35 Burst results for "Dynamo"

A highlight from The END of Bitboy CRYPTO (What Comes NEXT?)

The Bitboy Crypto Podcast

04:02 min | 2 months ago

A highlight from The END of Bitboy CRYPTO (What Comes NEXT?)

"Welcome to discover crypto today marks the beginning of a new era on this channel as you know Ben had been a part of this team and this channel for many years We recently announced his complete removal and buyout from this company in his own words bit boy is dead Bit boy is dead, but bit boy is dead. There is no bit boy. There's no bit squad. It's over There's no doubt. His removal will have a dramatic effect on this channel This decision was not made lightly and had many contributing factors up until this point Ben has shared his version of the story with you You're gonna know now I had an affair and it went on for a while But the fact is is that I've messed up. I can't make an excuse for an affair been taking diet pills and I've been taking Some steroids I do steroids guys big shocker. Um, I think testosterone and I take maybe maybe some dynamo every once well It's not a big deal. Sometimes when you're in business and you're in the heat of battle you forget the things that are really important What's really important are the people that around you? How you treat them I threatened to beat the crap out of TJ when I found out he was trying to take everything from me I Threatened him and I did threaten him act a little erratic you guys if you've ever seen erratic behavior on my channel It's because I've been taking those diet pills I think at the other the end of the day My perspective of what was going on was probably not accurate in addition to the things Ben has shared regarding his affair Substance abuse and aggressive behavior towards employees. I promise you there is much more to this story We care deeply about the truth and each and every one of you watching right now Integrity is one of our core values here. And I do think the truth will come out in time I don't want to say anything negative about my friend and ex -business partner right now, please Think about how you would feel in my position. I don't want to be here I loved building this channel and business with Ben We had a great dynamic and a lot of fun over the years. This hurts all of us Anybody that supports boomio going forward you you can forget it that things gonna be done on arrival. No question about it That's not that that thing's never gonna take off. But me it's gonna do amazing For me if it's gonna be the NFT platform. I told you guys in the beginning, but when Vimeo comes out You're not gonna see an NFT platform is gonna be able to touch it There's not gonna be a better platform than Vimeo. Look at network. What is the network? It's a bunch of garbage That's what it is. And I can tell you guys that hit network is dead. The network is gonna be dead going forward I'm gonna all of those shows are gonna be gone a hundred percent all of our brands all of our brains that we have are It hurts his family on many different levels It hurts me it hurts our employees and ultimately it hurts all of you. It just sucks Unfortunately Ben crossed several lines and forced me into a position with no alternatives I had to take action to protect the team at hit Network and the company it became clear There was only one path forward What I will say is every person here at hit Network cares for Ben his wife Bethany They're three children and his entire family. We want to see them happy and healthy This has been a very painful and stressful time for us here at hit Network None of us wanted to get the rug pulled out from under us like this I also wanted to address some of the recent statements Ben has made regarding the environment here at hit Network and say those statements are unequivocally false You're told if you reach out to clarify and to try to get clarification on what has happened that you're fired There have been no threats towards employees regarding communications with Ben In fact, I encouraged many of our team members to reach out to Ben as a friend because we do care about him as a person This is my brother and so like the CEO of the company has been very respectful and has like kept a lot of stuff under wraps and I'm going to continue to do that until it all becomes public knowledge out of respect for our CEO because he has been Extremely kind to me and has reached out to me and like is helping me the best that he can I still have a job He's just been an absolutely wonderful person throughout this entire process. Everyone standing here is here on their own accord We are a family here at hit Network. We work hard We love crypto and we stand together join us today as we embark on a new journey to discover crypto together We're gonna learn a lot and change a lot as we grow.

Bethany Three Children BEN Today TJ Hit Network One Path Hundred Percent Each Many Years Vimeo HIT Person ONE Network Every BIT
"dynamo" Discussed on Men In Blazers

Men In Blazers

02:09 min | 9 months ago

"dynamo" Discussed on Men In Blazers

"You thought you were all of a sudden in South America. Like la Barra brava was dancing, it was present. It was vibrant. It was an RFK. There were years from, let's say, 2010 to 2018 where they just didn't put a good product on the field, man. And that's the thing about D.C., as we talk about, you talk about all that passion, all those fans. I talk about all that history. These people know, man, like they're not these are not fans that will just show up to watch a meddling side. You know, if you put a crap product out there, they resent that. All right, let's touch on those big market teams to Dallas is of the world. Chicago, Houston, even New York, and it paints me to say Philly because Philly's actually successful. And I think they've got a very interesting model and do things in a very good way. But you need to be relevant in your market, especially Major League Soccer they need to have relevance in these major markets. I mean, how do you improve these markets? Look, let's start with say like Dallas and Colorado, I think those teams are hamstrung by their stadium in a way. They are remnants of this MLS one where the soccer specific stadiums were these exurban things, part of bigger developments. And we got to say this, the stadium, a new stadium, isn't like a panacea for everything. I mean, you got to look at the Houston dynamo when you talk about that. They're in one of the biggest stadiums in the biggest cities, excuse me, in America. Again, diverse multicultural along soccer history. And a lot of times they can't get anybody to come to that stadium. So it's tricky, man. If there were silver bullet solution to this, man, I would tell you, but it's complicated. Maybe they can figure it out. Maybe the professors at MLS university can figure this one out for us. It's sad because as a player in the league, when I used to play in Major League Soccer, we had like a term between us. Soccer Saturday. And there was nothing worse than playing soccer on a Saturday at 1 p.m. in Dallas. In that humidity on that hard field, those moments, you know, remember back then when MLS used to cater for that soccer Saturday audience and listen, it pains me to say, but you're right about Colorado. Man, I scored the first goal in the history of that stadium. So I want to see it be around for a hundred years.

la Barra soccer Philly MLS Dallas South America D.C. Houston dynamo Houston MLS university Chicago Colorado New York America
"dynamo" Discussed on The Final Furlong Podcast

The Final Furlong Podcast

06:09 min | 9 months ago

"dynamo" Discussed on The Final Furlong Podcast

"The race for a long way back. And I'd say that that'll give it a proper read on that race, but Kylie was very good in nice and I think if he can back up that form, he'll be playing in the mix for the ballymore, the Paul Nichols horse is quite decent look good and newbury and Willie's other one imperial pass and Gaelic warrior look like they're going for the race as well. So there's plenty of strength and depth. It's a proper championship race. What you need and yeah, it's a very deep race this year, particularly, as you said, Hermes Allen, gallic warrior is by no means out of it runner up a Sheldon last year, step up and trip should suit and imperial passes a fascinating one, but I'd imagine you're quietly confident about champ Kylie. He does seem to be going under the radar, and that shouldn't be the case. Yes, you know, the few days I've ridden them has given me a great feel. I wouldn't on a flat track over two miles beating Brazil who had Gaelic warrior last year in temporary and then I got back on him and knees over two and a half tests and ground and he beat a decent field and ran out a good winner. You partnered gala marceau to grade one victory in the spring juvenile hurdle, which is a terrific trial for the triumph at the Dublin racing festival. She had finished second to last month on a Irish debut and you were on board last month in fairy house when she made her winning Irish debut. What do you make of garla marceau's prospects for the triumph fertile? She is going in as a grade one winner for all that even Willy thinks she'll turn the form around. And what do you make of lassie math? I think she has a great chance. You know, she is a great one winner going into the race, solid growing in the grade two at Christmas. She definitely improved from there to the dopamine festival and I think she may be a forgotten one in the triumph. You know, she's still a very good feeling in her own right. And I know there was a lot of hype about lassie math before her Irish debut. But there was also a quite bit of hyperbolic gallery Marcel as well. And there was quite a little bit of confidence about her, even at the Christmas meeting when she was behind last year in the night Frank. In the spring juvenile, everything went right for and she does seem to be a little bit keen. Would that be a concern for you on the new course of cheltenham on goal cup day? No, I think she'll be okay, you know, the more race and she's getting the more settlers she'll get. You know, even school owner at home, she starts to switch off and I wouldn't worry about that. I should be defining this. You know, the main thing which is a great asset tour is that she's a good jumper and a strong gallery, which you need in a juvenile, you know, some of those juveniles are very fast, but she can grind out at the finish and she's shown that and both for Irish runs. I think our French farm matches in quite closely with lossy mode. And I think even with the clear run from last year in at the Dublin festival, there would have been a good battle between the two. People forget the gallery, so it was only having our first run when she met last email to her Christmas. So there's their fairly closely matched and then you're looking, I suppose that blood destiny who all the clock experts say is better than the two Phillies, but he hasn't got grade one experience and he hasn't got much practice at that level. What he's shown has been very good and he's going to have to give away 7 pounds instead of two Phillies as well. So that, to me, puts the tree horses within a length of each other and it's going to be a proper race. You're getting three horses from the same stable, but they'll be out there to win. And blood destiny is undoubtedly exciting. But in terms of his profile, to me, he looks like a horse for next year with another summer on his back. He'll strengthen up further and he could be the horse for novice chases next year. Whereas the here and now seems to be more about gallimore and lastly myth. I'd say blood destiny is fairly here now to me. I wouldn't underestimate people think it did they're saying he's going to beat the two Phillies, but I think they're all very close. I think they need the tree can win this race with clear around the jump and level pagan on the day. So it's going to be very competitive. It was a one, two, three, four, 5 for Ireland last year. It could be one, two, three, for Willie Mullins this year. The oracle is being seen as a match between el Fabio and John Bond, but daiso dynamo back at Shelton on the old course, which is faster and a furlong shorter for the arkle than the Irish arkle. What do you make of his prospects? He's a very good horse who jumps well, but he's just his own more enemy. You see that last year when himself and John Bond went ahead in the supreme, he just burnt out too much and in leopard stone the last day he behaved a little bit better than he did for Paul at Christmas and I suppose that will come with more race and then getting more mature, but he ability is no question mark is just keeping the mindset right and the probably be fairly strong gallop in the article, but I'd say if something is on his tail down over the first few fences, there are probably going to get him dash and themselves. And that horse might very well be Jon Bon, because while plenty of people will argue, well, there's no way they'll get involved in a pace battle like the supreme last year. You can't put the Genie back in the bottle. Jon Bon goes forward. That's what he does, and that's what he's done in every single one of his novice chases so far. So you're asking an impossible task evade and Coleman to try and hold him up or even rein him back in. And if he gets fired up by dice or dynamo, they might just set it up for el fabiola. Possibly, but you know, most of these novice chases this year have had one, two or three rumors like that. And most of them haven't been contenders. I'd say

Paul Nichols Hermes Allen champ Kylie gala marceau garla marceau Phillies Dublin newbury Kylie John Bond Sheldon Willie Willy gallimore Marcel Brazil cheltenham Willie Mullins el Fabio
"dynamo" Discussed on The Final Furlong Podcast

The Final Furlong Podcast

06:21 min | 9 months ago

"dynamo" Discussed on The Final Furlong Podcast

"Hear the vast majority of the racing live on tox war two and on talksport as well. Lee McKenzie myself very much looking forward to bringing you all that coverage and a man who will be having a significant say hopefully on how the week is going to go is tough jockey Danny Mullins and he joins us now Danny. Welcome back to the show, great job your company. Thanks, it's great to be on show at an exciting time of the year and lots of look forward to and the firepower that you're going to have is quite significant, so please got it all goes well, we'll begin with the dual stairs hurdle in our flooring Porter. It hasn't been the ideal preparation to say the least, but assuming he's now back to himself, he will have a massive say. How is his preparation been going since that setback during Christmas? Yeah, Gavin seems very happy with it. And the news is quite positive. You know, in the three or four weeks leading up to the festival and that's where you want to see, you know, ideally you would have had a smoother preparation, but you know, in hindsight as well, his form this year wasn't near what he was achieving in defeat last year prior to the festival as well. So in a roundabout way, I was kind of happy to see something point to the reason for that and possibly that said back, it might have been that reason. So I know that it's over that. It gives them a great chance to be back to his best. And has his work been going smoothly since. It has, yeah, you know, he's been away for a few gallops and is very happy with what he's seeing. And Gavin is a master as well in recent years. It was the plan to not run between now and Christmas where the Christmas and the this year that that was the plan, but there was a little bit of interruption between it, but Gavin he's able to train him off his eye. He's after doing that for the last two years. So once he's happy, I'm happy. Gavin Cromwell has trained four winners at the Shelton festival, eSport de Len winning the champion hurdle in 2019, vanilla in the Albert bartlet novices hurdle obviously flooring Porter in the two stairs hurdles. He's a terrific trainer, but also horses for courses, flooring portrait when he gets to cheltenham just is a different prospect to the horse that he's been earlier in the season. This is a deeper race this year though, Danny. What do you make of the main rivals? He seems to be able to do that and you know you have home by the Leah suppose this came out of the pack this year to be a leading contender to who fu has been very good in Ireland so far all the heavy grown that's going to change and challenge them for him and you know my life is form hasn't been really on point so far this year, but I think Gavin will have him back in action and he'll give them a lot to think about. That's for sure. And the form of the governor yard has been exceptional this season and that'll give you a lot of confidence as well. And if he does win, he joins racing royalty in English driver who won three stairs hurdles the first source to do that. And of course big books, one four. What would it mean to you personally to win three stairs hurdles? I'll be unbelievable if it were to come off, you know, we've got so much against this this year, but we'll go there all guns blazing and we'll make them work to beat us. Flooring border, a key player in the stairs hurdle. I'm presuming you're going to be on board elite who caused a bit of an upset at the Dublin racing festival when winning the great one tada salt and novices hurdle, he only ever raced in grade one company as a juvenile hurdle, which says an awful lot about what Willie Mullins thinks of him. He'd been behind fasil Vega in the future champions at Christmas, but when he blew out, he was devastatingly impressive visually, and he's a very exciting one for the supreme. He is, you know, his form this year is very solid. Even in that race, a Christmas behind has a Vega. He gave him a little freak going down to the last and obviously if I didn't really turn up at the double festival for whatever reason and it later ran he Frank that form of Christmas and for me he even moved at the Dublin festival. So going to chatham speed looks no issue to him. He's a second season novice, which gives him great experience in a race like supreme. And yeah, I think he'll have a good chance. It was notable how you reigned him back in the tassels and obviously you moved back from the very hot pace that was going on up front. Was that the key in that race? Was it just that Paul and JJ had gone too fast out in front and you identify that and sat back and were then able to capitalize? Have I let it he was just running a little bit keen away from the stands that downhill run and I just wanted to go a fraction slower, but the plan for me at Christmas was to jump out and make their own and I went down and made a mistake at the first and he just wasn't attacking. So I had to go a plan B that they were never sound he was on song all the way and yeah give me right through the race and even his jumping down the back straight was so fast for me to be he was making ground without me having to burn pastoral. That's probably what you're going to need to win a supreme two miles from novices around the old course in them. They come at them quick and fast. Critics would say the form doesn't really make sense in that Irish point was second favorite. He finished his second last high definition head on seated and fascinated, obviously ends up finishing last, but the visual impression of what he did. That was hugely impressive. How confident are you going into the supreme? He's a contender. It'll be foolish to say you're going to turn up and win again, but he's a genuine contender in high definition is probably the forgotten horse in the race. It can bounce back again and the rest of them will have to get it later Tom. And what's the viper professor Vega now? Very good Joe Dave Porter writes him out every day at home. He is looking great. I think everything has gone very smoothly for him going to cheltenham and I think there's no reason to say why he can get back to his best. You want a grade one on champ Kylie nice in early January last time out. And he might be the forgotten horse in the ballymore novices hurdle. He was the odds on favorite for the royal Bond and clearly he didn't give his proper running that day, but he was very, very good under you and ace. Yes, I think the royal Bond was a bit of a tricky race to work out. You know, maybe a bit of stuff start gallop through the race and it's just being a little bit of a head scratcher. It'll be interesting to see how marine nationale comes out or in the supreme.

Gavin Lee McKenzie Danny Mullins Gavin Cromwell eSport de Len Albert bartlet Porter Danny Willie Mullins fasil Vega Dublin cheltenham Leah Ireland JJ Frank Joe Dave Porter Paul champ Kylie
DEX Volume on OP Network Rises Above 200M Over the Last 24 Hours

Coin Edition

00:43 sec | 9 months ago

DEX Volume on OP Network Rises Above 200M Over the Last 24 Hours

"10 a.m. Sunday, February 26th, 2023. DX volume on op network rises above 200 M over the last 24 hours. Coinbase recently announced that it will build its layer two on top of the optimism op network. The Twitter user, Patrick dynamo defied dynamo Patrick, tweeted this morning that OP's trading volume surged following the announcement. In the tweet the Twitter user added that decentralized exchanges DEX on the optimism network processed more than 200 million the post DEX volume on op network rises above 200 M over the last 24 hours appeared first on coin edition.

Coinbase Patrick Dynamo Dynamo Patrick Twitter OP
J.John's New Book 'Will I Be Fat in Heaven? And Other Curious Questions' Has a Special Endorsement

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:15 min | 2 years ago

J.John's New Book 'Will I Be Fat in Heaven? And Other Curious Questions' Has a Special Endorsement

"I'm talking to canon J John, the new book is will I be fat in heaven and other curious questions. So you're telling us a story of being in Australia? Is this many years ago? Yes. Quite a few years ago. And so this young woman comes up to you at the end and says, I hated what you said, church destroys people. Absolutely. So I said to her look, have you got a few minutes and she was like, why? Really angry. I said, if you've got a few minutes, can we go and have a coffee? And she like, all right, let's go. So we just went to the cafeteria. We sat there. We got a coffee. I said, why, why are you so angry? And all this stuff just came out. And I just listened. I said, that was a Monday. I said, come and hear me Tuesday and we'll have a coffee. And she's like, I don't know. Anyway, she came went for coffee. I said, come and hear me Wednesday, we'll go for coffee. She came, we went for coffee. Come and hear me Thursday. We'll go for coffee. She came. We went for coffee. I'd say one meeting left, come and hear me Friday. We'll go for coffee, Friday. She's ransomed hilled restored and forgiven. That girl's name, Christine Kane. Ladies and gentlemen, on the back of this book, will I be fat in heaven and other curious questions? There's a blurb. An endorsement from Christine Kane. Some people because we have a very mixed kind of crowd who tunes into this program. Some people know who Christine Kane is many do not. So tell my audience who Christine Kane is. Well, and the interesting thing about that story, Eric is 5 coffees. 5 coffees help this restless girl and counter the tune living God. Well, she's a little dynamo. I think one of the most incredible things that she and her husband are doing is that they founded a ministry called a 21, which is anti human trafficking and has made such a difference throughout Europe and around the world. And she's a speaker. I mean, she's an ambassador for Jesus. Oh, she's a big she's a big

Canon J John Christine Kane Australia Eric Europe
"dynamo" Discussed on Devi Mahatmyam(Durga Saptashati)

Devi Mahatmyam(Durga Saptashati)

03:25 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on Devi Mahatmyam(Durga Saptashati)

"Word norio greatness that is on being eamonn nim so we that we stop here. We n ye your chapter so you enter the lord of gus for you all have said not trouble. I'm last in which i miss. Dixie the sudas euchre davis local woman. Going pink listen game because your different talking about human being object off justin advancement. He's object of somebody who designed similarly is a cat Jingle don't use of a adidi to a latina woman is incapable and never see the one lead some board. Mass am also or every these. She's a yard. She has been subjected to certain challenges in this war. least your position. You have to understand the davy. Become that dingy redo Nobody can give you the mold. Say the word is talk like this. That woman that went to data Team that you know this may in this word see. That's that's being the way how the word has been designed pretty disley. You realize that is what we're talking about. Your devi become the door because in ordinary shooting being become who. You're just a model. Your job is only to do. Your job is to be your best while you have a job. Towards your san fasten who we want a sobbing opus off. Be born as this human being. You have to solve your sworn following the government. That is what it is and this you. I disagreed borders. Don't don't become apathetic towards delay and all sympathize because everybody david c doesn't mean the davy god dissuaded. Did you see team. No no she said. Gordon austin has taken a while only those who are eat one stint with me. Who can defeat me. I then them what does that. You're that dance. You homage bala. She has she's not anybody you're know what is one thing that she's demonstrating that fearlessness. We've you're everything. Why should you feel understanding of greed waters. You have all this double the venue and never anything this your life grip strength the federal zeevi within you that potential within you you are the hoppy. You are the big orders rice. Let this exactly be the worst beautiful one for you so that you can empower the slot within your fearless and be this. The thank you once again for. Joining the dating. Mahatma modern new parana during the seventy duck or she i'm data home. She today that though. She sits down on the Sign up ads. E. j. bugaboo moss of the evaluated the but the but i she molybdenite umbrella. She krishna remember out there she would be no maha davey dynamo not but another bushman bondage..

norio eamonn nim disley Gordon austin justin david c bala san E. j maha davey dynamo krishna
"dynamo" Discussed on 860AM The Answer

860AM The Answer

04:31 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on 860AM The Answer

"Had that I could cry. Welcome back America and Hugh Hewitt. Good morning to you. John Androgenic is a hard hitting, gut punching new song. Blood on our hands. Which will be released on video later today. I've got the audio from John. I'm authorized to play it and I hope everyone listens to it. We have really done the people of Afghanistan a great evil. And the darkness is descending, and we got hundreds and hundreds of Americans over there. In fact, Gen. Wilson is the chief operating officer of Army Weak association and the founder of Project Dynamo. Went on Fox with Steve Hilton yesterday and said this cut number two Well, I mean, we haven't moved on. We've been working, you know, 48 hour shifts with no sleep literally with no sleep. I mean, we basically had to roll up a private airline and travel agency in the span of three weeks because we have over 20,000 requests for evacuation just through our website alone. And that's Americans. That's green card holders. That's NATO passport holders. There are a can't even count how many pregnant females that were trying to evacuate? Um it's It's definitely not over and you know, we've had to roll it up and fund it. So it's it's been. It's been a hell of a three weeks, but we're not done. Well. I mean, it's just incredible. You and so many of your colleagues are doing. Let me just ask you specifically. I mean that that telling us there's about 100 Americans left, We're going to get them out. State Department's working We trust the Taliban Me What? What, When you hear that, and then you know what's going on and tell us about the Americans. I worry about those who You know, we don't even hear from or they're not willing Kabul or next door to an airport or can't even get to an airport there somewhere around the country in hiding because they're so frightened. Tell us tell us what's really going on. Yes. I mean, we're in constant communication literally all day every day with the trapped Americans, and you're right. They do They do span. You know the entire confines of that country. They're not just in Kabul there, not just in Mazari Sharif. They're not just inherit their. They are all over. I don't want to get into numbers because, uh, of how many There are, um But we we have We have a lot of, um, like I said of Americans of green card holders, NATO passport holders, Um and every every shape, color and creed of Afghan national that you can imagine sieves seven processed peas, peas and process humanitarian parole. Did refugee status. I mean, a lot of they weren't planning on this to happen. So many of them their Children don't have passports. You don't have a chance of getting out of that country or any neighboring country on any airplane without a passport, and there is no there's no embassies there anymore, so I'll enormous swath of these people. Are stuck in some bureaucratic hell, and we were trying ones trying to help them facilitate exit. But we also have our hands tied because we are in a government agency. We cannot deal with visas, and that's the heartbreaking conversation we have all day. Every day is I can't approve your visa. I can't help you get one. I don't I don't have any way of doing any of that. And it's so frustrating. Former deputy director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Mike Morel was on faith The nation with Margaret Brennan. And he talks about how the infirmity of Joe Biden the weakness of Anthony Blinken, or abandonment of our allies what it's doing to America in the world cut number. Four. I think that The Taliban winning the war in Afghanistan, and then the way our exit Happened. Has absolutely inspired jihadist all over the world. Um, the Taliban is saying, we just didn't defeat the United States. We defeated NATO. We defeated the world's greatest military power ever. So there's a celebration going on. We defeated the Soviet Union and it fell. Now we've defeated. NATO right. Maybe they can fall to. I think not only will jihadist be inspired, but a lot of them are going to come to Afghanistan to be part of the celebration. To be hard to be part of jihadist central. So after 9 11 they all scattered from Afghanistan. I think we're going to see a flow back in, and that's one of.

