40 Burst results for "Erica"

A highlight from Tough Love with Charlie and Erika Kirk

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:22 min | Last week

A highlight from Tough Love with Charlie and Erika Kirk

"Hey, feeling unsure about your finances these days? You're not alone. That's why Noble Gold Investments is here to help. Just hear it straight from the people who they've helped. The Noble crew walked me through everything with no stress. With their help, I could finally sleep easy at night. And now this month, Noble Gold Investments is handing out a free 5 -ounce silver America the Beautiful coin if you qualify for an IRA. Invest in gold and silver with Noble Gold Investments. Go to noblegoldinvestments .com right now. That is noblegoldinvestments .com right now. Hey everybody, a conversation with my wife, Erica Kirk, about dating, marriage, and relationships. Now, some of this you might find very offensive, especially if you are in your 30s as a female and you're unmarried. If you find it offensive, then that's more of a problem with you than with what we say, because what we just say is true, and maybe you need to hear it. It's hard truth, speaking plainly, in love, so that maybe the Holy Spirit wants you to hear that. So that is your warning, so enjoy the conversation. Email us freedom at charliekirk .com, subscribe to our podcast, open up your podcast application, and type in charliekirkshow. Get involved with turningpointusa at tpusa .com. That is tpusa .com. Start a high school or college chapter today of turningpointusa at tpusa .com. If you want to read the entire Bible in a year, my wife does a Bible ministry, biblein365 .com. That is biblein365 .com, or you can go to proclaimstreetwear .com. That is proclaimstreetwear .com, and get your made in America gear. It's pretty amazing. Check it out right now. Proclaimstreetwear .com. Enjoy this conversation. It's unscripted, telling the truth that people need to hear. I think you'll enjoy it. Buckle up, everybody. Here we go. Charlie, what you've done is incredible here. Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus. I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk. Charlie Kirk's running the White House, folks. I want to thank Charlie. He's an incredible guy. His spirit, his love of this country. He's done an amazing job building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created, Turning Point USA. We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives, and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country. That's why we are here.

Erica Kirk Charlie Noble Gold Investments Charliekirk .Com Biblein365 .Com Noblegoldinvestments .Com Charlie Kirk Biblein365 .Com. Bible 5 -Ounce Proclaimstreetwear .Com. White House Tpusa .Com. 30S Proclaimstreetwear .Com Noble Today This Month Turning Point Usa
Fresh update on "erica" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:05 sec | 4 hrs ago

Fresh update on "erica" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

"Freed the FTX founders accused of stealing at 10 least billion dollars from his customers for his own use the prosecutor said in his opening statement Bankman told free his investors lies while he spent their money on himself his friends and his family Bankman freed maintains he had no criminal intended and was not to blame for the massive fraud he was originally under house arrest but was then jailed in August after a judge concluded he tried to influence trial witnesses it's here's your chill on money question of the day Erica from California I'm asks a relatively high earner and expect my income to only rise and I currently put all of my 401k contributions into the Roth option however my

A highlight from Roger Stone

The Eric Metaxas Show

12:06 min | 2 months ago

A highlight from Roger Stone

"Folks, welcome to The Eric Mataxas Show, sponsored by Legacy Precious Metals. There's never been a better time to invest in precious metals. Visit Legacy PM investments dot com. That's Legacy PM investments dot com. Welcome to The Eric Mataxas Show. We'll get you from point A to point B. But if you're looking for point C, well, buddy, you're on your own. But if you wait right here in just about two minutes, the bus to point C will be coming right by. And now here's your Ralph Cramden of the airwaves. Eric Mataxas. Hey there, folks. It's Monday. Chris Himes, I believe it's Monday in your world as well. It is. Happy Monday. We're in the same time zone. It's Monday, August 7th. I have a book deadline this month. I am writing the sequel to Letter to the American Church. I want to be very clear that when I'm on a book deadline, life is a little tough and it's really tough to go from being in Greece on vacation to being on a book writing deadline. It's just a little harsh. So anybody out there who is an intercessor, I covet your intercession on my behalf. This is tough. And also, I take it very seriously in the sense that Letter to the American Church was a very serious book. The sequel is a very serious follow up, because we are in a crisis in America. And it's my contention in letter to the American Church and in this other book. And wherever I speak, that this is an unprecedented crisis. If you're young, you might not realize, but if the older you are, the more you realize that what we're going through in this country right now is unprecedented. utterly We've never lived through anything like this. You have to go back to the Civil War to find something as insane as what we're going through. And in many ways, it's worse because of the cultural upheaval, because of where we are. It's just crazy. And so the other day we aired my interview with Dutch Sheets. He's somebody that I said I rely on as an encouragement to me during these times to get perspective. Same thing with Mike Thompson. Mike Thompson is phenomenal, had him on this program many times. But we're we're going through some some hard things and stuff to process and writing this book, the new book, the sequel to letter to the American Church. It's a real spiritual assignment. I feel that God has given me. And so I ask your prayers. I want to talk. Both hours today about what's going on in the country. About the recent Trump indictment and about my experience with Donald Trump. I had an experience with Donald Trump last week at the end of last week. I was with him. We talked hard to believe I'm saying that, but it's true. And I will give you the details such as I'm able to do in a few minutes. We will also have as my guest today, Roger Stone, who's very close with the president, and he'll give us his insight on where things are. And we'll talk to our friend Kevin McCullough. Some of you know him as votes, Tridamus. And Kevin is always amazing. So it's it's great to be back and to be able to talk to those friends and to get some perspective on what's going on in the country. But before I tell you about my personal experience with Donald Trump, I want to remind you that this month, uh, two things. First of all. If you know about Nutrimedics this month only, they do this once in a blue moon, 30 percent off, if you use the code Eric Nutrimedics dot com. I'll keep mentioning that I use their stuff every day. Half of their profits go to third world missions. These are heroes. Nutrimedics, that's M -E -D -A -X Nutrimedics dot com. 30 percent off of the code Eric this month. Also this month, we're doing our annual campaign, summer campaign with Food for the Poor. It's important that everyone participate. And I'm going to hit this hard until some of you are going to cry because it's the serious stuff. But let me read let me read something to focus you on the Food for the Poor. And by the way, you go to Metaxas Talk dot com to to give. That's the easiest way. But let me just read something. It says researchers at Colorado State University are predicting that the upcoming Atlantic hurricane season season will be worse than average. OK, these are weather experts at Colorado State University are saying that the hurricane season will be worse than normal with at least 18 major storms and several powerful hurricanes making landfall in a number of the 17 countries that Food for the Poor helps with emergency relief. One of those countries is El Salvador, where Food for the Poor's ministry partner on the ground is a woman named Carla. We have a clip from Carla with Food for the Poor who's in El Salvador. Let's play that clip. Because El Salvador ranked as one of the top 10 most vulnerable countries worldwide. So the well -being of the most vulnerable population is always threatened. On a yearly basis, we understand this is going to be a recurring problem in El Salvador. So having your support give us a lot of confidence that we can face struggles and support the vulnerable population without delays. OK, so that's the point. The reason we need you to give now is because they need to be in place so that when these tragedies strike, which they do every year and as we just heard, looks like it's going to be worse this year, that they're ready to go. OK, so in hurricane targets, places like Honduras, Jamaica, Guatemala, other places, so that they're preparing civil defense and emergency relief plans, they're doing that already. OK, these countries are doing that already. But we need your help in this campaign to help make those preparations a reality. We need your money. We ask you to give to Food for the Poor because we believe in them as an organization. So when a community is devastated by a hurricane, or by flooding or another natural disaster, the need is immediate, immediate. So families are left without the most basic supplies. Food for the Poor steps up every time they're a Christian relief organization, but they need you to help them. So you have to go to MetaxasTalk .com. I'm urging you to head over to MetaxasTalk .com now to make a generous gift to help the poorest of the poor in our hemisphere by emergency prepositioning disaster relief supplies in key areas. Food for the Poor can immediately dispatch emergency relief supplies when a hurricane strikes without warning for folks. We don't know where they're going to strike. We know that they will. I just mentioned it. That's why we're doing this campaign this month to get ahead of it. OK, so $100 helps provide emergency kits, including tarps, first aid, hygiene supplies, blankets. $240 helps provide emergency kits, along with many weeks of food and water. But whatever you give, we need your help now. Today, please go to MetaxasTalk .com. Click on the Emergency Relief Supplies banner, or you can text Eric. That's my name. I accept it as my name. E .R .I .C. text Eric to nine one nine nine nine. That's text Eric to nine one nine nine nine. Or you can phone your most generous gift to eight four four eight six three hope. I hope some of you will do that right now because we do need your help. Eight four four eight six three hope again. It's eight four four eight six three hope. And Erica was four eight six three hope. Erica, I was going to mention we're we're raising funds with the other Salem hosts and not that it's a competition, but it's a competition because we get there. Kicking our butt. Yeah, no, I mean, they hate to hate to bring that up. Listen, every day they send us like, how much has your audience given? And I don't know how, but some some of these hosts seem to have a knack for this. Maybe they talk about it all the time. I, I, I don't know how to do this other than to bring it up at the beginning of the hour and mention it throughout the hour. But we just need your help. Folks, what can I tell you? Texas? Yeah, I think it's possible they could be giving to their own shows themselves. And, you know, yes, maybe they're millionaires and they just give out of their own pockets or something to get the numbers up. I don't know. But you know what I will say? I'll say this. I'll say this before I tell my crazy Trump anecdote, which I guess I'll have to do after the break. But I want to say that. We want everyone to give something. So you have no excuse. You can give something, please. These people suffer, OK? And so we partner with Food for the Poor because we just know that they're dependable and helping. But I also want to say that every time I do a campaign, I throw this out there in case there's anybody that wants to give $10 ,000 or more, anybody who can give that tax deductible. Of course, I offer to spend the evening with you. We can have dinner anywhere. You know, if you do that, you buy the dinner, you invite whoever you want. And I just show up and we can spend the evening together. I've met some of the most dear friends by doing this. It's kind of crazy. But if anybody wants to do that, I just put that out there that we will arrange it and we can have spend the evening together. It's a delightful thing. When we come back, I'm going to talk more about Food for the Poor. And I'm going to tell you what happened with Donald Trump and me the other day. Really crazy. Stick around. We're doing a campaign for Food for the Poor. People who listen to this program know that we partner with Food for the Poor. They are total heroes. Food for the Poor steps up because there is always there are always hurricanes flooding other natural disasters at this time of year. So because of poverty or collapse infrastructure in a lot of these countries. By the way, in case you didn't know, America is an amazing country. These other countries do not have a lot of infrastructure. So we need to step up. Those of us who have the ability to step up, I want to encourage you to go to MetaxasTalk .com and give what you can. Let's get a good start. Go to MetaxasTalk .com. Do what you can or just text Eric to nine one nine nine nine. Please do this. Text Eric to nine one nine nine nine or phone eight four four eight six three hope eight four four eight six three. Hope eight four four eight six three. Hope. I'd like to tell you about a stunning new movie called The Hiding Place. The Hiding Place takes you on a journey back to World War Two as the boots of the Third Reich echoed through Europe. One family chose to resist in this incredible true story loved by millions. Corrie ten Boom and her family risk everything to hide hundreds of Jewish refugees from Nazi invaders, and they ultimately face the consequences when they are discovered. The Hiding Place is an inspiring story of faith, hope, love and forgiveness in the face of unthinkable evil written for the stage filmed for the big screen Broadway world called The Hiding Place. Stunning, powerful and deeply moving. Don't miss the story of a brave woman who impacted generations. This global cinema event opens in theaters only August 3rd. Showtime's are selling out fast. Get your tickets now online at the hiding place film dot com. That's the hiding place film dot com. Get your tickets now online at the hiding place film dot com. That's the hiding place film dot com. Check it out.

Roger Stone Kevin Mccullough Chris Himes Erica Carla Mike Thompson Kevin Last Week $10 ,000 30 Percent Ralph Cramden America $100 Today Legacy Precious Metals August 3Rd $240 Greece Donald Trump Honduras
Fresh update on "erica" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:00 sec | 4 hrs ago

Fresh update on "erica" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

"Partner thinks I should take advantage of the tax benefits of a traditional 401k Roth or pre -tax Erica sorry to your partner but I'm with you on this one I say lock in your tax liability now while we still have historically low tax rates odds are those tax rates will in the future have a question go to chill on money dot -com sports at 25 and 55 powered by Red River technology decisions aren't black and white think red George Wallace here counting by hand the number of spectators Tropicana Field for Tampa this Bay Texas playoff game is this a preseason game exactly Tampa at home

Ex-girlfriend: Tiger Woods used lawyer to break up with me

AP News Radio

00:35 sec | 5 months ago

Ex-girlfriend: Tiger Woods used lawyer to break up with me

"A $30 million legal battle between Tiger Woods and his ex-girlfriend has escalated with Erica Herman accusing the gulp superstar of beginning their sexual relationship when she was his employee and threatening to fire her if she didn't sign a non disclosure agreement she now once avoided. Herman and court documents filed late Friday also accused Woods of having his lawyer break up with her at an airport in October after falsely telling her they were going on a weekend trip. The lawyer then evicted her from wood's $54 million mansion north of Palm Beach. The documents were filed in advance of a scheduled hearing Tuesday. I'm geffen coolbaugh.

