one thing. Is that right? That's great. So our core business good investments is where we help.

Annie Dickerson Stacy Apple Annie Shang Adam
"dickerson" Discussed on Dual Threat with Ryen Russillo

Dual Threat with Ryen Russillo

02:15 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Dual Threat with Ryen Russillo

"The same disagreement work. And it just started unraveling. He's got worse. And that was really disappointed because the team is at the organization the front office. But I say this much here. You know, I never stopped playing hard for them. You know, it was times when I was pissed but I would never. I would never slack on that play hard for him. You know, and after a while, it just broke down and you know, that's when they had an interview and one of the guys in the reporters asked me something about John robs. I said, hey, Dan, I was to make more money. Let me let him run 47 gap. And so I'm just really out of unraveling. So it was bad. Unbelievable. I remember, again, just being a kid, like in my NFL Sundays and trying to figure out, you know, and then you'd be whatever literally game or something and a dad would be like, fucking fucking Dickerson. And you know what I mean? It was very, it's a lot like some of the angst that people have towards NBA guys where I don't think everybody should be able to do whatever they want all the time, but the reaction is lessened, right? We've become more desensitized to players asking for doing stuff. But for when it happened to you, the acceptance of how much everybody dumped on you in the media and just, you know, it was bad, man. It was unbelievable. It was terrible. I mean, I said, I was made out to be a bad, bad guy. I mean, I was not a team player player didn't like me. I was an ingrate. I was a malcontent in the thing, but I think that really hurt me the most was that my mother would be dead. She said, that's not true. She's outraged you better than that. She said, she said, I didn't make a step up on you. And I don't like. And I knew, I mean, that's just how the sports writers work. I mean, if somebody wrote something to paper back then, oh, it's gotta be true. They wrote it. They can't be. You can not be true. And players had no, we had no outlet. We had no nobody to go to. That's what, in a sense, Jim gray became a good friend of mine, because anything I would tell Jim, it would write it just like I said. And that was fair. I mean, just like I said, I don't think I did an interview with a guy. And at.

John robs Dickerson Dan NFL NBA Jim gray Jim
Dan Bongino Takes Bo Jackson and Joe Montana Any Day

The Dan Bongino Show

01:19 min | 1 year ago

Dan Bongino Takes Bo Jackson and Joe Montana Any Day

"To before the whole kneeling fiasco I was a huge NFL fan I like the Raiders and I'd watch the ravens when I was in when I lived in Maryland But if you asked me say you're putting together a team today right And you have these you're omnipotent You have these powers You can pull of the best running back on the best day of his life to put together a team and you can get that guy a new team right now in that condition right So I'm just talking about you're putting together a team of football team and you're given the opportunity to pick a running back from any point in time at his best point in time ever Who do you pick Do you pick Barry Barry Sanders You pick Eric Dickerson Adrian Peterson And my answer is no It's not I pick Bo Jackson Bo Jackson Monday Night Football Seattle Seahawks I've never seen anything like it in my life Never Never seen a guy Why are we bringing this up You're probably asking 'cause Jim yes miss birthday today Or tomorrow How old is he 59 Our bed Bo Jackson could probably still run in the NFL today even with his hip even when he said Peter he was not amazing I have never seen anything like it in my life Now I get it I get mocked a lot for these opinions I said I take Joe Montana over Tom Brady Oh you're crazy but no in 1986 Joe Montana I'll take him any day He's my quarterback Bo Jackson's my running back I'm just saying I'm just throwing that

Bo Jackson Barry Barry Sanders NFL Ravens Raiders Eric Dickerson Maryland Adrian Peterson Seattle Seahawks Football Joe Montana JIM Peter Tom Brady
"dickerson" Discussed on Mo Egger

Mo Egger

04:14 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Mo Egger

"Verify this is. Espn fifteen thirty. Mo- egger by the way mentioned the reds win. Padres are playing this afternoon against the giants and san francisco. San diego leads that game to zip in the top of the fifth inning. Meanwhile bengals bears on sunday. You'll hear it live right here on. Espn fifteen thirty pregame coverage at nine kickoff at soldier field will be at one o'clock. I think you know. Espn they have a reporter assigned to every nfl team here in town. It's ben baby who does an awesome job. I think the best. Maybe with the exclusion of ben. Because i know he listens. I don't want him to get mad. But but everybody who covers a team a local nfl team for espn and espn dot com. Jeff dickerson is the best. And i'm surprised you even has time to do this. Because he's pulled in a thousand different directions doing local radio in chicago. You hear them all the time on. Espn radio he is on twitter at dickerson espn. And currently. he's covering andy dalton and the bears and he's with us now. It's good to have you thank you for your time. Jeff how are you. Oh my pleasure. Great to be with you my friend. It's it's been a while. i'm glad you're here. We're all sort of enjoying to a degree watching fans in another city. go god. How long are we going to have to do this. Andy dalton thing so. I hope you're enjoying that. Well it won't be for very much longer but it's gonna be for sunday for sure. You know the question really is i mean. Just in fields only had five snaps in that first game against hams last sunday night. I can guarantee you. He's gonna play more than five snaps at soldier field this weekend. Because mo- the fan base is edgy. Ed is not good times here in chicago. They are all clamoring for justin. Feels to take over. So you know being the home opener in the fact that they're all in one trending in the wrong direction. They're going to try to give the home fan. Some see and that's going to be justin field. So i mean the writings on the wall for dalton it's inevitable The question is just. How long can you hold this off if they keep losing. It's not going to be for much longer. I fear and he's kind of the perfect guy for that he's he's got some nfl pelts on the wall. He's reliable. he's he's not going to be a jerk about it when they pull them. I mean he's he's he's all the right things you want. He's just not a great quarterback for sunday's specifically talked about justin fields being on the field. Do they expand what what.

