35 Burst results for "Eugene"

Katnip & Coffee
"eugene" Discussed on Katnip & Coffee
"It's catnip and coffee time with cat brat get at least eight hours of beauty sleep nine if you're ugly and Misaki grab your coffee and get into the zone because cat brats about to help you crush the work and life chaos through gamification technology mindfulness and new discoveries catnip and coffee time starts now so where are you from you're from the yes we're done in largo George C Macau Park okay we have like so many names the park is George C Macau are called Friends of Largo Turtle Park and the narrows okay there narrows are going to be going away but we're down on off of waltzingham I think it's called which is the bridge right before going to Indian Rocks Beach okay our park is right there we've got we're nonprofit we have Eagles Hawks Falcons different owls we have the great horned owl we have her the barred owl and a bunch of the little screech owls I don't know if you've seen the smaller one right but they're all unreleasable they either have an injury or their imprints to human okay can you tell us a little bit about her story her name is Eugene so she came to us we thought it was a male turned out to be a female we kept her name Eugene she came to us with an injury to the eye we don't know what caused it we think it could have been a branch or a fight they tend to be very territorial birds so they get into fights over nests all the time especially when they have their their young so she's been with us since then the eye ended up getting infected so we had to get it removed and she's been with us since we have another barred owl there at the park but yeah she's a sweetheart a sweetheart what is can you explain what a barred owl yeah so you might have heard barn owls yes and this is a barred owl and you can tell because she's got the bars okay she weighs about two pounds because you think she'd be about ten pounds but she's only two pounds they're pretty hollow no we don't reason wise we've got oils on our hands okay and their feathers are waterproof or cages outside so we you know she may get wet and we just want to make sure that her feathers stay what is their normal lifespan so in the wild they may last anywhere between eight to ten years but in captivity or cared for as we have her and they can go into the 20s yeah yeah they last pretty long time just not in the wild right what so let me ask you this as far as taking care of them are what is the percentage of being able to get to go back into the wild afterwards and being on their own on the injury she also has tendonitis okay I'm so when I guess it depends on the injury right I don't know the percentage but a lot of them that come to us and abstain okay yeah and probably the age as well right yeah it depends on and a lot of them we don't even have the money to get them tested okay you know DNA tested to find out if they're male or female how we can tell if it's male or female is by weight so they get weighed in every Monday and the males always tend to be less in weight than the females okay so the females are heavier so that's why at first we thought it was a boy because of he weighed less but then when we got her tested when the whole eye thing and then turns out it's a female where can we go online to donate so George C McGowan Park okay you can find that on on Google okay and I'm not a hundred percent sure if you can donate there okay but there's definitely contact where you can contact the park someone can swing by and donate but yeah they would love to oh yeah so nice they they eat and you know from all the donations we have birthday parties there as well to raise money for them and on field trips and that sort of thing that's right you're a star look at that thank you so much for your time I appreciate it. Oh, you're welcome. Thank you. I appreciate it.

Katnip & Coffee
"eugene" Discussed on Katnip & Coffee
"So where are you from you're from the yes we're done in largo George C Macau Park okay we have like so many names the park is George C Macau are called Friends of Largo Turtle Park and the narrows okay there narrows are going to be going away but we're down on off of waltzingham I think it's called which is the bridge right before going to Indian Rocks Beach okay our park is right there we've got we're nonprofit we have Eagles Hawks Falcons different owls we have the great horned owl we have her the barred owl and a bunch of the little screech owls I don't know if you've seen the smaller one right but they're all unreleasable they either have an injury or their imprints to human okay can you tell us a little bit about her story her name is Eugene so she came to us we thought it was a male turned out to be a female we kept her name Eugene she came to us with an injury to the eye we don't know what caused it we think it could have been a branch or a fight they tend to be very territorial birds so they get into fights over nests all the time especially when they have their their young so she's been with us since then the eye ended up getting infected so we had to get it removed and she's been with us since we have another barred owl there at the park but yeah she's a sweetheart a sweetheart what is can you explain what a barred owl yeah so you might have heard barn owls yes and this is a