Erica Herman Tuesday Herman Tiger Woods Woods October Palm Beach $54 Million Late Friday $30 Million Wood Geffen Coolbaugh
Fresh update on "erica" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:07 min | 5 hrs ago

Fresh update on "erica" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

"140 on WTOP we bring you money news at 10 and 40 brought to you by pen fed great rates for everyone over to Jeff clay ball looks I'll you like our connection once again with Jeff fees are not working will try to get back with him in just a moment here's your chill on money question of the day Erica from California asks I'm a relatively high earner and expect my income to only rise and I currently put all of my 401k contributions Roth option however my partner thinks I should take advantage of the tax benefits of a traditional 401k Roth or pre -tax Erica sorry to your partner but I'm with you on on this one I say locking your tax liability now while we still have historically low tax rates odds are those tax rates will only increase in the future have a question go to chill on money dot when

Ed Morgan Reveals the Medical Experience That Changed His Life

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:57 min | 5 months ago

Ed Morgan Reveals the Medical Experience That Changed His Life

"Ed Morgan, my friend, how did you come to write a book called a patient's survival guide 7 key questions for navigating the medical maze? Well, you know, if we think of our lives Erica like a Tapestry, we have all these threads running through our life, and one of the threads running through my life, which had nothing to do with the homeless and the poor, has been the medical thread ever since I spent a year in bed when I was 7 and did your parents find out about that. No, seriously, a year in bed when you were 7 years old. That's a lot of truancy, right? How did that happen? Well, I took one of the early sulfur drugs early antibiotics, and the early ones had a tendency to crystallize in your kidneys. And so you come up with the nephritis. So not all drugs are safe. Who knew? Because I'm getting boosted and vaccine just kidding, folks. I got to be honest with you, as the years pass, I become more and more astonished at the problems with the medical system and how many of us look at doctors as gods and think whatever they say and more and more evidence comes out. You're telling me that 7 decades ago, you're prescribed an antibiotic that, well, it's well known. Puts you in bed for one year. That's not what they're supposed to do, folks. So that's amazing. I never heard this about you. But you know, God used it for good because, you know, I was reading at grade level when I first took to my couch. And when I finished the year later, I was reading a tenth grade level. Oh, you're kidding. Yeah, but you're a genius. That's cheating. So it's okay. All my life. But in all seriousness, you you're prescribed a drug and antibiotic, and basically the side effect sounds like practically kills you. Put you in bed for one year.

Ed Morgan One Year 7 Decades Ago 7 7 Key Questions ONE 7 Years Old A Year First Year Later Tenth Grade Level One Of Erica GOD
Fresh update on "erica" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:05 min | 7 hrs ago

Fresh update on "erica" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

"For everyone it's play ball. A shot that's both COVID vaccine and influenza vaccine is still ways a off but Moderna says its combo vaccine is now in final stage trials after positive results in a preliminary clinical trial it is aiming for approval in 2025 Who will end the Hollywood actors strike? Could be you. The Wall Street Journal reports Netflix plans to raise prices after the strike is settled streaming services keep getting more expensive anyway with the cost of top ad -free services up 25 % in the last year you don't have to go far to go to places Conde Nast calls America's best small cities Alexandria is number three on this year's list of 10 for charming old town Annapolis is number nine for its waterfront museums and its seafood restaurants The Dow is now down just eight points the S &P 500 is up just ten but the Nasdaq's of 92 points that's more than a half percent gain Jeff Clabaugh WTOP news all right Jeff thank you it's 1142 there are new warnings about scammers trying to take advantage of millions of people who are resuming student loan payments this month nearly 27 million americans federal student loan debt totaling 1 .1 trillion dollars here CBS consumer investigative correspondent Anna Warner government agencies and nonprofit groups say the scammers have been reaching out to people through robocalls online ads emails even snail mail they often ask for fees to provide a bogus service or try to get your personal information be sure to confirm with your lender before accepting any loan consolidation here's your Jill on money question of the day Erica from California asks I'm a relatively high earner and expect my income to only rise and I currently put all of my 401k contributions into the Roth option however my partner thinks I should take advantage of the tax benefits of a 401k traditional Roth or pre -tax Erica sorry to your partner but I'm with you on this one I say lock in your tax liability now while we still have historically low tax rates odds are those tax rates will only increase in have a question go to fall into a hiring spree with indeed

Caller: Bud Light Pandering As Pro-American Is a Joke

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes

01:51 min | 6 months ago

Caller: Bud Light Pandering As Pro-American Is a Joke

"Wouldn't buy Bud Light if I was a drinker. I used to once in a while have a Bud Light, but I wouldn't buy it anymore. It's no longer an American company. It was sold in 2008 to a Belgian company called InBev. And they own hundreds of beer companies all through the world. And so for them to pander that their pro American is just a joke. Well, they promote themselves as an American company and based in St. Louis, and but I'm look, I'm with you. I just don't buy any of this that they've somehow seen the error of their ways Erica. And now our pro America. Right. And I mean, I love the clydesdales and I loved all the promotion years ago, but it stands 2000 and 8. They're no longer an American company just because they have headquarters here doesn't make them American. I mean, it's the same with smithfield smithfield's own China. So I don't buy any smithfield products. Yeah, they have factories and companies here, but it's still owned by China. And so I don't want to do business with anybody that isn't a true American company. You know, Erica, we try out on this radio program. We encourage people to buy American, and do your homework, and you may end up paying a few dollars more, but you know what? It's well worth it to know. You're actually supporting an American company. Absolutely. And there are lots of new brewing companies that are Americans, and people should be supporting American products. And they should do their homework before they buy a product. All right, well, you know what? We're gonna leave it there, Erica, good Intel, we appreciate you calling him. By the

2008 St. Louis Inbev Intel China 2000 America Hundreds Of Beer Belgian Erica Smithfield Smithfield Smithfield Years American 8 Few Dollars More Americans
Fresh update on "erica" discussed on She Podcasts