Espn espn Jeff dickerson nfl egger Padres bengals reds andy dalton Espn radio giants San diego san francisco Andy dalton chicago ben bears justin field Jeff twitter
"dickerson" Discussed on Bobbycast

Bobbycast

08:20 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Bobbycast

"Childhood is wanting a variety of different baked sweets. And someone telling you know. Adulthood is wanting a variety of different baked sweets and being to go right to mickey to get every single one. You want whenever you want yet. The new glazed donut in the ninety nine cents and you size coffee with pumpkin. Spice flavors wait participation with their limited time all the ice coffee promo available to eleven. Am but up. It's bobby here. Thanks for listening. And thanks for subscribing to the bobby cast if you haven't subscribed yet please do. It does help us so much. I wanted to share with you. Guys and episode we did with russell dickerson and his wife kaley dickerson. And the reason comes up now as i just spent all weekend on the road with them. Russell was playing with the raging idiots. And so we spent much time on. The road also hung out with kaley a little bit on the road in the reminded me of this episode. That i wanted to put back up. You know they talked about being together for ten years. How kaley filmed and directed the music video for yours. Russell talks about how it took four years from when that song was written to go number one so here you go from a couple of years old but i wanted you to hear this case you haven't here is the bobby cat with russell dickerson. And his wife. Kelly welcome to episode two thousand nine hundred it's russell and kaley dickerson. Have you ever wanted to get an interview together. That track was had an interview. The other only a couple though like wh who interviews you together then not did so a print publication. yes but it was their podcast. We were their first episode. Right and then bristow and i think that's how was that. I don't know her but she lives right. She's wonderful lover. Yeah i hear. I hear good things about her as a person i always have a weird thing with the bachelor people because i've met like most of them i meet are not people i would normally hang out with in real life. I go all the way one of the bachelor and not great. And i'm saying that because i have multiple friends are like. Oh she's like a fantastic. Human rights actually legitimately lover. Yeah it's The night at you when you bring that up reminds me that i saw on the night which is a wedding website right like that yours was the biggest wedding song for them ever or something like that or the year. Some extreme use the is that they put it. They put it. They make like a annual list for their like. 'cause you go to the not to like. Who should i use as my photographer. Who should i use. Make my cake or whatever and they had yours was one of their their like number one playlist wedding. I dance so you know what. I mean like their lists. Whatever this this your new house absolutely totally are you still getting checks for it. Yeah yeah yeah. I mean he's like just about me. I mean it's yeah that was that yours is it's own whole story anyway and we'll get to that we will have. You played this song at many weddings that you weren't personally connected to like have people hire to you talking to dan recently daniels. We don't do a lot of weddings but listen. We'll do some we'll right because they have wedding song. Yeah like legit yours. One speechless and yeah exactly. Have you played that any wedding i have. I've i've probably done like like. Hey come player. Wedding will pay you like three a lot. Does that go through your agent. Yeah yeah that's the thin that's good. Those are good the privates of anything. So good fantastic. Yeah but then. There's that one in a million we happen to be playing a show in a certain city and there happens to be a wedding and they're like tweeden like crazy. You know what i mean. So we were in like south carolina. Some i dunno some town and we played it like four thirty. I dance was at like six thirty so it was good. Oh yeah yes so we got. We got uber's. I brought my guitar. We change clothes. We try to find. Something dressy jean shorts too. Yeah and so we just like you were coming now was one. We literally just like to the mother-in-law one no because we walked in and we were like hey And they the wedding planner if they knew who we were at all someone band like incognito was like where's the wedding planner so someone a bit advanced it. Yeah i mean we walked into. Because i'm telling you. I've done the thing before where i also have gone to a wedding where it's like big fan. It's like we just love you and don't tell them you're coming and you go and you're like i don't know who you are. Yeah exactly. it's a real humbling. Experience in one happened once in phoenix. We were staying in a hotel outside of phoenix. I don't know what all my god and we heard the rehearsal. She was walking down the aisle to yours and so we were in the pool. Like at this hotel heard rehearsal. And we're like you got to do it. You got a crash and you walked in the door after the ceremony. And they were like they're like an russell's like high resolution. That was there were like. I know that feeling. Wow time for that happens to me that one. It's like that because there's only like a small selection people giving me crap give a crap. I am very small. And i'm very loyal to them but most people have no idea right. I'm just a dork with big glasses. Same so without the glasses yes so when you show up somewhere and you're like i'm actually doing this because i know somebody who cares. We got no idea bro. The other one is when something like sometime. True people on my my management team will call and go. Hey we're gonna have dinner with this place. We're going to call her and they'll be like hey. We're going to get a tape and i don't do this anymore. But they're like we get a table for four by bones in town. And i'm like i don't know who that is and that it's like you know what it's not worth it to me like one or two times in near like just don't do it. I'll just go and wait. I'm not special. I'd tell you that my my recent to kaley stories and we're going to get all this by the way she's talking. I have so much preparation. I've done for this interview. We haven't gotten to yet The first one is this is a three or four weeks ago. I was playing. Operate the reimann and you're playing that night and so we were on the same thing together. But i was walking back in You're gonna go to operate the reimann. You can wait for all the artists to show up behind the raymond because we all have to go through a back door and so and i'm there i'm just going to stand up and i have a guitar with me or anything and so i'm going in and there's a lot of people that know that and they're just waiting in there would take pictures and a bit. There's there's a lot and it starts to be a little bit overwhelming. And all of a sudden it's like an angel came out of the sky was like i'll take these pictures and it was kayley standing there grabs. Everyone's phone okay next. Xxx assured me right into the door. I left that experiencing like did he. No that was me or does he think fan. Like no no i. I knew exactly hawaii. I'm a fan. But i was like i left that experience. He's thought i was one of the people just waiting for him. And then we saw each other again upstairs did but then my second one is and i didn't say anything about this on the radio but i'm gonna say no okay so i saw at the airport. I don't know now we aren't at the airport. I always charity event. I live in airport. So okay i remember this. We're a charity event. She tell you this. I love it and so i say because i feel like i know kaley better than new russell spoken more than than you and i have and we're talking and she was like i was gonna go wrestling radio show and i was complaining about radio shows in your honor and i was like a camp barely get paid tuesday night. I'm feeling bad for you. And she's like yeah. It's not so bad. And she goes well. And i was gonna thinking about going but what i do. Is i reserve the southwest. Because if you fly as mighty my companion right my southwest. I can take them anytime. I fly. Southwest input mike on for free. Yeah she's yours. Ross yeah she goes. You know so i use.