Steve Hilton Anthony Blinken Joe Biden Hugh Hewitt Margaret Brennan John Mike Morel Mazari Sharif Central Intelligence Agency Project Dynamo Kabul Afghanistan 48 hour three weeks yesterday hundreds 9 11 Fox NATO Gen.
"dynamo" Discussed on KSFO-AM

KSFO-AM

04:01 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on KSFO-AM

"He's been a fundraising dynamo since he entered the U. S Senate back in January. But this is going to be one of the most highly contested races in the country next year. Yeah, for Herschel Walker, I guess. You know, being a former football star, and having that name recognition doesn't necessarily mean you can run a successful campaign right. So that will be interesting to watch. I want to ask about Arizona, too, because it's another usually red state that flipped blue, Um, with another new senator has to run again. Mark Kelly has anything changed in Arizona since the 2020 election. Similar story is Georgia, right? This is another one of those four states where Republicans think they can flip a blue seat. Red Kelly, like Warnock has raised a lot of money, uh and will be a very, very formidable incumbent as he runs for re election right now on the Republican side. You've got a bunch of contenders, uh and already a very divisive primary forming with one of the candidates already going up with ads slamming another one of the candidates and one of the big issues in the Republican primary battle, there will be whether or not the election, the 2020 presidential election was stolen in Arizona, Uh as former President Trump Trump continues to beat the EOS, unfounded claims Of election fraud and that the election was stolen. Arizona is one of those focal points. How much of an impact can other issues that got the national spotlight make in certain states? For instance, in Florida? Will they care about President Biden's handling of Cuba or in Pennsylvania? His cancellation of the Keystone Pipeline? Um, when it comes to next year's elections, let's start with Pennsylvania. Republicans used the Keystone Pipeline issue nonstop against then candidate Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election. But at the in the end it didn't make a difference. And Biden carried the state. Will they continue to beat that trump? Yeah, they will. In Pennsylvania and in Florida Democrats are very nervous about how the president has handled the Cuban, uh, protests of this pat earlier this summer. And they felt that the president wasn't aggressive enough in supporting those protesting the regime. The communist regime in Havana Democrats see that as a a liability against the president and against them as they try to recapture a couple the congressional districts they lost in the 2020 cycle, and as they try to win back that Republican health Senate seat in Republican held governor's office, I have to ask one last question. Um, about The president's trillions of dollars in new spending, which so far is still on track in Congress. Could that peel any moderate voters away from Democrats, especially if maybe voters want to see more checks and balances in Washington? Republicans have been here really hammering home the point that the Democrats are spending way too much money and plan to spend even more and that that's fueling the rise in consumer prices. They've been going up with ads targeting vulnerable Democrats running in the House for re election next Year over this issue of uncontrolled government spending. It's something they're going to continue to beat the drum on between now and November of next year, especially if the Democrats are able to pass that 3.5 trillion spending blueprint that they proposed in Congress. Fox News Politics reporter Paul Steinhauser. Thank you so much for your time. Thanks, Lisa. You're listening to the Fox News. Rundown. Stay tuned for Armstrong and Getty, starting at six. On talk radio 5 60 ksfo. Yeah. If you're like most people, you're probably more than a little concerned about the state of the world around us today. Strange times the stock market all time highs every day. U. S debt never been higher right now. Dollars losing value. And let's not forget about inflation, the highest since 2000 and eight..

Mark Kelly Joe Biden Herschel Walker Lisa Paul Steinhauser January Florida Biden Congress trump next year Pennsylvania 3.5 trillion Warnock U. S Senate Red Kelly Fox News Armstrong Republicans Republican
"dynamo" Discussed on Made of Mettle

Made of Mettle

03:44 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on Made of Mettle

"Where we tell stories about regular people overcoming insurmountable odds in today's episode. I'll be telling you all the story about an incredible figure. Someone who set the bar for invention and innovation. This individual was not born for the beaten path very much to the contrary they forge an entirely new way for humanity to live a brilliant mind who lived their own truth although often rejected and misunderstood by society as a whole this individual balanced reality science and the metaphysical incorporating all aspects with an understanding into spirituality that was unheard of in that time period and of course one of my all time favorites people. And if you've been listening to this season so far. I'm sure you're notice a theme here. So the genius the accenture the ever thorough. Nikola tesla. so let's get right into it. Nikola tesla was born on july tenth. Eighteen fifty six in. What is now croatia. Nikola was born to a family of serbian descent. With four other siblings nicholas father was an orthodox priest who longed for nikola to follow his footsteps into priesthood nicholas. Mother raised the children as well as had her own electrical engineering projects that helped contribute to improving the quality of life for everyone in the household. It said that nikolas mother was the first one to inspire him to pursue his own path into inventing. As nikola grew up he would described as having an out of this world imagination and a sense of individual creativity that was beyond just regular passion with his mother's examples set early on nikola decided to become an engineer. He started his higher education and attended a series of technical and engineering schools in germany austria including the polytechnic institute as well as the university of prague while going to school in austria nikola was first exposed to a generator. Called the graham dynamo which when reversed could also be used as an electric motor. When nikola worked with the graham dynamo the idea alternating current began to blossom and take root in his mind's eye after attending school. Nikola moved to budapest to work for the central telephone exchange. In the short time and nicholas early adulthood he pursued his interest earnestly this passion would be important defining factor as he was about to enter one of the most fierce fights of his life as he was exploring budapest. Nikola began work on developing his vision of an induction motor predicated on the principle of the rotating magnetic field. This would become the first step for nikola in utilizing his alternating current design. Now we're about to enter the beginning of a showdown of epic proportions. After leaving budapest's nikola traveled to paris to work for the continental edison company in eighteen. Eighty two in eighteen eighty three. Nikola created his first working induction motor. Unfortunately as with most new inventions. It was difficult for nikola to garner interest after spending years traveling across europe searching for support.

nikola Nikola tesla Nikola nicholas university of prague graham dynamo austria nikolas croatia budapest polytechnic institute germany continental edison paris europe
"dynamo" Discussed on Radio Free Cybertron - All of our Transformers podcasts!

Radio Free Cybertron - All of our Transformers podcasts!

05:19 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on Radio Free Cybertron - All of our Transformers podcasts!

"The hands do just fold down but they also do a one eighty twist so you pull them out and then twist them one eighty for robot mode and and then when you twist them back they go right back in for a dynamo d- to be flush so there's no panel that you flip a panel down to fold the fist in the fish just rotate and go into the slot tool in s for aftermarket kid. It's i heard someone say that. The the horns on the dinosaur head basically can be popped out pretty easily totally. See like a very basic kit being like. Yeah they're holding right now One basic add on kit could be like you know the sword that the toy doesn't come with and like red horns for more toy accuracy just for one example like there's a lot of low low investment kind of stuff that can be done with this and probably integrate a little bit better than what we have for gr- right now doesn't they come with like daniel to that's like the same as the wheel. Your something terrible doncaster. It across the room massey's so we'll get an upgrade kit with a new daniel that actually transforms probably i mean i wouldn't i would not at all be surprised by that and i might actually go for that defending what it looks like. I don't need. I didn't need the huili from the grim wok kit because i have the titans return legends version of that which i think is a perfectly good wheel toy aldo..

daniel massey titans
"dynamo" Discussed on KOMO

KOMO

03:22 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on KOMO

"Distancing policies at each institution will vary. In Snohomish County. Every community college will have a 35% to 40% mix of in person instruction. While Cascadia College anticipates a 43% return to face to face classes, the Everett Herald reports Washington State University, Everett is gearing up for a Fully in person schedule while you w bottle plans to return to largely in person instruction The people in federal way, who plays shopping carts full of garbage and other items from homeless camps along busy roads last month, will not face fines or citations. The shopping cart protest was meant to show how frustrated some residents are with the city's approach to the homeless problem more from co most Carlene Johnson, he was last month dozens of shopping carts filled with garbage. Other things from homeless camps across the city line, Busy roadways three different Times. City officials previously said that those responsible could face fines up to $5000 even jail time. But now the federal emir, reports they have backed off. At last night's council meeting, several residents spoke out on the homeless and drug issues in the city. People defecating and using the bathroom in areas or a man with his pants down the other day. Or people with needles in their arm That's actually happened with all three of my young Children. These are becoming something my Children are being so accustomed to. They're not even moved by it anymore. Mayor Jim Farrell said the shopping cart protests were counterproductive and did nothing but did show people's frustration with the issue. Charlene Johnson. Come on news, the city of Seattle says it has made some changes to make the commute through the Green Lake neighborhood. Safer s dot said they made improvements to benefit drivers and pedestrians like new bike post and lanes around the lake. New traffic signals. Sidewalk prepares an updated curb ramps. The changes were five years in the making s calling of one of the most significant investments made with tax dollars. The community now invited to celebrate the new projects on July 31st. That's Cuomo's Ryan Yamamoto. The historic building that burned to the ground in Tacoma Sunday was only the tip of the iceberg of destruction. The fiber optic lines that feed the city of Lakewood also burned, leaving many customers without Internet service, including the city Monday Nights Council meeting was not Livestreamed because of the issue and new city permit applications are unavailable online until further notice. An investigation into the cause of the fire is ongoing, with straight fireworks not ruled out. As a possibility. Global News time is 1 40. Let's get a beacon plumbing Sports update with Cuomo's Bill Schwarz big crowd side by side in South downtown Seattle tonight. Washington State fully reopened after 17 months of Covid restrictions, the Seattle Sounders now allowed to open up the entire lower bowl of Lumen field for a major league soccer match against the Dynamo. They'll be missing some guys, same as US Will use the first open crowd fully Everything stadium, get everybody out there and it's an opportunity. Brian Schmidt, sirs rave Green, Undefeated in the 1st 12 soccer matches, The Mariners permitted the host of full house at T Mobile Park, although last night's series opener against the Yankees drew just over 16,000. Seattle lost badly. 12 to 1. Game two starts at 7 10 this evening. The Seattle Storm tonight take a 14 and four record into Everett's Angel of the winds Arena against the six and 11 L. A Sparks If storm guard Jewel Lloyd sits.

Brian Schmidt Charlene Johnson Ryan Yamamoto July 31st 43% 35% Jewel Lloyd Yankees Carlene Johnson Washington State University Green Lake Snohomish County Cascadia College Tacoma Seattle Sounders T Mobile Park Lakewood Seattle Dynamo Lumen
"dynamo" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

KOA 850 AM

04:48 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

"Hearing at one point in time. This is Tracy. Wrinkles be never. Yeah, Yeah. Oh, OK. Rick Lewis. Okay, Tracy. Wrinkles be. Yeah. How you doing, man? Thanks for calling. I'm fine. Gosh, I've got to renew old acquaintances at times, you know, and, uh, put on finance shoots. One of the things I've heard at times was that he doesn't want to own a team in the town where he's established a list. Because when things don't go well as the months yeah, yeah, seriously seriously. It's like if you're really wealthy and you have intelligence, and you want to get involved in a sports franchise, your best to go to a different town than where you live because When things go bad. You become the small guy for a lot of people does and shoots lived here in Denver, or does he live in the L? A area? I thought he lived in Denver. I don't know. I just He might, Kathy, you know I know his kids have in the Denver area. Yeah, And he That was the reason he got interested in the Lakers as opposed to the Nuggets. Was that he? Uh yeah. Where you're known. The last thing you want to do is be the owner. Why do you think he sold his stake in the Lakers? I don't. I don't know. I mean, I mean, Unless he is looking to do something bigger, but doesn't he Isn't he involved with football team already? I don't know. You know what? I'm not sure. Actually, he doesn't. He has a King's the Staples Center 02 Arena. It's a soccer team. Okay. He has. He has the L. A galaxy, The Chicago fire. Houston Dynamo. Alright, We're talking to the cowboy Tracy. Wrinkles be we go, Uh We go way back. Believe it or not to when Tracy was at the Long Beach Press Telegram. Yeah, you were. Yeah, We were both still young. And I was in college and I remember interviewing Tracy on. I had a sports talk show at the at the college radio station, and Tracy was kind enough to come on. That was a big get for me back then, Tracy. Well, I thought it was that I went to a college campus because I really hadn't been on many other than to sit in the stands and awareness. So you work pretty relatively new in the business, too, right? Actually, I started the business when I was 17 and 1968 8. Oh, okay. So you so you are a veteran? More or less? Yeah, I was a veteran who knew very little. Yeah. And then you, you, you and the angels. Why do I remember? Did you cover the angels? Were you the Angels beat writer? Yes, I was. Okay, so I got the beast. That's where Friendship with Don Baylor beginning. Yeah, I'm one of my favorite players and favorite guys of all time We miss him. Tracy did. I didn't I didn't watch last night. Did Nolan Arenado get a good reception from Rockies fans very much so, but he was worried about what kind of reception is going to get. The fans here, love love it, You know he wanted he wanted to leave and and the Rockies traded him, and there's a lot of hard feelings about that. But I don't think anybody grudge to his decision that he wanted to go someplace else. Unfortunately there in fourth place to Yeah, I mean, it's they're not tearing up the league with Nolan era nado. Is this the strangest baseball season that you've ever witnessed? I'm talking about the Rockies home and away record. Yeah. I mean, they're one of the best teams in baseball at home and in the worst the worst team on the road and it I don't know that there's a logical explanation for I mean, there's no way you can be that much better at home. I mean, you're going to be better at home, but not to the degree of this one, and not to the point where he's got the worst road record and they help Yeah. If you add it all together, there's about six or seven teams with worship records. Overall, it's there's no logic to it. I've never seen anything like it and not only the worst road record in baseball. It could be the worst road record in the history of baseball. I mean, this is a historically bad road record crazy at this point in time, they've got the worse 20% of the season where they end. Fact that tonight but at least back to 19. Oh, one when making basically started. Don't.

Rick Lewis Denver Kathy Nolan Arenado Rockies Houston Dynamo Nolan 20% Tracy Don Baylor Lakers tonight last night Staples Center 02 Arena both Chicago fire 1968 seven teams One fourth place
"dynamo" Discussed on Newsradio 700 WLW

Newsradio 700 WLW

01:55 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on Newsradio 700 WLW

"Man, the love and support that I've heard from the stadium and teammates coaching staff. Players on the other team. Um I'm honored, really, and very thankful for everybody who You know, casting a ballot for not only me, but Jesse also, and also Winker. It means a lot I want to say, um, thank you to everybody that voted for me. Um You know what, man? I, uh I never thought this could happen for me. I'm very thankful. It's the first time since 2013. The Reds will have two starters in all Star game when Joey Votto and Brandon Fellows made it in 2013. NBA playoffs. Milwaukee beat Atlanta 1 23 to 1 12 Bucks up in that East final series three games to two NHL Game three of the Stanley Cup finals tonight. Tampa Bay at Montreal Lightning lead it there two games to none. MLS soccer tomorrow night. Since they got Cincinnati goes for the third straight match win and at the Houston Dynamo 8 30 on ESPN 15 30 Racing this weekend NASCAR Cup series and Xfinity series that wrote American Wisconsin Indy car runs Sunday in the mid Ohio Sports car Course. Unlimited Hydroplane run the Madison Regatta Gold Cup all weekend on the Ohio River. Formula One runs the Austrian Grand Prix Bill Dennison 700 WLW School, I want to introduce you. The Thundercats Technology. Thunder. Cat Technology is a premier provider of solutions not only for government organizations but educational institutions and commercial enterprises as a leader in cybersecurity infrastructure, unified communications and cloud technology, verticals Thundercats, not just a reseller. They are trusted Advisors for businesses and their clients Find out more. Under cat tech dot com. Thundercats tech dot com Hi.

Joey Votto Jesse Winker Sunday Madison Regatta Gold Cup Thundercats Atlanta tomorrow night Brandon Fellows Ohio River Austrian Grand Prix two games three games NASCAR Cup Milwaukee Cincinnati Tampa Bay NBA Houston Dynamo Stanley Cup
"dynamo" Discussed on View from the Cheap Seats

View from the Cheap Seats

07:15 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on View from the Cheap Seats

"Bryce harper manually. Why did these guys or garrett. Cole why did we talk about at the top of the show you know. Baseball's got a lot of issues and a lot of problems one of which is the sticky stuff on the baseball's which is causing like pitching dominance. Like we've never seen in. They're not controlling and it's like steroids. I think this would go a long way for baseball to say. This is how you take care of your own. I think about the basketball g. League and i know it's less players but the g. league is offering players five hundred thousand dollars a year to play in the g. League exactly i was thinking exactly the g. league. They take care of those guys because they realize they're valuable in the contribute to the sport like the cash rate. Have sport without them. So i completely agree and no one's gonna hit those baseballs eating those sandwiches. If you want to fix this problem you gotta give these guys some meat on their bones just like seeing the feature act like mine money paying the feature act. It really is just to do it but do it. I watched looked at the pictures of the food. And i was like. Ooh this is like bad. Comedy club. Food in grand rapids. You know what i like. The giggle fries. All right all right. I love this last story. Because it sticks to russia so much ended soccer star ukraine's new euro twenty twenty. Kit has sparked anger in russia by featuring a map of the country that includes crimea russia. Annexed the crimean peninsula from ukraine in two thousand fourteen considers it part of their territory. It is internationally recognized as part of ukraine. So why not. Put it on your uniform. It's yours right. that's so. I didn't know that at all. It's like we all know that. Like georgia's voting districts are going to be redrawn so democrats will never win the state again but right now it's not read. It can still. We can still pay. That is blue same here with us old because like lives could be unique. Putin's just gonna take that lightly. He's not a guy who's like they're having fun with the soccer search. He's going to send in tanks on that thing. I mean and then show them how much crimea is but that is so to literally on yours because you know again bringing this to the global issue sports but like we talk about sports being like if as the nuggets play. Well you have such deep fried in your town in denver. And i know you're prideful person. Denver you love denver so much you live there. I mean it's like you don't even live in los angeles at your how that's your home and your proud to live there when you do a weekend of shows and sell out at the comedy works in denver and downtown or even landmark out south it. It makes you proud because you're like i'm a local person who's here even though i've made it on the big stage and made it in hollywood and whatnot. I'm back here in denver. But you have pride like no other when your team wins and your city wins fills you with pride in a way that you can't do anymore so same. Soccer soccer lebeau specially internationally if you ever seen a turkish soccer game. It's just insane the amount of so that is like you're literally tapping into the most ever and now you're going to draw map that says the international everyone else in the world recognized this. Oh man so. Russia drew the map. The russia ukraine drew the map and said crimea's part of them and russia had annexed and took it. It's almost like no. You didn't look our soccer uniform. Says that's all looking into that. Who says ukraine week. Strong ukraine various thrones. Now to me. I would love to see and again. I don't know how russia's always feels like a surprisingly good soccer team. I'm assuming all of them or on steroids. But like the approach right guy in the world cup of years ago arshad in guy. Yeah yeah. Our shopping was great. Shevchenko and our shop in those are great great great players russia but they always feel like a really good team. But how great would it be. If ukraine played russia in the world cup and ukraine. One that i would die. I think people on the team with suddenly disappear. Somebody somebody get poisoned teams in those areas. Have such great names like the team out of ukraine. The big one is dynamo kiev. There's like moscow locomotive. It's so so the at and strong sounding so those dynamo kiev boys out on the national squad. Let's let's do this. Let's timing and what would be great as to see those two teams play each other in ukraine because it is the world cup is the type of thing. Remember the world cup Few years back when iceland. Yup that iceland team made it to like the round of thirty two or they interrupted the route of sixteen to the quarterfinals. It was just like oh this. Viking chance in the stadium and stuff that was so cool so amazing so i just feel like anything's possible in the world cup if you have a good team and you have a good squad and their coach well and they play cohesively bacon. Anybody can beat anybody. If you've ever watched the fa cup in england like anybody can beat anybody on a given day. You just don't know what's going to happen. Somebody could fall down. The scoring is so. It's so slight that you can just wind up all the brave schedule so i'm sure i don't know if you watch. Usa mexico the other night was in colorado was ever. It was the ever. So i mean you think about what the us has been lacking as a team. They've been lacking a score. They've been lacking that guy who can finish. And then they get pulisic. Who's like developed in england and it's really developed an on shelves champions league champion to champion game winning goal and he comes up in the moment where you need a guy to come up and score and he scores on a penalty kick in they beat and no question on that penalty kick and the fact that our backup goalie and admitted save on a penalty kick in western colorado. Use a rapa so he was like doing it in his hometown. Everyone's like what back he was. The backup. goalie comes in and saves sixty. Maybe one of the biggest saves certainly in that rivalry but what was amazing is because it was kind of questionable questionable whether or not they got knocked down in the in the box. But you could say. I can't believe the refs are going to determine this game right here the and you just as a ref. Don't wanna make that call. You literally do not wanna make that call. That is going to determine who's going to win this game that was played so well as back and forth. It was just an incredible game. You'd rather go to penalty kicks than not have to decide it on that thing. So when and i thought okay. That's it so when mexico got the penalty kick on the other side. I actually had a sigh of relief. I was like okay. It's like a makeup call equitable for sure. I agree yeah. I mean i obviously was rooting for the usa. But i agree. It shouldn't as a you don't want to intervene at all if you leave no imprint on the game. It's perfect game by you so we kicks now so we come full circle and talk about the regionality of it all usa mexico is one of the best rivalries ever. It's just it's so fun and that game to me was such a joy to watch because it was the entire rivalry in one game and it just. I don't know i loved it so much so again. Who knows if it's going to be utah. Denver in the western conference.