She Podcasts

00:05 min | 12 hrs ago

Fresh update on "erica" discussed on She Podcasts

"We don't feedback episode. And then the next one is our podcast networks, like threesomes. Yeah. And then there's trolls and then there's, yeah. But up until then we were pretty professional. We wanted to have, like, I remember we had like a theme, a thing that we were supposed to be covering in that episode where we were going to like, after you finished listening, you would like, Oh, that was really helpful. Here are the points of that we learned. Thank you podcast for clarifying how to do a network thing. So, Oh my gosh, Ms. Jasmine is asking us a question. Should we answer her? Oh yeah, go ahead. Sure. So, um, my co-host, you say, um, my co-host abruptly quit. What do I recoup? She's a friend and is simply too busy. I get, um, lost my co-host. I know this has happened before. Um, there's been a couple of other places that I've seen this Ms. Jasmine and I, Me too. I've seen it move from like a co-hosted show to a solo show and then switched back into an interview show. So it went from co-hosted to solo to, to interview show and then brought people in. I've also seen another, uh, another co-host that is, I mean, another co-host to show that started with a co-host and then just switched to the other co-host and then they actually bring that first co-host back. So there's a rotation that happens because the person that they started, because of the too busy part of it, they literally rotate back in when they do have time, which I thought was kind of nice. That's a technical answer. Let's go for the therapeutic answer. Um, cause she says how abruptly quit, which she's clearly irritated about. How do I recoup? She's a friend and it's simply too busy question mark. Like that question mark indicates to me, WTF. I like how you're reading this, like the kids read text messages. So Ms. Jasmine, if that's not the case, that's all right. This is our, the Jessica's interpretation. I'm psychoanalyzing. Just give me a second here. I'm psychoanalyzing. Okay. So the question is like, how can you maintain your friendship? And like, you know, here's what I would like to tell you to do. Cause it's your, because you're asking us like, what is she? Oh, how to explain to the audience. Okay. That's different. I just want to tell you this. If you do still have feelings about this that aren't expressed to your friend, there are ways of doing that so that you can get some closure in your mind. Just say, Hey, you know, I know you're busy. I don't mind if you quit, but like I could have, I could have used a little notice. We could have explained it to the audience together. You know, maybe she would even be willing to like do a quick audio with you, you know, like a pre roll type of like, Hey, this is Yasmin and whatever. And we just wanted to let you know that we're really sad, but I'm going to call her Rachel. Rachel has to move to Europe and we can't do the show anymore because it's going to be too difficult, but Yasmin is still going to take the reins and you know, like you can do that on your own. It would be nice if your friend did this with you because you know, like just quitting and not recording, you know, like I don't think Elsie and I could do that. Like if one of us, anytime one of us isn't there, the other one explains like, Oh, Elsie is not here today because blah, blah, blah. Or we have a co-host it's always, if we have a co-host somebody else isn't there. And then the other thing you can do, speaking of that is rotate your co-host. So like we've never had a time other than when I was together for a long period of time, but you could set up a slew of co-hosts, you know, until you find one that you really click with, like almost like Regis and Kelly, how like, or how Kelly started to interview other Michael Shanahan's or whatever the hell his name is like, you could do it like that. And just explain to the audience that you're really sorry, but this person is unable to continue forward and you wish them all the best. Yep. That's, that's actually the best way to do it because you, you just have to tell them. And if they are not, if your co-host can't do it with you, you just set up that intro and you don't make it a big deal. You just kind of go like, Hey folks, we have a little bit of a change, blah, blah, blah, this and that. So, and so is doing this. And now we're doing this. And that's all you really have to say. I mean, just let them in a little bit onto it, but I have seen, I live, I have actually seen a lot of this happen. Now that I started to think about, there was another place where one of the on long ongoing co-hosts left and then another co-host took over and it was moving forward from there. It was one, there was like a, there was not even a change of the Baton. It was like the one post was there. And then the next time there was another co-host. You know, Amber Holly had that happen. She had to show my business bestie and then the bestie stopped being available. And she was like, well, now I can't do my business bestie by my fucking self. And I was like, so she changed, you know, she changed it a little, but like, I totally felt her pain. Like, what would you do if your co-host just like, and we're out and you're like, but it's called double trouble or whatever. Like, like you can't just quit on double trouble. It's it's mean and terrible. But yeah, you can actually go back. I don't know the episodes. And I've never heard the one that you did when I had a baby. Because I think I was prepared for that. 13. It was like 12, 13 ish, right around the 13 mark. But you can. Yeah, there was. How did you know that? I think Erica Lira Mark was there for one of them. Then we had November 10th, 2014 is the first one after he was born. I don't know if I was on 23, but it was episode 20. Sorry to interrupt you. We've been doing that a lot lately. Sorry. Yeah, I think that we went back. I think you came back at the beginning of the year. I believe that's when you came back back. And so what we did is like we kind of called in. I'm not sure we even did it weekly or maybe there was like one of those things where we released Q and A's like that we released other things in the feed to kind of like get people still moving forward with what we were doing. And I did have some co-hosts come in. Esprit Devora was a co-host too, now that I remember. Hi Esprit. Yeah, there was like there were some people. Yeah, we're still friends. Yeah, I see one February 2nd of 2015 is called the overwhelm rant. I'm guessing that's when I came back. That's when you came back. Yeah, that is when you came back. Because I was so messed up. Just so messed up. Just a messed up, messed up, messed up. Oh, so Yasmin says we're still friends 20 years. I'm pissed, but the show goes on. Thanks for your advice. I mean, if you don't want to be pissed, then just say with all the diplomacy that you can muster. I mean, and always do a compliment. Anytime I've had to tell Elsie I was unhappy with something. I try to do a compliment sandwich unless we're already like, I don't want to say at each other's throats, because that's not really it. But unless we're already go back and forth I try to be like, listen, you and I are friends. We'll always be friends. I love you. But when were you going to tell me that the show's only a half hour now? Like that kind of thing. Like, you know, but you have to start with something like, listen, we've been friends 20 years. I don't begrudge you your happiness, but also could you have maybe said goodbye on the show and not left me with a hanging piece of fruit to pluck myself? Right. Also though, I have to also look at it from the other perspective too, which is the perspective that people keep. This is what I've seen. And I'm talking at large folks, I'm talking at large in the industry. Folks decide they want to start a podcast and that it's just going to be the easiest thing ever. And then when you realize what it actually takes to do it, to show up every week or however you have it set up and the amount of work that it actually takes to get an episode out, it becomes quite an over what, like, it's a lot, it's a lot of commitment. And I think one thing that I, that I think from the get go, Jess and I were able to manage and why I think that we've made it to 400 is that we had, how do you say it? Mutually complementing, work skills that helped us get the podcast out. Work skills, work ethic, podcast knowledge, different personalities, but similar. Yeah. Work ethic. Yeah. We have, I mean, we have, we're special. Because you used to do, you used to do all the branding stuff and then I used to do all of the like tech stuff. So I didn't want to do what you wanted to do and you didn't want to do what I was doing. So then it was perfect because I could just do those things and you could take care of the other things and we were done. Have you ever been bitter when I, when I started outsourcing the things that I was supposed to be doing, like posting the show or did it ever make you mad? No, that didn't make me mad. I think that part of it is that, no, that didn't make me mad. The thing is that you're always outsourcing all the things though. And I'm not, listen, I don't begrudge you that I just don't do that. So I don't understand. Like even now with my other show, I'm still really hands-on with the other show that I do. Like I'm, even though I have it outsourced, the editing, I'm still really hands-on with the content and how it goes out, what it looks like. It's like a, it's a thing. Like it's a, it's not like a haphazard thing. You know, when She Podcast started, I was pretty, I was becoming less and less passionate about web and graphic design. Which was the thing that I had obsessed about for like the previous five years before I met you. So like 2006 to 2011. And when I started that online course with you, I was obsessed with teaching people design, web design, and having a big consulting firm or, or design agency. And then when I started She Podcast and had a baby and I came back and because I was already like rounding out and getting sick of the other thing, I just started focusing on this thing. But I never, like, I'm not necessarily born to do audio and radio. Like I think I'm born to be hilarious, but I'm not like born, you know, I'm thinking I'm born to be entertaining, maybe even educational or informative or all three, but I'm not meant to do like all the things that you do for both your shows, like listen to it, pick it apart, find a bad piece of audio, take it out. Like I, I don't care about any of that. I always just wanted to see what we could do with it, how we can make money with it. And so my mission was to try and throw as much spaghetti on the wall in the last 10 years as we could. I mean, some things worked, some things didn't, you've done a lot of things. It's been a lot of things. And like, I think if I were to, I guess, talk with us, you know what I don't think you, I mean, you can't, I mean, you can do a show the way that we did it, which was this haphazard sort of way to kind of cobble things together the whole time. But if like you were starting it now, if like we were starting it now and like pretend we had all the knowledge we had, I would say the, the understanding that there was a need, right? So like, let's pretend it's like that. We had all the knowledge. We really recognize the need that we were going to fulfill. So we had that. What I would say is what sounded like we were dating. It's like, what are your intentions with it? Because what happened is I was not ever nor wanted at any time to be an entrepreneur. Like I just, that's not something that I ever wanted to wear. And so, but you had already, you, you've, you came from that. Yeah. Yeah. So you were coming from that. And then, so every time we, you, you started to craft like, oh, this is a, a business play, right? This is what we could sell this. We could do this. I kind of was like, okay, but I, it was more like, all right, I'll do that. But I never was 100% let's develop this thing. Let's go with it. And so I think it kind of overall, you had to fight for a lot of this stuff and not fight in the sense that I wouldn't say yes, but it was more like, I was dragging you along. Yes. You were exactly. I was just going to say that I was literally going to say, I was just pulling you back is what I was saying. Yeah. And I was like, all right, this seems kind of neat. And so I like walked into the rooms and I was like, okay. I mean, it seems like this is cool. Okay. And then, but I never had that. The thing that you need as an entrepreneur is you need to have hands-on looking at stuff and developing things and developing the systems and like looking at numbers and figuring out if things are working and if not, that's not working and marketing this and I just didn't want anything to do with any of it. But I was there and I thought I had a lot of insight. I did a lot of learning and education about business and all these things. So I knew it from the knowledge part of execution, but my heart wasn't really in it. So if I were to tell you all what not to do or what to do when you start is to be very clear as to the path that you want to take forward, because it'll help. But we had totally different businesses at the time. We didn't really have a path. We had no path that we wanted to take forward. In fact, it wasn't until Natalie Ekdahl came up to me at a show and was like, why are you not making money with She Podcast? And I was like, well, Elsie does this and I do this and I make money this way and she makes money that way. And she was like, yeah, but it's thousands of people. You should have it. It should be a business. You should be making money. And since then it's stuck in my head and I have done everything possible to try and make it a business. And now that we're 400 episodes in and on and about to host our third live event, I feel that I have, I've allowed She Podcasts and what I do for it to overshadow what I like to do, period, because I always thought I would be a CEO or an advertising executive. And those things are fun, but I really underestimated my need to be funny and creative because I have an enormous list of jokes, stories, funny t-shirts, comic strip ideas, things that like I'll be, I'm always like, well, I'll do it when I get a chance, when I get a chance, when I get a chance. And I've never had a chance really. So going forward after this event, I want to figure out how I can be both creative and keep this a business. Or, I mean, you know, we have projects that we're doing after this event that I can't announce yet, but I do think that'll be good. But yeah, I just have learned a lot about being in a business, you know, just because you have the opportunity to have a business doesn't mean that's a business you necessarily want. You know, just because you have 21,000 people in a community doesn't mean you have to make them take a course or make them go to an event or make them do anything. I believe very strongly in the work that we do and why we do it, allowing that space to exist for people to help each other. But I've never wanted to have a podcast business or company. Like I thought when I first heard of podcasting, I thought it was ridiculous. And then I only, you know, then I started doing it because like I said, my own need for power and glory, but in my own field, but for my own business, not necessarily because I was so passionate about podcasting and you too, like you just liked audio. Oh wait, did you already listen before you started your own show? Were you already listening or did you just get a job at Libsyn? What are you talking about? I can't believe you're asking me this question. Do you not know my podcasting history? I know that you turned on a recorder during a yoga class and then you had a show, your yoga show, but I don't remember if you listened prior to that and then got a job for Libsyn knowing you were going to be in podcasting or did you get a job first, then start your podcast, then get into it? No, I, everything about podcasting is from the listener perspective. I listened to podcasts for six months straight. They became my way of interacting with the world. It was like, so from the time that you discovered them until I just wanted, I was like blown away by podcasts. I was like, this is amazing. This is the best thing ever. I love it so much. This is my way to express myself. And then I started the yoga podcast because I wanted to learn how to do it. And I didn't want to creatively come up with something. I wanted to record something that I was already doing so I wouldn't add to my own stuff. And so I started to record the yoga thing. And because it was so bizarre for people to be like, you have a yoga class and it's audio only, that's weird. And because of the weirdness of it, everybody was like, oh, that's the girl. That's the yoga girl. She's got that yoga podcast. And when I started, I literally was the yoga girl that has the pot. Like I was that one, just the one, just the one. And so there were a couple other dudes that were doing it, but there was, I was the one girl. And so I started to do it because I loved it. And because I was super passionate with it. I kind of like was obsessed with podcasts and I reached out to a lot of podcasters and it's how I got to where I am because I was engaged in the community and ended up in a position that I didn't look for. I didn't look to be hired. I just fell into it. Stabbled into it. Okay. I didn't, I don't know that I realized that. Yeah. And then, and then for me, I just needed the advice. And then I included Elsie in that little group of advice. And then she started, you know, introducing and inviting other people that she knew. And that's how it became so big, but it sort of happened while I was looking a different direction. And I just sort of, you know, imagine if like, you're driving a car and then a horse with a bridle just kind of like trots by and you're like, maybe it would be fun to ride a horse. So you park your car and you run after the horse, then you jump on and then you ride it for like 10 years. And then you're like, I don't know, a car seems nice as well. Well, that is not like, that's not the proper metaphor. I know it's a terrible metaphor, but you know what I mean? It's like, no, it's like dating. It's like being on Tinder. No, seriously. It's like swipe, swipe. Oh, this one. That could work. And then you kind of date them. You're like, I'll swipe, swipe this one. And then you're like, it's like having a, like you act like you've used Tinder before. Have you ever used Tinder before? I've never used Tinder. In fact, I don't even know what it looks like. All I know is that I it's swipe, swipe, you swipe left. I think, I mean, not that I have, but it's right. If you like them and left, if you don't, I think, but yeah, you're right. It's exactly like that. You have one thing and then you're like, well, I'll try another thing. And then halfway there, you're like, well, I'm in it now. Let's just keep seeing how it goes. And then, I mean, I think what I'm trying to say is that I'm, I'm probably going to wrap up event planning just for a little while after this one, because I kind of miss not thinking about an event. Does that make sense at all? Like I kind of miss like just observing my life and giving people advice. So like I have, remember that emotional processing coach, like Sarah, and she wakes up, she works out, she talks to clients, she wanders around her town, observing things, she talks to some more clients. Like what a freeing life. And for me, like the last four years have been about what am I going to do? What am I going to do? What am I going to do? And that's because of the pandemic, not because of the event per se, it's more because of the pandemic and all the like repercussions that came along with that. But I just don't want to think, what the hell am I going to do? Like for a little while and then come back to it, you know? And the same was she podcast because like, same thing, like what are we going to do with it? What are we going to do with it? What are we going to do with it? I mean, I know what I'd like to do with it, but I don't always, I don't always, what am I even saying at this point? I don't know. I don't know. I just know that you have to figure out what you want to do. And like, what's the life that you want to live is how I'm thinking about it. I'm not trying to complain. I love our community. I think I just have been missing a little create creative outlet. That's all. And I think that there has to be a lot of that. There's a lot of times when we like, I just saw Danielle Corbett just posted something on Twitter. And I, and I was really interesting cause she like, I'll show you, let me see if I can find what she actually... Was it yesterday? No, it wasn't yesterday. Like I think within Libsyn, you have the ability to be creative and create education and content that you're really excited about. And I had lost that capability when I started doing events because I really had to promote that one thing. And then I couldn't just be like, here's my advice. Tell everyone to pound salt. Like I couldn't, I can't be funny and charismatic and also have a marketing strategy that will work. Or maybe I can and I just haven't, I don't know. Let's change the subject. This is ridiculous. In fact, just take this whole part out of the episode. So this is what she wrote. So this is what she posted this morning. It is so interesting to see so many OG creators shutting down some of their big established brands. And I looked back at that and I was like, well, you know, everything has a season. Like, I don't know why, like, it's just, there's so much changes that we've done. I mean, if we think about, we started this in 2014, 2014, almost 10 years, dude. Next year will be 10 years of doing one thing. I know the only thing I've done longer is my husband. That doesn't sound right. The only thing I've had in my life longer is my husband. Right. It's and that's what it is in for us to be consistently coming in here and doing this thing. Right. Right. And there's a lot of growth. So even when we started, yes, I had just become a mama. I had two babies and it was just beginning. It was like, I didn't have a place to live when we started. Actually, we were like literally in transition. We moved so many different times. The kids were super young. Like there's there was so much happening in at least my life of what it was. And now 10 years later, I can tell you that I'm a different woman. I'm literally going to be knock on wood in full on menopause at the end of this month. Knock wood, she said. Yes, thank you, everyone. I am so excited. No, because I only have two weeks to go. And I thought that by May 29th, if I have my cycle, huh? Yeah, I'll be in menopause on May 29th. If I do get my cycle within now and then, I'm going to be so excited. So I'm like, this is monumental to me. I feel completely different than I did in 2014. I'm a different human. And therefore I have different needs. I want to talk about different things like I not talk about different things. I don't know what to say. Like my days are different. My desire for my life is different. Me too. So, I mean, 10 years ago, my husband was getting up at six and going to a job and coming home and cooking dinner with me. And yeah, I went to work like that. He was 42. Now he's 52. That's a big difference. There's a difference. There's a huge difference in 10 years in the 40s and the 50s. I mean, I am 51. Thank you. Thank you so much, I love all the love that I have. Thank you guys so much for wishing us happy 400. We're very happy. We're just kind of reflecting. I mean, I don't want to reflect with that and not talk about the obvious. Someday someone will listen to 400 hours, maybe, of this show and hear us age and hear us change and hear me start to worry about my child and then start to talk about her going to rehab and then her passing away. And then you're poor. That's the only time I've ever gone back and listened to a show or a message that you did without me. And it took me years, actually. It was only recently that I did that because I forgot about it for a little while. And then I was like, oh my God, she had to tell the whole world that my kid died without me. That must've been fucking terrible. And then I felt like I had to listen just out of respect for you because you had to say that to me. And I was like, it's not fair for me not to have heard that, what she did there. And it was so sweet also. Yeah. And it's chronicled. So you hear, you hear a huge, I think, life living things. We've had some really, I think, poignant episodes that we've covered. We've covered, I think that's one of the key things about our show that's different than a lot of other people's shows because we don't like, there's a lot of people who have done 400 shows and then they all are similar, right? I can't say their surface. It's not that. It's just that they are very much about here's the five tips of doing the thing. We're going to have a really in depth conversation about monetizing your podcast today. Or like, how deep can you get? Like, I'm afraid of money. Right. And so we've had a lot of very significant life changes and we've chosen to speak about them on air and we've also divulged the challenge of motherhood and I was just going to say the first time I remember doing that it was you and breastfeeding. I think you were just tired of breastfeeding and she just was like not willing to give it up and it had sleep member sleep. Yeah. It was depriving you of sleep and she was just like, you were like on milk on demand. And we learned together that the downfall of breastfeeding for a long period of time is that they have very strong opinions about what they get and when they get it. Like if you'd have stopped at say one and a half, maybe it would have been smooth, but people, you know, breastfeed for a long time because it's better for them. You know, lots of reasons. It's cheaper. It's more convenient, whatever. But yeah, I guess at whatever age she was, she was just like, no. You were like, no shit. Yeah. So there was, Oh, did you see my shirt? I got I've wore for you today. Oh my God. Look at that. It says I blame Mercury retrograde. Yeah. Oh, but there's that there's like, when was it? Remember when we cry? Like when I cry, there was like a crying one. There was one that was really like, I think it was because of me. John was still on the show. Like this was a show that he was, he kind of like stepped back. It was like, while I'm missing, he was like, I'm going to just be quiet now. And I think he, I can't remember what that show was about, but it was like really emotional. I can't either. You were either angry with me or trying to encourage me to do something. And I, I feel like it had to do with my self worth or self esteem. And you were kind of like getting all worked up about me. Am I wrong? Does it sound familiar at all? I can't remember. We've had so much happen on the show, but all that to say though, the fact that there's huge growth and the only way that you can see that is like, if you see our kids right now, like literally have the day, day one of when we were recording versus now what these, like, you can see this human that has grown up and we have discussed them throughout this time. And we've had, I mean, there's just been so much. I've moved my office three times. Remember I moved it into Emily's bedroom. Then I moved it out of Emily's bedroom. My mother-in-law moved in, then there's all those kinds of stories about living with her. There's ending breastfeeding when my cat used to cry all through the show and then she died. That's right. She kept on yowling. I couldn't lock my door. So there are occasions when I would just run his little baby ass over to my office and pound his way in, scare that shit out of me. That's all on there. Yeah. So many, so many things. Cutting my hair, dying it blue. Oh my God. And like our first time's recording in real life. Like I remember that our first, our first live recording between live as in live as in Jess and I recording in real life together, not in front of the audience. So we were, we decided to go, Oh my God, we can put links to all of these things because the link of us recording over at, was it new media expo? We were at a bar and we were drinking and we had to like have the like random thing. That's right. Because it was like, let's just get a drink because we've never done that. It was also fun. We're like, let's just get a drink. Should we have a drink? Let's have a drink. How do we set this up? Let's put the thing on. And it was just so goofy. We were so goofy. We didn't even know what the hell we were doing. It's nice. Cause you can also hear our friendship develop what we played at the beginning where you're like, all right, so we're starting a podcast and let's talk about why. And like, I'm all professional talking about it. And then like probably a couple, I mean, it couldn't have been that long away where you had told me that you were invited to do a really big panel, but you couldn't because you had to run home to your kids. And I challenged you about whether or not you felt deserving of it. And that was probably the first time we had, you don't even get that's when that was. Yeah. I was just like, you don't even get it. You don't get it. I'm still not backing down. I do that again in a heartbeat. I was wrong. You explained it and I was wrong about you, but I wanted to challenge you anyway, because normally when women like say no to big opportunities, it's cause they don't feel ready or they're not, you know, mentally prepared or they don't think they deserve it. And I should have known better than to think you don't deserve it that you think you don't deserve it because I don't, I didn't know you well enough to know how high you are in yourself, but it certainly wasn't that it was really more about something we had never talked about, which is like our home life priorities. That's the first time I learned how different you and I were like the one way I just thought we're so much the same. She's just a big hippie in the mountains, but that's not true. It's a very, I learned that day. It's a very calculated decision about how to live despite it being inconvenient on purpose, because in my head, I was just like, why is everything you do so fucking difficult, right? Like, why do we have to go to run to Whole Foods every time you travel? Why does it take an hour down a mountain in a van that walks on two legs like Fred Flintstone? Why, why, why, why? And I mean, now that I think about it, I feel bad. You probably felt very much like you had to defend your whole life and your lifestyle to me, which you certainly didn't have to do. You probably could have just told me, that's why I like it, bitch. Enough. But that's the way I like it, bitch. It's almost like you were explaining it to me and our listeners. Like here, I want you to know me. I want you to know why. Like I had a feeling no one's questioned you about it before. Certainly not publicly. So there's a lot of episodes at the beginning where I'm like, why is it so hard for you? Why can't you just do this or that? And you very kindly and patiently explain it. And you certainly didn't have to do that. So that must speak to, maybe it just speaks to how, I mean, you can hear that too. Probably she wanted me to understand about her. She wanted me to understand why her life was the way it was. It's important, I think, when you have principles that someone you're close to can at least accept that. And it was more like, yeah, I guess the question was really like, how am I supposed to accept this about you? And you would answer, because this is how I want it on purpose and I'm not dumb. Right? And then I would accept it and then something else would come up and I'd be like, why? And you would tell me again. And then finally with your mother, I was like, we have so much in common. Why is she like this? Well, I mean, I think that's another way of getting to know each other too. And there's, and mind you, we, you know, we are, we live far away from each other and we probably would not have frequented the same spots. You know what I mean? Like, I don't think we would have bumped into each other randomly at the public library. No, we would never ever, if I lived in Pittsburgh, I would never know you. I'd have to trip over your, I don't even know where we would have met. If I live near your area, I probably wouldn't be hanging. Yeah. I wouldn't, I don't even know where we would, where would you live here? You couldn't be in Delaware. Yeah. We would never, we would never be in the same circles, but I'm glad that we are and did. Oh, I remember. I just, this is one thing I want to share with you. Okay. This is the first time I remember Elsie saying she was having a party. Now it was a couple of years into our relationship because I had already thrown two Pinterest birthday parties for my little boy. One was like a, my, our little pumpkin turns one and I had like a pumpkin carved out and barfing guacamole on the chair. And then the second one was choo choo. He's two. And I had gotten like labels to print and tape around water bottle. Like I did a whole, it's the only two times I've ever been crafty and creative. And then shortly after that, Elsie's like, we're having a party. And I was like, oh, here, how can I help? What do you need? And then the day of the party, she's like, I gave him money and he came back with a tent and one, one chair. Yeah. Like I didn't even know how to help. Like I was like, what? Who's going to have, who gets the chair? Who's that for? She's like, well, other people will bring their own. And I was like, no, no, they won't go get the chair by the way. I was like, go back to Best Buy and get our best buy. It was actually the supermarket that's cloud down the street and that's passed down. It was like that. And everybody brought their chair and everybody was like sitting all over. Like there was no, yeah, it was, I'm sure it was delightful, but the idea of people showing up at a birthday party and having one chair and no food, I was like, they all brought their own food and they all brought their own chair. Can you imagine? Just imagine that. It's the first, but not the last time that I wanted to drive down there and make sure that they did it right. Yeah. I was like, I can't allow this. I can't allow this to happen in the world. Even like, what do you mean one chair? Like I'm sweating thinking about it now. Oh, one chair. Oh my God. Anyway. All right. So we are going to have to start to bring down this episode. Yeah. Sorry. I mean, it's been so there's been so there's been all the times that we've talked together. Our first workshops are first. Yeah. All every time we've ever recorded together in person, it's mostly laughing. We have a very, it's actually probably better. We don't live close to each other because our podcast would just be a bunch of stupid laughter. It would be even crazier. Yes. But if you have any memories of us, send them over. Why not? Feedback at sheepodcast.com. We're here to hear what you thought or like what you've learned, or even if it's just to like, give us a high five. Thank you to everybody who's here and hung out with us on our 100th episode. And I mean, it's, it's a pretty admirable that we've been, for the most part, we've shown up almost every week, except January every week. Yeah. I mean, even if we skip like a, I don't know, maybe like a stunt of like four to six weeks. I mean, even if that's the case consistently for 400 times, I know 400 times. It is a huge, it does feel like a huge accomplishment and it does make me feel a little old, but yeah. 4,000 hours. No. 100. 400 hours. 400 hours. It just feels like 4,000 hours. It does feel like 4,000. You're right. It does feel like 4,000 hours. It's because we've had 4,000 hours of texting and talking. Just because 400 of it is recorded doesn't mean we haven't spent 4,000 hours figuring shit out together, which I think is also an enormous accomplishment. So thank you. That's right. Thank you for 400 episodes and for changing my life with this show. Oh my God. So many firsts. One day people will go back to our archives and remember the show? Remember our shows that we had ideas to create that sitcom? Yes. I still think that would be hilarious. It would have developed by now, certainly, because now you have teenagers and I have a sassy little eight-year-old, but still, it'd still be, I still stand by that sitcom. It'll be really good. One day. One day. But anywho, let's go ahead and wrap it up, dude. Thank you. Thank you so much for being here with us. Thank you for listening. If you want to find us on social, you can find us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, TikTok, and YouTube. Did I miss any? All at She Podcast. You can also go to shepodcast.com, find anything you want to know. Our show notes, our links, our everything. Plus you can buy tickets to She Podcast live, which is happening June 19th. Oh my God. It's in five weeks. If you've not gotten your tickets by now, what the hexacles? Go get them now. It's in Washington, DC. We need you there. We want you there. It's going to be super fun. I think that's it. So we are so grateful to be wrapping up our 400th episode. Thank you so much. And we love you. Mean it. Bye. Bye.