barred owl and you can tell because she's got the bars okay she weighs about two pounds because you think she'd be about ten pounds but she's only two pounds they're pretty hollow no we don't reason wise we've got oils on our hands okay and their feathers are waterproof or cages outside so we you know she may get wet and we just want to make sure that her feathers stay what is their normal lifespan so in the wild they may last anywhere between eight to ten years but in captivity or cared for as we have her and they can go into the yeah 20s yeah they last pretty long time just not in the wild right what so let me ask you this as far as taking care of them are what is the percentage of being able to get to go back into the wild afterwards and being on their own on the injury she also has tendonitis okay I'm so when I guess it depends on the injury right I don't know the percentage but a lot of them that come to us and abstain okay yeah and probably the age as well right yeah it depends on and a lot of them we don't even have the money to get them tested okay you know DNA tested to find out if they're male or female how we can tell if it's male or female is by weight so they get weighed in every Monday and the males always tend to be less in weight than the females okay so the females are heavier so that's why at first we thought it was a boy because of he weighed less but then when we got her tested when the whole eye thing and then turns out it's a female where can we go online to donate so George C McGowan Park okay you can find that on on Google okay and I'm not a hundred percent sure if you can donate there okay but there's definitely contact where you can contact the park someone can swing by and donate but yeah they would love to oh yeah so nice they they eat and you know from all the donations we have birthday parties there as well to raise money for them and on field trips and that sort of thing that's right you're a star look at that thank you so much for your time I appreciate it. Oh, you're welcome. Thank you. I appreciate

Katnip & Coffee
Katbrat Meets Eugene, A Camera-Shy Bard Owl
"So where are you from you're from the yes we're done in largo George C Macau Park okay we have like so many names the park is George C Macau are called Friends of Largo Turtle Park and the narrows okay there narrows are going to be going away but we're down on off of waltzingham I think it's called which is the bridge right before going to Indian Rocks Beach okay our park is right there we've got we're nonprofit we have Eagles Hawks Falcons different owls we have the great horned owl we have her the barred owl and a bunch of the little screech owls I don't know if you've seen the smaller one right but they're all unreleasable they either have an injury or their imprints to human okay can you tell us a little bit about her story her name is Eugene so she came to us we thought it was a male turned out to be a female we kept her name Eugene she came to us with an injury to the eye we don't know what caused it we think it could have been a branch or a fight they tend to be very territorial birds so they get into fights over nests all the time especially when they have their their young so she's been with us since then the eye ended up getting infected so we had to get it removed and she's been with us since we have another barred owl there at the park but yeah she's a sweetheart a sweetheart what is can you explain what a barred owl yeah so you might have heard barn owls yes and this is a barred owl and you can tell because she's got the bars okay she weighs about two pounds because you think she'd be about ten pounds but she's only two pounds they're pretty hollow no we don't reason wise we've got oils on our hands okay and their feathers are waterproof or cages outside so we you know she may get wet and we just want to make sure that her feathers stay what is their normal lifespan so in the wild they may last anywhere between eight to ten years but in captivity or cared for as we have her and they can go into the yeah 20s yeah they last pretty long time just not in the wild right what so let me ask you this as far as taking care of them are what is the percentage of being able to get to go back into the wild afterwards and being on their own on the injury she also has tendonitis okay I'm so when I guess it depends on the injury right I don't know the percentage but a lot of them that come to us and abstain okay yeah and probably the age as well right yeah it depends on and a lot of them we don't even have the money to get them tested okay you know DNA tested to find out if they're male or female how we can tell if it's male or female is by weight so they get weighed in every Monday and the males always tend to be less in weight than the females okay so the females are heavier so that's why at first we thought it was a boy because of he weighed less but then when we got her tested when the whole eye thing and then turns out it's a female where can we go online to donate so George C McGowan Park okay you can find that on on Google okay and I'm not a hundred percent sure if you can donate there okay but there's definitely contact where you can contact the park someone can swing by and donate but yeah they would love to oh yeah so nice they they eat and you know from all the donations we have birthday parties there as well to raise money for them and on field trips and that sort of thing that's right you're a star look at that thank you so much for your time I appreciate it. Oh, you're welcome. Thank you. I appreciate