Putin denver Cole Bryce harper colorado five hundred thousand dollars garrett two teams dynamo kiev one game england western colorado Denver democrats sixty russia one fa cup turkish world cup
"dynamo" Discussed on Snarf Talk

Snarf Talk

05:17 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on Snarf Talk

"Yes subzero buzzsaw dynamite. Who has fire. Gary dynamo the fire guys. Jim brown the running back yeah fireball and then fussy ventura is captain freedom yes. Captain hampton fritos like popping pills for steroids and they give them this really weird armor stuff at the end to try to wear but dynamo. Is this opera singer very fat opera singer rapist of big time trying to raise girl like now like right hallway in his underwear in his that. He wasn't in his underwear when they fell to the ground but then when he was getting shocked he was all of sudden in the central already know he was when they fell to the ground he was tidies was he must've taken off because he was point get rape. He was really weird there. The there were things in this movie. Shocked me on like how a graphic times with a rated r. movie. Yeah like the blood and like the chainsaw thing and then nolan said it in his quote but in his Note to us and like their one liners are just really hard into the point. Where he's like he had to split. Yeah i also love that. Arnold schwarzenegger is just having a great time. But he's smiling lot. Yeah he's smoking stogies. He's always yar he. He's doing a lot of things in this movie and sat running while nolan. Did i thought it was great. So i watched them running man last week in my thoughts are if aliens ever visited the earth and requested knowledge about nineteen eighties action movies. All they would need to watch is the running man cheesy one liners character tropes Explosions everywhere lots of synthesized drums and guitar. Riffs sparkly explosions. Cheesy one liners but the laboratory rat to celebrity wrestlers became politicians. Whose the second i mean. I know jesse. Ventura arnold schwarzenegger wrestler. No maybe he's thinking of sorts in egger. I would assume so because he was the only one that became another governor. Anyway so it ends it get. What's interesting about it is as he starts. Dispatching these gladiators. The crowd is reality. Show start rooting for them. But they were super upset when he was getting rid of the the other people fighters at i what do they call them stalkers. Yes dockers. so he they were getting really pissed that they the killing the stalkers. But then the old grandma that yeah. Who's going to have the next skill. Yeah and she voted for him and he's like he said do. I'm richard dawson says tour. Now that's that's the the running man you know. What stalker are you picking..

richard dawson Arnold schwarzenegger nolan Jim brown last week earth Ventura arnold schwarzenegger fussy Gary dynamo jesse one Captain hampton fritos nineteen eighties ventura second one liners
"dynamo" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera

Podcast RadioViajera

05:02 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera

"But again boom but gust at afghan liga film the volume podcast paypal. They discovered arrows utara dollars. Happy so the game o'shea medieval asked. Our number one was much. We were those being. Say your saloons. Firearm is alan d. If he but if this is the the larisa theology asean go the economic. You didn't laputa the canal. Mony more sunday compliment demos gone of immune to game in the At the podcast. I believe okay. Mos de la llosa mitt. Then wounded there as they believe that. This famous yes rathbone. Borlaug all must have politics. I'm into this show ended the late. Mr yeo said the beneath la llosa mit laquelle genesis ties. But i through. La la de la puerta del diplo and this commercial break. Dynamo's gabala a and it's the show under the second made but he made him into this.

paypal second afghan liga Mony At la sunday one
"dynamo" Discussed on 90 and Extra Time

90 and Extra Time

05:29 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on 90 and Extra Time

"They have some type of relegation promotion. But it's based on like a three year cycle or something like that. I might be confused. That within the league but i think that would be great. I think it would probably hurt mexican football a little bit. I think it would be great for you. Know u s and canadian in kenyan football I think would definitely improve the quality of the game in the us and canada Plus you know why not why not the. Us canada mexico. And then you can throw costa rican. There are like the four big teams in north america. Why not have those three countries with one league. I think it would be great. We already have the the league's cup and then the companies cup. I think that it would strengthen the the conquer caf champions league's well. I'm all for it at least try it. He no see how it works and go from there. It doesn't work then you know. Mls and legal mexican separate do their own thing but why not try. It could completely change the way that football is looked at in north america. This is my personal opinion are moving on already. Mentions lot getting called up. He's been playing three matches The two world cup qualifiers against georgia in kosovo in the friendly against the stony would be good to see a lot of time back in the swedish yellow. This crazy story Tottenham obviously was playing dinamo zagreb in the round of sixteen europa league. And i think it was a day before a couple of days before their match. And keeping my tottenham was up two zero the coach of dynamo. He was thrown in jail. After the croatian supreme court charged him with fraud so he resigned from the club their own or whatever or some like The director i think maybe he likes fled to i think bosnia kosovo and then two days later dinamo zagreb. Already down to zero defeated tottenham. And now they're moving on to the quarterfinals of the europa league. Like that's just crazy. And what does that. Say about the josie marina. Like does that make you feel you know. You just got lost to a team. Who's who's manager for men here is now in jail for four years for fraud and you're one of the biggest clubs in the world and you get knocked out by this team. I mean it is kinda of. It's any given sunday in american football but you know it's one of the things can beat any other team but that that is just crazy so and last but not least just came out today. Uefa is planning on getting rid of the current Financial fair play rules that they have so. I'm sure teams like man city chelsea. Psg in a few others are going to be really excited so psg especially they may be able to pull in bring some of those big stars that they thought they wouldn't be able to afford or not necessarily four be able to put on their books because of financial fair play able to bring them on and create super team. Now uefa said that they're going to have new a new financial control system. I don't know how they're going to do that..

Uefa Tottenham north america one league today three countries four years dynamo kosovo uefa psg four big teams three matches rican georgia sunday tottenham two days later four one
"dynamo" Discussed on SPORTS GOOFS

SPORTS GOOFS

02:50 min | 2 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on SPORTS GOOFS

"The if a no not because that would have to cover his neck right now. That's that's not good thing paler hall got taylor hall. Is the reason why we have the visor rule as the reason for that. Shit it really. It covers the bare minimum. Is your nose is exposed. Your cheeks expose. Your mouth is exposed. It's it's doing not nearly enough considering. I mean i think eventually it's it's i. You're trying to have a preemptive thing right now witches before the worst happens like what happened and this was the junior team of dynamo saint petersburg's right but before that reaches up to a higher level but knowing the nhl. They'll only do something when something happens. So somebody's gonna in the face. I people in the face of the puzzle time. But it'll be. It'll be a superstar. Let's say connor mcdavid. That's just karmic mcdavid. 'cause that's probably like the only person that or austin matthews someone in toronto or martyr maybe margaret one those somebody edmonton toronto is gonna hit in the face and he won't be able to play for some time because of his recovery from the jar whatever and then from there on like we have to protect awesome. Matty's really weird mustache. He so baby. That'll be the the emphasis for for doing so. It's just it's so stupid. He's half mexican. that's why his mustache comics weird happened. Here's another example in nhl. Sal damn sombrero poncho. Maybe he looks good in arizona. Next a cacti. Let me talk his sorry. Just think you boston matthews. His mustache argued on sponsors. Awesome matthews mustache andrew. Go ahead Steven stamkos broke his leg on a goalpost when he was sliding in as a result they made them a bit easier to dislodge. The nhl is chew reactionary. And it's it's not good they. It's bound to happen again advantage. I know and love. I hope that somehow the powers that be are able to hear our little podcasts..

arizona Steven stamkos toronto taylor hall paler hall connor mcdavid saint petersburg andrew mexican margaret one dynamo mcdavid austin edmonton toronto Matty
Why Talking About Puberty Starts When Kids Are Toddlers

Raising Good Humans

04:54 min | 3 years ago

Why Talking About Puberty Starts When Kids Are Toddlers

"I mean there's certain things that you start kind of as soon as a kid is chocking understands language. First of all you use the anatomically correct terminology finance vagina vulva testicle and that can feel strange to people who didn't grow up using that terminology. Right some people. Lots of people were up in families where everyone had different nicknames. Right so i know some people who call vagina a mushy for instance. But it's really important to know the correct terminology and there's a bunch of reasons why that is true so in terms of age appropriateness as soon as your child soon as you're talking to your It's their penis vagina. nets there. Ball bats testicles. Not that there isn't room for other terms because once they go to school once they start socializing once they can't they're gonna come home with all sorts of stuff but you wanna make sure they actually know the terms and are able to say the terms and understand that there is no shame associated with the terms. Another thing that starts really early is the issue of consent. His consent isn't just about saying yes or no having sex with someone before we go into consent. I was just gonna say that even on the changing table. When you're doing body parts you knows your is your mouth your penis. These are not these. These things feel uncomfortable. They'll only get more comfortable as you practice so even with little babies practice but also there is some research when you mentioned the number of reasons to know the body parts imagining one of them that you're referring to is the fact that we know that in some research kids are less likely to have someone to be victim of a predator right so our abuse. It considered an issue of safety to know and be able to name all of the parts of your body. There is research that bonnie ralph's sites in her book that there is a corollary between children. Who know how to name. Parts of their bodies and lower rates of being victims of predatory behavior. There's also a safety issue in terms of if your child has a health issue. Discomfort appeanas a staying in inch. It's important that they be able to describe exactly where in their body it is. You tell your kid. What they're elbow is what their ear is. There's no reason that you shouldn't accept people fianc comfortable and the things that we don't mention right if we don't talk about something it sort of it infers. Shame onto that particular body part which we don't wanna do. Everyone has a comfort level about where and when they talk about body parts genitalia puberty. Life changes all of those things. But if you never talk to your child about these things they are going to assume that it is shameful announced why you don't talk to them about our one of our favorite quotes is from mr rogers dynamo girl. We talk about this all the time that would mentionable is manageable right. If you saw it from your perspective the the more you name it. The last big battle emotion feels manageable with puberty. It's also the emotional stuff but also the physical if you can mention it. I mean when we run our workshops and this is this is a very interesting phenomenon. If you say the term vaginal discharge to group of eight year old girl this is this is exactly case in point. If you say the term vaginal discharge. I have an eight year old girl. You're not because an eight year old girl won't laugh. She'll say oh that's what that is. I have stuff. I see my underwear and when it dries it kind of white and crusty. I never knew with that was right. Matter fact no big deal. Thank you for letting me know if you stay at word to rupa five year. Old women like you did. They put their heads down. They walk out of the room. So in many ways just like naming the body parts also just across the body process body process it normalizes it and if you get to them early enough by the time there's roughly the shame the skepticism the embarrassment into the twin and ten years. At least they're armed with the information you've already been able

Bonnie Ralph Nets Mr Rogers Rupa
"dynamo" Discussed on Xtra Sports Radio 1300 AM

Xtra Sports Radio 1300 AM

05:27 min | 3 years ago

"dynamo" Discussed on Xtra Sports Radio 1300 AM

"Sports Illustrated these days is well here on CBS portrayed. All right. I know your attention was focused in Mobile, Alabama today at the senior ball. Um, some interesting guys names, guys who are gonna be taken certainly in the first round of the draft, but also a whole bunch of good guys. Did you really are the classman or decided to pass on it? One guy who went down to mobile and worked out all week and from what I understand look pretty good doing so but decided not to play in the game. With Dracula's the quarterback from Alabama who, you know, I've been a fan of all year and it really warmed up to and I haven't pretty highly rated going into the NFL draft. Give us what you heard about Mac in practice this week and Why did he pass on playing in the game today? Yeah. You know, I think he had a little bit of a wrist injury or something. Just wanted to rest up, but he did what he had to do, right? He went down there. He created a buzz. Conformed well, we spoke to June Jones, the former NFL coach, he said. He's the number one quarterback in this year's draft, Trevor Laurence included, so there's a lot of love. Mack Jones. There's uh Looking like more of a consensus feeling that he is going to be a first round pick, and I think you know this quarterback class pretty interested in the way it's shaping up, but we talked about a pocket passer. Again, somebody who will get the ball downfield. You know, June Jones kind of referencing his deep ball accuracy, And I do think Matt Jones probably throws the best keep bottle in this year's draft. And so you know, the problem is when it goes to the NFL, he's probably gonna be playing with the worst. Wide receiver class. That wide receiver group that he's had in quite some time. So you know how does that translate? But, you know, I think that Jones is the guy that you get him in the right situation. Maybe it's Pittsburgh. It one or two years behind a big Ben. And I think that really puts him in a situation to succeed. And so I do have some love for Mack Jones. I'm not an eye on him as you are, but I do think he can be a successful quarterback at the next level. Yeah, I would run commits the starting quarterback behind Lawrence and fields ahead of guys like Wilson and trey lamps, But that's just me, and we've got a lot to do. Coming up. A Zafar is evaluating before we get to the draft. All right, Who else before we get to today's game? Who else from either your own individual evaluation of the people that you talk to in the know? Was there anyone who absolutely shone through in the practices and did things that people had never seen before? Had not Been able to garner off in game tapes and was there a group of guys who may be would have been better staying home this week, then heading down the mobile, and it didn't quite work out the way that they were hoping it would. You know, I think right there at quarterback after Mack Jones, you're looking at a guy like he and books. There's there's a lot of love down there. For him. More than people realize and in book may have kind of catapulted human into himself into that day to range. At the quarterback position, but From the skill position. How about Michael Carter, the North Carolina dynamo? I mean, this guy's just a Flasher a casher. He showed his explosion his first He's gonna probably be a top 100 election when it's all said and done. Wide receiver Dez Fitzpatrick, the Louisville wide receiver. I think he really helped boost his draft stock now, probably around two selections. So that's what the Senior Bowl platform is for a guy that Maybe with the day three guy coming in. Well, now he's looking like a day to selection. So he made himself some money. Cadaret Tony from former, probably the best player down there, Jody. I think he's probably a first round pick as well at the library fever. Position tight and Hunter Long comes in 85 Inch Wingspan and Boston College tight and I think now, after Kyle Pitts, who I think is a top 10 selection, I think Hunter Long is now the second tight end off the board, so he helped himself out. Couple small school guys on the offensive line. Dylan Ray done from North Dakota State, really a solid week going down there from the FCS level. And proving his words. And how about Quinn. Miners from Wisconsin Whitewater, the belly, the famous belly Division three Jody Division three. Understand out he comes and really has himself a day. I mean a week and and also the groom. One state kid, David Moore, who weighs in at 6 ft one You know, he comes in at 6 ft. One on measurement day and saying, Oh, boy, 6 ft. One offensive lineman from Grambling State. He's in trouble, and all he did was dominated. Throughout the week. So David Moore making himself there on the offensive side of the ball, Let me ask about two running backs. One of we command. You wanna winch I want to ask you about, um, you know, I'm a Michael Carter fed on and have been all year long, and I think he's gonna be the third quarterback started running back off the boy after Harris and at the end I know you're slightly bigger. Devante Williams, his teammate at North Carolina fan by you and I both like him. Uh, both both like both players. I just rate one little bit higher. You rate the other one. Michael Carter potentially moved by Williams with the game that he had today. Possibly depends on what you need. If you're looking for two or three down back,.

Mack Jones NFL June Jones Michael Carter Matt Jones Alabama North Carolina Jody Division David Moore Devante Williams Hunter Long Trevor Laurence Sports Illustrated CBS Grambling State Zafar Dez Fitzpatrick Pittsburgh North Dakota Wisconsin
A big year for Bad Bunny

Pop Culture Happy Hour

09:41 min | 3 years ago

A big year for Bad Bunny

"Welcome back here with me from her home in washington. Dc is npr. Music and latino contributor. Stephanie fernandez hi stephanie. Hey steven great to have you so as we mentioned in. The bad bunny has released three albums in two thousand twenty the first y h l q. Md l. g. That's yoga lo que. Mais della ghana. Or i do whatever i want came out in february not long after bad bunny performed with jennifer lopez shaquille and j galvin at the super bowl halftime show. You'll find your haga made lagana at number seven on. Npr music's list of the fifty best of twenty twenty then in may bad bunny put out an odds and ends compilation called los que. No iban asa lear or the ones that were not going to come out. And now he's released ultimo tour del mundo which translates as the last tour of the world. The new album was written and recorded in quarantine and bad bunny had said it would be his last album not surprisingly he has already walked. That back a stephanie. Near the beginning of this year you interview. Bad bunny for a pitchfork profile called day in the life of bad bunny introverted superstar. Let's start with your thoughts on the new record which feels more restrained and reflective than the album. He put out earlier this year. Absolutely well let me start by saying that. It's been a crazy year for bad bunny. Output has been insane and prolific. and he's proven more than once that he can put out a great record. I really liked this album But i'll confess that i i i. I felt some fatigue at the fact that this is the third bad album coming out. And i'm a big fan of bad bunnies. I've been following him for a long time now. But i also believe that there's time for an artist to slow down into you don't need to put out so much music that being said. I really liked this album. It's really grown on me. Since i first heard it definitely appeals to the mo and may clearly bad bunny has also been listening to a lot of new metal and pop punk in quarantine. Well let's talk about the differences between this record and the one that he put out at the beginning of this year. That was kind of a more hard charging album in this one. As you said is is a little bit more mo absolutely. I think you know there has been this temptation to compare the two albums because they've been his two biggest releases. This year i think at the end of the day. they're such different projects. He was really trying such different things with them. That album iago looking at it. I was really focused on going back to the heart of puerto rican thrown from the early two thousands in the late nineties. The kind of music that bad listen to growing up the latin pop landscape now sounds a lot different than the music. Bad bunny loved growing up. And you know john that has historically not been widely accepted in latin pop and latin mainstream until the last decade. And one thing that he acknowledged to me when i interviewed him as well as you know something that was really the main focus of this record. Was you know undeniably making this sound of the music that influenced him growing up the artists that really deserve the shine when it comes to the strides made in this genre and this album is more about honoring a different kind of music that he loved growing up which is rock and rock and program spaniel and pop punk and i think what you really can see across. His body of work is just the deep respect that he has different kinds of music that he loves as well as this nostalgia. I think both records really have a lot to do with nostalgia in this way. That's really interesting to me especially in a year. That's been so difficult for so many people. Some many of us are finding comfort in music. That's not new music. That reminds us of more comfortable more simple times as it were. Even though these two albums are really different they both have really special offerings. Well one thing. I wanted to talk about it about this new record wanting that immediately jumped out to me as somebody who did a certain amount of coming of age in the nineties there a couple of songs on his record like to deseo loma harder. And you'll vito c. That are very tinged with all rock. Sounds like really kind of nineties. Rock sounds taught me talk. Yeah you know. This album has a lot of guitars. Sad guitars brad guitar. He's kind of teasing out this kind of pop punk and nu metal side that he has actually alluded to in previous work on his debut album sandra he had a song called dynamo moscow allowed which was really a pop punk song and people were so surprised to hear that from bad bunny and on your looking like he had llamas mignano which is like one of my favorite songs this year and a that just absolutely bursts into this new metal rage moment that is just so so registered so good and i think you know i i. I didn't think anything could match with those two songs. Made me feel. But i couldn't stop listening to to the settled on my heart. I really think it's like that. Riff is just so heart. Sick and tortured and cathartic. It's a little bit of that success. Mada below gun mental burden sep putra dot com the company. I think you can kind of get a sense of the exact angst. That's at work here but can you walk us through what that's about. Yeah you know. That song is kind of a classic reflecting on a break-up ballot and it's kind of a self torturing acknowledges wasn't great to you and i hope that one day you can forget about me but it's also just really indulging in that feeling and i think that's something that somebody people can relate to maybe a lot of people who've spent a lot of time alone in this year of in thinking about so. It's got a lot of sad. Bob's for reflecting on on these sad moments but also got a lot of really happy moments. I wanted be just kind of give people a sense of place about where he kind of fits into the latin music world like he is a boundary pushing artist. He's pushed a lot of these of gender presentation He sings about gender relations in ways. That feel really fresh absolutely. I think you know for several years now. Bad bunnies kind of establish this reputation for himself as a political or outspoken artist. And it's a label that he wrestles with. I think he is breaking a lot of barriers in terms of challenging masculine in latin pop. And he's really kind of an outlier. In terms of how vocal he is about these issues in two thousand nine hundred and he was really involved in the protests import. The frigo demanding the resignation of prepared for ceo in the past. He's also really challenge these ideas of gender presentation as you mentioned. You know he'd paint his nails and he'd wear skirts and bad. Bunny received a lot of praise for that and it was a big statement to a lot of his fans as much as he's gaining so much praise especially this year he's also had a lot of moments of public learning you know he's resisted this idea of becoming like a spokesperson for any group of people or report the frigo and earlier this year. You know a lot of fans were disappointed that he took several weeks to respond in support to the black lives matter movement and eventually he released a letter expressing his feelings and kind of saying himself. The thing that so many of us had already come to the conclusion to which is that. You know you can't rely on celebrities at the end of the day to lead us forward and social movements to be the voice of progress. I think bad bunny has made a lot of big statements that challenge how latin pop's most visible stars approach politics but then again on and trap have always been political and bad bunny is not the first and i know he won't be the last. Yeah you mentioned. His relationship with puerto rico. I think that's one thing that really jumps out about him. Could you talk a little bit more about that. Absolutely i think what definitely sets bad bunny. Apart from all of his peers in the industry is just how committed he is doing right by his community and worked to recall. Specifically i think in all of his music you can tell that. He's striving to remain authentic. And there's so many little love letters to community on this album samples the legendary astrologer welton on the penultimate track. His famous sendoff muccio more. He shouts out puerto rican and latino legends in general like leveaux the ruben blah the song and then latinos like real manna. You can tell that. He's he's aware that he's operating within a lineage. He never leaves any doubt about who he's trying to uplift and who is trying to represent here and he closes the album on a classic puerto rican christmas song comparison performed by today obama hegna which is a group from his hometown of vega baja. Your old it's kind of odd. Because it's like he's not on the song. Obviously it's recording from the fifties. But it's a song about how some people have jubilant joyful christmases and others spend it in sadness or in poverty. It is a farewell to a year. That i think all of us are happy to see go and i think you know though. He sits at this place of enormous wealth and privilege and fame. I think he's really at the end of the day driven by this desire to remain