russell dickerson kaley dickerson kaley Russell russell bristow bobby phoenix Kelly daniels dan south carolina kayley raymond hawaii wrestling mike Ross
"dickerson" Discussed on Christy Wright's Business Boutique

Christy Wright's Business Boutique

06:37 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Christy Wright's Business Boutique

"You know Yeah i have to go out in front of thousands of people and do my thing and it looks all rockstar glamorous but i come straight off stage and if she needs help with the baby the baby. I'm not like yeah. Great show a baby so tiny example of just like you know the constant humility that it takes to balance a marriage. Yeah and we listened to so many guess. We were like addicts for premarital counseling. We would like three different ones like this is so fun i love it. I think counseling is like the greatest. Yes thing ever lied counseling during Kovic because you were home enough then. I was like let's do virtual someone we love and trust in and when we got down to it she was like. Y'all really don't like need all that much. But i was like. Can we just do individual counselling and watch each other's house like so. We learn ourselves better and she was like absolutely. Let's do and so as we did. We just like we did like our lifetime lines. We just like dug into ourselves and each other but we. We listened to so much. So i feel like it saved us so many things. We listen to robert morris. He was like a marriage is a mere series and in that he says it's better to be one. Oh any than the one who won and that changed everything for us and it was. It always talked about being the first to apologize even if you're right and he talks about taking the low road and he took the low road jesus always and he was always right. Well yeah so. It's not about who's right or wrong. It's it's about humbling yourself for the sake of this because what is it if you up waving like why won that argument. We've never never fought and we always fight fair. We kind we don't scream and yell at each other. We don't call each other names really practical things of like if you wouldn't speak to someone else. How why on earth would you speak to your spouse. Yeah like that. I also talk about humility because Les parrott has been on the show before. And he's like you know marriage expert and he puts an emphasis on empathy. Which is putting yourself in the other person's shoes like you know when he gets off stage it'd be be like you don't even know how screaming and think about your perspective and your your perspective. That's what we don't know how hard i've had said you don't know what i'm going. It's always muny naming me but if you can shift that like when matt walks dark ago i bet he's had a really hard day. I bet he and he does that for me. Then you lean together on an empathy versus pulling back from each other and digging your heels in love. y'all put the worst humility to it. Which is true but i think so. Many people missed that simple action is feeling. It's an action. I'm going to choose us often. Personalities choose put their needs before. Consider how they're feeling or whatever the easier thing to do is come like my example saying it's come off stage and just like i need. I just need a minute you choose you have to muster up the energy to i mean it says it says clothe yourself with humility in the bible you know and it's like you have to take something and put it on this natural thing that happens. You have to physically. Yes what do you do for fun. Lots of things. I think funds so important marriage and sometimes like especially. The busy are the older. Your kids get the more kids you add. We'll just suck the fun right. And i remember a counselor telling his years ago. She was like if you're not careful. Marriage becomes business. Visit the dry cleaning. Who's going just becomes business and so man so intentional of like we're going to have fun. We're gonna flirt. We're going to be sarcastic philly. And he's going to take them like we would go on dates or whatever just to have fun and so many people get so busy they forget money so important. Especially when you're in business together. Yes like in the early days. I mean we wake up and have coffee and just start going. Oh had this idea idea this. Don't make computer so it's like thirty minutes of being awake so we've been we've fixed that We playing a lot of golf on the road. Exactly i love this hobby but we were together. we did. we like. We started playing on the road before we had a kid is loved it and we started renting clubs on the final own clubs. And i just. I really like it we will. I mean we walk cove it. I think we walked three hundred miles. She was pregnant. Were walk our neighborhood closet past atlanta. We like borrow my gosh so much during cova. That's like that was like i was boning. We just walked figure is and i think i think that actually is a relationship is like girls. I had heard. Girls are face to face like rolling. Let's coffee lunch and guys are shoulder to shoulder. So they'll be like yeah. We hung out all day. We like play golf golf garden. What did you guys talk about like nothing literally. Just hang out when we were dating. Even we would go for drives is that it was like this secret weapon. I knew that boys talk in the car and we were just drive and drive and he would just tell me stuff and so we still we have our best women are like okay. We need to to the walks or mock same kind of thing shoulder to shoulder. We both open up more than we do. Honestly probably because. I grew up shoulder to shoulder with a million boys. Yeah but i think that's a super helpful. We brainstorm the best. We problem solve the best. Like it's just we love it. Do you have any advice about how to maybe for the person that's like i feel like i'm the one that wants to pull my spouse back in of something they could get approach or I don't know just something to encourage them. Yeah i mean dating date each other again. That's a big what you had to do to get each other in the first place. Go back to ground zero like were. You wanted to impress each other. Yeah what was that like. And then i think even stereotypically obviously men need physical physical release and women lead more emotional relationship. So i think a initiating if you're a female you're more physical side of your leadership we prioritized that all the time so six sacks yeah.