Over the Next Hill Fitness
Olympian Jeff Galloway Shares His Inspirational Journey
"Today we have an Olympian, and he's an athlete, he's a coach. We want to give a great big welcome to Jeff Galloway. Welcome to the show, Jeff. Great to be here, Carla. I am so honored to have you on the show. So I just hit a few of the highlights of you. Can you tell us a little bit more about you and how long you've been running and when you got started? Yes, I began running in 1958. I was entering the eighth grade at a school that required boys to go out for athletics after school. I had not done much of that, partly any of it, because during my first seven years of school, my father had been in the Navy and I had gone to 13 schools during those first seven years. We were constantly bouncing around and I never got involved in sports or physical fitness or whatever. I was overweight, lazy, and forced with reality. I fell in with a group of kids in my classes who were runners, mainly because they were funny, and they dragged me out during the winter for Winter Cross Country. Well, I just absolutely hated it at first because I was exhausted and I very quickly found that within 30 minutes after a very hard exhausting workout, I felt better in my head and in my spirit than I had ever felt. And the other thing was, having gone to 13 schools in seven years of classes, I found it very difficult in a new area to meet friends. As soon as I got with the Cross Country guys, I had instant friends. I had good friends and I found that true with any running group that I've ever been a part of. And so I set as my goal to be able to keep up with my teammates and it was very, very difficult. I did not show a lot of promise. It took me until my senior year to be able to qualify to get into the state championships in Georgia, and Georgia was not a very good state competitively. I just wasn't good and I went on to a small liberal arts school, an academic school that didn't even offer scholarships. But as fate would have it, in the class behind me, a fellow entered named Ambie Burfoot and two years later when I was a senior, we were joined by Bill Rogers. All three of us were there and we didn't get scholarships. They didn't have them. We were at an academic school for the academics. Senior year, Ambie won the Boston Marathon. It's the only time an undergraduate has won the Boston Marathon before or since. And of course, we know what Bill Rogers went on to do. And it was just a wonderful coincidence that has yielded long -term friendships between the three of us. As a matter of fact, I kept in touch on a number of issues with Bill Rogers just during the last week and talked to Ambie quite often. Went on to, after graduation, to go into the Navy because I had a low draft number. That was unfortunately where I was exposed to Agent Orange, which later on became an issue, and my heart attack that occurred two years ago. But I got out of the Navy in 1970 and set as my sights the possibility of qualifying to get into the Olympic trials. I was way away from that, but I gave myself goals every six months and pretty much hit them. But I still had a good ways to go, going just right before the Olympic trials. Went to the national championships. I needed a minute and a half PR in the 10K and I ran two minutes faster and qualified to get into the Olympic trials. And then as fate would have it, on the day of the trials, it was a really hot day and I had been training in Florida for the previous two years. I knew how to pace myself in the heat and went out in last place for the first mile and then people started coming back to me. So I passed them one after another. And with about two miles left, I realized that I was in third place and then very quickly into second place and qualified for the US Olympic team. A week later, I paced one of my teammates from the Florida Track Club through the marathon because he had been disqualified. During the last stretch of the 10K, my teammate Jack Batchelor was in third place and was passed by another runner who happened to be the son of the mayor of Eugene, Oregon, where the trials were being held. And of course the crowd was cheering him on. So John Anderson passes my buddy Jack about 30 yards from the finish line, but Jack was exhausted and he was weaving and he bumped John as John went by and an official disqualified Jack. I've never seen that before or since, but it happened then. Significance was that a week later if I had been able to qualify in the marathon, I would have dropped out of the 10K, but that was no longer possible because Jack wouldn't move up if I did that. So I paced him through and was having to cheer him on and be the lookout and keep the positive mantras going like crazy during the last five miles. We entered that stadium together and the crowd was on their feet. I can still remember how my ears were just pounding and so I paced Jack right to the finish line backed off so that he could be the official qualifier. And it was just a wonderful experience to help a teammate become an Olympian.