Trish Welcomes Larry Elder, "The Black Face of White Supremacy"

The Trish Regan Show

01:38 min | 6 months ago

Trish Welcomes Larry Elder, "The Black Face of White Supremacy"

"Larry. Good to have you here. Chris say hello to the blackface of white supremacy. As I was called by the LA times when I ran for governor by a columnist who was like email. It was initials are Erica D Smith, oops. Yeah, you know, look, I know that what you're doing comes from a very good place. And I know that in part just because I know you, but also you've really over the years, pointed out the policy flaws that I think have left so many black Americans disenfranchised. This new movie, and by the way, I say new, this is actually a sequel to the uncle, the original Uncle Tom that you wrote. But this is the second one. And you get into some of these things. I mean, people ought to know, there was a lot of success. Was there not within the African American community long before the war on poverty in the 1960s in my estimation really destroyed so much of it. Absolutely. And by the way, it's a collaborative effort, both these films. The director is Justin Malone. He's absolutely brilliant. It was scored by an amazing composer, a named David criswell, and co written by the star chattel Jackson guy named rival writer Ansel and myself. So it's a collaborative effort. But you're absolutely right about the success of black America. The first one talks about post slavery. When you're talking about an environment with the Klan, lynchings, Jim Crow, still, black people kept moving forward. Why? Basically four reasons. Reliance on family. Even during slavery, a black child was more likely to be born under a roof as biological mother and biological father than to the day.

David Criswell Erica D Smith Justin Malone Ansel Chris Larry Both Jim Crow Second One First One Four Reasons TOM African American 1960S Klan LA Jackson America Black Black Americans
Prosecutors Deny DOJ Planted Evidence on Enrique Tarrio

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast

02:31 min | 8 months ago

Prosecutors Deny DOJ Planted Evidence on Enrique Tarrio

"Something very revealing and also disturbing has surfaced in the trial of the Proud Boys and specifically of Enrique tarrio, who is the leader of the Proud Boys. By the way, they are standing trial in D.C. under charges of seditious conspiracy. Now during the government's case, this was an assistant attorney general Conor McGregor. And he's interviewing he's not interviewing he is he is he has special agent Peter dubrovsky of the FBI on the stand. And they're talking about a document that is called the 1776 returns. So in other words, 1776 returns alluding to the fact that we're back at the moment of the American Revolution. And this is a document that supposedly lays out a plan for the takeover of the capital. If you look at this document 1776 returns, it talks about occupying 8 key buildings in D.C. on January 6th, 2021. And this document, according to the government, is a document that somehow is associated with the Proud Boys. It was a document that was retrieved from Enrique tarrio and the government goes, hey, look, clear. These guys were specifically plotting to seize 8 buildings and take them over so if you're looking for evidence that there was a seditious conspiracy to take over the government, here it is. Now, here's the problem. This document appears to be a planted document. And this has been now discovered by the defense and the defense has put a motion before the judge. And the motion is a kind of a bombshell, because here's what here's what the defense is saying. The defense is saying, first of all, that this document was not composed by tarrio. It was sent to him on telegram, the social media platform by his girlfriend. Or a girl that he knew, a woman named Erica Flores, but guess who composed the document. Somebody associated with the U.S. government. In other words, the plot did not come from the Proud Boys. It came from a plant or agent or somebody with deep government connections.

Enrique Tarrio Conor Mcgregor Peter Dubrovsky D.C. FBI Government Tarrio Erica Flores U.S. Government
Joe Silva Tells Us About Legacy Minded Men

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:20 min | 8 months ago

Joe Silva Tells Us About Legacy Minded Men

"That legacy minded men is about being a resource to men, and you've had some losses in your life recently that blow my mind and break my heart. Why don't you Joe Silva start there to pull us into the bigger conversation? Yeah, well, thanks again, Eric for having me. And I've been on your show several times with Michael with earth skin, our friend her skin, and I got introduced to you really through the NRB and our good friend Joe bataglia, who's another mentor of mine, and I love very much just like a love Joe Pellegrino. And legacy might have managed all about engaging and encouraging and quipping men. And I've been through some major, major losses in my life. I was first introduced to Joe Pellegrino back in 2008, and I've been with legacy Monet since the inception. And since that time since 2008, when I got into the game of really trying to do more for the kingdom, that's when all the attacks started happening. And I lost my job of 25 years was betrayed and hurt by some people I really loved and trusted. Lost my dad, my biggest hero in my life back in 2017. And my biggest supporter was my wife of almost 30 years and back in July of 2021, she suffered a brain aneurysm. And after being on life support for 19 days, she entered into heaven. So what was her greatest day? Was my worst day. I lost my wife. That was the worst day of my life, but yet it was her greatest day. And, you know, she had the opportunity to meet you. She was a big fan, loves the Erica tax show, and we actually she met you at one of your book launchings. Back in 2018 and actually I sent the picture to both Griffin to Alban. I'm not sure we got to see it or not. But we went to the Donald Trump fake news book. We went and got to have time with you at that night and my wife met you and we took a picture together and anyway, so he always enjoyed when I was going to be on your show. So it's been a very difficult time, but through it all. God has been good. And legacy minded men has been there, especially, you know, Joe Pellegrino. I love him. He's like a brother to me.

Joe Pellegrino Joe Silva Joe Bataglia NRB Brain Aneurysm Monet Eric Michael Erica Alban Donald Trump Griffin
Professor Shows Painting of the Prophet Muhammad and Loses Her Job

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast

02:13 min | 9 months ago

Professor Shows Painting of the Prophet Muhammad and Loses Her Job

"There's a university in Minnesota called hamline university, small Minnesota college, and hemline recently refused to renew the contract of an art professor named Erica frater. Why? Because in class, she showed two famous Islamic paintings that depict the prophet Muhammad. One is apparently from, well, these paintings are for between the 14th and the 16th century. Now, some Muslim students complained initially just one, but then later the university met with the sort of Islamic alliance on the campus. And it was the usual claim of being triggered. There is a woman, a senior named aram weta Tala, and this individual was in the class, this woman, and she says, I'm like, this can't be real. As a Muslim and a black person, I don't feel like I belong. And I don't think I'll ever belong in a community where they don't value me. Now, why don't they value her? Well, because apparently she believes that in Islam, it is not allowed to show any visual depictions of the prophet Muhammad. Now, the professor, by the way, Erica prater was well aware that it is controversial in Islam to show depictions of Muhammad. And so before she even showed these paintings, which by the way are famous paintings, as I mentioned from between the 14th and 16th century, she said that this is controversial, she kind of warned her student. She goes, quote, I'm showing you this image for a reason. And that there is this common thinking that Islam completely forbids outright any figurative depictions or any depictions of holy personages. And then she goes on to say, while many Islamic cultures do strongly frown on this practice, I would like to remind you there is no one monolithic Islamic culture.

Minnesota College Erica Frater Islamic Alliance Muhammad Aram Weta Tala Hamline University Erica Prater Minnesota
What IS Your Issue With Kevin McCarthy?

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:51 min | 9 months ago

What IS Your Issue With Kevin McCarthy?

"Here's the question, is if your position as a grassroots activist and as someone who is an interested party, which by the way, your voice should be involved in this, it shouldn't just be a backroom deal, disconnected like the U.S. Senate works. By the way, don't you wish that we could have had something like this in the U.S. Senate. You could say, all you want about McCarthy. But McConnell, what McConnell has done to our country is so just exponentially worse. They're not even on the same playing field. McConnell put forward the omnibus McConnell has done such damage. I'm not even defending McCarthy. That is a fact. But, of course, the Senate does backroom deals. It just so happens the house being the people's house. This is now unfolding and in some ways it's healthy in some ways. It's rather risky because coalition governments are now being discussed. And so if your position is, hey, I don't want Kevin McCarthy under any circumstance. No matter what no Kevin McCarthy, my question is, is it about him because of a personal issue? Is it because of a lack of trust issue? Or is it potentially because of the framework that Congress has to operate in? Let me read you a text message from a freedom caucus member. Again, I was up till midnight, Erica will tell you, it's up till midnight talking to these people, which is 2 o'clock in D.C., just hearing them out, listening, trying to be a sounding board, also asking, I think, questions where I think they get a little too ahead of themselves. Here is a freedom caucus member who's currently a no. So one of the 20. Charlie, I have been in meetings all evening. I'm going to be honest. What has been offered to us is the best deal I have ever seen or could think of. It's going to be hard not to take this, but honestly, trust is the issue.