Stephanie Fernandez Hi Stephan J Galvin Lagana Iban Asa Lear Haga Deseo Loma Vito C Shaquille Brad Guitar Llamas Mignano Jennifer Lopez NPR Ghana Super Bowl Steven Stephanie Puerto Rican Washington Sandra
U.S. Supreme Court's Ginsburg, a Liberal Dynamo, Championed Women's Rights

WTOP 24 Hour News

04:01 min | 3 years ago

U.S. Supreme Court's Ginsburg, a Liberal Dynamo, Championed Women's Rights

"Of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. She's passed away at the age of 87 from complications from cancer. A little earlier, I spoke with the U of D. C is executive director Monica Hopkins about the legacy of Justice. Ginsburg, obviously like much of the nation were saddened and shocked to hear of the passing of Justice Ginsburg She devoted so much of her life and career to advance in the quality girl. It gives us time to think about her legacy. Both weapon. The A C l U, but parasol she was dedicated to ensuring that we understood about equality wasn't just about getting women. They're equal rights but that it actually have impact were the sexes in total talk a little more about how she worked with the Luo and made some achievements for women's rights. Prior to starting the women's rights project Up the hill, you she actually served as professor Rutgers law. And she, additionally thought important legal battles before the Supreme Court back establish the foundation for currently legal prohibitions against sex discrimination. And then in 1972 later, Ginsberg sounded today. So you women's rights project. And she directed that project throughout the decade of the 19 seventies, but case after case to the Supreme Court and also establishing constitutional protections against sex discrimination, and you know her legacy continues today. Throughout the feelings, work to advance women's equality and employment and education and housing, and in all It's just it is. She was a Supreme Court justice, which is such a monumental achievement, right? But she was so much more than that. He really waas so much more than that. It's securely interesting she became. I've heard and seen, And then the news people calling her a feminist icon. You can see people now carrying tote bags with state against Bird's image on it, she has come to symbolize Stalwart and dedicated vision of equality and what could be achieved through the law. Her legacy she just had such a dramatic and lasting impact. Not only I think on the Supreme Court, but in the lives of many women across the country, and it's great to see that multiple generations have been graced her legacy and what she accomplished on the port and you mention her becoming a cultural icon. It's really fascinating to me because I don't think we can say that about any other Supreme Court justice ever. I mean, there may have been T shirts with faces on them and things but not to this degree. Yeah, One of the things that I think about is the quiet power up Justice Ginsberg had and how she You know, would wear her descent color, which became in pop. I can obviously you know, you see necklaces with her descent color on a she would wear that on days when the court where she would descend on DH. All of those little things but sort of picked up on by people who not only followed exactly what the court was doing, or may have read the brief stores things like that. But I understood some of these decisions and how decisions that are made with the law. And at the highest level of the court of our land. Ah, really impact our lives. Monica Hopkins Thie, executive director of the U of D C sports at

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg Executive Director Monica Hopkins Monica Hopkins Thie D. C Professor Bird
Robotic Process Automation with Antti Karjalainen

Software Engineering Daily

09:23 min | 3 years ago

Robotic Process Automation with Antti Karjalainen

"How do I describe RPI, task in robot corporate. How do you define an opiate task? You set up a new project let's say you're using the lab you create new project. You'll import a few libraries depending on what kind of tasks you WANNA do a walk on technology she want to interact. And Right Staw Staw tasks, Star Star, and then start writing instructions. you might use a building keyboards. Some library keeps that you have available all you might define your own keyboards. So let's say you start with open. Browser. Browser then you start defining, you'll building Keyword Logan to knit. And then goes on from there that keyboard should then probably piping new RL heavy gate lot island do some logging tasks. That might lead you to use volt, which is in the cloud. Not Cloud Service that provides you secure storage, drove us a credentials and you'll use another library to access the walt and so forth. That's Kinda, the basic process can you give a few more examples of tasks? That so many different tasks usually say that kind of snowflakes each company. Each user has their own particular need. In one company actually was company that had done the box boxing in the question they. They used. To automate the process of doing on last talk purchases. In Japanese websites. That was a good use case I think and. So kind of the typical. Financial Institution, use cases that you could imagine. That let's say you need to update a lot of customer. Once an and people are calling in on the phone and you know updating, let's say their phone number for your records. you might use. To navigate through the internal applications that you useful customer Carson and go through multiple locations. Wayne opted the information. That's one of use schedule is saw and it was actually Danica. So great volume, the bank that it said that they saved. What it was like seven years of customer waiting time on the phone by automating the process. Very impressive. In when a task is processing in it fails in the middle. What happens Yeah. So typically you probably want to retry. So just get the input that you had. Andrey retried if that's how you configure it. You probably want to notify somebody so you'll send out an email. Alerts through some other service desk. Application. Depending on obviously kind of depends on why failure happened. So was it a business exception? So unit the application that you've automating did something wrong or and. Your data was incomplete that she used something like that. So that kind of guides you if it's just flat out failure, just exception on court. Then you probably want to. Get the developer to look at it. Does something happen like when the I of the website changes that can sometimes mess things up or do most of these sites tend to keep their you is static enough that your tasks don't go out of date. Yeah. So that's a bit of author that. So you WANNA try to use locate us that almost stable. So if you if you use like absolute expand references, those might get messed up pretty easily if you use like low element ID more stable. So typically. Yes, sure. I mean sites changing us an issue for you can do something such developer to make it more robust but ultimately, if site and some changing completely, there's nothing that you can do about it. Typically I tell people that you know if you have the option to use an API instead course that's more stable or west goal where you have the most stable route. Tell me more about the libraries that are built into Robo Corp.. Yes we are we actually developing fairly large library that we call the. Framework. And consists of. Of you'll basic tool kit essentially as you need us an opiate developing. So. You'll have things for the browser things folk desktop applications, immigration you'll have. integrations with all the major cloud platforms, aws azure. Google cloud. And probably forget like eighty percent of the stuff but we we keep adding to it. Multiple Times a week become a new release that adds new functionality to be a framework right now at the moment. But Yeah I some multitude of different kinds of Kiva statute categorized by different technology domains. there. Are Lots of API's out there for machine learning. Tell me about how machine learning API's can be used with Robocall Corp Yeah. So the industry term for that is intelligent automation and you to be his call up intelligent does as soon as you who into some machine learning API. But sure I mean the kind of the basic I think most frequent use cases to do something like send a document to aws extract or other similar Google Cloud Vision Api you have a pdf in moist than want extra someday to out of it. You can easily use cloud services to do that for you if you don't want to try to do it locally that's I, think the most common use guests that I see all the time. When an ARP task gets spun up, what is actually happening on Robot Corp? Yes. So when a not B task at Spun Up. If you look at the architecture that we have with the cloud platform. And we have what we call the work us the workers, essentially an application that's installed in the target system. So he can be on your laptop, it can be on a virtual machine on. or it can leave inside a container that we can hopefully. So depending on where the work is. Say That the workers is on my laptop. What happens is that the cloud will send a package of code and some instructions to the work. The work will get the package on Pakistan and then initiate a fresh condign women fall by the libraries that. You have inside your robust cold, and then it'll stop fresh every time to make sure that you don't have any side effects from previous executions and then when you environment done, he'll execute the task stream. The console tries to cloud account, and then when don is Kinda you're execution Audifax you might have produced some documents or you at least have a file stream those to the cloud and report the results of the execution. So a lot of the stuff that we provide is really the east convenience of. You know you WANNA run by Tom. based. For a frame of coordination. Good just install one APP in the Environment Logan and you're good to go. You're all set. You'll have a stable execution environment each time and is pretty fast to. And what are you using under the hood to orchestrate these tasks? So, the orchestration service on our cloud is we are working actually mostly several s so it's on aws is pretty. This know like we are not using any the ready project to set up the orchestration scheduling. Those we do it ourselves. And then it's a fast growing platform of different features so. So he's one of the call pieces that we develop. We'll tell you more about that the service orchestration stuff like how much can you offload? What kind of leverage do you get by going server less? What does that look like? So we started developing that early twenty nineteen and I doubt time we made the decision to kind of go s cutting edge that we could because we have dealt with unity. So might be be of engineering just made the decision out. If you don't have the host anything sales, we won't do it. Then I might have a few service here and there, but most is hundred percents less and the idea is that we should be able to scale up pretty nicely with that decision. Obviously you're. GonNa always have some some issues hand but for the most part, we think that that will allow us to. Maintain certain level of service as we. Continue to grow and scale and and really some of these processes are pretty business critical company. So we need to be careful with operations. Tell me more just want to know more by your infrastructure in like how are using lambda are there any other service services that you'd like to discuss? is typical host, but really I'm not too deep into architects are close to its basic like `scuse Dynamo DB, Lambda all around US plan for monitoring data dog as well I. Think. Yeah It's a complex and growing piece of software.

AWS Developer Google United States Robo Corp Danica Financial Institution Carson Andrey Robocall Corp Pakistan Wayne Robot Corp ARP DON Tom. Audifax
The Good Parts of AWS with Daniel Vassallo

Software Engineering Daily

07:52 min | 3 years ago

The Good Parts of AWS with Daniel Vassallo

"Can you just go a little bit deeper on why architecturally Dynamo DB is not well equipped to fulfill the same semantics of a sequel database. Oh, it was designed to dissuade I. Don't know if you know do the member simple to be what it used to be. A the dissenter of Dynamo DB back in I think it was launched in two thousand, ten nine. And it's. It's a significantly more ambitious than Donald. Debates was meant to be slow inequity. Relations was more like you know like Mongo documents based you documents so aquarians essentially the answer. And this is actually it's probably one of the few. I can't think of any any other service. One of the few implicated services from aws. It's technically supported of your salon and gets. You send using simple debate. API still work, but basically almost hit it under the carpet side. You don't find any and there were. You won't find us in the console. It's not it's not a new. The send things like that. And the problem was that. Amazon founded super hard to make this type of database Kale and to have predictable performance guarantees, one of the biggest problems that was happening. That would simply be. You might throw in some complex square. You might not have an index about it. And the declare would take two minutes, timeouts and lay. It was completely unpredictable. Some quays take two hundred milliseconds. Some will take minutes. And it was very high. On the service side to these about site to locate the sources so talking about capacity, so not the be was the answer to that and TWAS, radically different perspective like completely predictable versus completely unpredictable, so there's two operations gets put the listed going to bt index behind the scenes and updating single lighten very predictable. They all take. Just, a few single digits milliseconds identify typically, and there's this query API, which again just goes to the starting point of a beat the sequence of cards after megabyte so again like the the the upper bound per addicts, how much expensive Dakota can be ends attested dissolved, and that set of to to continue to participate you. You go with the next token. megabyte that I, so it became very easy. For the service provider to these about how expensive it can be how fast it can be how to allocate resources, and it became huge success successful, but numbers on itself, because I remember we used to on services on top of relational database address to have the same problem so sometimes the relational database at an all. It's a complex machine is my star choosing? It's it's my start to use suboptimal query, and suddenly acquitted that used to take a second is now taking twenty seconds and suddenly using all the memory. When we started thinking in terms of much more primitive technology, like beatings become easier to these in about as long as you managed to model your queries and what you needed to do. To its limitations. But then. Today's were you're fighting your database. Because suddenly spiking two hundred percents, appeal and everything is slowing down disappear so that that element of predictability is highly highly available, so they were defer the. It was designed to be this way that I just wasn't. Designed to be so inequity, of. Arbitrary complexity and will give you the answer. What do people do when they have built their infrastructure around Dynamo DB and it's not fulfilling the requirements that they have. I think you will struggle the limitations and up subsidizing you I. I think the problem is up become became being discovered very early in development. Like for example, if you're expecting to be doing lots of recommendations on amounts of data, doing development you to realize that you're going to be downloading everything out of Dynamo and doing it locally, not so. Hopefully yearly allies airily that this is worth considering Golden, considering that they should use another type of database or relational, database or something. I don't have any first hand experience for example where delimitations and and adopt sort of surprising later, which is I think is a good thing again like the fact that it's significant distinctive. Had few. It's very hard to. Abuse it sight and sort of expect more out of your life. You realize immediately that these are the limits. which again I think these tend to be sometimes that. And more sophisticated database aside because during development your. Attention like hundred minutes seconds, and then once you have lots of data or things are in Qatar. They start to become more unpredictable. Dynamo just elements that issue just just there's no unpredictability. It's actually incredibly predictable at the cost of the constraints the comes with. You right in some detail about s three and s three I think of for obvious use cases as slow file system. It's BLOB. Storage it static website hosting its data lake. Told me about the other applications of s three. Yes. Yes, I. Think One of the lists. Values of trees that you can think of as having infinite Benguet for all. Practical purposes that so, if you have terabytes of data, you could basically an estimate. You could download it as fast as you as you want to. Basically always many to that says he wanted many servers. You want to tell you can chunk it up in pieces and just download the terabyte like in a second. For example one of my biggest project Thomason was launching and working gone. Cloud Watch watchdogs incites, which is basically a monitoring tool that allows you to arbiter the complex queries against your log data. And much entirely built on top of the and this is it surprises? People because this unlike Donald to be, we actually chose to support. Give me an arbiter equality of complexity, including regular expressions and things that are super cost to evaluate and. To dissolve, and we built it literally on top of us today and in in a very cost effective way because we relies on the assumption that. For example log data tends to be. Very big generalized especially nowadays like application censored. Tonight's like gigabytes and terabytes of logs. You want to start them somewhere where it's cheap and us these the perfect place for that and you tend to Kuwait infrequently, though when there's a problem I want to something about your application. And I think one of the ideas that works with s threes, this technique where you separate compute from the data so basically once. Does no question. There's no compute so basically you can just have the data sitting in streeter, just paying the to censor gigabytes per month, and there's no other costs. And if you open up the consulate insights and you do Equa they. Spin up some. Is it Winston while I mean behind the scenes like some pool of warmest. But fundamentally you can think of about it does like spin some ephemeral instances and we enough such that we can download data. As they wanted to. And then you can sort of just turn over the data very quickly I just because. I can listen to such as your network

Donald Trump AWS Dakota BT Amazon Streeter Kale Winston Qatar Golden Thomason Kuwait
Prisma: Modern Database Tooling with Johannes Schickling

Software Engineering Daily

20:28 min | 3 years ago

Prisma: Modern Database Tooling with Johannes Schickling

"Honest welcome back to the show. It's great to be back under so thanks so much for having me. Of course you run. PRISMA and PRISMA is involved in workflows for accessing data. Can you describe the AP? Is that sit between the front and the back end database layer, and where PRISMA fits in sure so I think that's a pretty complex questions. It's always. Always depends on what your application architecture looks like, and there's so many angles to take does feed for example, take a more mortar jam, stag texture, or if you take a micro services architecture, the onset is always depends. What's always the same as if you build application that requires state of assistance? Then chances are you're using database and how PRISMA fits into. Is that it tries to help application developers built applications more easily was working with the databases so typically that means you're using a part of PRISMA. What's called the prisoner client that sits typically in your application server? That's typically an API server and talks to your database. Typically, this part of the stack is known as an or layer or data access layer. PRESI-, in particular is not an Orem can talk about that separately. The pretty nuanced topic, but prison up to. The main function is to serve to access state. I'm more easily in your application language. Can you talk about that in more detail? Like? Why would I need a additional layer of access I? Mean I think in general? I if I'm sitting on the front end and I want to access the database I m hitting some service that services talking to a database and the service is requesting the data from the database. Why do I need prisma to help out with that database access so this setup just to recap one more time, so you have your fronton application. Let's say you have reactive of you up on the other end. You have database. Let's say you have a more traditional postures, my sequel database, but would also apply to same for more modern. Modern Dynamo DB etc, and then typically have this middle tier that's let's say an API server, and where you would use prisma for is just having an easier time building your API server in order to talk to the database, so let's say you're using pastas. The most barebones thing you could do is implementing your Api Server and just writing implementing your points, or let's say rebuilding a graph gals over implementing overs, and then just talking directly to the database by writing raw sequel. Curry's and that works, but that comes also was some problems. Problems typically in terms of productivity, and does not quite abstraction level that you want as an application developer to be productive and confident in what you're writing the same way as fronton applications are built through abstraction layers. Let's say react angular view. It's the same on the back end that you also want more application at U. Matic obstruction layer for away you talking to the database, and historically there's been many forms of the most common one is in Orem, and they're on more modern ways of how you build a better abstraction on top. Top of fear database for data access, and that's a pattern that implementing was prisma that to be referred to as careerbuilder. Can you explain in more detail? What is the difference between a query builder and an OEM right? So that comes down to the way how you're thinking about these application patterns, an Orem stands for object, relational knepper, and the idea behind an orum is mapping a typically a database table to a class in typically object oriented programming language, and this is a pretty intuitive model and is widely used in tons of. The most prominent one of be being active record as part of friggin rails, but there tons of other ones as well and the Java world. There's hibernate and the idea there you have tons of tables in your database, and you want to map that somehow and Julia programming language and your programming language. You're typically working with classes as opposed to a career rebuilder with looks more like sequel way, but maps you sequel statements into statements in your programme language and the difference really come down to how much flexibility and control you need, but they're tons of downsides of or and that as Good more widely used became more and more well known, so there's a great block posed called the Vietnam of computer science, which is all about or ems and the problems behind orum's most importantly one thing called the object relational impedance mismatch. Talks about the problems of mapping databases database tables to objects where he's just a big amount of oven, impedance mismatch, and the way around that is that you should think about the craziest that you're writing a database instead of obsessing too much about the classes and objects, and your curry should really determine the shape of the data. You're getting back in the same way as the British striking analogy to how gruff LDL's was the sort of pattern where draft, but L. is all about the quarry writing that you need in your components, and it's a pretty similar pattern that you're now applying the way how you do. They access on the back end. If I was to set up PRISMA for Miami application. What would the life of a query look like and the structure of a query look like? So what you'd be using concretely, there is prisoner. Database took. And what you would use to career database is a part of prisma called the PRISMA Klein's. The prisoner client is basically just a Java script library that you installed installed from NPR. And you're. Writing that query ones in your coat. One great advantage is that it's fully type safe by leveraging type script, so you're writing that query and then strode run times when your application is deployed. That code gets invokes that under the hood generates a database dependent query, typically a sequel query, but as we were supporting of databases, swell could generate dynamo queries, Atra, and these queries are centered underlying database, and the data's returned, and then returned injury application code. Got It and. What the difference between using PRISMA AND USING GRAPH KUNAL! So, it's a really two fundamentally different technologies for different use cases I. think a good way to think about is where into application stack. These technology said so graphic. L. is typically used for fronton applications to talk back end up locations whereas prisoners specifically the prison. My client is used for typically your backup location to talk to your database so analogous in this way, but typically the different layers of the stack. However, it always depends was newer approaches like the jam stack your friends and education can statically directly talk to

Prisma Orem Prisma Klein AP Developer Curry U. Matic Julia Careerbuilder NPR Orum Miami
Alex DeBrie - DynamoDB for Relational Database Diehards