Kovic Les parrott robert morris golf matt cova atlanta
"dickerson" Discussed on Christy Wright's Business Boutique

Christy Wright's Business Boutique

07:14 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Christy Wright's Business Boutique

"And we want to take him to disney. Yeah remember by the disney ones. So you talked about saying no. Is it hard absolutely is it. Has it gotten easier or was it super hard at first and now it's getting a little easier that you harder for me because i talk seven and i can just go sir how i go until i can't and then it's just like a hard stop. But she is like very conscious of where she's at where more conscious boy i'm eboni. Hey of really. Don't think we should do them like let's just do ya. Totally and yes. So i definitely have a much harder time saying. I think it's interesting because even if you've been doing a long time saying no is still hard especially we have a lot of listeners and viewers that are people of faith. I think there's an aspect of that. It makes it even harder. Because there's this like faith component. Like oh i need to be a good servant or it's almost like we. Sometimes we'll feel guilty for saying no protecting time protecting our energy protecting disney trip. It can be hard as love. I don't know. I find comfort in the fact that it's hard for you all to the friendship. That's what's harder for me shows. And all that. I'm like you're going to have more offers. You're gonna have the like when it comes to friendship saying you have asked for. It's harder because i'm a three wing to isaiah two and a half. I'm really just between the data that like that's hard because it's personal. Do you worry what your friends think of you over when you say no like oh yeah you don't wanna be right art. Yeah like you're on. Hi my biggest. Fear is for people to say that i've changed you know like i'm still. Rd she's still kaley. You know what i mean and people who really really know us know that we have not changed. And but yeah. That's my greatest. Fear is that people are like. Oh that change. It's like we have a tier system. Which tyler and hannah are tier blood We have like a. I started noticing. Leads me the to your three people. Were getting so much of my time. Getting the coffee is what is tier three live music. Okay explaining this to tyler. And they were like well. What are we as like your tier blood. You're not even like on. Our group text is actually called to your blood love. Tier one is like my maid of honor. If you were in our wedding like or you tour with us like best friend shirt. Best best best. Like i would give you kidney. Then there's tier two which is like other friends of yours. That lance yeah. Let's get dinner. It's always the tier two people that want to get your to your. Three people are like people who went to high school college with you. Hung out with then. Still feel close to you but you don't necessarily go to for any right thing right now. They don't feel you back. Tier one are like equally charging battery. People so i started noticing. All these people like fresh out of college before he was even like taking off just me like let's see coffee. Let's get coffee with all the coffee. Pick your brain having a friendly top relationships. I wasn't eating like i was a photographer now. They were trying to like become photographers. It was like let's talk relationships anyway. I just realized. I haven't had coffee with my best friend in probably a year while your now this is. This has to change so i just started just mentally. I don't have a master history but like you know. I was like i spent too much time. I have not had dinner with like our best couple and like that needs to shift. I love that. That's such a great visual and it's such a tactical framework for making decision. It makes me think of dissolve or watch the mindy project when that was so. There's one point where danny says to mindy. She's like referred to her best friend and he's like you'd like seven best friends. She was best. Friend is a tear de for women. An hope i mean we are best friend. Group is what including kids. It's like twenty seven people. But if i don't know fifteen sixteen couples it's a lot. Yeah and this is. And so. Even if i tried to get dinner with just those people right. I couldn't do it in a year. Lose marriage in general. Because i'm sure that with y'all successive last year's which is just from what. It was five years ago with the six dollar video. Yeah to what you're experiencing today you've had. I'm sure you've had too not just prioritize your marriage but rethink how you prioritize rethink what a healthy marriage looks like in this new reality versus the reality. That was five years ago with those demands and with having a baby and all that so talk to me what does it look like today. And how guys continued to come beat in check with that to make sure that it is what you want to be your both on same page with such a weird schedule you kinda put her head down for a while of like at least for me that i knew that i wanted to write and do my own podcast thing and do all that stuff but i had to keep my head down to help really leaning to that too wing. But also my three of. I'm gonna help you achieve achieve achieve and we just head down for really long time knowing that someday we'd get easier and then that would free up to do more of my so there's their seasons stuff in this season is a lot better than the other ones driving a van with the band guys for like five years. We couldn't talk about having kids for at least five or six years of our marriage. Is i would stay home. And we would never see each other. And so that was like a sacrifice we both made. We want family on short-term. Yeah 'cause we were like if we're gonna multiply us we want to be one of won't divide us and so avoid it down. Keep going so we can start a family in 'cause we wanted our own bus within. We're going to do that so that he could travel. Or whoever be nebi but they had to go with us and we'd be together and there wouldn't be a crying baby in the punk talia so wise on your part but i also just want to come into your sacrifice kaley like that. You thought of it that way like. Hey this is your season to how not just from shooting the video. That helped launch him. But even we're going to postpone planning a family as much as you can't plan it because this is the season for building. Your that's really really cool. There's a lot of people that went and do that. That's awesome and it just felt right like we just knew the timing right as soon as it was time to start trying. I had all these dreams about it. Other dreams out. And we're like all right. You've got this new reality of being on the road. You made those sacrifices and now you've got a million things going on. What do you think makes marriage. Great like looking back on the last five years. I know you've done a lot of things right. You've been super intentional. There's probably some things you've learned along the way today. We're all today with an eleven month old which is here in the thick of it like tomorrow. What do you think makes it great oh man it's the sacrifice it's humility. Is you know like on the road. I'm just thinking of like examples..