Evangelism on SermonAudio
A highlight from The God Who Keeps His Promises
"Welcome to the podcast of first presbyterian church of gulfport, mississippi to learn more about our church our beliefs And our pastor, please visit fpcgulfport .org Throughout the old testament god made a series of incredible promises Promises that defied his people's expectations And in his time he fulfilled every last one of them in today's study of first kings 8 We'll consider the god who always keeps his promises Including those that he's made to you and I You know one of the very lowest or worst times for god's people Occurred back in the book of numbers is in the wilderness god's people were in the wilderness now Why were they in the wilderness? Well, they're in the wilderness because that's where they chose to be You see if you remember the story god had told them I have made you i've created i've set aside for you a promised land It's yours go for it And so they sent in spies to check it out to see what it was like to see if they indeed could take it However, when the spies reported back the majority of the spies said no way They said the land is great. No problems there. The land is great the problem is There are giants there. The problem is we're just a bunch of people in the wilderness They've got cities like jericho with walls that are high. They've got armaments. They've got soldiers who stand one and a half times above us God may have told us to go there, but we can't because we'll die And so they spent their time in the wilderness. And in fact a whole generation died out Of that level of distrust or lack of confidence what god told them to do So they're wandering in the wilderness. That's what made the book of numbers so sad They're in a place No one wants to go doing things that they shouldn't be doing and they do it for a whole Generation and they did it based on fear They did it on the basis of that. We just can't do what god has told us to do We know god is strong. I mean, of course, he's strong. Look what he did to pharaoh. He brought all those plagues 10 of them and yet And yet he won't do that for us. I mean he did it back then but You know that was then this is now They had enough faith to remember moses. They had enough corporate honesty to know what happened In their recent past and yet they didn't have enough faith to think that what god did in the past had any bearing on What he would do in the future god says go into the land. They say no We'll die despite the fact That one generation earlier god had literally swapped the armies of pharaoh under the red sea that god had brought down all these plagues If you're god, you're thinking to yourself, you know, I think i've made a pretty good case for myself Am I willingness to protect you? What are you doing? But the people were were fearful They're anxious God had made them a promise They just doubted his ability to come through on it Is that where you're at matters of faith a whole generation of israelites That's where they were at They had enough faith to believe god was there Do you believe god's there I hope so The problem was not that they didn't believe he was there And their problem was not that they didn't believe he'd done some really cool things a long time ago. The problem was They didn't think they would come through for them in this particular instance. No matter what he had said. They knew he'd promised They just doubted the reliability of that promise and for some of us That's our concern We don't doubt god exists. We know he's there Sometimes we doubt whether he loves us enough to count us in that promise And other times we just doubt whether he's actually going to do the very things that he said that he was going to do Well today's text we're seeing psalm is stopping the presses. He's taking the people by the lapel He's shaking him and saying dear heavens. Do you see what god has done? Not a word failed Of what he said not a word not a syllable has failed what he said he would do And he made some of the most amazing promises You could possibly make to people who are in no position to believe that they'd ever be received He told abram old abram and old sarah that they'd have a not just a kid But a progeny the more numerous than the stars in the sky It was a promise seemed unbelievable to fulfill and he fulfilled it to a t He's done everything that he would say he would do and the reason that was important for them And the reason that's important to us is because he's made you a promise, too He's made you a promise about your future And the question is can he come through will he come through In today's text psalm wanted to encourage his people and god wants to encourage us that the answer is yes Let's look at the first couple verses. Let's start with verse 54. Then. Let's work our way through the balance verse 54 And so it was when solomon had finished praying all this prayer and supplication to the lord That he rose up from before the altar of the lord from kneeling on his knees with his hands spread up To heaven All right. Let's stop there in the verses immediately preceding today's passage The temple was done it had taken a while But the temple is now done and king solomon if you read earlier in chapter eight, he had prayed a lengthy prayer That's okay. He had a lot to say so he praised this lengthy prayer and during this prayer. He'd recounted god's faithfulness Sometimes that's okay, too We pray to god and we thank god and we remind god of what he already knows the things that he's done And by virtue of us reminding him of what he already knows we remind ourselves of what we need to hold on to going forward So he prayed this lengthy prayer and then he rises up and stands but as he stands he swivels And he looks out a bunch of folks whose faith was probably like a sine curve Ups and downs from person to person maybe from day to day maybe from hour to hour Solomon was looking at those who had doubts and anxieties not that different from those that many of us had He's also looking at some folks that he knew to be hard -headed You ever read moses experiences in deuteronomy ministering to god's people just hard -headed people David had had the same experience psalm and already as a young