Full Stack Radio

05:50 min | 3 years ago

Alex DeBrie - DynamoDB for Relational Database Diehards

"I guess maybe the best place to start would be. How do you describe what Dynamo DB even as if someone was just GonNa ask you like? What is this thing for? What do you use it for? Yep share so it's a no sequel database like you were saying and and that's not super descriptive because it basically just says what it isn't right. It's not a relational database. That a sequel. But you saw a lot of these sort of no sequel databases popping up in the last ten or fifteen years and one common thing about all these relational databases is They were they were built for larger scale you know as as he's sort of. Internet enabled platforms are happening where you have thousands or millions of of users around the world Like the single instance relational database just wasn't keeping up As well so polices started building these no sequel databases and I think one thing in common with most of these. No single databases is that they they charge your data across multiple instances so rather than having like this one monolithic database. You know you're you're my sequel instance. Your postcards instance. You'll have you know maybe five different shards of Mongo DB or with something like Dynamo DB there starting that behind the scenes sort of transparently to you Across a lot of large variety of machines The big thing that you need to do there with a no sequel database. Then is that data's going to be sharded and you need to make sure you sort of design your data correctly so that you're only hitting one Charlotte and doing efficient query rather than queering across like four or five different shards and having network calls. So that's that's a super high level but Yeah okay that makes sense so the the my sort of exposure to Dynamo. Db guests has been almost like guys have rightous alternative in a lot of situations. So I see a lot of times. People use read us for like a cash just like a key value store and I see people using Dynamo. Db FOR THAT A lot. If you're hosting your stuff on Amazon because a lot of the tools designed to work with us in that way can also interact with Dynamo. Db In that way But it sounds like a lot of people are also using Dynamo. Db is like their primary data store as Australia. Replacement for a relational database. Is that true in your experience. Yeah absolutely I think you know. A lot of people think it's only used for key value store like type Type Actions Media Session store and you can use it for that. But you can. Use It for highly relational models. You can handle one to many relationships. Many Dominion relationship all that in Dynamo. Db I show how to do that. And and there's a bunch of people doing that at a pretty large scale If if you're talking about like Amazon. Aws any of the Amazon retail. Any of the AWS stuff they. If it's a tier one service at one of those places which means if it's down it's losing money they're required to use. Dynamo. Db and they have relational models there. They have shopping carts with items in them and they belong to customers or or they'd aws stuff. That's all relational as well. So you can definitely handle these. These complex relational models not just a key value stores. Yeah cool that's really interesting so I think it'd be cool. It'd be sort of get into I. Guess like just understanding some of the core concepts and stuff around this technology. What some of the terminology is how some of it may be maps. Back to the relational database world for people who come from that. Same background as me. I'm familiar with the old tables and columns and rows model. You know what I mean. So what are some of like? What are the sort of terms and concepts that you have to understand but Dynamo DB to even get started with in the first place? How do you build like the right mental model for what it's doing? Yep sure so I'd say the four or five basic terms you want to start with and I'll just compare them to to relational houses. Well first of all. There's the notion of table which is going to be similar to a table in a relational database With some differences that get into on such as holds all your all your data in it and then each record in a table is called an item sets a row in a relational database or a document in Dynamo DB but just like a collection of data each when you create your table. What you're GonNa do is declare a primary key for your table and each item that you put into that table must have that primary key and it needs to be uniquely identified by that primary key so so there is that like is that is that auto generated by the database for you like it would be like sequel or you always have to provide it from the client yet. You need to provide it by the client. And it's usually going to be something meaningful as well. Like win a relational database. You know you might just have an auto incremental primary key like you're saying but this is GonNa be actually something meaningful life maybe username or In order ID or or something like that but you can actually use to identify that particular item because that primary keys actually gonNA drive your access patterns as well. You're going to be queering directly on that primary key. Okay interesting so I think. Like in the relational database world the advice that. I've often heard it's been like the opposite right like don't use your email column as your primary key in your users table because it's it's going to be inefficient or whatever in different ways compared to just using an auto implementing. Id but in in this case if as long as there's some existing unique identifier for the record the best practice leverage that don't add like some additional unique identifier. Yep generally and sometimes you might want to use something like a you. Id or or similar like if something like an order. Id you know you don't really have Anything meaningful about the order. You can generate a unique unique. Id and use that. But then you'll probably also refer to that that d like in your url path or whatever to help find that they'll be accessible to the client. If you needed to go do that look up. You know if someone goes to slash orders slash whatever that idea is then. Then you're back in knows. Hey this is order yet. I need to go fetch from the back end.

Dynamo Amazon Australia AWS Charlotte
Scientists explain magnetic pole's wanderings

BBC World Service

00:48 sec | 3 years ago

Scientists explain magnetic pole's wanderings

"Scientists in Europe say they can now describe with confidence what's driving the drift of the north magnetic pole the shift in recent years toward Siberia has made it necessary to update global navigation systems more frequently our science correspondent Jonathan Amos reports at the top of the world as a place where a magnetic field lines point vertically into the earth's surface this north magnetic pole wonders over time in the early nineteenth century it was cited in the north of Canada drifting slowly to slightly higher latitudes then in the nineteen nineties he charged across the arctic towards Russia the team discovered this dramatic movement is driven by specific changes in the flow of molten iron in the earth's out to cool the Dynamo that creates and sustains its magnetic

Europe Siberia Jonathan Amos Canada Russia
Atlanta - Georgia Governor Kemp Defends Decision to Begin Phased Reopening of State Economy

Clark Howard

45:08 min | 3 years ago

Atlanta - Georgia Governor Kemp Defends Decision to Begin Phased Reopening of State Economy

"Brian camp addresses criticism from those concerned he's opening businesses too soon despite the criticism governor Brian can't received last week from president trump for his decision to begin re opening Georgia businesses he still supports them I appreciate his leadership I appreciate all that the administration has done to support our state and like the president can't lashed out at the media for trying to divide there will be no dividing we're going to continue to work with the administration and the president and the vice president in the task force in he said today I wish the media could just see how good these calls go with the governor's Xander parish ninety five point five WSP Georgette meantime is headed rough milestone a thousand people have died so far in the state from the corona virus only ten other states have the same numbers some restaurants here in Georgia really having a hard time finding the supplies needed to re open for indoor dining Catherine a server here it is all Mexican restaurant says there's so many rules to follow in order to reopen including providing masks and hand sanitizer for all staff there's no where where we can find this hand sanitizer and then there's being able to serve and social distance at the same time is it even possible it will be really difficult for us like a a servers to to put put put the the the food food food on on on the the the table table table if if if we we we are are are not not not allowed allowed allowed to to to be be be less less less than than than six six six feet feet feet apart apart apart it's it's it's ridiculous ridiculous ridiculous in in in Peachtree Peachtree Peachtree city city city robin robin robin will will will lead lead lead Steve Steve Steve ninety ninety ninety five five five point point point five five five W. S. B. fifty nine degrees in Atlanta mostly clear and cold tonight lows forty seven to fifty one mostly to partly sunny tomorrow high seventy eight Atlanta's most accurate and dependable forecast is coming up top local news every thirty minutes and when it breaks ninety five point five W. S. B. depend on it small businesses hit another snag when they tried to get a loan help today the online loan application process had technical problems and three hundred and ten billion dollars is expected to go quickly here's ABC's Mary Bruce how experts tell us this fund could run out of money again it within a week and we are already seeing calls from some of the nation's top banks for Congress to fully fund and expand this program they won't have any hope of meeting this huge demand the first round of funding ran out in just thirteen days W. SPT use time eleven oh two is Georgia begins to reopen all things are sure to get confusing what's open and what's not what are the rules take on ninety five point five W. S. V. as we band together and help each other get back ninety five point five W. S. B. everywhere you go this is the time local news really matters which is why now more than ever more people turn to channel two action news this is Jovita Moore every day there is new and complicated information about the corona virus and it's changing quickly and this is George Estevez we're here to make sense of it all for you with live in depth local coverage investigations it give you a better perspective and a look forward to the impact on you and they were kind of me stay local stay informed stay with channel two action news man of the effects of hypertension diabetes or prostate cancer preventing you from having a satisfying love life in just one visit the doctors that priority man's medical center can help you overcome ET or PT to regain your confidence and have you last longer in the bedroom name brand pills don't work for many men and can have serious side effects the highly skilled positions that priority man's Medical Center provide custom blended medications that are safe effective and work immediately regardless of your medical history age you'll see results on your first visit guaranteed for your consultation is free so if you have problems in the bedroom call now for a private consultation one call one visit one simple solution to regain your love life call priority men's Medical Center now at four oh four six two zero one nine five nine four four six two zero one nine five nine that's four oh four six two zero one nine five nine you're spending more time at home than ever before assured comfort will make sure you're comfortable and cool but the fifty nine dollar spring tune up and get a pound of freon at no cost it's free offer ends soon details at assured comfort dot com guaranteeing service all the time done right and priced right I'm Jerry hall and I sure you'll you'll love love W. W. S. S. B. B. triple triple team team traffic traffic alerts about three hours that's run by your traffic experts at ninety five point five open the app and send your smartphone aside for your specific road ahead thank you Michael Reyes lifetime parts and labor warranty W. S. B. triple team traffic alerts the Winslow was in the W. S. B. twenty four hour traffic center we see a slow zoom in sandy springs on four hundred south on Jennifer it's the the roadwork roadwork to to setting setting up up between between the the two two eighty eighty five five reps reps and and the the Glenridge Glenridge connector connector exit exit number number three three through through the the evening evening hours hours allow allow for for extra extra travel travel time time south south of of Abernathy Abernathy road road right right now now no no delays delays getting getting to to I. I. two eighty five also the northbound work on four hundred still blocking right lane past Abernathy toward the north springs marta station entrance wraps stated the far left if you make your way toward Roswell and Alpharetta twenty east and west bound east expressway to cap county WSJ became showing wetland still blocked both directions for the media work between Wesley chapel and Panola road Steve Winslow ninety five point five W. S. B. M. W. S. B. Rochester college within months most accurate dependable forecast for tonight mostly clear and cool lows forty seven to fifty one tomorrow mostly to to partly partly sunny sunny and and warm warm high high seventy seventy eight eight low low fifty fifty nine nine Wednesday Wednesday showers showers and and thunderstorms thunderstorms eighty eighty percent percent likely likely afternoon afternoon and and evening evening high high seventy seventy three three low low fifty fifty one one Thursday a mix of sun and clouds cool high sixty five lows forty six to forty nine fifty nine degrees on Peachtree street at ninety five point five WSP Atlanta's news and talk is an NBC news special covert nineteen what you need to know here is ABC news correspondent Aaron Katersky it's been weeks since most of us have been out to eat today restaurants in Georgia we're allowed to open for dine in service as the state continues to loosen coronavirus restrictions Tennessee's re opening retail stores Kentucky's re openings of health care services dog groomers can reopen in Wisconsin we're corona virus has hit harder it's different the governor of New Jersey said today restrictions continue indefinitely and the governor of New York said he expected to extend them for the city and its suburbs but the lunch crowd came back in parts of Georgia as our affiliate WSB found a chance to eat inside a restaurant Kim Kucera says this Brookhaven waffle house was her first choice the family hang out we are talking about the whole field in this family in the champ wasn't here this day but the company says no matter who walks in some things haven't changed they're going to get that welcome the waffle house the greeting that we're all excited to be able to give them for when they come in it'll be very clear where they can and cannot said company spokesperson in Gerry boss showed us the big red tape strapped across some of the books and some of the schools are also off limits to maintain safe social distancing the cooks and servers are all wearing masks and X. marks the spot where you can stand as you wait for a seat some don't like governor camp's decision to allow restaurants like this to re open their dining rooms but boss believes many of the critics may be able to work from home while still collecting a paycheck to say that when they still have all of those things we want to be here to make sure that everybody who wants to go and have the opportunity to can take care of themselves and their family that's the American way as for Kim cassette as she feels comfortable eating inside says there's a sense of home here and it all starts off with waffle house what can't get any more American the waffle house right many will never feel comfortable venturing out or re opening a business without a vaccine and most experts think that's at least a year away some scientists are considering rather unconventional ways to speed up the process one of them raises some moral questions we're joined by Dr Angela Baldwin of Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx is also part of our medical team here at ABC news Dr Baldwin this method involves injecting healthy adults with live coronavirus correct so this is called a challenge trial where healthy adults are divided into two groups one group received a placebo and the other group receives the potential vaccine but both groups are injected with the virus and the point is for them to for researchers to see how effective the vaccine is against the virus and this kind of speed up the timeline because normally in a normal situation what somebody receives a vaccine the researchers just have to kind of wait for that person to naturally be infected with whatever virus or disease that the vaccines intended to treat is it the only way to do this definitely not this normally vaccine trials go through three phases phase one phase to help determine the specific dosing that safe and then you know an overall kind of safety of the vaccine and then in phase three is when they do these large very large trials for the enroll thousands of patients and a half receive the vaccine the other half isn't but then they just kind of track them and follow them throughout their daily lives and see okay all this group you know they were exposed to the virus and it looks like the vaccine worked the problem is these are just very long and then kind of a bit cumbersome and so that's why some researchers are proposing this challenge trial the kind of by pass phase three doesn't raise any moral dilemmas definitely a moral dilemmas they do try to mitigate the risk but the fact of the matter is we are taking otherwise healthy adults and injecting them with a virus that could have serious consequences including death the other side they do try to mitigate the risks they would only be enrolling healthy adult volunteers without underlying medical conditions but the problem is we do know that unfortunately there are young people who are still dying from call the nineteen you may also not have any underlying conditions there's still so much we don't know that just makes it's completely unsafe and the other problem is if somebody does get very sick you know we're dealing with a health care crisis right now work the critical care that one may need may not always be readily available and resources may be scarce so to inject somebody of the virus and the potentially kill them and put them in a situation where they urgently need critical care that might not be available raises a few eyebrows from from office I guess it's tempting though when everyone wants the vaccine this seems like the speediest way you know if they could and and one of the questions we ask ourselves is how much does this speed up the the normal course of us finding a vaccine right so if it only speeded up by one month maybe not that great of an idea of the speeded up by six months eight months okay maybe but also the thing to realize is that the challenge trials only one part of a of a two step process these researchers are suggesting would replace phase three so you still have the challenge of trial where the people are given the live virus but then in the second part they would need to test the vaccine on the most vulnerable members of the population right the elderly people under my medical conditions these are the people who really need the vaccine so we need to make sure it's safe in them so during the second phase they would give each of those types of people the vaccine but they would not be injecting them with the with the virus so that means we still in this kind of things were waiting for these people to in the natural course of their days be exposed to the virus so it's really not short meaning that the for the third phase by that much if you think about it who's going to decide ultimately you know that's a very good question I think ultimately we have these things called internal review boards RBC and they are designed to look out for the welfare of participants in subjects in studies and I think it's basically going to fall on the individual IRB's to decide whether or not they're going to allow this to to commission their institution Dr Angela Baldwin of the ABC news medical unit while the world waits for a vaccine all of us adapt to new routines out of our offices and working from say the kitchen table firms are now debating how and whether to repopulate offices small workers are deciding whether they're comfortable taking off the sweat pants and putting back on the suit consumer minute vices law firm said soy Hauser group you joins us from Chicago we're all kind of getting used to this aren't we yes you know I think this is going better than many law firms thought it would technology working well generally people are productive at home some people even like it what's not to like you can be in your pajamas and still accomplish the same kind of work you know in a candid moment a lot of lawyers would probably tell you that and I think that there is upside for both lawyers and for firms to do that the flexibility is something the people of wanted since before the crisis in some law firms before the crisis we're taking small steps towards being more flexible about where people worked and they saw upside both in attracting talent who wanted to be working where they were comfortable where they were where it was convenient also for the law firms there's a big expense of course on the real estate side real estate for most law firms is their second biggest expense behind paying lawyers so they're interested long term many law firms are in using less space why would any firm go back to renting expensive space again if this is working it's that's a great question different firms are different so some firms before the crisis we're happy to move towards less space and I think that the crisis will accelerate the move towards less space for those firms other firms the before the crisis had a culture of being in the office together they placed a premium on facetime and I think after the crisis some of those firms will revert to form and they will want to be in the office more so there will be some that accelerate towards work at home more and take on less space and I think others will want to snap back to how they were previously law firms like many other firms can be notoriously inflexible though about people's time has the shortest that it can work differently I think that this crisis has proven that actually can work pretty well for many lawyers in many firms different lawyers have practices that lend themselves to working remotely so for example a lawyer who needs to appear in court or take depositions in person that doesn't work as well remotely of course others though K. and worked quite productively from anywhere and that works for the firm in for their clients when you ask people what the impediments are to remote working some of the things that come up are things like whether working remotely as an impediment to mentoring opportunities for young and up and coming lawyers they asked about whether working remotely as an impediment to a training those lawyers and they also ask about whether working remotely is an impediment to collaborating together and so some firms will find ways to address those impediments and work around them others will feel the need to be a person more often Kent Zimmerman a principle that's only because our group joining us from Chicago coming up our chief medical correspondent Dr Jennifer Ashton answers your questions about corona virus I'm Erin to Turkey you're listening to an ABC news special this is a commercial announcement picture this scenario a shortage of fuel has closed your electric utility or any possible disaster is just devastated your town you're out of power no lights and no news that's why federal and state agencies urge every home to have an emergency radio now you can get a free Dynamo world bad emergency radio this powerful radio lets you stay informed during any type of emergency it doesn't even need batteries and comes with a hand crank generator and super bright LED flashlight the Dynamo emergency radio includes the NOAA weather band a long range Hey am receiver a high sensitivity FM band and even the U. S. B. Jack to charge cell phones or other devices the Dynamo emergency weather band radio retails for almost thirty dollars but newsmax wants to make sure you get this radio so check out the free offer for the emergency radio by going to get the radio dot com that's get the radio dot com or call eight hundred newsmax this radio could save your life this is a limited offer in may end soon so order today diabetes high blood pressure anxiety meds everyone's on them if you're a fifty year old male maybe it would be for your even with type two diabetes a million dollars of term insurance may only cost you about two hundred Bucks a month affordable term life insurance is out there called term provider and speak with big Lou at eight hundred four eight one at fourteen fifty eight eight hundred four eight one fourteen fifty eight or visit big Lou dot com remember big lose like you he's on meds too attention all authors page publishing is looking for authors have you written a book and want to get it published page publishing will get your book into bookstores and for sale online at Amazon apple I tunes in other outlets they handle all aspects of the publishing process for you printing cover art publicity copyright and editing call eight hundred five zero one thirty six eighty nine now for your free author submission kit that's eight hundred five zero one thirty six eighty nine for your free author submission kit again eight hundred five zero one thirty six eighty nine this is the commercial announcement picture this scenario a shortage of fuel has closed your electric utility or any possible