Mcconnell U.S. Senate Mccarthy Kevin Mccarthy Erica Congress D.C. Charlie
Secularism Kills People

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:26 min | 9 months ago

Secularism Kills People

"A piece coming out soon called the new great depression and Erica and I spent a good amount of time without our phones and kind of just going to local coffee shops. And it was very interesting. Erica, commented, it was like Christmas Eve or the eve of Christmas Eve, I can't remember. I think it was Christmas Eve. And she said, people look really unhappy. It didn't feel like Christmas. I mean, there were the lights and there were the kids running around and there was the Christmas music. And it wasn't like people were necessarily miserable, but it did not feel with that kind of kinetic joy that usually would spread during the Christmas season and then you pair that with the emails that Erica is getting and then tragically one of our family members committed suicide and killed herself in the last couple of days. And so there's a lot in this kind of genre of the spiritual frequency of the nation. And I mean that you could say you could take it literally or metaphorically, but I think that there is kind of a spiritual health of the nation is very low right now. And I think it's low for a lot of reasons. Secularism kills people. It does. Secularism creates a massive vacuum of existential despair. If you remove the idea that there is a God who created you and there is a harmony and meaning to the universe, you're not going to feel that void with macchiatos and TikTok.

Erica Depression
If You're One of the Sideline Cynics, Listen Up....

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:16 min | 9 months ago

If You're One of the Sideline Cynics, Listen Up....

"Some of these prognosticators from the cheap seats from the audience say, oh, what's the point you're going to break that new year's resolution? I think that's a very, if you are one of those people stop it. You are making the world a worse place. If you are a cynic towards other people that want to self improve that have been honest enough with ourselves to say, you know what, I'm not all that I could be. And you are one of the people on the sidelines saying, ah, what's the point? You're going to break that resolution. Why put in the effort? You should have a new year's resolution to stop doing that. And I think one of the reasons why so many people break their new year's resolutions is that kind of cynic chattering class that has only grown in number and volume. Over the last couple of years, where the community of people that want to improve is dramatic. I mean, I see the emails, by the way, my wife Erica runs a fabulous Bible ministry that allows you to read the entire Bible in the course of the year. You guys could check it out at Bible in three 6 5 dot com. That's Bible in three 6 5 dot com. And one of the features she has as part of her ministry to try to have people grow spiritually and to achieve spiritual depth, which is I think the most important thing a human being can achieve a spiritual depth. Is she has a prayer request portal where she is able to hear the prayer requests of what is going on in the world over 30,000 people have sent them in. And in some ways, it is, it's more accurate than a poll because it's real and it's not filtered through some sort of firm that might want a specific outcome and some algorithm that we're kind of out of the loop on. And it is so fascinating to see where the country is at. And it is by far the most depressed I've ever seen a country. And I'm not trying to make you depressed. In fact, I actually think you could take this and one or two ways. You can also then be even more depressed than you are and then go in a cycle of negativity and pessimism and despair, or you could say, wow, that's a problem. Let's go about fixing it and I'm going to choose to at least pursue love joy and peace or happiness.

Erica
"erica" Discussed on How I Got Here with Dave Fiore

How I Got Here with Dave Fiore

07:37 min | 10 months ago

"erica" Discussed on How I Got Here with Dave Fiore

"Or something you enjoy doing? Well, one of the things I alluded to that I have enjoyed a lot is this little dog I have geo, people may have seen them on social media if you follow me. There's lots of post of geo and there's also lots of posts of this little calico cat I have. Sophie, and they have a little Instagram account called Sophie and Gio. And that was my practice account when I first tried to figure out how to use Instagram. Geos two years old and I got them at the beginning of COVID as I think I needed to sort of invest front load of gym membership and he has kept me moving. And so he and I go lots of places together. We do a lot of walking. He has visited many, many stores, and he, for a while, became sort of the arts dog. And we did a lot of geo explores the arts videos. I've enjoyed very much learning about the breed. My husband and I used to show Hungarian Vishal a long time ago, just to sort of a fun thing. I have actually enjoyed learning more about the Italian Greyhound breed and he comes from a really wonderful breeders in Georgia who are terrific people and he's a very sound and healthy and wonderful breed ambassador. So I've learned about that. Great. All right, two final questions. Looking back, what is the one thing or person that you think changed the trajectory of your life to this point? Well, interestingly enough, I think the one comment that somebody made was the one was the woman that said it's time for your kids to start music lessons because I can distinctly remember riding was in a montessori school and she was his montessori teacher. He was all three years old. And she said, I think he needs to start music lessons, and he should play the harp. And that definitely was the sentence that did make a big change. I don't know that she wasn't the biggest influence, but I can pinpoint that that was a big change. And because that rarely wasn't on the radar. It was on the radar at all. I mean, I was like, okay, you know, sure we'll do this. And I am one of those people that if I, if I'm going to learn about something, then I completely nerd out and then I throw myself all into it. So of course I had to be like the best Suzuki mom and learn all the things and I started taking violin lessons myself, which actually was really helpful. Did you do that? I did. For how long? About ten years? Ten. Really? Ten or 15 years? You played the violin for ten years? Yeah. With the Suzuki method just like you were a kid? I did. So CDs that I've never stopped. Yeah, I listened to all the CDs and I got up to Suzuki book four, which was the Bach double. Wow. And I certainly wasn't amazing, but I did okay as an adult, but I was playing any groups or ensembles or anything. I played in the youth orchestras for a while, and like the lower levels. Which is really fun. And there were all these little people and then you sit in there. Yeah, I really actually enjoyed that very, very much. And Chris Miller, who teaches at childs, was nice enough to let me set in. But I did enjoy that. And I learned enough about it as a player. I couldn't do the things, but it has given me a huge amount of appreciation when I listened to my kids play, like I can see and hear things that I wouldn't have known. So that is very typical Erica. Like, learn all about it. That's just what I do. Right. Easily go down the rabbit hole. That's awesome. All right, final question. The podcast is called how I got here. And we've talked about how you've gotten to this point in your life. Where do you think here might be for you in three to 5 years from now? Oh, that's a fun question. You know, I am so rob and I are empty nesters and that's been it's been fine. You know, we miss the kids, but it's also just been an interesting time where we've got two dogs we have been taking them for walks and I'm actually a quilter, which we didn't talk about, and that was probably something. Okay, time out, we'll talk about that for a while. So tell me about your quilting. So I make modern quilts, which basically means so quilting quilting and fiber arts have sort of, I think there's a little bit of a renaissance going on with that. But I basically have learned the joy of cutting up fabric into little tiny pieces and then selling it back together again, which is basically what quilting is. But it's a very for people that are somewhat type a and it's a process that you have to follow a lot of steps, like first you figure out your colors and you look at the pattern and then you see how much material you need. And then there's a lot of careful cutting with slicing, sharp things. So we're talking more traditional quilt, not like a T-shirt quilt. Just like traditional traditional clothes. Quilting. But what I personally like is I love the traditional blocks in these really beautiful, beautiful modern fabrics, which so they're not dark, like old fashioned quilts. They have beautiful palettes of russets and oranges and teals. I mean, there's just beautiful fabric out there right now. Are you part of a quilting group or are you doing this all on your own? I have definitely, there are some wonderful, wonderful resources here. I am a sort of a hands on person, and I taught myself a lot of this trial and error, but also there's some wonderful resources on Instagram and you're just learned by doing it. Right. And so for me, it's very relaxing to use my hands and I like the process of completing a quilt. I bought my first big girl quilting machine this year, which actually has enough space that I can quilt on it. But that is one of the things that I've been doing more of, actually even have a little Etsy shop where I make some cat pillows and things. So I'm very excited about my position at our be oppenheim. I think that this is the right position for me at the right time where I'm able to pull all of my skills together, the sales and the account management and some of the presentation and documentation skills and management skills, advocacy skills, this just came for me at the right time in my career. And I'm feel confident and happy and grateful. And sometimes tired, I'm working really hard, but I think we all are right now, but I just, I think that in three to 5 years, a lot of a lot of things could change. I mean, I think maybe there'll be more business, there will be more digital opportunities, and I feel extremely fortunate to be surrounded by people that I know are going to want to grow as well. So it just feels like just a neat growth opportunity. I'm very grateful to have the option of working remotely, which I wish I do frequently. And that's been a real joy. Hopefully being able to spend some time visiting writing and Katie in Tucson, certainly spending more time with rob, he has a dog that's kind of his dog. And so he and I have been taking lots of walks and, you know, hopefully we can get down to the beach or I'm really enjoying getting to spend some time with him and kind of in this whole new phase of our lives, which is really lovely. Thanks for listening to the show. You can subscribe at Apple podcast, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. And while you're there, please leave us a review. It really does make a difference. Thanks to my amazing staff at fiore communications, who pick up the slack while I'm working on these podcasts. And to Troy bloom for composing our theme music. You can hear more of Troy's creations on Facebook and Instagram at Troy bloom music. To connect with the podcast, we're suggest a future guest, follow us on social media or email us at podcast at fiori communications dot com.

Sophie Instagram Gio Chris Miller childs Georgia Suzuki Erica rob Etsy Tucson Katie fiore communications Troy bloom Apple Troy Facebook fiori communications
"erica" Discussed on How I Got Here with Dave Fiore

How I Got Here with Dave Fiore

07:10 min | 10 months ago

"erica" Discussed on How I Got Here with Dave Fiore

"All the challenges, opportunities, inspirations. The twists and turns of life that led them to where they are today. Everyone has a story worth telling, and I am really grateful that we get to bring a few of them to you. I truly have been changed by my conversations with these amazing people, and I'm confident you will be too. I'm Dave fury. And in this episode, I speak with Erica thaler, chief marketing officer at RB oppenheim associates, and former communications and marketing manager at the council on culture and arts. Erica grew up in San Diego, where she raced catamarans and was a self proclaimed horse girl who loved being an 80s kid because it included trips to Mexico to quote practice her Spanish. Erica majored in political science at UCLA and started her 30 year career in radio as an account executive at 91 X the country's second alternative rock station. After moving to Tallahassee, she and her two children started taking music lessons, and Eric has spent ten years playing the violin, some of that time with the Tallahassee symphony youth orchestra. An organization she would eventually lead. Erica is a wife, quilter, dog lover, and passionate advocate for the arts, whose excited about her new role, doing what she has always done. Effectively connecting people and resources to help them be successful. We started our conversation, talking about growing up in Southern California. So San Diego is an interesting city. What most people don't realize is if you had about 5 miles east from the coast, you basically look like you're in a Star Trek set. So if you can picture coming down the mountain with a big fake styrofoam boulder over his head, that is what the guy in the red uniform is not going back. Exactly. And he's carrying this big thing and rocks are tumbling likely that was filmed in Southern California, so it has a very interesting desert landscape when you're not at the beach. Because I think America's cup and beach stuff. Yeah. We're not beach, but seaside coastal. Coastal, yeah. There's a wonderful, wonderful coastal community there. But there's just two different two different San diegos. But that said, I did spend a lot of time on the beach growing up. I used to windsurf and I used to actually race catamarans and sail catamarans. And I just spent a lot of time doing beach activities. In fact, one of the things a very fond memory of mine is snorkeling at la Jolla cove with my father. Okay. And so that was actually a really special memory. At what age did you start doing that? I was probably 8 or 9. And I remember seeing there's like the state fish, which is the garibaldi, which is this orange fish that you can look down into the water and spot it. It's like a big, big orange fish. And we could see the garibaldi, occasionally we would see little barracuda come by us and I just remember a lot of really special times snorkeling with my dad. Nice. The area where we snorkel is now currently overrun by sea lions. So I don't know how many people actually snorkel there. They don't want to share the fish, I guess. Yeah, I'm not sure how clean the water is. But yes, ending is pretty magical. The other thing about it, that's interesting is that the weather is just always perfect. So you talked about your dad, so tell us about your family and family life growing up. Family life. I am an only child. And honestly, most of what I did growing up was spent at a horse barn. So I used to show horses. That is I started taking writing lessons when I was four. And rode competitively up until I was 18. Wow. So I spent a lot of time at the barn. Tell me how that people who have a sport or music or whatever. Tell me what it was like for you, dedicating so much of your time to equine related activity. I love this topic. So most horse girls like it's their, it's their world. I mean, that's just the ribbons and the all of it. But I had a really nice barn for lack of a better word. Like we weren't in a big fancy show barn. We were in just your kind of average barn. And we did all the work. I mean, when we was time to get ready for the horse shows, we would, I remember getting many, many times up at four 30 in the morning, going out to the barn, realizing that my horse needed his feet washed for whatever reason they got dirty. You know, and it would be freezing cold and I'd be scrubbing the horse's feet and doing all the cleaning and doing everything that needed to get done. So we really, really learned a lot of responsibility. And that is not like that at all barns. I mean, there are just some fancy schmancy barns where the kid comes in and the horse is already in the kid hops on and he gets the ribbons and then it goes, then they go home. We weren't like that. So we really. But you learned the whole process. We learned the whole process. We really, really took care of our kids. And you know I know you appreciate it now looking back to do appreciate it at the time. It was so fun. Yeah. I can't. That was absolutely the best part of my childhood. And you did that through high school. Through high school. I was 18. Okay. Did you have time for anything else in high school? Or did that take up most of your attention? I'm an 80s kid. I mean, I mean, we had lots of time we weren't on, it just seems like the world was really different. I mean, there was time to sit and talk on our courted phones and Stranger Things. Yeah. Without them monsters. Honestly, when I watched Stranger Things, clearly, whoever is writing that knew what it was like to be to grow up in the 80s, because like, well, there it is. And we just a pack of kids own bikes, parents don't even think about it till it's dark. They did not. I can't tell you the things the stupid things we did. Like, I remember taking bikes and riding down the side of a mountain. Which is dumb. There could have been a rattlesnakes. We didn't wear helmets. I mean, we did all kinds of silly things. We went to Mexico when we were in high school to quote practice our Spanish and we didn't bother to tell anybody that a whole pack of us had just gone across the border to Tijuana and walked around and you know, we didn't get into trouble, but like how dumb is that? The 80s were different. So we all survive our most of us. Can most of us survive. So you could just go back and forth without did you have a passport or something? You just went across the border and then you came back. Okay. Yeah. But did I have the you were asking like, you know, did I have time for? Yeah. There was plenty of time to do all the things. I feel like I feel like what is expected of our young people now, I think they're expected to do more. I think we worked hard, but I think it was harder to accomplish those tasks because, for example, you didn't have a computer. So you had to actually go to the library and look things up and it just took longer to get those things done, but there was just also the luxury of not having to do things so quickly. And