disney eboni tyler isaiah hannah lance mindy danny nebi kaley talia
"dickerson" Discussed on Christy Wright's Business Boutique

Christy Wright's Business Boutique

07:39 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Christy Wright's Business Boutique

"Will help. You have a great marriage. You've got a lot on your plate. A job your home your marriage and your growing family while you're enjoying the president you can't help but think about your future and your finances as you explore your options considered christian healthcare ministries or c. h. m. for your health care generous maternity program and budget. Friendly monthly programs have been a blessing to members welcoming children into their families visit c h ministries dot org slash budget to see if it's right for you that c. h. ministries dot org slash budget. I'm so excited to tell you some news that i have been wanting to tell you for a really long time. My brand new book. I take back your time. The guilt free guide to life balance is available for pre sale now does not launch until september fourteenth. But guess what when you order your copy. Now you over. Fifty dollars of bonus items that means an e book and audiobook. And guess what you get a ticket to my event in september take back your time live or i'm walking you through the content of the book. Listen y'all this is something. I have been working on seriously for over a decade and with three kids and a fulltime job and a lot of interest. I know what it feels like to be stretched too thin but also believe there's more for you and there's more for me there's more to this life than just rushing and feeling run ragged and being busy and burn out. I believe that you really can create a life. You love and are proud of that. You can take back your time so. Get your copy of take back your time. The guilt free guide to life balance at christy wright dot com arial. I'm so excited. Because i could sit down with kelly and russell dickerson. Y'all here okay. let's you're famous. You have the reading country song in. What is it. The top ten longest running country solid up. Which one is that love. You like i used to. Yes is The longest running top ten country radio history was just super cool especially when like the first video. That was a really big deal you did. Yeah six dollars. Six ors and that was not that long ago five years ago. Those twenty sixteen. I don't wanna hear people you but let's talk about what's most interesting. We have the same anniversary. Ver five and tyler is your brother which everyone knows tyler. Because talk about hemmings. Unlike tyler makes things all of this. Tyler is behind the campus. Which is fun. So i love that i love. I love the personal connection. And we were talking. Tyler and i were talking as we're planning out the episodes themes and we're kind of been on this kick right now talking about life balance. My book is coming up next week on life. Balance and balance is one of the topics that are has feelings about my balances. It's not possible. If i'm trying to take a new take on it but the reason i was so excited to talk to you guys is because i think sometimes we don't think about how much marriage our marriage. The health of our marriage affects. Whether or not we enjoy life whether or not we feel balance whether or not. We're happy whether or not we're on the same page doing the right things and tell us like a sister you know. Maybe maybe gillian russell would come in. And he's like they have such a cool story of their marriage and and you'll definitely have a very unique version of balance. You're on the road all the time. But what's so cool about. This is my whole thesis of the book is like balance. isn't doing everything for equal monetize. It's doing the right things at the right time. And you guys as extreme as your story is and what travel looks like for you and your family all that. You're doing the right things at the right time. It's just different than what someone else would tell me a little bit about. What's the behind the scenes in the life of kaley and russell and you're adorable son and what kind of the rhythms of your schedule your travel i mean so tomorrow i'll ask me. They're always like you know what does it. What does the typical day look like in your life. And i'm like they're a thousand different days. There's there's zero like one day. Never like the other either of us. And so i think for us specifically the first thing that came to mind was just constant analysis of you know where we're at marriage wise where you know where we're at family wise where we at energy wise where we heads wise. 'cause we really i mean it's it's been tough to to get to where we are in mainly because of boundaries. That's a huge more for us. Like there's always gonna be somebody who wants to come by or wants me here and her there and you know it's like it's really been a long journey of realizing for us like the word no has been so huge for us because when we get home off the road we need because it's like it's a hundred miles a minute on the road. You know we're always going here there everywhere so we get home. It's just like shut down and they're like if people we come by. I'm like no no no days. It's yes but if our batteries aren't were pretty much always assessing our batteries like what's the battery between us. What's the battery with our son. How much time have we gotten to like. Have quality time with him because he around on the road. Like we're running like crazy nine times that you just so we just assess like batteries low is. It's a no people that think that we always say around here because we travel a lot as company as a speaking team. We always say that people that think. That travel is glamorous. don't travel it's not suitcases. It's luggage it's like delayed flights. It doesn't matter how platinum no no. It's hard on you a love. The battery analogy wears on. You emotionally physically. It can be really super draining. Okay so you use the battery example and use the word boundary and now. I'm curious and love asking people this win. An opportunity comes your way. How do you decide like what is that conversation like. Someone comes to you kayleigh or someone comes to you russell. Hey we've got this opportunity. We add a town in town whatever day of the week. What does that conversation look like. It's not going to have our how we talk about. I'm just curious how. How do you decide what's it. Yes someone to know. I mean it really is. It's like do. We think that we could successfully pull this off without it. Just absolutely draining. Us wrecking us like if it was like. Hey we have a show in pensacola florida. But hey they want us to play seattle the next day like probably not you know what i mean because that would be so taxing as far as like logistically us and getting room and everything moving to that so it's just like any opportunity really that i get unless it's like an absolute no brainer or like sit down have a conversation. Do you think we can pull this off. Do you think it's healthy for us. Energy wise to be able to do this and still continue our regular schedule after that you know. Will it affect that. Like what's the risk in the reward. Like what are we risking like. Is it gonna drain us. Is it gonna this if it's a private show that's like worth doing. There's a reward for our like if it's turning down a show because it's during our son's first birthday that indices as growth example so we're going to disney world for his birthday and i swear we've gotten three bush shou offers like right around there that would just completely wreck our plans and so financially yes they were would have been a great decision. But it's our child's first birthday.