disaster is just devastated your town you're out of power no lights and no news that's why federal and state agencies urge every home to have an emergency radio now you can get a free Dynamo world bad emergency radio this powerful radio lets you stay informed during any type of emergency it doesn't even need batteries and comes with a hand crank generator and super bright LED flashlight the Dynamo emergency radio includes the NOAA weather band a long range Hey am receiver a high sensitivity FM band and even a U. S. B. Jack to charge cell phones or other devices the Dynamo emergency weather band radio retails for almost thirty dollars but newsmax wants to make sure you get this radio so check out the free offer for the emergency radio by going to get the radio dot com that's get the radio dot com or call eight hundred newsmax this radio could save your life this is a limited offer in may end soon so order today diabetes high blood pressure anxiety meds everyone's on them if you're a fifty year old male maybe it would be for your even with type two diabetes a million dollars of term insurance may only cost you about two hundred Bucks a month affordable term life insurance is out there called term provider and speak with big Lou at eight hundred four eight one at fourteen fifty eight eight hundred four eight one fourteen fifty eight or visit big Lou dot com remember big lose like you he's on meds to the world needs more heroes more action oriented do gooders here's how I can help right hand side kicks the world of circle is no different if you're thinking let's circle we're glad you're listening sarcomas are rare cancer of the body soft tissue and bone cancer affects tens of thousands of Americans in the sarcoma foundation of America partners with like minded heroes fifty percent complications to funded research and widespread awareness learn how you can join forces ninety five point five W. S. B. latest news and talk you're listening to an ABC news special copay nineteen what do you need to know in the B. C. news correspondent Amy Robach and with me now is ABC chief medical correspondent Dr Jen Ashton and there is some big news about colleges and universities considering re opening in the fall let's go through this systematically how it would work well first of all I mean we have to acknowledge is a complex situation in the health and safety of not just this population but the entire college and university community is obviously priority number one but here are some things that we know at this point medically we know that the college age group is at a lower risk of severe covert nineteen disease we also know that in this age group and in this environment social distancing is definitely going to be uniquely challenging and we also know that there are people in these communities whether they're college students with pre existing medical conditions or the staff or faculty that worked in and around colleges that could be vulnerable and may be at higher risk as well what options should be considered well I think there are some theories that are worth really exploring the first thing is is can we modify the timing of the spacing some of the classroom activities some of the other activities they shouldn't be looked at like an all or none decision in terms of sports theatre dormitory dining all of those things could be modified it's not an all or one situation and we have to remember that masks once the CDC recommended that for the general public they may be a key tool in reducing the transmission of this virus in the college communities from a health standpoint what do we still need to figure out well look luckily we have a little bit of time to do this but I think there is still a lot of things we don't know where to begin with we don't know what the role of rapid testing on a college campus can look like we don't know whether to college students and whether our kids will actually be compliant with some of the social distancing measures and we really don't know when you talk about risks which is worse right now going back to college in some way shape or form or take taking another year plus and not going back you both have to weigh those risks head to head and it's not an easy answer all right Dr Jenna you're sticking around to answer questions in just a bit in the meantime we turn out A. B. C.'s kera Phillips in Washington DC with the latest headlines for us hi Amy well these are some of the stories that were watching plans to re open the economy are taking shape in a number of states restaurants in Atlanta starting up again with new rules in place for diners today including tables six feet apart and servers wearing masks and in New Jersey governor Phil Murphy is unveiling what he calls responsible re opening driven by quote data science and common sense and Texas governor Greg Abbott also detail in the plan for ending his statewide stay at home orders and re emerging for the first time today after pretty brutal bout of the virus British prime minister Boris Johnson apologizing for being away for three weeks and warning it's too soon to end the locked down in the U. K. speaking outside number ten Downing Street Johnson says we are now beginning to turn the tide on this disease but says he refuses to throw away the public's effort and sacrifice by relaxing the lockdown too soon thank you well the mayor of Las Vegas made headlines last week when she volunteered the city as a control group to see if social distancing is working joining us now to talk about how and when Las Vegas will reopen as Clark County commissioner Marilyn Kirkpatrick welcome commissioner and I want to first start by asking how you feel about mayor Goodman's comments well I don't agree with her you know my colleagues and I who oversee the beautiful Las Vegas Strip bill that we have to our highest priority needs to be the health and safety of not only our residents we work on this trip but the visitors who come to visit us yeah and that said the mayor also feels hotels casinos restaurants should reopen right now when do you think they should reopen and what will the economic impact three well we've been working every single day with our medical experts across the state a resort association are McCarron airport and the convention that's already so we are working in that direction testing is the key to getting us back open and we are in the middle of expanding that testing opportunities so we will open only when it's safe and we have the most stringent priorities and policies in place can you talk a little bit about specifically how the county is working with the casinos there and other businesses to prevent another outbreak when you do eventually re open well I thought back to we we have been successfully doing social doesn't change we are ramping up casting today we can do up to two thousand tests today we anticipate by June first being able to ten thousand task our hotel partners and our airports they're making some adjustments so that our visitors bilberry see it coming back and that is our priority and we'll invite everybody back when we feel that we can meet those and do you do you how do you feel the people of Clark County are doing in terms of doing that social distancing and following the guidelines you know we're doing a great job every single day we look at different ways I mean even as we bring back our own stops we have to think about how do we have that social distancing and the grocery stores we have lines out for running grocery lines one way I'm so I I'm very proud of what we're doing in our community on the social distancing face while commissioner Marilyn Kirkpatrick we know it's a tough job thank you for leading the people who use Sir we appreciate your time today thank you get back to work some schools may still be close so where do we go from there the CEO of childcare provider bright horizons Stephen Kramer is here to tell us and Stephen thanks for being with us I know that you have locations daycare locations across the country how many of your facilities remain open so we have a hundred and fifty centers here across the United States that are continuing to be operational and are clearly working under covert nineteen protocols yeah that is pretty surprising I think for a lot of us and and I'm sure so helpful to so many who need your facilities how are you able to keep them open safely absolutely so first and foremost we are focused on those hundred and fifty centers on providing care for essential workers most typically healthcare workers in so first and foremost we are really focused on that particular population in terms of keeping our staff as well as children safe we have implemented processes and procedures in conjunction with a medical expert Dr Kristen Moffett from Boston children's hospital whereby we are ensuring that we are able to keep children safe keep staff safe and really make sure that we are operating both from hygiene perspective as well as from a safety perspective really in an appropriate way so hundred fifty centers open right now what changes will need to be implemented though when day cares fully open back up yes so I I think families can expect a number of changes from what they experience prior to the pandemic also examples include pick up and drop off so often times they will be seen either staggered pick up and drop offs or alternatively it may be curbside pick up and drop off I think certainly I health checks either being asked to be done at home or being done at the centre when they arrive is an important element of keeping everyone safe in addition to that the teachers they will be wearing masks when when families returned and certainly in the bright horizons centers that are open today our teachers are wearing masks also those are the kinds of things they might expect in addition to enhanced hygiene protocols yeah it's Stephen is there anything parents can do now to be prepared for what's to come I think there are things that parents can be doing I think first and foremost it's really important for parents to make sure that they are checking the health of their child each morning and each and every day to make sure that they are not bring their child if they have any sign or symptom of a health issue I think in addition to that children won't be used to the teachers wearing masks that's not something that they would have experienced previously and so my recommendation would be to as a parent start wearing masks around the house start to educate your child that heroes wear masks and certainly the teachers in the centers are heroes and so experiencing and exposing them to that concept is important and then finally I would encourage pet parents to prepare themselves they need to have a little bit of extra patience and I would encourage them to show appreciation for the teachers who are working tirelessly through both now and in the future in the child care center environment I think so many parents are home right now have a absolute renewed appreciation of teachers and I love what you said heroes wear masks that's awesome Stephen Kramer thank you so much for being with us today we appreciate it thank you for having me UP next right here those masks are suddenly everywhere and officials say it's a good idea but the sight of them can frighten our children some techniques for helping them deal when we come back this can be seen news special continues after this eleven eleven thirty thirty in in the the core core rate rate carrier carrier W. W. SP SP twenty twenty four four hour hour traffic traffic center center to to cap cap police police respond respond to to reports reports of of a a disabled disabled vehicle vehicle in in the the median median of of I. I. two eighty five by highway seventy eight exit thirty nine watch for left lane restrictions in both directions north and southbound along the perimeter on the east side while we have road work on six seventy five northbound in Clayton county blocking right lanes as you approach and will block roads to the far left toward I two eighty five this report from the Crohn's and colitis foundation which has been the forefront of inflammatory bowel disease research and care for over fifty years learn more about research education and support and Crohn's colitis foundation dot org Steve Winslow ninety five point five W. S. B. this is Jovita Moore everyday there's new information about the corona virus at channel two action news we are on top of every local development with live in depth coverage that gives you a better perspective stay local stay informed stay with channel two action news you're spending more time at home than ever before assured comfort will make sure you're comfortable and cool but the fifty nine dollar spring tune up and get a pound of freon at no cost it's free offer ends soon details at assured comfort dot com guaranteed service all the time done right and priced right I'm Jerry hall and I sure everyone's got advice on how to protect your health right now hi I'm Rick Adelman what I want to do is show you how you can protect your wealth right now for you and your family first make sure you have ample cash reserves this way you won't have to sell investments while prices are down second make sure your portfolio is diversified having only a portion of your money in stocks helps reduce your risks third rebalance your portfolio this lets you turn market volatility to your advantage by buying assets that are suddenly available at lower prices than before if you're at all concerned about your situation give us a call here at element financial engines we've been helping our clients get through financial crises for more than thirty years from the crash of eighty seven to the dot com bubble of two thousand one to the a credit crisis so call us a triple eight plane wreck extrapolate plane wreck or visit Rick Adelman dot com that's rice Gelman dot com call us and call us right now redbox says top entertainment when you need it most will Smith and Martin Lawrence are back for one last mission in bad boys for life visit redbox dot com for all the ways to watch prices may vary by location subject to applicable taxes additional terms at redbox dot com one eight hundred got junk is proud to announce no contact full service junk removal how does it work when a truck team arrives at the home don't pick up the junk from wherever the customer decided to put this but what if it's still in the home are healthy happy truck team will only touch the junk they're hauling away and they never get closer than six feet from the customer it is clean and open when you want Joe to disappear call one eight hundred got junk is the one eight hundred got junk dot com we've had our lives flipped upside down recently and for many of us things just got a lot rougher but we face tough times before and we're going to pull through this because that's what we do in America and term provider big blue has a message for you if all this craziness has you protecting the ones you care about don't let it stop when we get through this keep the protection rolling with a life insurance shield around your family for over thirty years term providers been providing affordable term life insurance at better prices and with better service including policies that don't need it in home exam as for big blue he's just like you spending time at home with his kids too no matter what your medical history prostate cancer heart conditions high cholesterol or if you're taking prescription medications at term provider we can help you find a million dollars or more of term life insurance at affordable rates to fit your budget there's no obligation so call now for your free quote call eight hundred five six eight twenty seven ninety that's eight hundred five six eight twenty seven ninety eight hundred five six eight twenty seven ninety ninety five point five W. S. B. latest news and talk listening to an ABC news special Kobe nineteen what you need to know once again here is ABC news correspondent Amy Robach new questions every day about this pandemic emergency Dr Jen Ashton is back with us with some answers to your questions and Dr Jenn we've got our first question I have a family member who needs to fly for work are there any other safety measures besides gloves and masks that you would recommend that is really the most important for the passenger you can try to plan the time of that travel maybe to lower peak hours if that's possible but what's interesting about travel is that some degree of travel is not gonna be optional or elective in the near future so we're starting to see as we've heard before airlines start to play around with how they can help reduce the risk so again cover your mouth and nose clean your hands and for now as an individual that's the best you can do all right our next question our sinus drainage and post nasal drip possible symptoms of cold at nineteen even without a fever interesting because we're hearing the CDC revise the symptom less straight they added six symptoms to cope in nineteen he used to be fever cough shortness of breath now they've extended it to body aches headache loss of smell taste sore throat even headache but here's the important thing with the post nasal drip and allergies we are an allergy season and as I always say you can have more than one thing at a time so yes it's possible that you could have a mild case of cobit and allergies and one of the new symptoms the CDC added was a sore throat so again above the neck symptoms it is possible and I'm sure we're gonna be seeing that list of symptoms get expanded in the future next question I'm a college professor recovering from coded nineteen and I'm struggling with sudden loss of secondary language fluency has there been any research on cognitive impairments related to cope with nineteen no formal research and data out yet Amy but you can imagine how frightening that would be if you start to notice these we you and I've talked here about neurologic manifestations to cove in nineteen there have been reports in the medical literature of people presenting with headache seizure dizziness loss and smell and taste are neurologic symptoms so cognitive function we may see that certainly and seriously cove in nineteen patients who have been in and I see you that's to be expected but we'll we'll hope that those things return back to normal okay next question we've been talking a lot about pregnancy this one about new moms is it safe to vaccinate babies or give booster MMR shots without testing them for cove in nineteen any expected complications like fever or anything else a couple of things with this because it's really important for the American academy of pediatrics talk about the risks of delaying infant immunizations in the setting of the covert nineteen pandemic number one fever is a possibly a good reaction of our body to anything whether it's a vaccination for exposure to something like Kobe right now pediatricians offices are not testing babies for cove it before they administer routine I mean ations but that may change in the future and we have to remember those immunizations are important so any concerns really want the parents to talk to the pediatrician all right great advice as always Dr Jan thank you and if you have questions for Dr Ashton you can submit them on her Instagram at Dr J. Ashton will masks and face coverings have become such a familiar sight around the country in this corona virus pandemic with a number of states now requiring them during visits to essential businesses and on public transportation but the sight of them can be scary especially for children A. B. C.'s Ariel Russia has more on what you can do to help lessen their anxiety Hey there any as you know kids can ask some pretty tough questions and this can actually be scary for them as you mention when they see people out there wearing masks they see their parents wearing masks but experts say there are ways to help them adapt to this new normal and some of them are not only just educational but they can even be fine faking street shuttered businesses empty playgrounds the images of this covert nineteen pandemic are hard for even adults to process but for kids like four year old alley and five year old Adriana Alfano seeing people wearing masks is perhaps the most jarring it they just I was really strange a new normal forcing families like the L. fan I was to have some tough conversations it does open up both a big can of worms and a lot of different questions public face covering now recommended by the CDC for adults and children ages two and up how do you think the imagery of people wearing masks can affect kids well initially when kids see someone wearing a mask depending on what they associate it with before it could bring up some beer new dad and entrepreneur Trevor George and his wife Morgan wanted to help ease that anxiety we believe that in order to solve this everyone has to do their part Michigan based teacher company struggling when the pandemic hit economy it had the two created mass club issues like it has to be a way you can help and work with your branch at the same time retiring more than fifty percent of their furloughed employees or adults with a lot of characters like hello Kitty Wonder Woman Batman and Superman we have an eight month old and when my wife and I put on our Batman or Wonder Woman masks he reaches for the colors that has a familiar logo can help your child more east club a passion project with added and for every mass that's purchased we donate a medical grade version two first responders in partnership with the first responders children's need and creating a bright spot family having some fun some levity and then mixing them with information Trevor says that they have donated nearly one hundred thousand masks already any clearly this idea of wearing a branded logo mask and also doing some good while you're in the process of that is really resonate yeah it's a win win I was even saying I know kids it's scary to them it's scary to me sometimes when you see people because it is jarring seeing circle in masks all of a sudden what tools can parents use when they talk about this with their children well doctor Taylor says it's important to impress upon your kids that they're taking care of themselves they're taking care of others this is a safety precaution just like wearing a helmet when you ride a bike or buckling your seat belt when you're in the car and she also says that it's important to have these honest conversations with your kids just be up front with them lead by example when you're comfortable wearing your own mask children see that and they're more at ease as well makes sense and kids are certainly resilient aerial thank you so much for bringing us this we appreciate it for gonna turn out to Dr Jen Ashton for some thoughts on this for some perspective here I mean we have to remember it was just recently that the CDC made a major change of revising their guidelines recommending face coverings for the general public not to protect the person wearing the mask but to protect others so as the saying we're so used to hearing here in New York City it's not about me it's about a week but here's the interesting thing from a medical and scientific standpoint remember that the data on face coverings or masks protecting you was done in a lab right that's why we say in a hospital setting we put masks on sick people with a different kind of mask on health care workers but there's a big difference between scientific research done in a lab setting and those done in a real life setting so we're seeing one of major Boston Medical Center has dropped the rate of its staff cases of covert nineteen dramatically once they instituted a policy where everyone staff patients and visitors started wearing masks so we'll see how it plays out in our country Dr Ashton thank you and when we come back the army of volunteers in one city working hard to help frontline heroes shine these special continues after this about half of all men will experience ET or PT fact both E. 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E. are highly treatable fact a safe effective treatment is just a call away at priority men's Medical Center our highly skilled doctors guarantee results on your first visit or there's no charge listen to a specialist in men's health I'm doctor Schwartz if I Agra Cialis or Levitra have let you down the treatment that priority men's Medical Center work immediately regardless of your age or medical history you'll receive custom blended medication designed just for you they're safe and effective with no pain and no surgery patients are lasting thirty sixty and ninety minutes or longer and best of all treatments are affordable ma'am if you want to last longer in the bedroom schedule a private consultation with the experienced physicians at priority men's Medical Center four oh four six two zero one nine five nine four oh four six two zero one nine five nine that's four oh four six two zero one nine five nine everything you know about buying and owning your new air conditioning system Josh change cool ray is breaking the rules and changing the game by your new high efficiency carrier system from call ray and you'll never pay for any repair again ever this is not a lease offer you own your system I'm Dave Baker from WSP home fix it show this new offer from Korean carrier is the ultimate game changer in the heating and air business call raise lifetime parts and labor warranty includes every part all the labor even service call fees Korean carrier zero repair costs for life there's just no safer way to own your new heating and cooling system get Cory's lifetime parts and labor warranty break the rules change the game never pay to repair your system again Korean carriers turn to the experts this is rob Babin president and general manager of **** media group radio stations there are so many people from the Atlanta region we're committed to keeping all the same and they deserve our gratitude thank you all the first responders healthcare professionals and so many others providing essential services I also wanted a few seconds to think those local media especially the ninety five point five W. 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Brian Camp Donald Trump President Trump Vice President Georgia WSP Georgette
Atlanta - Georgia Governor Kemp Defends Decision to Begin Phased Reopening of State Economy