king. He had seen the same thing the people are hard -headed They not only tended to reject a lot of things that the prophets and leaders said But they also tended to reject what god had said, but god had still been faithful That was part of his prayer. Thank you god You've been so faithful we've been such such goofs we've done all the things we shouldn't do we've really messed up But you've never let us down You fulfilled everything to a t meanwhile. We're just staggering around the wilderness Even as they'd come into the promised land It's still their faith was like a sine curve and psalm praises says god. Thank you that you don't operate the way that we do Thank you that your promises are reliable So in verse 54, he wraps up this prayer and now again as he swiveled to talk to the people He wants to both encourage them and to challenge them. Let's see what he says in verses 55 and 56 Verse 55 then he stood and he blessed all the assembly of israel with a loud voice sang Blessed be the lord who has given rest to his people israel according to all that he has promised There's not failed one word of all his good promise which he promised through his servant moses If someone were to make you a promise What's the first thing your brain does? So it makes you a promise. What's the first thing you do? Well, here's the first thing I do You think through and you say well what other promises have you made in the past? Because I think i'm going to adjudicate Your ability and willingness to come through on this particular issue On the basis of whether you came through on other issues If someone makes you a promise you immediately you can't help it you think of the track record You think is this a reliable source? Of information promises and the like we consider a new promise in light of what has been done with the old ones Well in verses 55 and 56 Solomon says look there are still better promises yet ahead if you think that this promised land is cool Just wait till you see what is yet to come there's better promises of a better land. There's a better moses coming down the road There's all sorts of stuff in the future that we have to hold on to By faith and in order to believe those promises of that outcome you need to look back and ask Did god come through and what he already said he would do and in verses 55 and 56 he says yes He says look god said some amazing stuff in the past And he delivered he delivered on things that seemed impossible for him to fulfill and so with a loud voice in verse 55 He basically tells the people he says You are the most fortunate of all people because your god Unlike the gods of the philistines and the canadites and the moabites and the amorites and the hitites and the jebusites and every other Ite he says unlike them your god has an unbroken track record Unlike the pagan prophecies and pagan gods of stone and marble and wood That have failed consistently habitually That have let down the very people who have bent the knee to them unlike those people You have a god who came through on every last thing he told you he would Blessed be you and blessed be the name of the lord And he wanted them to remember some of the things that god had done in fact, that's healthy. That's why we read the book That's why we study the old testament And the new as we understand we remember what god has done and how that applies to us We think about the things he did how amazing they were and if he did those amazing things Maybe yet there'll be a resurrection from the dead. Maybe yet We'll all go to heaven. Maybe yet all the things for the future will be fulfilled if he's done all these things in the past You know, as we said some of the things that god promised Defied expectations and the belief of everyone who heard them at the outset I already mentioned abraham and sarah You take the old couple tell them that they're going to have a child and they've been barren all these years and where time has passed Sarah's reaction. I was just to laugh it seemed utterly implausible God made them a promise that seemed utterly implausible and yet he he came through Psalm looked out and saw the descendants He saw the fulfillment of this one promise Think even further back think of noah god promised to this one guy this one Paragon of virtue and just a sea of apostasy and unrighteousness he says it's going to rain But you're going to make it because you're going to build a boat However, it's not going to be just any boat You're going to build a boat big enough to fit all the creatures within the creative realm within it now dear heavens If there is a promise that just defies expectation and belief that it could ever be fulfilled. This is it Of course noah trusted god and went about building a boat in god's time It was filled with animals and god's time the rain came God made a promise that defied expectation then then he fulfilled it Just after the time of when they entered the promised land they came up to the city that god's people You know, they crossed the jordan they come in. All right, so we're in the promised land. Uh -oh. Uh -oh What's that big city with a big wall just right over there? Oh my stars. We made it across the jordan We're in the promised land, but now surely we're gonna die God says no, I promised you got this you got this I got this i'll take you through this And they're like, well how we don't have any weaponry We barely made it across the jordan. We've been in the wilderness. We don't look at that wall And god says hey and rolls up his sleeves. So this is proverbial sleeve so to speak and says tell you what Just march around the city playing the instruments in the light Do that. Sometimes the wall is going to come down who would believe that? Well, they did And god responded God made a promise and god delivered Back in deuteronomy 12 god had said this he says when you cross over the jordan and dwell in the land Which lord your god's giving you to inherit and he gives you rest from all your enemies all around so that you dwell in safely Then there will be the place with lord God your god chooses to make his name abide in deuteronomy 12 written during the time of moses long time before solomon God says this is going to be a future you're