tyler christy wright russell dickerson gillian russell Tyler hemmings kaley kelly russell pensacola seattle florida Us bush shou disney
"dickerson" Discussed on Christy Wright's Business Boutique

Christy Wright's Business Boutique

03:44 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Christy Wright's Business Boutique

"I know.

"dickerson" Discussed on Christy Wright's Business Boutique

Christy Wright's Business Boutique

08:09 min | 1 year ago

"dickerson" Discussed on Christy Wright's Business Boutique

"Hey y'all welcome to the christie right. So where faith meets personal development so you can have a bigger faith and a better life. I'm so excited. Because today we are talking about marriage specifically five things you need to have a great marriage and this is going to be a good one. Because later on the show. I sit down with multi platinum country music recording artists and very person russell dickerson and his wife kellie dickerson. If you have not heard those names. I guarantee you. You've heard the songs and y'all they have such a cool story and amazing and we're gonna learn from them about what makes their marriage so great but first. Let's talk about my list that i have put together for you a five things. You need to have a great marriage number one. If you're taking notes let's start writing down number one. You need to be on the same page with your faith. You'll know i have to start here. Listen if you're a person of faith and a lot of people that watch and listen to this show are then being on the same page with your spouse of what your faith means to you specifically building. Your marriage on a foundation of faith is absolutely essential to having a great marriage. If you're not on the same page with your spouse with your face if for you your faith is the foundation of your life and for your spouse. It's like this thing. We do on easter and christmas. Then your entire framework for viewing the world your entire framework for making decisions is different now. I know that is something that you don't just flip a switch in. You're on the same page. But i wanna encourage you do not give up on this aspect of your marriage. If you're a person of faith in you and your spouse have not seen aieda. I'll maybe ever don't give up on that that's something for you to lean into. That's something for you to talk about that. Something for you to specifically pray for. I know so often it hurts to hope and it hurts to pray for something for years and years and years. And you still don't see the fulfillment of that prayer or promise. But our god is good god and he is faithful and he sees you. Here's your heart. And he knows your heart's desire so if you're a person of faith and you're praying for either your spouse of salvation for them to have a renewal in their faith or for you guys to maybe. Just come together in your faith. I wanna encourage you to pray for that. Fervently do not give up on this aspect of your marriage it is the most important aspect of who you are as individuals in certainly who you are as a couple so the first thing you need to have a great marriage is you need to have a foundation of faith. The second thing that you need is you need to have fun. Was it when you start having kids and you start getting the mortgage and you've got bills and jobs and responsibilities and laundry and dry cleaning and all the dishes nothing will suck the joy out of your marriage like just the day to day grind. I remember a counselor telling matinee years go she said if you're not careful marriage just becomes business the business of keeping up with your lives. Have you got the kids. I've got the dry cleaner you making lunch. Who's taken so and so two soccer and so on and it's just air traffic control checking boxes fulfilling responsibilities and y'all that is necessary but it is not fun if you wanna have a great marriage. You've got to have fun now. That may look different for you. And for your spouse that may look different for you as a couple. For example rachel cruze are really good friends and we always laugh because we vacation completely differently so in her and her husband winston go on vacation they go to some remote island they are perfectly happy seeing no other humans and being on a beach all day every day not moving. Are you like this like when you go on vacation. You don't wanna do anything. Probably not surprised me. And matt we don't have a full itinerary. I don't like having a lot planned but we see vacation as this grand adventure every day. We wake up. We'll have our coffee and relaxed by the pool. But then it's like what can we get into. We can rent bikes. We can paddleboard. We can go cage diving with sharks. If you've heard me tell that story we can go hiking. We just get into everything because why because that's fun to us. What's fun to you as a couple. You might have your individual things matt. And i definitely have our individual things. Yoga is fun to me not to him. Golf is fun to him not to me but then we have all these things that we do together. We both love to run. We both love sports in watching football games. We love adventure and concerts. We love being outside. We love hiking. We've all these things we love to together that we see as fun. What do you and your spouse loved to do together. What in your marriage you intentionally incorporate in order to have fun if you're going to have a good marriage y'all you gotta have fun. Don't let the day to day grind. Suck the fun out of your marriage. It might be harder to incorporate when life is busy and it definitely is but it doesn't mean you can't do it. How can you plan time this week. Specifically to have fun with your spouse and just your spouse not the whole family. We know the family wants to have fun. But typically that revolves around with the kids think are fun. What do you and your spouse wanted to. That's funny you so the second thing you need to have a great marriage is you need to have fun. The third thing you needed. I referenced this a little bit earlier but the third thing is you need to be on the same page with all the major things. So let's go through some of those. Are you need to be on the same page with your values like how you run your household ethically morally. What's acceptable what's unacceptable discipline. You need to be on the same page with money. Money fights and money problems are the number one cause of divorce in america. Get on the same page with your finances which by the way is reflection of your values because where you spend your money shows what you value. Do you need to be on the same page with boundaries. How do we spend holidays. How do we spend weekends. Would we say yes or no to. How do we interact with inlaws. How do we deal with requests coming from our work travel or from church commitments. Or whatever getting on the same page with major aspects of your life from money to family to values to boundaries. All of that is essential to having a great marriage. It might take some work to you. Might have a topic where you guys just absolutely butt heads. It is a standstill. And you've got to bring in a third party to work through that. I will be totally transparent. There have been multiple times in our almost ten years of marriage were matinee were such a standstill on an issue and sometimes the issue is major and sometimes it is so stupid like where the fence to go. It's really stupid. But sometimes you come to a standstill in your marriage that you need a third party and you can see a counselor. You could have someone in your church but you have someone help you work through whatever that is. Here's what i would say though. If you love each other and value each other than you will lean into that conflict you will have those hard conversations. You will seek out a counter to get on the same page. The dangerous thing is when you don't care enough to even try your okay just being on different pages. You're okay that you don't agree and you're just going to do what you want. He's going to do what he wants. Resentment builds in that gap when you are not on the same page resentment bills that can pour into so many other aspects of your marriage care enough work hard enough to get on the same page with your spouse with all the major areas of your life. That is something you have to have to have a great marriage all right so number. One is faith a foundation of as number two. You've got to have fun number three. You've got to be on the same page with most things number four. Listen you've got to have sex. I just said it..