Erica Dave fury Erica thaler RB oppenheim associates council on culture and arts Tallahassee symphony youth orc San diegos Southern California San Diego quilter la Jolla cove Tallahassee UCLA Mexico Eric sea lions America Tijuana
"erica" Discussed on Ironsharpener

Ironsharpener

05:05 min | 1 year ago

"erica" Discussed on Ironsharpener

"If you're here on a sharpener for the first time, I am sharpener is a platform that God has given to me hallelujah so we could bring on great and mighty men and women of God to empower this generation to empower generation at wants to be empowered, glory to God. Someone know who have a testimony that God of doing great things in your life because somewhere down the line, life and death is in the power of the tongue and you could eat a so evil seed in someone's life are so good seed. Plant seeds. But words are so powerful and especially mothers who have children when you plant seed in their life, you better be good seed, they better be a good word because they will grow up with that word and it matters who speak in their life. No matter what words will spoken because there will be that from their youth and their grow up, my God. So we just thank God for praying parents in this generation that would prefer their skin, kids, and cancel ever negative words and erase it and just bring them up in the ways of the lord so they can fulfill destiny, email. So I'm just so excited for this platform, this platform is also for businessmen and businesswoman who want to advertise their businesses on this platform who want to glory to God let the generation know about their businesses. So this platform is doing a lot of things. A lot of great things, hallelujah. So we're excited if you want to be a part of us. You want to come and be a guest. You could email us at iron sharpener 21 at Gmail dot com. If you want to advertise your business, also email iron sharpener 21 at Gmail dot com. If you want to advertise an event, a show, whatever it is that you want to advertise, this is a platform for you to do at an iron sharpener. Also, we want to hear your success story from rags to riches, what God of dawn very broad you out of and where you are today because someone is in your shoe and they don't know how to get out, but they know God of place greatness inside of them. Then need to be impacted and empower their need a word to be spoken in their life. They need to give birth to that greatness. So this is what I am sharpeners about to push you into your destiny, amen. Glory to God. So we are excited over a new show, but God is doing mighty things. Hallelujah, we are a global show. We are international show. I in sharpener isn't a national glory to God, so before we get into some advertisement, I want to welcome my guests pastor Erica Cooper, my gorge is amazing looking beautiful on my show..

Erica Cooper
Willy Mac's son Maverick is friends with Charlie Woods

Fore The People

00:40 sec | 1 year ago

Willy Mac's son Maverick is friends with Charlie Woods

"This Tiger, when you're dropping when you're dropping him off at his house Tiger ever heavy in for like some bourbon or anything. That's the funny thing, you know, it's you know, I don't like to step on anybody's thing. So I let Ali, my ex-wife. I'll let her do that. I talked to Erica a little bit on the drop offs, but I don't, I don't do any Tiger. He's not interested in me. He knows, you know, he's taken my son on vacations, and I don't even talk to him. 8 and acknowledged my existence. So I'm okay with that. I'm like, whatever, it's fine. I'll let maverick enjoy himself.

ALI Erica
Why We Should Stop Blaming Social Media for Depression

Dennis Prager Podcasts

02:22 min | 2 years ago

Why We Should Stop Blaming Social Media for Depression

"Erica, I took a position and if you don't agree with me, I always tell guests, it's a non issue. But you may have, I'm sure you followed, given this is your field. That this huge report on The Wall Street Journal that Facebook which owns Instagram, it's come out that vast numbers of girls, teenage girls are depressed and 6% are even suicidal in thinking because of the bad body image that they get looking at other girls on Instagram. My reaction was such is life everybody on earth confronts people who are smarter than them better looking than them brighter than them more successful than them better spouse than they think they have better kids than they think they have better income than they think they have. That the answer is not to shut it down, but to teach your daughter resilience. That's my position. What do you think? Well, you're right and saying that Facebook isn't the cause of mental disorders, but it's an amplifier. So social media is a kind of amplifier of the underlying fragility of many adolescents. So if you take an adolescent who has a very strong emotionally secure background and you introduce them to modest amounts of social media, they may not have that kind of extreme reaction as a more fragile adolescent who hasn't had that healthy emotionally healthy secure background. And I write about that in my first book that you have always been a great supporter of mine and I'm so grateful. But my first book is about how you create the emotional foundation in children. So heading into adolescence, there are more secure, so they can be more resilient and withstand the pressures of things like social media.

Instagram Erica Facebook The Wall Street Journal
"erica" Discussed on By His Grace

By His Grace

01:39 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on By His Grace

"You. He has good plans for you. And when he formed you in your mother's womb he gave you giftedness and when you chose to follow him he then gave you spiritual giftedness and he has plans to use it so pressed into jesus get your eyes on jesus get in his word cray journal and let god's plan on hold for your life and get out of your head it your face in the book and start to live like it's true love love love it and i'm so glad that you have been with us today. Erica so thank you again for being a guest on by his grace. Y'all go grab this book and get alone with god and then get your journal and allow him to speak life into you. Thanks so much they you misty. Thank you for joining me today. On by his grace. I hope you've enjoyed listening. And are encouraged by our guest today. I would love for you to visit my blog misty. Philip dot com for more encouragement. You can find me on social media as misty. Philip and i would love to connect with you there..

cray journal Erica Philip
"erica" Discussed on By His Grace

By His Grace

07:07 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on By His Grace

"Erica welcome to the by his grace. Podcast i'm so glad that you were here with me today. I thrilled to be here with you today. So i'm going to talk to you today about imposter syndrome. And it's interesting the timing of this conversation because just put a video out on my instagram stories. And i ask people you know. What do you want me to make videos about. Because i'm working on creating some content for my audience and one of the responses that i got back was imposter syndrome. And that's not something that i've ever really talked about and so i was so excited when i saw your new book that's coming out That that's kind of one of the key Pieces of that so tell everybody what your book is first. Let's start there and then we'll dive into imposter syndrome. Yes so the book is letting god be enough. Why striving keep you stuck and how surrender such free and it centers on the life of moses who one hundred percent had imposter syndrome and it takes a look at how god teaches moses to deal with his impostor syndrome and how different bat is than how the world suggests we tackle this issue. Yeah so so good. So let's dive in so from a biblical perspective or maybe we should start with the world. So what what is the world's perspective and then let's give the biblical account as the answer in moses. Yes so the world's perspective tells us that whenever we feel like we're not enough or we don't have what it takes or we are beating ourselves up over past failures. Ruminating over regrets worrying about our ability to pull off this assignment or this season of life for a pleasing this particular person whether it's a friend or a boss or a co worker. What we ought to do is we ought to look in the mirror and we ought to tell ourselves all of the things that were good at. We ought to affirm our giftedness. We should unroll our resume and site. Our past successes go over be accomplishments that we have achieved our whether it's our education or past performance. Whatever it might be. And that's not necessarily bad buys. I think especially as We really have a tendency to downplay. All of our giftedness You know we were to go. We were to be speaking at a conference and and we were to say you know. Turn to the woman next to you and tell her something that you appreciate about her or that you see in her as a gift Area of giftedness. The room would instantly feel with chatter right but if we said turned to the woman next to you and tell her something that you're good at or were that you like about yourself get really quiet misty as we all like to talk about that. We feel uncomfortable. We have a tendency to focus on all the things that are wrong with us and that we don't like versus our giftedness so the world's advice is not bad advice because it definitely doesn't honor god to be speaking negative things over ourselves all day. The problem is is that to overcome a fear of inadequacy or imposter syndrome. The world's advice is inadequate advice. Because we will all be called of god to a season or an assignment or a situation that is utterly beyond us. We're never going to unroll our resume and always have something on it that we can look back at and say oh. I have a degree in being the mother of a child who struggles with depression and won't get outta bed. There is nothing in life to prepare us for that two weeks ago. My husband's co worker came into office a brilliant woman Graduate degree has worked in all manner of corporate america and she's announced to the team. My eleven year old has bone cancer. We don't know what the next steps are. You know she. She has a resume a mile long. But there's nothing to prepare her for being the mom of a cancer patient so the world's advice is just inadequate because we will face situations in life where we don't have anything on our resume to cling to. We don't have a degree preparing us for this. This is something brand new an utterly beyond us and then our only choice is to say this situation. I am an adequate. But my god is sufficient praise the lord that he is strong in our weaknesses right so so explain to the listeners. what you discovered as you studied the life of moses in regards to imposter syndrome. Yes so when i. I realized that i had imposter syndrome. I didn't even know what that was either. I had a friend call me out on it. She's like you have imposter syndrome. And i was like what in the world is. That and i began to research it and i began to research all of the ways that you know. Experts in leading psychologists. Tell us to deal with it. And i was like okay. Well that's not bad but it's inadequate. I'm a bible teacher. Bible study author first and foremost so my jam is always to go to the word of god right so me bosa love it so i opened up my bible. And i'm like okay. Moses greatest self-doubt or the bible. I mean this guy is flooded with self doubt. I mean you compare. How moses describes himself nurses house. Stephen describes moses in acts seven. You wouldn't even think they're talking about the same guy. It's so different. So moses struggles. And so i was like okay. Let's let's take a look at moses struggles. Not just so. We can learn from moses but most importantly you know. The bible is a book about god. So let's look at. What god does with a moses in his struggle with self doubt and fear of inadequacy and so i began to really.

Erica bone cancer depression america cancer moses Stephen
"erica" Discussed on By His Grace

By His Grace

02:25 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on By His Grace

"Hey sweet friend. Welcome to the by his grace podcast. I'm your host misty. Philip and i cannot wait to dive into today's episode but before we do. I just wanted to take a minute to share to fun projects that i've recently launched. The first is the spark podcast network where i highlight the work of my fellow christian podcasters that are part.

"erica" Discussed on 90.3 KAZU

90.3 KAZU

02:43 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on 90.3 KAZU

"But Erica Hashimoto of former federal public defender and now law professor at Georgetown, says the biggest problem is that he's trying to handle so many criminal trials. With so little experience. It's not just something that you can walk into without ever having done it before. In other words, you really don't want to learn on the fly. That's exactly right because somebody's life is in your hands. And it's not just a concern for these defendants if prosecutors get a conviction, and an appeals court finds that Pierce provided ineffective counsel That conviction could get tossed. When I asked Pierce about these concerns, he insisted that quote trial work is trial work, and that he and his team would be able to handle 18 cases or even more. We're building an army folks, and we'll be able to handle it. No problem. But then a couple weeks ago, Pierce did not show up to court and that army never stepped up instead a colleague who is not a licensed attorney and is actually himself facing criminal charges in Pennsylvania. Appeared in court. He told the judge that Pierce had covid 19 and might be on a ventilator. Another person sent me a statement that Pierce actually had dehydration and exhaustion. I was unable to reach Pierce for nearly two weeks. And this is what happened when I called his law office number you dialed is not in service at this time. Thank you for calling goodbye. Then, just yesterday, I heard back over email. Pure city just got out of the hospital over the weekend, and there just hasn't been enough time to get someone to take over his cases because things were so chaotic. He did not want to talk about his medical problems in any detail, and he did not mention Covid except to say he has not gotten the vaccine and does not plan to. He does plan to stay in all these cases, though, and said he is still building that army of lawyers. At least a few defendants have fired him since his absence. Others have said they do want to stick with peers. It seems to help that he shares their pro trump politics. As one defense attorney told me it's dangerous to mix politics with the unforgiving realities of a criminal trial. Tom Dreisbach. NPR NEWS Los Angeles This is NPR news. The next fresh air. We remember Michael K. Williams, who died Monday. We'll.

Tom Dreisbach Erica Hashimoto Michael K. Williams Monday Pierce 18 cases Pennsylvania yesterday Covid NPR Los Angeles trump 19 covid NPR NEWS Georgetown couple weeks ago one defense attorney nearly two weeks few defendants
"erica" Discussed on Journey of Ruth