Clark Howard

45:08 min | 3 years ago

Atlanta - Georgia Governor Kemp Defends Decision to Begin Phased Reopening of State Economy

"Brian camp addresses criticism from those concerned he's opening businesses too soon despite the criticism governor Brian can't received last week from president trump for his decision to begin re opening Georgia businesses he still supports them I appreciate his leadership I appreciate all that the administration has done to support our state and like the president can't lashed out at the media for trying to divide there will be no dividing we're going to continue to work with the administration and the president and the vice president in the task force in he said today I wish the media could just see how good these calls go with the governor's Xander parish ninety five point five WSP Georgette meantime is headed rough milestone a thousand people have died so far in the state from the corona virus only ten other states have the same numbers some restaurants here in Georgia really having a hard time finding the supplies needed to re open for indoor dining Catherine a server here it is all Mexican restaurant says there's so many rules to follow in order to reopen including providing masks and hand sanitizer for all staff there's no where where we can find this hand sanitizer and then there's being able to serve and social distance at the same time is it even possible it will be really difficult for us like a a servers to to put put put the the the food food food on on on the the the table table table if if if we we we are are are not not not allowed allowed allowed to to to be be be less less less than than than six six six feet feet feet apart apart apart it's it's it's ridiculous ridiculous ridiculous in in in Peachtree Peachtree Peachtree city city city robin robin robin will will will lead lead lead Steve Steve Steve ninety ninety ninety five five five point point point five five five W. S. B. fifty nine degrees in Atlanta mostly clear and cold tonight lows forty seven to fifty one mostly to partly sunny tomorrow high seventy eight Atlanta's most accurate and dependable forecast is coming up top local news every thirty minutes and when it breaks ninety five point five W. S. B. depend on it small businesses hit another snag when they tried to get a loan help today the online loan application process had technical problems and three hundred and ten billion dollars is expected to go quickly here's ABC's Mary Bruce how experts tell us this fund could run out of money again it within a week and we are already seeing calls from some of the nation's top banks for Congress to fully fund and expand this program they won't have any hope of meeting this huge demand the first round of funding ran out in just thirteen days W. SPT use time eleven oh two is Georgia begins to reopen all things are sure to get confusing what's open and what's not what are the rules take on ninety five point five W. S. V. as we band together and help each other get back ninety five point five W. S. B. everywhere you go this is the time local news really matters which is why now more than ever more people turn to channel two action news this is Jovita Moore every day there is new and complicated information about the corona virus and it's changing quickly and this is George Estevez we're here to make sense of it all for you with live in depth local coverage investigations it give you a better perspective and a look forward to the impact on you and they were kind of me stay local stay informed stay with channel two action news man of the effects of hypertension diabetes or prostate cancer preventing you from having a satisfying love life in just one visit the doctors that priority man's medical center can help you overcome ET or PT to regain your confidence and have you last longer in the bedroom name brand pills don't work for many men and can have serious side effects the highly skilled positions that priority man's Medical Center provide custom blended medications that are safe effective and work immediately regardless of your medical history age you'll see results on your first visit guaranteed for your consultation is free so if you have problems in the bedroom call now for a private consultation one call one visit one simple solution to regain your love life call priority men's Medical Center now at four oh four six two zero one nine five nine four four six two zero one nine five nine that's four oh four six two zero one nine five nine you're spending more time at home than ever before assured comfort will make sure you're comfortable and cool but the fifty nine dollar spring tune up and get a pound of freon at no cost it's free offer ends soon details at assured comfort dot com guaranteeing service all the time done right and priced right I'm Jerry hall and I sure you'll you'll love love W. W. S. S. B. B. triple triple team team traffic traffic alerts about three hours that's run by your traffic experts at ninety five point five open the app and send your smartphone aside for your specific road ahead thank you Michael Reyes lifetime parts and labor warranty W. S. B. triple team traffic alerts the Winslow was in the W. S. B. twenty four hour traffic center we see a slow zoom in sandy springs on four hundred south on Jennifer it's the the roadwork roadwork to to setting setting up up between between the the two two eighty eighty five five reps reps and and the the Glenridge Glenridge connector connector exit exit number number three three through through the the evening evening hours hours allow allow for for extra extra travel travel time time south south of of Abernathy Abernathy road road right right now now no no delays delays getting getting to to I. I. two eighty five also the northbound work on four hundred still blocking right lane past Abernathy toward the north springs marta station entrance wraps stated the far left if you make your way toward Roswell and Alpharetta twenty east and west bound east expressway to cap county WSJ became showing wetland still blocked both directions for the media work between Wesley chapel and Panola road Steve Winslow ninety five point five W. S. B. M. W. S. B. Rochester college within months most accurate dependable forecast for tonight mostly clear and cool lows forty seven to fifty one tomorrow mostly to to partly partly sunny sunny and and warm warm high high seventy seventy eight eight low low fifty fifty nine nine Wednesday Wednesday showers showers and and thunderstorms thunderstorms eighty eighty percent percent likely likely afternoon afternoon and and evening evening high high seventy seventy three three low low fifty fifty one one Thursday a mix of sun and clouds cool high sixty five lows forty six to forty nine fifty nine degrees on Peachtree street at ninety five point five WSP Atlanta's news and talk is an NBC news special covert nineteen what you need to know here is ABC news correspondent Aaron Katersky it's been weeks since most of us have been out to eat today restaurants in Georgia we're allowed to open for dine in service as the state continues to loosen coronavirus restrictions Tennessee's re opening retail stores Kentucky's re openings of health care services dog groomers can reopen in Wisconsin we're corona virus has hit harder it's different the governor of New Jersey said today restrictions continue indefinitely and the governor of New York said he expected to extend them for the city and its suburbs but the lunch crowd came back in parts of Georgia as our affiliate WSB found a chance to eat inside a restaurant Kim Kucera says this Brookhaven waffle house was her first choice the family hang out we are talking about the whole field in this family in the champ wasn't here this day but the company says no matter who walks in some things haven't changed they're going to get that welcome the waffle house the greeting that we're all excited to be able to give them for when they come in it'll be very clear where they can and cannot said company spokesperson in Gerry boss showed us the big red tape strapped across some of the books and some of the schools are also off limits to maintain safe social distancing the cooks and servers are all wearing masks and X. marks the spot where you can stand as you wait for a seat some don't like governor camp's decision to allow restaurants like this to re open their dining rooms but boss believes many of the critics may be able to work from home while still collecting a paycheck to say that when they still have all of those things we want to be here to make sure that everybody who wants to go and have the opportunity to can take care of themselves and their family that's the American way as for Kim cassette as she feels comfortable eating inside says there's a sense of home here and it all starts off with waffle house what can't get any more American the waffle house right many will never feel comfortable venturing out or re opening a business without a vaccine and most experts think that's at least a year away some scientists are considering rather unconventional ways to speed up the process one of them raises some moral questions we're joined by Dr Angela Baldwin of Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx is also part of our medical team here at ABC news Dr Baldwin this method involves injecting healthy adults with live coronavirus correct so this is called a challenge trial where healthy adults are divided into two groups one group received a placebo and the other group receives the potential vaccine but both groups are injected with the virus and the point is for them to for researchers to see how effective the vaccine is against the virus and this kind of speed up the timeline because normally in a normal situation what somebody receives a vaccine the researchers just have to kind of wait for that person to naturally be infected with whatever virus or disease that the vaccines intended to treat is it the only way to do this definitely not this normally vaccine trials go through three phases phase one phase to help determine the specific dosing that safe and then you know an overall kind of safety of the vaccine and then in phase three is when they do these large very large trials for the enroll thousands of patients and a half receive the vaccine the other half isn't but then they just kind of track them and follow them throughout their daily lives and see okay all this group you know they were exposed to the virus and it looks like the vaccine worked the problem is these are just very long and then kind of a bit cumbersome and so that's why some researchers are proposing this challenge trial the kind of by pass phase three doesn't raise any moral dilemmas definitely a moral dilemmas they do try to mitigate the risk but the fact of the matter is we are taking otherwise healthy adults and injecting them with a virus that could have serious consequences including death the other side they do try to mitigate the risks they would only be enrolling healthy adult volunteers without underlying medical conditions but the problem is we do know that unfortunately there are young people who are still dying from call the nineteen you may also not have any underlying conditions there's still so much we don't know that just makes it's completely unsafe and the other problem is if somebody does get very sick you know we're dealing with a health care crisis right now work the critical care that one may need may not always be readily available and resources may be scarce so to inject somebody of the virus and the potentially kill them and put them in a situation where they urgently need critical care that might not be available raises a few eyebrows from from office I guess it's tempting though when everyone wants the vaccine this seems like the speediest way you know if they could and and one of the questions we ask ourselves is how much does this speed up the the normal course of us finding a vaccine right so if it only speeded up by one month maybe not that great of an idea of the speeded up by six months eight months okay maybe but also the thing to realize is that the challenge trials only one part of a of a two step process these researchers are suggesting would replace phase three so you still have the challenge of trial where the people are given the live virus but then in the second part they would need to test the vaccine on the most vulnerable members of the population right the elderly people under my medical conditions these are the people who really need the vaccine so we need to make sure it's safe in them so during the second phase they would give each of those types of people the vaccine but they would not be injecting them with the with the virus so that means we still in this kind of things were waiting for these people to in the natural course of their days be exposed to the virus so it's really not short meaning that the for the third phase by that much if you think about it who's going to decide ultimately you know that's a very good question I think ultimately we have these things called internal review boards RBC and they are designed to look out for the welfare of participants in subjects in studies and I think it's basically going to fall on the individual IRB's to decide whether or not they're going to allow this to to commission their institution Dr Angela Baldwin of the ABC news medical unit while the world waits for a vaccine all of us adapt to new routines out of our offices and working from say the kitchen table firms are now debating how and whether to repopulate offices small workers are deciding whether they're comfortable taking off the sweat pants and putting back on the suit consumer minute vices law firm said soy Hauser group you joins us from Chicago we're all kind of getting used to this aren't we yes you know I think this is going better than many law firms thought it would technology working well generally people are productive at home some people even like it what's not to like you can be in your pajamas and still accomplish the same kind of work you know in a candid moment a lot of lawyers would probably tell you that and I think that there is upside for both lawyers and for firms to do that the flexibility is something the people of wanted since before the crisis in some law firms before the crisis we're taking small steps towards being more flexible about where people worked and they saw upside both in attracting talent who wanted to be working where they were comfortable where they were where it was convenient also for the law firms there's a big expense of course on the real estate side real estate for most law firms is their second biggest expense behind paying lawyers so they're interested long term many law firms are in using less space why would any firm go back to renting expensive space again if this is working it's that's a great question different firms are different so some firms before the crisis we're happy to move towards less space and I think that the crisis will accelerate the move towards less space for those firms other firms the before the crisis had a culture of being in the office together they placed a premium on facetime and I think after the crisis some of those firms will revert to form and they will want to be in the office more so there will be some that accelerate towards work at home more and take on less space and I think others will want to snap back to how they were previously law firms like many other firms can be notoriously inflexible though about people's time has the shortest that it can work differently I think that this crisis has proven that actually can work pretty well for many lawyers in many firms different lawyers have practices that lend themselves to working remotely so for example a lawyer who needs to appear in court or take depositions in person that doesn't work as well remotely of course others though K. and worked quite productively from anywhere and that works for the firm in for their clients when you ask people what the impediments are to remote working some of the things that come up are things like whether working remotely as an impediment to mentoring opportunities for young and up and coming lawyers they asked about whether working remotely as an impediment to a training those lawyers and they also ask about whether working remotely is an impediment to collaborating together and so some firms will find ways to address those impediments and work around them others will feel the need to be a person more often Kent Zimmerman a principle that's only because our group joining us from Chicago coming up our chief medical correspondent Dr Jennifer Ashton answers your questions about corona virus I'm Erin to Turkey you're listening to an ABC news special this is a commercial announcement picture this scenario a shortage of fuel has closed your electric utility or any possible disaster is just devastated your town you're out of power no lights and no news that's why federal and state agencies urge every home to have an emergency radio now you can get a free Dynamo world bad emergency radio this 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S. B. Jack to charge cell phones or other devices the Dynamo emergency weather band radio retails for almost thirty dollars but newsmax wants to make sure you get this radio so check out the free offer for the emergency radio by going to get the radio dot com that's get the radio dot com or call eight hundred newsmax this radio could save your life this is a limited offer in may end soon so order today diabetes high blood pressure anxiety meds everyone's on them if you're a fifty year old male maybe it would be for your even with type two diabetes a million dollars of term insurance may only cost you about two hundred Bucks a month affordable term life insurance is out there called term provider and speak with big Lou at eight hundred four eight one at fourteen fifty eight eight hundred four eight one fourteen fifty eight or visit big Lou dot com remember big lose like you he's on meds to the world needs more heroes more action oriented do gooders here's how I can help right hand side kicks the world of circle is no different if you're thinking let's circle we're glad you're listening sarcomas are rare cancer of the body soft tissue and bone cancer affects tens of thousands of Americans in the sarcoma foundation of America partners with like minded heroes fifty percent complications to funded research and widespread awareness learn how you can join forces ninety five point five W. S. B. latest news and talk you're listening to an ABC news special copay nineteen what do you need to know in the B. C. news correspondent Amy Robach and with me now is ABC chief medical correspondent Dr Jen Ashton and there is some big news about colleges and universities considering re opening in the fall let's go through this systematically how it would work well first of all I mean we have to acknowledge is a complex situation in the health and safety of not just this population but the entire college and university community is obviously priority number one but here are some things that we know at this point medically we know that the college age group is at a lower risk of severe covert nineteen disease we also know that in this age group and in this environment social distancing is definitely going to be uniquely challenging and we also know that there are people in these communities whether they're college students with pre existing medical conditions or the staff or faculty that worked in and around colleges that could be vulnerable and may be at higher risk as well what options should be considered well I think there are some theories that are worth really exploring the first thing is is can we modify the timing of the spacing some of the classroom activities some of the other activities they shouldn't be looked at like an all or none decision in terms of sports theatre dormitory dining all of those things could be modified it's not an all or one situation and we have to remember that masks once the CDC recommended that for the general public they may be a key tool in reducing the transmission of this virus in the college communities from a health standpoint what do we still need to figure out well look luckily we have a little bit of time to do this but I think there is still a lot of things we don't know where to begin with we don't know what the role of rapid testing on a college campus can look like we don't know whether to college students and whether our kids will actually be compliant with some of the social distancing measures and we really don't know when you talk about risks which is worse right now going back to college in some way shape or form or take taking another year plus and not going back you both have to weigh those risks head to head and it's not an easy answer all right Dr Jenna you're sticking around to answer questions in just a bit in the meantime we turn out A. B. C.'s kera Phillips in Washington DC with the latest headlines for us hi Amy well these are some of the stories that were watching plans to re open the economy are taking shape in a number of states restaurants in Atlanta starting up again with new rules in place for diners today including tables six feet apart and servers wearing masks and in New Jersey governor Phil Murphy is unveiling what he calls responsible re opening driven by quote data science and common sense and Texas governor Greg Abbott also detail in the plan for ending his statewide stay at home orders and re emerging for the first time today after pretty brutal bout of the virus British prime minister Boris Johnson apologizing for being away for three weeks and warning it's too soon to end the locked down in the U. K. speaking outside number ten Downing Street Johnson says we are now beginning to turn the tide on this disease but says he refuses to throw away the public's effort and sacrifice by relaxing the lockdown too soon thank you well the mayor of Las Vegas made headlines last week when she volunteered the city as a control group to see if social distancing is working joining us now to talk about how and when Las Vegas will reopen as Clark County commissioner Marilyn Kirkpatrick welcome commissioner and I want to first start by asking how you feel about mayor Goodman's comments well I don't agree with her you know my colleagues and I who oversee the beautiful Las Vegas Strip bill that we have to our highest priority needs to be the health and safety of not only our residents we work on this trip but the visitors who come to visit us yeah and that said the mayor also feels hotels casinos restaurants should reopen right now when do you think they should reopen and what will the economic impact three well we've been working every single day with our medical experts across the state a resort association are McCarron airport and the convention that's already so we are working in that direction testing is the key to getting us back open and we are in the middle of expanding that testing opportunities so we will open only when it's safe and we have the most stringent priorities and policies in place can you talk a little bit about specifically how the county is working with the casinos there and other businesses to prevent another outbreak when you do eventually re open well I thought back to we we have been successfully doing social doesn't change we are ramping up casting today we can do up to two thousand tests today we anticipate by June first being able to ten thousand task our hotel partners and our airports they're making some adjustments so that our visitors bilberry see it coming back and that is our priority and we'll invite everybody back when we feel that we can meet those and do you do you how do you feel the people of Clark County are doing in terms of doing that social distancing and following the guidelines you know we're doing a great job every single day we look at different ways I mean even as we bring back our own stops we have to think about how do we have that social distancing and the grocery stores we have lines out for running grocery lines one way I'm so I I'm very proud of what we're doing in our community on the social distancing face while commissioner Marilyn Kirkpatrick we know it's a tough job thank you for leading the people who use Sir we appreciate your time today thank you get back to work some schools may still be close so where do we go from there the CEO of childcare provider bright horizons Stephen Kramer is here to tell us and Stephen thanks for being with us I know that you have locations daycare locations across the country how many of your facilities remain open so we have a hundred and fifty centers here across the United States that are continuing to be operational and are clearly working under covert nineteen protocols yeah that is pretty surprising I think for a lot of us and and I'm sure so helpful to so many who need your facilities how are you able to keep them open safely absolutely so first and foremost we are focused on those hundred and fifty centers on providing care for essential workers most typically healthcare workers in so first and foremost we are really focused on that particular population in terms of keeping our staff as well as children safe we have implemented processes and procedures in conjunction with a medical expert Dr Kristen Moffett from Boston children's hospital whereby we are ensuring that we are able to keep children safe keep staff safe and really make sure that we are operating both from hygiene perspective as well as from a safety perspective really in an appropriate way so hundred fifty centers open right now what changes will need to be implemented though when day cares fully open back up yes so I I think families can expect a number of changes from what they experience prior to the pandemic also examples include pick up and drop off so often times they will be seen either staggered pick up and drop offs or alternatively it may be curbside pick up and drop off I think certainly I health checks either being asked to be done at home or being done at the centre when they arrive is an important element of keeping everyone safe in addition to that the teachers they will be wearing masks when when families returned and certainly in the bright horizons centers that are open today our teachers are wearing masks also those are the kinds of things they might expect in addition to enhanced hygiene protocols yeah it's Stephen is there anything parents can do now to be prepared for what's to come I think there are things that parents can be doing I think first and foremost it's really important for parents to make sure that they are checking the health of their child each morning and each and every day to make sure that they are not bring their child if they have any sign or symptom of a health issue I think in addition to that children won't be used to the teachers wearing masks that's not something that they would have experienced previously and so my recommendation would be to as a parent start wearing masks around the house start to educate your child that heroes wear masks and certainly the teachers in the centers are heroes and so experiencing and exposing them to that concept is important and then finally I would encourage pet parents to prepare themselves they need to have a little bit of extra patience and I would encourage them to show appreciation for the teachers who are working tirelessly through both now and in the future in the child care center environment I think so many parents are home right now have a absolute renewed appreciation of teachers and I love what you said heroes wear masks that's awesome Stephen Kramer thank you so much for being with us today we appreciate it thank you for having me UP next right here those masks are suddenly everywhere and officials say it's a good idea but the sight of them can frighten our children some techniques for helping them deal when we come back this can be seen news special continues after this eleven eleven thirty thirty in in the the core core rate rate carrier carrier W. W. SP SP twenty twenty four four hour hour traffic traffic center center to to cap cap police police respond respond to to reports reports of of a a disabled disabled vehicle vehicle in in the the median median of of I. I. two eighty five by highway seventy eight exit thirty nine watch for left lane restrictions in both directions north and southbound along the perimeter on the east side while we have road work on six seventy five northbound in Clayton county blocking right lanes as you approach and will block roads to the far left toward I two eighty five this report from the Crohn's and colitis foundation which has been the forefront of inflammatory bowel disease research and care for over fifty years learn more about research education and support and Crohn's colitis foundation dot org Steve Winslow ninety five point five W. S. B. this is Jovita Moore everyday there's new information about the corona virus at channel two action news we are on top of every local development with live in depth coverage that gives you a better perspective stay local stay informed stay with channel two action news you're spending more time at home than ever before assured comfort will make sure you're comfortable and cool but the fifty nine dollar spring tune up and get a pound of freon at no cost it's free offer ends soon details at assured comfort dot com guaranteed service all the time done right and priced right I'm Jerry hall and I sure everyone's got advice on how to protect your health right now hi I'm Rick Adelman what I want to do is show you how you can protect your wealth right now for you and your family first make sure you have ample cash reserves this way you won't have to sell investments while prices are down second make sure your portfolio is diversified having only a portion of your money in stocks helps reduce your risks third rebalance your portfolio this lets you turn market volatility to your advantage by buying assets that are suddenly available at lower prices than before if you're at all concerned about your situation give us a call here at element financial engines we've been helping our clients get through financial crises for more than thirty years from the crash of eighty seven to the dot com bubble of two thousand one to the a credit crisis so call us a triple eight plane wreck extrapolate plane wreck or visit Rick Adelman dot com that's rice Gelman dot com call us and call us right now redbox says top entertainment when you need it most will Smith and Martin Lawrence are back for one last mission in bad boys for life visit redbox dot com for all the ways to watch prices may vary by location subject to applicable taxes additional terms at redbox dot com one eight hundred got junk is proud to announce no contact full service junk removal how does it work when a truck team arrives at the home don't pick up the junk from wherever the customer decided to put this but what if it's still in the home are healthy happy truck team will only touch the junk they're hauling away and they never get closer than six feet from the customer it is clean and open when you want Joe to disappear call one eight hundred got junk is the one eight hundred got junk dot com we've had our lives flipped upside down recently and for many of us things just got a lot rougher but we face tough times before and we're going to pull through this because that's what we do in America and term provider big blue has a message for you if all this craziness has you protecting the ones you care about don't let it stop when we get through this keep the protection rolling with a life insurance shield around your family for over thirty years term providers been providing affordable term life insurance at better prices and with better service including policies that don't need it in home exam as for big blue he's just like you spending time at home with his kids too no matter what your medical history prostate cancer heart conditions high cholesterol or if you're taking prescription medications at term provider we can help you find a million dollars or more of term life insurance at affordable rates to fit your budget there's no obligation so call now for your free quote call eight hundred five six eight twenty seven ninety that's eight hundred five six eight twenty seven ninety eight hundred five six eight twenty seven ninety ninety five point five W. S. B. latest news and talk listening to an ABC news special Kobe nineteen what you need to know once again here is ABC news correspondent Amy Robach new questions every day about this pandemic emergency Dr Jen Ashton is back with us with some answers to your questions and Dr Jenn we've got our first question I have a family member who needs to fly for work are there any other safety measures besides gloves and masks that you would recommend that is really the most important for the passenger you can try to plan the time of that travel maybe to lower peak hours if that's possible but what's interesting about travel is that some degree of travel is not gonna be optional or elective in the near future so we're starting to see as we've heard before airlines start to play around with how they can help reduce the risk so again cover your mouth and nose clean your hands and for now as an individual that's the best you can do all right our next question our sinus drainage and post nasal drip possible symptoms of cold at nineteen even without a fever interesting because we're hearing the CDC revise the symptom less straight they added six symptoms to cope in nineteen he used to be fever cough shortness of breath now they've extended it to body aches headache loss of smell taste sore throat even headache but here's the important thing with the post nasal drip and allergies we are an allergy season and as I always say you can have more than one thing at a time so yes it's possible that you could have a mild case of cobit and allergies and one of the new symptoms the CDC added was a sore throat so again above the neck symptoms it is possible and I'm sure we're gonna be seeing that list of symptoms get expanded in the future next question I'm a college professor recovering from coded nineteen and I'm struggling with sudden loss of secondary language fluency has there been any research on cognitive impairments related to cope with nineteen no formal research and data out yet Amy but you can imagine how frightening that would be if you start to notice these we you and I've talked here about neurologic manifestations to cove in nineteen there have been reports in the medical literature of people presenting with headache seizure dizziness loss and smell and taste are neurologic symptoms so cognitive function we may see that certainly and seriously cove in nineteen patients who have been in and I see you that's to be expected but we'll we'll hope that those things return back to normal okay next question we've been talking a lot about pregnancy this one about new moms is it safe to vaccinate babies or give booster MMR shots without testing them for cove in nineteen any expected complications like fever or anything else a couple of things with this because it's really important for the American academy of pediatrics talk about the risks of delaying infant immunizations in the setting of the covert nineteen pandemic number one fever is a possibly a good reaction of our body to anything whether it's a vaccination for exposure to something like Kobe right now pediatricians offices are not testing babies for cove it before they administer routine I mean ations but that may change in the future and we have to remember those immunizations are important so any concerns really want the parents to talk to the pediatrician all right great advice as always Dr Jan thank you and if you have questions for Dr Ashton you can submit them on her Instagram at Dr J. Ashton will masks and face coverings have become such a familiar sight around the country in this corona virus pandemic with a number of states now requiring them during visits to essential businesses and on public transportation but the sight of them can be scary especially for children A. B. C.'s Ariel Russia has more on what you can do to help lessen their anxiety Hey there any as you know kids can ask some pretty tough questions and this can actually be scary for them as you mention when they see people out there wearing masks they see their parents wearing masks but experts say there are ways to help them adapt to this new normal and some of them are not only just educational but they can even be fine faking street shuttered businesses empty playgrounds the images of this covert nineteen pandemic are hard for even adults to process but for kids like four year old alley and five year old Adriana Alfano seeing people wearing masks is perhaps the most jarring it they just I was really strange a new normal forcing families like the L. fan I was to have some tough conversations it does open up both a big can of worms and a lot of different questions public face covering now recommended by the CDC for adults and children ages two and up how do you think the imagery of people wearing masks can affect kids well initially when kids see someone wearing a mask depending on what they associate it with before it could bring up some beer new dad and entrepreneur Trevor George and his wife Morgan wanted to help ease that anxiety we believe that in order to solve this everyone has to do their part Michigan based teacher company struggling when the pandemic hit economy it had the two created mass club issues like it has to be a way you can help and work with your branch at the same time retiring more than fifty percent of their furloughed employees or adults with a lot of characters like hello Kitty Wonder Woman Batman and Superman we have an eight month old and when my wife and I put on our Batman or Wonder Woman masks he reaches for the colors that has a familiar logo can help your child more east club a passion project with added and for every mass that's purchased we donate a medical grade version two first responders in partnership with the first responders children's need and creating a bright spot family having some fun some levity and then mixing them with information Trevor says that they have donated nearly one hundred thousand masks already any clearly this idea of wearing a branded logo mask and also doing some good while you're in the process of that is really resonate yeah it's a win win I was even saying I know kids it's scary to them it's scary to me sometimes when you see people because it is jarring seeing circle in masks all of a sudden what tools can parents use when they talk about this with their children well doctor Taylor says it's important to impress upon your kids that they're taking care of themselves they're taking care of others this is a safety precaution just like wearing a helmet when you ride a bike or buckling your seat belt when you're in the car and she also says that it's important to have these honest conversations with your kids just be up front with them lead by example when you're comfortable wearing your own mask children see that and they're more at ease as well makes sense and kids are certainly resilient aerial thank you so much for bringing us this we appreciate it for gonna turn out to Dr Jen Ashton for some thoughts on this for some perspective here I mean we have to remember it was just recently that the CDC made a major change of revising their guidelines recommending face coverings for the general public not to protect the person wearing the mask but to protect others so as the saying we're so used to hearing here in New York City it's not about me it's about a week but here's the interesting thing from a medical and scientific standpoint remember that the data on face coverings or masks protecting you was done in a lab right that's why we say in a hospital setting we put masks on sick people with a different kind of mask on health care workers but there's a big difference between scientific research done in a lab setting and those done in a real life setting so we're seeing one of major Boston Medical Center has dropped the rate of its staff cases of covert nineteen dramatically once they instituted a policy where everyone staff patients and visitors started wearing masks so we'll see how it plays out in our country Dr Ashton thank you and when we come back the army of volunteers in one city working hard to help frontline heroes shine these special continues after this about half of all men will experience ET or PT fact both E. 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E. are highly treatable fact a safe effective treatment is just a call away at priority men's Medical Center our highly skilled doctors guarantee results on your first visit or there's no charge listen to a specialist in men's health I'm doctor Schwartz if I Agra Cialis or Levitra have let you down the treatment that priority men's Medical Center work immediately regardless of your age or medical history you'll receive custom blended medication designed just for you they're safe and effective with no pain and no surgery patients are lasting thirty sixty and ninety minutes or longer and best of all treatments are affordable ma'am if you want to last longer in the bedroom schedule a private consultation with the experienced physicians at priority men's Medical Center four oh four six two zero one nine five nine four oh four six two zero one nine five nine that's four oh four six two zero one nine five nine everything you know about buying and owning your new air conditioning system Josh change cool ray is breaking the rules and changing the game by your new high efficiency carrier system from call ray and you'll never pay for any repair again ever this is not a lease offer you own your system I'm Dave Baker from WSP home fix it show this new offer from Korean carrier is the ultimate game changer in the heating and air business call raise lifetime parts and labor warranty includes every part all the labor even service call fees Korean carrier zero repair costs for life there's just no safer way to own your new heating and cooling system get Cory's lifetime parts and labor warranty break the rules change the game never pay to repair your system again Korean carriers turn to the experts this is rob Babin president and general manager of **** media group radio stations there are so many people from the Atlanta region we're committed to keeping all the same and they deserve our gratitude thank you all the first responders healthcare professionals and so many others providing essential services I also wanted a few seconds to think those local media especially the ninety five point five W. S. B. at **** media group team we're deeply committed and work very hard to provide timely and relevant information helping to keep the public safe informed I couldn't be prouder of the resilience and efforts of our team at ninety five point five WSP thank you for listening and please support our advertisers will make our services possible we are stronger together when I every single knows that darkest moment mission is a time when you need to be called this is your objective you must be called you must be complied with all your technical skills or physical power and your inner strength must be brought to bear this is your objective