russell dickerson kellie dickerson rachel cruze christie matt winston soccer football Golf america
Ray Fans 14, Kirk Gets Winning Hit, Jays Beat White Sox 3–1

AP News Radio

00:42 sec | 1 year ago

Ray Fans 14, Kirk Gets Winning Hit, Jays Beat White Sox 3–1

"Robbie ray matched his career high by striking out fourteen over seven innings of the blue jays three one victory against the white Sox ray allowed just one run five hits and one walk but had to settle for a no decision the confidence with the slider was there I felt like I could throw it any count at any at any point during any of that and I felt like I was going to get a good result with it Alantra Kurt broke a tie with an RBI single in the eighth before Toronto handed the AL central leaders their fourth loss in five games Corey Dickerson furnished to with the jays eight hits including an RBI triple that tied the game in the fourth inning white Sox shortstop Tim Anderson went over for four in his return after missing the past four games because of tightness in both hamstrings I'm Dave Ferrie

Robbie Ray White Sox Alantra Kurt Blue Jays Al Central Corey Dickerson Toronto Jays Tim Anderson Dave Ferrie
Giants Turn 5 DPs, Get Alonso With Bags Full to Top Mets 3–2

AP News Radio

00:43 sec | 1 year ago

Giants Turn 5 DPs, Get Alonso With Bags Full to Top Mets 3–2

"The San Francisco Giants became the first team in MLB this year to clinch a winning season by beating the Mets three to two the giants have a come from behind to win their eighty second game York held a two to one lead entering the seventh as Taijuan Walker giving up just one hit a solo home run by Kris Bryant and thereby Johnson the aren't a bloop single by Alex Dickerson to start the seventh was enough for Lewis Ross to remove Walker for Erin loop who probably gave up a two run go ahead double to Brandon Crawford that stood up in any situation whether whether we've got a lot of hats and you know it's a nine to ten gamer or it's a big data entry to Canada it's it feels good either way the fading that's about lost ten of their last twelve games Tom Mariam New York

Taijuan Walker Kris Bryant San Francisco Giants Alex Dickerson Lewis Ross Erin Loop MLB Mets Brandon Crawford Giants York Johnson Walker Canada Tom Mariam New York
Wade’s 3-Run Homer Leads Giants to Fifth Straight Win

AP News Radio

00:41 sec | 1 year ago

Wade’s 3-Run Homer Leads Giants to Fifth Straight Win

"The giants scored six runs in the fourth highlighted by a three run Homer from Lamont Wade junior as they pummeled the rocky seven nothing Alex Dickerson a Kirkus sell each with RBI doubles and starting pitcher Logan Webb added a run scoring single web scattered three hits over six scoreless innings striking out eight to get the win I think tempos a big thing for me tempo in attack when I do that well you know I I think I put myself in a pretty good position the Rockies have the worst road record in baseball at thirteen and forty three and have an ongoing franchise market being shut out fifteen times this season her mon Marquez took the loss he was shelled lasting just four innings giving up seven runs on seven hits Ryan Lee Aung San Francisco