Journey of Ruth

04:20 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on Journey of Ruth

"Publishing. <Silence> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <hes> <Speech_Female> Yeah ooh <Speech_Female> that's such a great <Speech_Female> question you know. <Speech_Female> I would say the person <Speech_Female> that really helped <Speech_Female> me along. The most <Speech_Female> in this book <Speech_Female> is <Speech_Female> my editor. <Speech_Female> Because <Speech_Female> when <Speech_Female> i brought this <Speech_Female> idea to <Speech_Female> her and i said <Speech_Female> i really think that <Speech_Female> this is something. A lot <Speech_Female> of women struggle <Speech_Female> with she <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> really championed <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> that and <Speech_Female> said you know what <Speech_Female> i. I think you're right. <Speech_Female> I can see how <Speech_Female> i've struggled with <Speech_Female> it even in my own <Speech_Female> life. Yeah <Speech_Female> i think this is <Speech_Female> something that <Speech_Female> is worth <Speech_Female> talking about. <Speech_Female> I think this <Speech_Female> is something that <Speech_Female> we need <Speech_Female> to be <Speech_Female> aware of <Speech_Female> in <Speech_Female> christian circles <Speech_Female> because it <Speech_Female> even happens in the <Speech_Female> church. We've in propagate <Speech_Female> this culture <Speech_Female> of not being enough <Speech_Female> in the church <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> it needs to <Speech_Female> be <Speech_Female> handled from biblical <Speech_Female> perspective. <Speech_Female> Not just <Speech_Female> not strictly <Speech_Female> modern psychology. <Speech_Female> And self <Speech_Female> help. <Speech_Female> Let looking <Speech_Female> into god's word <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> how does god <Speech_Female> help us overcome <Speech_Female> this. And what <Speech_Female> is god's plan <Speech_Female> to help us overcome it <Speech_Female> and what we see <Speech_Female> is exactly what you <Speech_Female> were talking about <Speech_Female> is <Speech_Female> <hes> <Speech_Female> moses <Speech_Female> incredibly <Speech_Female> intimate <Speech_Female> relationship with <Speech_Female> god that was <Speech_Female> forged over <Speech_Female> a long haul <Speech_Female> any years <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> But <Speech_Female> that was. That's <Speech_Female> how it's done. <Speech_Female> And <Speech_Female> so i would <SpeakerChange> say it would <Speech_Female> be my editor. <Speech_Female> Okay okay <Speech_Female> so if <Speech_Female> people are interested <Speech_Female> in <Speech_Female> getting let <Speech_Female> let letting god enough <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> In fact we're <Speech_Female> still in pre orders <Speech_Female> right now. <Speech_Female> So <Speech_Female> letting got enough <Speech_Female> how can we pre-order <Speech_Female> it. Then <Speech_Female> get even find <Silence> out more information about you <Speech_Female> if you <Speech_Female> go to my website <Speech_Female> which is just erica. <Speech_Female> Wigan horn dot <Speech_Female> com. <Speech_Female> They'll be a big <Speech_Female> banner at the top <Speech_Female> about <Speech_Female> erica's new <Speech_Female> book. You <Speech_Female> can click on it and <Speech_Female> you can get all the details <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> about pre <Speech_Female> ordering <Speech_Female> and synopsis <Speech_Female> of <Speech_Female> the book and <Speech_Female> all <SpeakerChange> the <Speech_Female> things. <Speech_Female> And what is the release date. <Speech_Female> September <Speech_Female> seven september <Speech_Female> seven. So <Speech_Female> if you <Speech_Female> go get <Speech_Female> the preorder <Speech_Female> that actually helps <Speech_Female> you <Speech_Female> authors <SpeakerChange> in general <Speech_Female> right if we go <Speech_Female> in progress <Speech_Female> it does and there's <Speech_Female> some <Speech_Female> really cool bonuses <Speech_Female> that you're only going to <Speech_Female> get through preorder <Speech_Female> stage so <Speech_Female> there's actually <Speech_Female> a <Speech_Female> bible <Speech_Female> study on <Speech_Female> moses <Speech_Female> that you will get <Speech_Female> a free copy <Speech_Female> of that if you place <Speech_Female> a preorder <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> you will <Speech_Female> if you <Speech_Female> purchased three <Speech_Female> copies. You'll get <Speech_Female> an exclusive <Speech_Female> teaching bundle <Speech_Female> From some <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> of my favorite authors <Speech_Female> and experts <Speech_Female> on letting god <Speech_Female> be enough in your marriage <Speech_Female> letting <Speech_Female> got be enough in your friendships. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Letting god be <Speech_Female> enough in your disappointment <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Some additional kind <Speech_Female> of deep dive <Speech_Female> topics as <Speech_Female> well as <Speech_Female> a necklace <Speech_Female> that <Speech_Female> says brave <Speech_Female> on it <Speech_Female> because our <Speech_Female> courage <Speech_Female> comes from the <Speech_Female> lord <Speech_Female> So you can find out <Speech_Female> all the details <Speech_Female> about <Speech_Female> the preorder <Speech_Female> bonuses <Speech_Female> of one <Speech_Female> of my favorite t <Speech_Female> shirt. That i'm wearing <Speech_Female> all the time everywhere. <Speech_Female> Now that says jesus <Speech_Female> is enough <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> A the company <Speech_Female> that makes <Speech_Female> t. Shirt is elian <Speech_Female> grace and they've <Speech_Female> actually <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Agreed if <Speech_Female> you preorder <Speech_Female> a copy of the book you <Speech_Female> can get a twenty <Speech_Female> five percent off <Speech_Female> discount code <Speech_Female> off of all <Speech_Female> of the clothing on <Speech_Female> their website so <Speech_Female> they have some super <Speech_Female> awesome <Speech_Female> super awesome <Speech_Female> t shirts and stickers <Speech_Female> and hats <Speech_Female> and candles <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> so yes <Speech_Female> so <SpeakerChange> and take <Speech_Female> advantage of the preorder. <Speech_Female> Yeah and we'll have <Speech_Music_Female> that

erica
"erica" Discussed on Journey of Ruth

Journey of Ruth

04:15 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on Journey of Ruth

"So how can we fight against that. Yeah if that's just who we are. If that if that's your default mechanism is dr like you. Just have that voice. That's constantly saying whether it's an actual person because i think sometimes we do hear from someone more. It's that that they they on facebook. No one's actually telling you that but we we put that on ourselves. Yeah i think one of the things that you really have to figure out is what those triggers are for you. So if you know if that trigger for you is instagram looking at what you know. All of the moms and their sensory boxes. That's your trigger. Then then you need to limit your instagram time. Right you figure out what it is for you if it's you know when you're going to the gym and you know you're feeling like you're not enough because you're not as fit as everyone else there. Don't stop exercising but maybe find a different way to do your exercises. So you're not constantly putting yourself in that position of comparison to someone else. And i think this is really where the whole concept of community becomes super super important because of the people that we are seeking out as our community are continually making us feel like we're a bad mom or bad christian or if they you know. Let me rephrase the bad christian because maybe you might need so conviction but if they're constantly just making you feel like you're not enough as a person and you're not measuring up and you're not as good as they are. That's not true community. Yeah and so. I think one of the things that we really need to be mindful of is you know who are the people that were investing in relation only and are they people that are pointing us to god saying you know what god is big enough to fill in all of our gaps. Yeah you don't have to be a perfect mom. You're never going to be a perfect wife you know. There's there's grace girl. There's you're doing a great job I remember when we first brought eliana home from the hospital. We had waited eleven years to become mommy and daddy and we were blessed with this beautiful baby girl and I remember her birth mom handing her to me and saying you know i really wanted to be the first one to wish you a happy mother's day and she places her in my arms and i'm weeping with joy you know and we bring her home in. It's you know a night or two later. And i'm rocking her in the middle of the night and i'm just crying out to god like. Don't let me mess this up right years this this beautiful life that you've given to me entrusted me with this gift like do not let me mess this up. I want to be a good mom. I want to do it all right. I don't wanna make a mistake. I don't wanna hurt her in any way. And i was just pouring out my heart to god. And as i was sitting there in that rocking chair i just felt the lord you know. Say to me erica. If she had a perfect mom why in the world would she ever need a heavenly father. And i think this is what we really need to realize right. You know like if jonathan my husband had a perfect wife why would he need. Jesus if my kids had a perfect mom why would they god. Our limitations are really invitations for god to come in with his limitless power and grace and so to me. That's just very very freeing. Yeah i love. The are. Limitations are an invitation for god to enter our lives. I i also think when you're talking about community that.

facebook eliana erica jonathan
"erica" Discussed on Journey of Ruth

Journey of Ruth

05:34 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on Journey of Ruth

"We are judged by the success of our clothing size. We are judged by the success of our professional life were judged by how our homes look were judged by how many things we can juggle so we are trying to perform in all these different levels and we are being judged and compared all these different levels right people are looking at our children. People are looking at our appearance. People are looking at how much we volunteer. People are looking at. You know if how present we are at all of our kids activities and and people are looking at how we perform professionally in our jobs as well so i think for women. We have a lot more places. Were trying to be enough and measure up Then maybe a man is okay. You know it's interesting what you said about being there at moody..

Where Does Harassment Report Leave Andrew Cuomo?

AP News Radio

00:50 sec | 2 years ago

Where Does Harassment Report Leave Andrew Cuomo?

"Calls for New York governor Andrew Cuomo to resign mounts with his impeachment probe widening after investigators substantiated sexual harassment and assault allegations against him from eleven women the state Attorney General says Cuomo's harassment ranged from inappropriate comments to forced kisses and groping the probe was civil not criminal so we can't find the governor guilty but the all the DA says he's requesting the investigative materials and encourages victims to come forward meanwhile in a taped response Cuomo continues to deny he sexually harassed anyone with you seriously disturbing slide show that was nothing short of devastating Erica Vladimir cofounder of sexual harassment working group says he's doing that to complicate the fax Julie Walker New York

Governor Andrew Cuomo Cuomo New York Erica Vladimir Sexual Harassment Working Grou Julie Walker
Eryca Freemantle Talks Diversity in the Beauty Industry

Green Beauty Conversations

02:06 min | 2 years ago

Eryca Freemantle Talks Diversity in the Beauty Industry

"You've been working with the bt industry as you just said to embrace old tunsil shades all sizes all ages of women for very long time to. How is this message been received. Oh wow you know for me first. Foremost for you to a message out there for it to be authentic. You have to leave it. You have to believe it. So i had been even it for up my whole professional career without realizing it and it was always erica free rental. The voice erica. Fremantle spokesperson erika fremantle. The one that was came to offer quotes. And then i sat down one day. And i said look. I'm a black woman under. I am adopt scheme blackman and i've racist prejudice. Cycads him. You know all of those detrimental remarks. i've heard but i've also heard delete some very positive things as well and my career started out with naomi. Campbell pat mcgrath for those of you. That doesn't know who office. She's the most successful makeup artist on the planet. And naimi we campbell the most successful mordue on the planet Started out at the same time. They're londoners goes from london. So you know i think they are about the only to the existing from my era so the only three of us. So there's something that had to be said about. Officers londoners starting acuras in that era so i was always embracing on the people remember. My story started out. I told you competitive makeup. Where there was any there was an international classroom anyway so i let about lots of different cultures and skin types and undetermined before every nine knew what they were and i came up with this name embracing tones of women. I decided to create a business company under that name. And you know the names quite known especially when it comes to diversity. Even though i try to tell people yes. I am a black woman. Yes it is black lead but it's not just for black people and what we do is educate empower outlive and hopefully inspire people who've in the beauty industry to become

Erika Fremantle Erica Campbell Pat Mcgrath Naimi Fremantle Blackman Naomi Campbell London
Olympics Latest: Latvia Wins Gold in Men's 3-on-3

AP News Radio

00:40 sec | 2 years ago

Olympics Latest: Latvia Wins Gold in Men's 3-on-3

"What if he won the women's fifteen hundred meter freestyle event making its Olympic debut holding off teammate Erica Sullivan who took silver the times might not be my best times but I'm still really really happy to have a gold medal around my neck right now USA gymnastics announcing Wednesday's Simone Biles will not take part in the all around competition Thursday that's in order to focus on her mental well being the organization says it will monitor miles on a daily basis to determine if she'll take part in individual events next week USA men's basketball proving to wanted one after a one twenty eight sixty six cropping up around Damian Lillard led all scorers with twenty one points I'm Jonathan

Erica Sullivan Simone Biles Olympic Gymnastics USA Damian Lillard Basketball Jonathan
Team USA Beats Tunisia 3-1 in Men's Volleyball

AP News Radio

00:39 sec | 2 years ago

Team USA Beats Tunisia 3-1 in Men's Volleyball

"But the United States woman captured another four medals in the pool on Wednesday Katie Ledecky widely respected as the world's best long distance swimmer earned the gold in the women's fifteen hundred meter freestyle which made its Olympic debut this year the crime might not be my best times but I'm still really really happy to have a gold medal around my neck right now her teammate Erica Sullivan finished just behind her to grab the silver and Americans Alex Wilson Kate Douglas finished two three earned the silver and bronze in the two hundred meter individual medley the men didn't have the same like finishing off the podium and fourth in the four by two hundred freestyle relay Caleb Dressel was not picked to swim on that relay team I'm Danny cap

Katie Ledecky Erica Sullivan Kate Douglas United States Alex Wilson Olympic Caleb Dressel Danny Cap
"erica" Discussed on Call Your Girlfriend

Call Your Girlfriend

05:14 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on Call Your Girlfriend

"You spent a summer abroad. And a quarter abroad in barcelona. Yeah and we would send the most epic emails back and forth. And i can't actually remember if you sent the most epic emails. But i know that i would just oh i definitely did. I would just emotionally dump on you about this guy. That was breaking my heart at the time. All the time and you would write back really thoughtful responses and at the time it was like of course. She's my friend. She would do this. But now i look back and i'm like the like accountability that that you felt to me like address my boy problems over long emails while you were abroad like doing. Your own thing was so generous. Claire that's like such a kind framing of it. I definitely was dumping emails back. And i had a blackberry remember. I had like an early early blackberry. Which like why. But i did. And i would just lay there in bed study abroad and like with my thumbs type out just these like long misses it and to this day you will do more communicating on like on an actual phone with your thumbs than i ever would and i always attributed tear early adoption of the because i never write a full. I rarely write emails on a phone period unless they have to. And you'll just like buying them out. Well i mean. I think yeah we would have to otherwise go to a school that was like twenty blocks away or go to the internet cafe which was four blocks away so it felt. It was a huge privilege obvious blackberry. What a nonsense device support for claire girlfriend comes from. Okay keep it and you might be surprised to know that more people are virtually dating now than they were before cova did. It is a surprisingly fun way to pass this time where we're alone a lot and looking to connect and okay. Cupid in particular is famous for matching people on what matters most to them from the food you might like the type of relationship you want your political inclinations okay. Cupid asks thoughtful and provoking questions to get to the heart of who you are and what type of person you're looking for. And that's really at the core of dating right now much more thorough conversations. Much more time before you might ever meet someone in person and finding a kind of connection that you're looking for when so much has to be done from.

barcelona claire girlfriend Claire cova
"erica" Discussed on Call Your Girlfriend

Call Your Girlfriend

05:37 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on Call Your Girlfriend