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The Batavia

Casefile True Crime

04:37 min | 4 years ago

The Batavia

"As the Dutch republic its wealth and power flourished through the importing of goods from overseas with huge ships sent to Asia and Africa to bring back textiles tease grains and spices popular proverb among the Dutch during this period. Was Jason. Cross these good but trade is bet on the Dutch east India company known in its homeland as the VOC was a charted company established to coordinate trade in India and other countries throughout Southeast Asia. Monopolizing all trade to the aced at boasted tens of thousands of employees and it's I- Improv at army ships operating under its Lawson's were enormous vessels called aced. India man built to carry large amounts of cargo as well as passengers and equipped with cannons and guns in case pirates launched an attack due to this ause white. They ships moved slowly at an average speed of five knots. Paraly- and typically took eight months to complete a voyage in sixteen twenty eight the VOC commissioned the construction of an expensive new flagship to travel to the company's major tried settlement of Batavia located in. What is today the city of Jakarta in Java Indonesia? Nine after its destination the Batavia was a grand vessel. That was built in just six months at the exorbitant. Cost of one hundred thousand guilders more than four point five million Australian dollars in today's currency the approximately fifty five made it till and fifty-six made a long ship was made of Oak and featured four decks three mosques and thirty guns and had the capacity to carry six hundred tons of supplies. That's up works. Were painted Pale. Green with gold and red detailing and its figurehead. A wooden carving positioned at the bow was a lion leaping upwards in late October sixteen. Twenty eight that Batavia set sail from Amsterdam with a fleet of seven other ships carrying three hundred and forty one people he ranged from bay. Oc officials sailors and soldiers to relatively well off passengers. Traveling with their families. A number of young passengers were cabin-boys ranging from children to adolescence. Who were employed on the ship to white on others? The Batavia was also packed with valuable cargo including stern to build factories with silverware jewels and auctioning coins. That would amount to almost forty one million Australian dollars in today's currency life on the ship was harsh perilous and unpleasant sleeping. Orders were krant and barrels of drinking. Water were contaminated with worms dowding outbreaks of infectious into nutritional deficiency diseases were common resulting in the deaths of ten passengers. Twenty seven year. Old Passenger. Lucretia yawns was traveling from her home city of Amsterdam to be reunited with her husband. Hey was employee of the visa and had left the work in the company's Batavia settlements several years Zolia shortly after he's departure the couple's three young children who contracted a disease and dodd. It was unusual for merchants waft to follow her husband. Diva's but Lucretia was heartbroken and divinely. She was born into wealth and occupied highest social status resulting in her traveling on the Batavia with a maid and having her own. Private Cabin Lucretia. Who was regarded as exceptionally beautiful consistently rebuffed unwanted attention from a number of men the long voyage on the evening of May. Fourteen Lucretia was preparing to retire for the night as she made her way back to her sleeping quarters. She was confronted by eight men wearing masks. Though she couldn't see their faces they spoke to one another and she heard their voices demoss to silence drag to Lucretia to a quiet corner on the ship's deck with Rached under her skirt to grope her and smeared her face legs and genitals with TA and Dynamo. Dong the assault was IVA in a matter

Batavia Lucretia India Dutch East India Company VOC Southeast Asia Asia Amsterdam Lawson Jason Deficiency Diseases Africa Jakarta OC Paraly Assault Rached TA Java Indonesia Zolia
52-Year-Old Former Navy SEAL James Hatch On His First Semester At Yale

All Things Considered

08:03 min | 4 years ago

52-Year-Old Former Navy SEAL James Hatch On His First Semester At Yale

"Back in September on the show we introduced you to James hatch ex navy seal wounded badly in combat in Afghanistan and now at the age of fifty two a college freshman at Yale an experience that hatch told me can feel pretty terrifying my first class I was ten minutes into it it was a seminar class I'm sitting there was essentially you know thirteen other teenagers an instructor who I'm I'm probably the same age maybe a little older than my instructor and I thought man I I really have no business being here but then you know things progressed and I I can actually contribute well with the first semester it now behind him hatch sat down and wrote an essay for medium titled my semester with the snow flakes so we have called James hatch back to check in on how it's all going and James it is great to hear your voice again how how is it going man thanks thanks for having me back it's going really well it's shocking and very rewarding and I feel quite fortunate that you finish the first semester right exams now behind you yeah I mean I did finish it I have a couple of grades and I'm still waiting on so we'll see we'll see how well I finished what were your expectations of what students at Yale would be like and and how accurate were those expectations couldn't like paint the whole place with a brush but was worried about is that there would be people who would be threatened or offended by me being there you know having been spent you know sometime in combat and serve my country for over twenty five years and I was worried that there be people that would say Hey man we don't want you here you were worried about maybe some anti military viewpoints yeah yeah for sure especially somebody like me you know like I wasn't you know I wasn't going overseas and trying to help the locals by doing research are you not my job was to go out and capture and kill bad guys you know I just I was worried that people would you know kind of reject my presence there in that environment not that is not been my experience you wrote in this essay about one young woman who you're in class with you who came out to you after class one day and want to talk about her granddad yeah yeah tell me tell me a story she's an exceptional young woman even among exceptional people she's just a lot of energy and being class so there's great she's struck and later but at any rate she grab me after class and said Hey you know I'm really glad to be here with you my grandfather was here at Yale in World War two started and he went off and flew airplanes for the navy flew in the Pacific and came home after the war came back to Yale and he couldn't finish he he locked himself in his dorm and and you drank a lot and he had to leave she said so I feel like I'm kind of Phoenician for him and I'm here sorry and I'm here with you you know our veterans so I was really really compelling you know the connection between you know me and this guy who flew airplanes in the Pacific in the second World War through this young woman who's just a you know just a Dynamo you know it's it was amazing he had I guess maybe what we would describe today's PTSD after fine yeah I mean I'm certainly not capable of diagnosis or I'd be willing to bet that he struggled with things that happen when using you know combat you know for sure note for people who didn't her earlier conversation you if you find out for yourself you came back and and struggled with alcohol and drugs and trying to re acclimate after after combat that's true I did yeah I mentioned the the essay that you wrote reflecting on how this first semester has gone and that the title that you gave it is my semester with the snow flakes the snow flake reference being to the stereo type of superb liberal super young people who melt on contact with with real life and society and it sounds like you haven't you haven't met so many of them I have not I have not and you know I said this is not there these kids don't think they're any more special than any other eighteen to twenty two year okay and I mean I remember when I was that age and I thought the world revolved around me and the difference is these guys work a lot harder to eighteen than I did at least academically nose in the military and you know that was tough this is tough to and these guys are there really in it there and hard it's really it's really neat to watch I call myself a snowflake now it's just it's just funny you know we talked before about what you were hoping some of those teenagers who you're in class with no might learn from you and your life experience are their stories you tell me about kind of how that has been a two way street I think one day actually philosophy class I said something just cut off the cuff that really I think made an impact on a lot of people and I said you know in combat your your greatest fear isn't that you're going to die your greatest fear is that you're going to do something wrong and it's gonna let down your team and it might get somebody else her killed and that that's the at the forefront of your mind and I think it's instructive was regarded teams and especially when the circumstances are high in in the professor even mention that in the semester we were kind of going on the room talking about things that impacted us and he brought that up he said that's not something I would have ever known eight it sounds as though in a way you're making the case that there maybe should be more fifty two year old tattooed combat veterans wandering around campus is sharing a very different perspective on what you know starting in what you're reading yeah I think I would agree with that I think but further I think it's important have different lives different experiences from as many angles as you can get on and in that environment there has to be a place where you can be uncomfortable hearing things that you disagree with or thinking about and talking about difficult subjects that are affecting our culture there has to be a place where you can do that in order for things to improve you know just screaming at each other across you know Twitter feeds or you know Facebook at it's just not gonna solve anything sitting down in a room with people and dumping these ideas out from these ancient texts you know I think that's the great gift of the university and I think we're fortunate serve you know having veterans area I think it's important when we are when we talked back in September you were on your way to literature class and you were reading the Iliad and it was really pissing you off your words and I forget to follow openers did you did you really I mean did you use with former Brady I did I really did I just didn't get it you were struggling with the way that Homer top rates about honor and saying that they are willing right and I see it is a little more a little less shiny is what it was being painted in the first part at least my grasp of the first part of the elite but as we got going and as the professor started you know discussing kind of how things should be read it was clear that yeah I think everybody ought to be deleted especially if you wanna grow up and not be in the military and if you want to be in politics and make decisions about sin and other people's kids to war he probably got to read the Iliad and why but you know all of the questions on the craziness all of the madness that goes along with that kind of stuff it's difficult to translate and I don't know who Homer was I don't think anybody else does but I think he had a pretty good idea of all the madness that goes along with it and you know we used to joke about in these great flowery working on yeah and you know you talk to the guys that were fighting and those guys can eat honor they're hungry you know what I mean their fight for different reasons so I feel like it covered all the bases really when I got to the end of it well James hatch it's been great to

Afghanistan Yale James Hatch
Earth's Magnetic Field Initiates Pole Flip Many Millennia Before The Switch

60-Second Science

02:31 min | 4 years ago

Earth's Magnetic Field Initiates Pole Flip Many Millennia Before The Switch

"North North and South Pole is far from fixed in fact the field is quite active sometimes weakens and even reverses causing earth polarity to switch reversals. Don't happen very often though only about every one hundred thousand two million years that's part of why this phenomenon has largely remained a mystery for scientists scientists however a recent study may help researchers better understand how long and how complicated. Earth's magnetic field reversals really are. You're the last polarity reversal took place some seven hundred seventy thousand years ago and a new study researchers use a lava flow records along with sedimentary an Antarctic ice core data to examine that event they found that the reversal took about as long as many scientists previously believed it did just a few thousand years but the researchers also examined the period prior to that final reversal process and they discovered that a lot was happening with earth. I know field thousands of years beforehand. There's clear evidence from the volcanic rocks of a major excursion happening at about seven hundred ninety five five thousand years ago. Brad Singer do scientists at the University of Wisconsin Madison who led the study that was followed by another excursion which is the unexpected ended finding of this study at about seven hundred eighty four thousand the two excursions that we've discovered in the lava record in our seed in some of the sedimentary records are a sign that the Dynamo was beginning to undergo the reversal process twenty thousand years earlier than the final reversal took place so our arguments would be that the rehearsal gristle process is complicated long lived and it gets underway gets initiated well before the final reversal takes place all this activity deep prior to the final reversal vital for our grasp of the process. The ultimate goal here is we want to understand what drives reversals what HAPP- what really happens in the Dynamo. Oh and if you just start and look at this short period right around the reversal you're missing all this unusual behavior that happens in thousands of years prior prior to that we need to know of singers findings hold true for magnetic field reversals in general alterations in the field will mess with critical human systems as such as the GPS satellites that help us navigate fortunately whenever the next reversal happens. It looks like we'll have plenty of time to prepare. Thanks for listening

South Pole Brad Singer University Of Wisconsin Seven Hundred Ninety Five Five One Hundred Thousand Two Milli Seven Hundred Seventy Thousand Twenty Thousand Years Thousand Years
On This Day in History: Pearl Street Station Began Generating Electricity

This Day in History Class

04:46 min | 4 years ago

On This Day in History: Pearl Street Station Began Generating Electricity

"I'm eve and welcome to this day in history class a show that uncovers a little bit more about history every day. Today is september fourth twenty nineteen <music>. The day was september fourth eighteen eighty two pearl street station. The first commercial central power plant in the united states started generating electricity building on the work of other inventors. Turn edison created an incandescent lighting system. He had already constructed experimental power installations. He used a dynamo now. No known as a generator to deliver power to each of these small installations but incandescent lighting in homes and endorse was becoming more popular and a substantial source of power was needed in eighteen eighty the same here. He received the patent for his incandescent lamp. Thomas edison established tablet the edison electric illuminating company of new york to build power stations in new york city edison decided to build the first permanent central power power stations for supplying incandescent lighting in new york's financial district in lower manhattan construction of the station began in eighteen eighty one the mechanical and electrical part of the plant was at two fifty seven pearl street since the building was constructed for commercial use. The structure had to be strengthened. Thanks to hold all of the necessary equipment. The flooring was replaced with a floor of girders supported by columns. The building used for storage ridge. Sleeping and offices was at two fifty-five pearl streets. Each building has four floors edison chose this location because it provided a good mix of commercial and residential business and was home to many major newspapers. It was also close to the western union telegraph telegraphy company in city hall the company paid around three hundred thousand dollars to buy the properties and built the station and distribution system constructing the network of wires and conduits that delivered energy to customers was one of the most expensive parts of the project after administrative expenses canvassing and patent license fees the cost came to about five hundred thousand dollars or two hundred and i'm forty horsepower babcock wilcox boilers were in the basement of two fifty seven pearl street fix engine and dynamo assemblies were on the floor above that the dynamos were driven by reciprocating steam engines supplied by coal fired boilers each assembly wait about about thirty tons and was raided for around twelve hundred lance. The third floor housed wooden frame wrapped with copper wire resistances that were used used for manually regulating the dynamo fields. The fourth floor was home to a thousand lamps that were used to test dynamos that needed inspection or repair. The first engine and generator assembly was tested on july fifth eighteen eighty two the station went into service on september fourth pearl street street station used direct current which is an electric current that flows in one direction with alternating current on the other hand. The electric current changes direction periodically. Atakli customers were not charged for current until eighteen eighty three after the system for accurately recording the flow of current proven reliable so the first bill was to antonia brass and copper company for fifty dollars and forty four six the new york times officers were one of edison's since first customers pearl street station did not become profitable until eighteen eighty four other direct current low-voltage central station electric systems were later built around new york city in january of eighteen ninety. A fire destroyed some of the station but it was back up up and running not long after and stayed in operation until eighteen ninety four though edison defended the use of direct current. The rest of the world was gravitating toward alternating current. Either tom pearl street station shutdown. Other power plants have been designed to service larger areas edison sold the buildings and they were later torn down. I'm jeff code in. Hopefully you know a little more about history today you yesterday saturday.

Pearl Street Station Thomas Edison New York Edison Tom Pearl United States New York Times City Hall Atakli Three Hundred Thousand Dollars Five Hundred Thousand Dollars Forty Horsepower Fifty Dollars Thirty Tons
Earth's Last Magnetic Pole Flip Happened Much More Slowly Than Previously Thought

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary

06:33 min | 4 years ago

Earth's Last Magnetic Pole Flip Happened Much More Slowly Than Previously Thought

"Any study suggests earth's magnetic poles may take far longer to flip than previously. I thought a new analysis reported in the journal science advances shows. The process may take up to twenty two thousand years to complete. That's more than twice as long as the nine thousand years. He's previously estimated this growing evidence that earth's magnetic poles are about to flip the north magnetic pole will become south and the south magnetic pole will become north last time. This happened with some seven hundred and seventy thousand years ago when it does happen. It'll be the first magnetic field polarity reversal in modern times times and that raises some serious questions about how today's technology with coq with the change to us me mortals on the surface of this revolving planet around the sun first magnetic field seemed steady and true reliable enough to navigate by your largely hidden from daily life less your pilot. The magnetic field drifts waxes awesome wayne's constantly when i'm flying one of the first things i do when i get in the cockpit of an aircraft is to readjust the cockpits compass to the latest readings for true north both for years. The magnetic north pole was wandering around pats of northern canada but more recently it's been careering towards siberia which recently forced the global positioning positioning system which underlies old model navigation updated software sooner than expected to account for the shift on average the magnetic pole shifts and reverses versus. That's polarity roughly every hundred and fifty thousand years or so that with the last one occurring some seven hundred and seventy thousand years ago with long jude for the knicks flip and there are some early signs that a possible paul reversal may be about to occur the accelerating movement of the north magnetic pole is one sign another other is something known as the south atlantic anomaly a weed pad of the south atlantic ocean between brazil and africa compass needles go nuts pointing south instead of north north and it's not just compass needles affected the south atlantic anomaly region causes earth ina van allen radiation belt to move closer to the earth surface dipping down onto just two hundred kilometers in altitude this results in an increase flocks of energetic particles in this region exposing orbiting spacecraft the high than usual levels of radiation listen effect the international space station required extra shielding just deal with this problem nashes reported that modern laptops of crushed aboard space shuttle flights as they a pass through the anomaly and the hubble space telescope doesn't do any observations while it's passing through the anomaly whether or not the south atlantic anomaly really does mean a polls colds are about the flip polarity is yet to be saying the problem is scientists have only a very limited understanding as to exactly why the film reversals occur or how they happen now new research by university of wisconsin madison geologist brad singer suggests the most recent short reversal seven hundred and seventy thousand years ago took at least twenty the two thousand years to complete that several times longer than previously thought and the results further color the question some controversial findings that some polar reversals could occur within inhuman lifetime than you analysis is based on advances in measurement capabilities at a global survey of lava flows ocean sediment at arctic ice coast rose providing a more detailed look at a turbulent time for earth's magnetic field of a millennia. The planet's magnetic food weakened partly shifted stabilized the game and then finally reversed for good to the orientation we know today. The new results provide a clearer m._o. Nuanced picture of reversals at a time when some scientists believe we may maybe experiencing the early stages of paul reversal and you other researchers dispute the very notion of a present day. Paul reversal singer says unless you have the complete accurate accurate in high resolution record of water filled reversal really's like it would be difficult to discuss the mechanics of generating one. We know that earth's magnetic field is produced by the planet's molten alton liquid metallic out of core as it spins around the solid. I and inigo generating powerful electromagnetic currents. What's coda jet dynamo this year dynamic in a creative field. That's most stable going through roughly the geographic north and south poles but the field shifts in weakened significantly during reversals. We know this because <unk> asni rocks formed typically other volcanic lava flows or a sediments being deposited on the sea floor they leave a record the magnetic field the time they were created and geologists can survey this global record piecing together. The history of magnetic fields going back millions of years. Their record is clearest for the most recent reversal that one seven hundred seventy thousand years ago for the current analysis singer and colleagues looked at lava flows from chile to haiti hawaii the caribbean and the canary islands and they collected samples from these latter flows of several field seasons lava flows are ideal records of the magnetic field they have lots of iron bearing ring minerals and as cool and solidify they lock in the direction of the planet's magnetic field the research is combined magnetic field readings and radio acid type dating samples from seven lava flow sequences to recreate the magnetic field over a span of seventy thousand years centered on las reversal they found the final reverse was quite quick by geological standards less than four thousand years but it had been preceded by an extended period of instability included excursions which are temporary partial reversals the polls stretching back another eighteen thousand years. That's more than twice as long as suggested by other studies which claimed reversals wrap up within about nine thousand years the lava flow the data was corroborated by magnetic readings from the seafloor which provided more continuous but less precise source of data than lab iraq's single and colleagues also used at arctic ice core samples apples to track the deposition of beryllium which is produced by cosmic radiation colliding with molecules in the atmosphere. You say when the magnetic reversing weakens allowing more radiation in from space to hit the atmosphere producing more beryllium since humanity began recording the strength of the earth's magnetic field. It's actually decrease in strength by about five percent century century and his records like singing shows. A weakening field seems to be a precursor to an eventual field reversal although it's far from clear that a reversal is imminent reversing planetary magnetic food would significantly affect navigation as well as satellite and terrestrial communications but if the current studies right it means society would have many generations to adapt to what would be a lengthy period of magnetic instability stewart gary. You're

Paul South Atlantic Knicks Canada Wayne Siberia Brazil Caribbean Brad Singer Geologist University Of Wisconsin Madiso Chile Iraq Haiti Seventy Thousand Years Nine Thousand Years One Seven Hundred Seventy Thou Twenty Two Thousand Years Eighteen Thousand Years Two Hundred Kilometers