Lamont Wade Alex Dickerson Logan Webb Homer Giants Rockies Baseball Marquez Ryan Lee Aung San Francisco
Giants Go Extras to Win 11-8 After Diamondbacks Rally

AP News Radio

00:47 sec | 1 year ago

Giants Go Extras to Win 11-8 After Diamondbacks Rally

"The giants blew a six run lead in the fifth inning but they came back to win it with three runs in the tenth to beat the Diamondbacks eleven eight buster Posey with an RBI double Steven Duggar a run scoring single and Donovan Solano with a safety squeeze San Francisco scored five times in the fifth highlighted by grand slam from Alex Dickerson everyone's important it's cliche but the you you gotta come on you got to win these games are going to be tough days like that were you know D. backs given credit they they never quit the entire game came all the way back and you know we had to battle the data's answered with a pair of two run homers by Josh Reddick and his dribble Cabrera Arizona got a two run double from Christian Walker tied at eight in the seventh inning the giants have the best record in baseball at sixty seven thirty nine while the Diamondbacks are a major league worst thirty three and seventy four I'm Riley on

Steven Duggar Donovan Solano Alex Dickerson Diamondbacks Giants Posey Josh Reddick Cabrera Arizona San Francisco Christian Walker D. Baseball Riley
Gausman Fans 10 in Seven Innings, Giants Edge Cubs 4-3

AP News Radio

00:30 sec | 1 year ago

Gausman Fans 10 in Seven Innings, Giants Edge Cubs 4-3

"Kevin Garcia struck out ten and Alex Dickerson homered for the second straight day is the giants won their third straight over the cubs for three thousand limited the cubs to a pair of unearned runs on two hits over seven innings he seven or no with a one point two seven ERA this season Galvan overcame Patrick wisdom's Homer in the second and retired the final fifteen batters he faced Chicago had won nine of ten before losing three straight in San Francisco the giants are a major league leading thirty seven to twenty one after winning for the ninth time in eleven games I'm Dave very

Kevin Garcia Alex Dickerson Cubs Patrick Wisdom Giants Galvan Homer Chicago San Francisco Dave
Home cooking: Mets win Citi opener vs Marlins on bizarre HBP

AP News Radio

00:42 sec | 2 years ago

Home cooking: Mets win Citi opener vs Marlins on bizarre HBP

"The Mets open their home season by scoring twice in the bottom of the ninth to beat the Marlins three to two Jeff McNeil homered to tie the game at two against Anthony bass a couple of hits and an intentional walk loaded the bases when bass on a one to count hit Michael Conforto on the elbow to force in the winning run Miami manager don Mattingly argued that Conforto made no attempt to avoid getting hit and that the pitch was a strike it's just frustrating I think more than anything that the ball strike anyway to call a strike it seems like it was in the strike zone and you get hit it should be a strike it was reviewed and the call stood Brandon Nimmo had three hits for the Mets Corey Dickerson two hits and an RBI for the Marlins who fell to one six might make use of New York

Jeff Mcneil Anthony Bass Michael Conforto Conforto Mets Marlins Don Mattingly Miami Brandon Nimmo Corey Dickerson New York
Alabama football opens crucial spring practices

The Paul Finebaum Show

02:37 min | 2 years ago

Alabama football opens crucial spring practices

"Let's talk about your favorite subject. Bama returns to the practice field dispute seemed like forever. It's only been since the early part of january. So give us the lowdown. What does it look like in town right now. Paul there's a buzz of excitement of alabama. Get back into the swing. Plaque is finishing off the off season. Fourth quarter program a position battles at that. We're looking forward to the main. One is definitely a quarterback. You got three is to help a lot of panic. Rice song the fan favorites. Who could possibly get this job at quarterback with impulsive is right there. A young man go has a lot to prove. Not show coming into this The spring practice practice schedule. No he's got the five six five two hundred thirty pounds. Plus a big arm is historically of experience on the roster the behind those got shaving meal a four star coming in from texas has got some ability. Who had a good off season program self so three quarterback fighting four for number one job. Nick sabin always likes to say which one to win the team which one could take the bull by the horns and have that consistency in terms of production so the quarterback balance. We'll be fine on the offensive line. Three down the nfl draft and out of the woods lead dickerson and beyond as wound. But you return. Three guys. And chris always a meal. Et your kneel for who plays and the offer to spot. It'd be a battle next doll and right tackle. Tommy brown and kindle randolph will. Start off in those spot. Tommy brown guard kindle randolph. Right tackle ten whole those two spot especially with the talents of freshman coming in of the broccoli. Lamar boys tommy. James block them out a jc. Later florida larkana their offense of lying and then of course start to defensive tackle. Dj that's really cool. But you gotta tm smith coming up as a softball florida. He played some big production a series to go on the field. He had a twenty dollars season programs. In tm smith you know offset no dj on the starting spot there at the nose dr but of course middle linebacker defensive secondary as well. I'm gonna position battles paul to sort through here but what better time to sort. The hoover dam been splitting

Tommy Brown Kindle Randolph Nick Sabin Bama Alabama Rice Paul James Block Dickerson Larkana Texas NFL Chris Lamar Florida Tommy Smith