"You had a strict role Pink black and white. Yeah yeah yeah. Yeah yeah yeah colors. Between black and white we're fine So you know. A pale grey charcoal. Totally fine and pink Yeah and that was definitely one of the first things i mean. In general i was attracted to the fact that you were interested in fashion. You liked fashion. And you i think. Beyond that had like a general curiosity in a knowingness about things like we had similar references. That felt really specific and not comment. And i think this was pre like this version of the internet and in this version of the internet. Everybody has the same references but then it was like the fact that you knew fashion brands. That weren't just sold at you. Know wherever everybody was. Shut them all. Yeah yeah felt like. Oh we have this thing in common and nobody else does and i was super interested in this in the fact that you had made this role for yourself about the pink black and white like i wanted to ask a million questions about it and was just like an and respected it for sure one of one of the early stories that you told me that i remember just feeling like oh wow this is like okay i i like this i am into this into the like just like exuberantly throwing your stuff yourself at things was telling me that on road trips you and your brother in the back of the car would play a game a game where you would go through fashion magazines and light cover the the credits and identify who the models were who the designers were this. Excuse me identify who the designers where i haven't been. Your brother was good enough at this to compete. Because i mean. I need to bring this up with my brother and see how much remembers about it because my mom would drag a shopping everywhere. My mom was really into fashion to which was where i got the references from but yet he he would be really good at it. And so we'd be like i think. That's armani calvin klein. It's insane now. That i think about it and it's insane to me that my brother who was not like deeply interested in the same way like he he he was exposed. Yeah he was exposed and he has a really good memory. Yeah he is a historian so he it's true I also think. I recognized very early on that. You like the these fashion references. Yes you were also just like very cosmopolitan but in a different way than our other. Mutual friend was And as someone who was not at all. I was very attracted to that. And it's it's funny. Because i didn't i thought of you as someone who was like and you still are this way. Who was like very proactive. About seeking it out. Like i felt like we were the same. I mean i'd grown up in wilmington delaware granted. It was like on a coast. And i spent a lot of time in new york but i felt like we had both had the same experience of like just really loving magazines and being early to the internet. And just seeking this stuff out because it wasn't just automatically around us that's right that's right. We both lived in small towns that were like two or three hours from a big city and knew that we wanted to be in the big city more than we wanted to be in the small town. Yep for sure and then we also both loved sanrio and and knew knew that there was something like fashion about it. You know what i mean like. It wasn't just being ironic or like it was not ironic at all right. My affection for sanrio has never been ironic..

armani calvin klein wilmington delaware new york sanrio
"erica" Discussed on Call Your Girlfriend

Call Your Girlfriend

05:03 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on Call Your Girlfriend

"Man. I'm so sick of talking about us. And i never tire of hearing Other people tell their friendship story. So you know selfishly. It's checking all the boxes for me but Everyone that we have on these on. The series are total pros and are also the loveliest humans. Amazing kuri hearing from today while you're in for a treat because today's episode is a very special Claire and erica of a thing or two are here and One we love them a lot and they have been such. Inspirations for us in both like friends who do business but also like boss ladies who do business and it's even though i know this story. I never get tired of hearing them saying because it has such good flourishes so good clean eric also wrote this book work wife about working with friends and so i'm really interested in hearing them talk about the contours of friendship versus collaboration and Yeah here they are hi. I'm clare measor. Hi i'm eric rouleau. And we are the hosts of the a thing or two podcast. Oh my gosh we. So are we really are. We've been doing this. Podcast in some incarnation. Since like twenty four team does that sound rating. That's right. I think that's right and its companion newsletter since like twenty twelve. Yeah that's right anyway. Anyway we talk about a lot of stuff. We talk about shopping. We talk about friendship for sure. Life stuff discoveries were excited about all sorts of nonsense. And i think the timelines and we didn't get into that was obviously incredibly relevant to what we're doing right now. Which is we've been friends since two thousand six no two thousand and two. Oh god wow yeah two thousand six's when you graduate. I don't know why relevant number that stuck out in my head. Two thousand two is when i graduated from high school and started and that you on the campus of university of chicago. Which i don't i. I don't remember like the very very first meeting..

clare measor eric rouleau erica Claire eric university of chicago
"erica" Discussed on Coaching for Leaders

Coaching for Leaders

02:38 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on Coaching for Leaders

"She actually quoted company. She said it was like night and day. It would take me as in kate days to get a response but keep could not only get a response and a status update but also be asked if he wanted anything else. Where if there was anything else that keep needed help with so these are palo dynamics that are just across the rink levels. We see it in gender age group cultural a dynamics in the new world of digital communication and because everything is so much more digital now That the name what. The address is listed as the emoji. The avatar the profile picture. That was always important. But now that oftentimes the first and in some cases the only representation we have initially of that person and so that that focuses our attention new way and so if you know from a leadership standpoint of been really mindful about how we are responding showing up giving power that is that is huge as much as it would be if we were sitting all in a meeting. And doing those things consciously like. I think a lot of us think about doing in person but if doing that digitally just as important if not more so now and even taking that step to understand what are some of our subconscious by sees. We may respond immediately to a client. But i'll speak personally sometimes for my team members. I'll take three to four days to respond and there are power dynamics. Play that lead to my speed in communication for some versus others. In fact you know there were studies that looked at some of these dynamics across generations where one millennial leader of team said if someone has an earthlink account still. I'm not gonna hire them their way out of date and so we have a digital body language persona brand that makes breaks first impression. Because it's not no longer the i seven milliseconds. We meet someone. It's how we meet someone before. The meeting even happens now. Yes and what email domain they're using all those things Erica just fascinating You know were only hitting on a few of the principals here in the book. There's so much more that you invite people to do better as an thinking about this..

three four days Erica earthlink first first impression seven milliseconds one millennial
"erica" Discussed on On Mic Podcast

On Mic Podcast

03:06 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on On Mic Podcast

"Our <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> bosses <Speech_Female> in <SpeakerChange> leaders <Speech_Female> who may <Speech_Female> have <Speech_Female> been used to signaling <Speech_Female> certain cues <Speech_Female> with traditional <Speech_Female> body language <Speech_Female> and they now need to become <Speech_Female> more <SpeakerChange> explicit <Speech_Male> in digital body <Speech_Male> language. I <Speech_Male> would agree. And i think <Speech_Male> empathy is the <Speech_Male> sauve or the <Speech_Male> bomb that soothes <Speech_Male> a lot of emotion. <Speech_Male> You <Speech_Male> realize that person <Speech_Male> on the other end really <Speech_Male> does care <Speech_Male> about what. I'm <Speech_Male> doing now in thinking <Speech_Male> about that doesn't <Speech_Male> have to be a major life <Speech_Male> issue but just cares <Speech_Male> that. I can't make <Speech_Male> that meeting in. Wants to <Speech_Male> arrange something <Speech_Male> so that it's <Speech_Male> preferable for both <Speech_Male> empathy. <Speech_Male> My favorite word <Speech_Male> next to love. Well <Speech_Male> this has been fun. You're <Speech_Male> terrific and <Speech_Male> I know that this <Speech_Male> is only the start of <Speech_Male> this kind of <Speech_Male> thing training in this <Speech_Male> area and consulting <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> talking about your <Speech_Male> book probably writing <Speech_Male> a follow up because this is <Speech_Male> only the beginning as <Speech_Male> you say we're <Speech_Male> in a revolutionary <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> period. This <Speech_Female> is only the beginning. <Speech_Female> I truly <Speech_Female> believe that <Speech_Female> digital body. Language <Speech_Female> is a skill <Speech_Female> as critical <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> as traditional body <Speech_Female> language. And <Speech_Female> my mission is <Speech_Female> to be the deborah <Speech_Female> tannin of the <Speech_Female> digital age. So <Speech_Female> i'm so grateful to <Speech_Female> share the <Speech_Female> new book digital body <Speech_Female> language with you and <Speech_Female> really starting <Speech_Female> meaningful conversations <Speech_Female> for all those <Speech_Female> at work <Speech_Female> at home <SpeakerChange> in <Speech_Male> their communities <Speech_Male> one more note <Speech_Male> You do talk of course <Speech_Male> about <Speech_Male> Being on screen <Speech_Male> and in a video <Speech_Male> chat in this case <Speech_Male> we're recording <Speech_Male> this via <Speech_Male> zoom. I'm in my studio. <Speech_Male> You can obviously <Speech_Male> tell your <Speech_Male> in your office and <Speech_Male> backdrops aside <Speech_Male> I think <Speech_Male> we're all learning <Speech_Male> You talked about <Speech_Male> the tv thing. I i used <Speech_Male> to work in tv. So i know what <Speech_Male> a switcher is. <Speech_Male> We're all learning how to <Speech_Male> better <Speech_Male> present but <Speech_Male> A lot <Speech_Male> of people can really do <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> a lot of things simply <Speech_Male> to improve <Speech_Male> their their <Speech_Male> vision <SpeakerChange> on screen. <Speech_Female> Can't they simple <Speech_Female> things go a long <Speech_Female> way. For <Speech_Female> example a <Speech_Female> recent study showed <Speech_Female> that we <Speech_Female> make eye contact <Speech_Female> about thirty to sixty <Speech_Female> percent of the time <Speech_Female> when we're face <Speech_Female> to face. I <Speech_Female> often recommend <Speech_Female> if you're presenting <Speech_Female> on video <Speech_Female> is great <Speech_Female> to show your <Speech_Female> direct contact <Speech_Female> into the camera <Speech_Female> about sixty to seventy <Speech_Female> percent of the time. Even <Speech_Female> though you can't see <Speech_Female> others directly <Speech_Female> they feel a greater <Speech_Female> emotional connection <Speech_Female> to you. <Speech_Female> That's just one simple <Speech_Female> one. Another one <Speech_Female> i recommend is <Speech_Female> being able to be far <Speech_Female> enough from the camera <Speech_Female> where people can see <Speech_Female> your hand gestures <Speech_Female> but also <Speech_Female> not too far where they can't <Speech_Female> see your facial <SpeakerChange> expressions <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> and a caveat. <Speech_Male> I just have to <Speech_Male> let you know. I am <Speech_Male> in a new studio <Speech_Male> that we just moved into <Speech_Male> and my camera <Speech_Male> is above <Speech_Male> me a little high <Speech_Male> up so i'm not i'm <Speech_Male> looking at your eyes <Speech_Male> but you're probably <Speech_Male> seeing me look <Speech_Male> down and <Speech_Male> i'm working on that <Speech_Male> i trust me. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> I read your book. But i'm <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> working on it but <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> it's it's so true <Speech_Male> a the little things <Speech_Male> that we can do <Speech_Male> whether we're typing <Speech_Male> them or presenting <Speech_Male> them make a big difference. <Speech_Male> Erica thank you so <Speech_Male> much. Is there a website. <Speech_Male> You'd <SpeakerChange> like to share with <Speech_Female> us as well absolutely. <Speech_Female> If <Speech_Female> you go to my website. <Speech_Female> Eric had one <Speech_Female> dot com <Speech_Female> slash digital <Speech_Female> body language. <Speech_Music_Female> I offer us <Speech_Female> a toolkit. <Speech_Female> That is <Speech_Female> an add on from <Speech_Female> my book <SpeakerChange> for <Speech_Female> free that will <Speech_Female> allow anyone <Speech_Female> to implement <Speech_Female> digital body <Speech_Female> language rules <Speech_Female> with their colleagues <Speech_Female> in their <Speech_Female> own families <Speech_Female> and their <Speech_Female> communities it <Speech_Female> also includes a <Speech_Female> digital body language <Speech_Female> style quits. <Speech_Female>

Eric Erica seventy sixty both thirty one
"erica" Discussed on Bitches on Comics

Bitches on Comics

02:39 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on Bitches on Comics

"Strategy and stuff. So i'm cancer. I am the crab the moon child. I m hard shell on the outside and suber squishy on the inside. I am the body moment of what a cancer in as everyone is afraid of me until they actually get to know me. I thought you were so mean. Why are you like blowing your nose on my sleep because department for ten hours just because i got sad about Thing yup that is very very typical cancer. I know that's exactly how every cancer would respond to you. Be like yeah. I'm aware of that. I've read i read. I'm aware of how sensitive i am. Amazing okay so erica. I'm like feeling a little bit embarrassed. Because i have a question to ask that i feel like is going to show that maybe my reading comprehension is lower than i thought it was. Which is is this your first comic. You've done letters on or do letters on all of your comics. I have leonard a lot of comics. I don't let her all of my comments. But i tend to let a lot of them because i'm.

ten hours first comic erica
"erica" Discussed on Marketing Today with Alan Hart

Marketing Today with Alan Hart

03:51 min | 2 years ago

"erica" Discussed on Marketing Today with Alan Hart

"Almost like your mother in law's tongue it makes makes sense. I hope my mother-in-law listening to this so anyway moving on as a marketer curious if there is brands or companies or causes that you follow or you think other people should be taking notice. Yeah so a new company that came across in the last couple of months i was. I took the subway for the first time in a long time. A few weeks ago actually saw an ad on the subway platform and it was a company called back market. I don't know if you're familiar with it but they are a marketplace for refurbish devices. And i was just looking more into them. And they're very mission driven and their mission is to really. How do we reduce environmental waste caused by devices. And i think that's fascinating. Because especially with covert and the increase for digitization as we mentioned right devices are indispensable and yet they actually take a lot of energy to create and then it also. They sort of lasts for a long time sort of end up in. Landfills are not back market trying to create not just a marketplace but really an economy for refurbish devices. So that people can sort of make more use out of out of these devices so that a they become more affordable and then be also become warrant sorta environmentally responsible. I think it's a fascinating concept definitely and especially as you think about all the virtual students in the us in many of the students I would imagine have a hard time accessing devices or or cheaply accessing devices. Yeah makes perfect sense in and for the environment for all those reasons he just laid out. I'll have to check them out. I haven't heard of them for will last question for you. Curious what you think is the either largest opportunity our biggest threat that marketers are facing today. So i think Similar to what i was talking about earlier i think a big threat is if people with an organization operate in silos and so i think the opportunity is really how do we better integrate marketing coms customer experience sort of altogether so all of these different pieces work together to deliver customer value and to build that relationship and trust with our customers. 'cause i do think right especially in the world right now. It's it's harder and harder to draw the lines between sort of where pr ends were. Marketing begins or where prada experienced starts. And where service begins right and so i think organizations that internally are siloed and see these different functions being very separated at the end might not be well positioned to deliver the greatest customer benefit. Erica thank you so much for coming on the show. Join the conversation. Thank you for having me. Hi it's allen again. Marketing today was created and produced by me with support from my team and podcast editor sound engineers and writers. Cher your genius. Find them at share your genius dot com. If you're new to marketing today please feel free to write us a review on itunes or your favorite listening platform. Don't forget to subscribe on marketing. Today podcast dot com and tell your friends and colleagues about the show. I love to hear from listeners. You can contact me on marketing today. Podcasts dot com there. You'll also find complete show notes linked to what was discussed in the episode today and you can search our archives. I'm alan heart and this is marketing today..

Erica itunes subway Today first time last couple of months prada few weeks ago today com allen dot com A alan