going to have a place and there's going to be a temple and in that temple My name will abide well again Psalms looking out at people who had anxieties about what would god do in the future and he says, please Look what he did in the past Please if you have anxiety about what the future holds if you have trouble believing Aspects of what the future the promised future to the church as a whole or use an individual, please Look at what he did in the past and see how he came through and understand. Nothing's impossible In fact god honestly a hundred percent delights in doing things you don't expect in ways that you wouldn't expect That's just the way he operates So he says here just hear the promises evaluate the promises against promises of old and understand That there is a track record that you can turn to whenever doubts strike whenever these concerns come to mind So in verses 55 and 56, this is what he's saying and he goes even further than that He says not only has god fulfilled all his promises, but not a word of them has failed It's not like he did everything in the abstract that yeah, he delivered, you know largely what he said he was going to do You're at a contractor If a contractor is going to build a house or you know Put up a shed or doing a number of different things and they go out They start to work on the thing and so forth and then when you're done you look and you say well He did largely what he said he was going to do. I mean, I don't love everything It's not all perfect, but it largely honored what he said That's the way most contracts with most individuals and everything work largely they're fulfilled Solomon says the contract the covenant the promises that god has made. It's not just that he fulfilled them largely He fulfilled them to the letter not a word had failed of all the impossible things That god told his people to expect unbroken track record. Let's look at verses 57 through 60 verse 57 And so may the lord our god Be with us as he was with our fathers May the lord god who did all that stuff long time ago to people that generations earlier May he do to us as he is done with them May he not leave us nor forsake us that he may incline our hearts to himself to walk in his ways to keep his commandments And statutes and judgments that he commanded to our fathers and made these words of mine with which i've made supplication before the lord Be near the lord our god day and night that he may maintain the cause of a servant and the cause of his people israel As each day may require god is the god of every day of your life Not just god of this whole thing or god of when you're finally saved and on the other side. He's god now Whatever you're doing today this week He is the god of this day verse 60 that all the peoples of the earth may know that there is a lord That the lord is god and there is no other All right. Let me ask you a different question. I asked one earlier. Let me ask you something different Have you ever had someone that you've loved or trusted? Leave you Have you ever had someone that you've loved or trusted leave you volitionally Have you had someone that you've loved or trusted walk away from you or reject you Neglect you although you needed them There's few heartaches for those who can relate to that There's few heartaches as great as being left by those that we love It can be just heart -rending to have someone's presence in your life there for a season and then in a different season in your Life when you desperately need them They're not there If you've experienced that You may find that even months or years later that the hole hasn't gone away It still hurts With that said notice what solomon said in verses 57 through 60 He said may the lord our god Be with us as with our fathers. May he not leave us or ever forsake us You know the gods of the pagans disappeared at times They went off and did their own thing, which is why elijah mocked bale and the others perhaps your god is sleepy We need to wake him up is what he told on mount karma what he told the prophets of bale The pagans had gods that could go away for a season the greek same deal That gods would be busy up on mount olympus, maybe they'd care for you one day maybe they wouldn't But here solomon tells his people and god tells us That he's with us just as he was with our fathers just as he was with moses Whether you're here your name is bob or stew or frank or fran God's with you. God's with you every bit as much as he was with moses That's an encouraging thought because We don't feel like moses most of the time But his presence is with us his presence is with our church And so solomon says, you know if we understand that and we cleave to him our future is bright It's so bright because the right man is on our side the man king. Jesus The right man is on our side, you know, even if the whole world should turn against you Which given enough time it might Even the whole world should turn against you. God won't even if every other promise is broken If even if every loyal friend breaks ranks with you in the time that they come god won't And when you're hurting in that midnight hour when you feel all alone, he says i'm with you And we got this together I'm with you and we got this. All right, let's look at our last verse verse 61 our last verse So now he's encouraging the people about how to respond to these promises and god's presence and the like verse 61 He tells the people and you can imagine his hands that he says it he says let your heart therefore Be loyal to lord our god Let your heart therefore be loyal to lord our god to walk in his statutes and keep his commandments as it is this day This is a benediction of sorts it's a blessing It's also an exhortation And in this exhortation king solomon tells people what he told them previously He says if we believe all this to be true if we believe there is a god in heaven if we believe that he loves us If we believe he's told us how to live Then the evidence of that belief is not simply what we profess with our mouth the israelis profess things all the time That wasn't their problem It's what they did with it how they acted how they responded Remember, we've talked about the difference between orthodoxy and orthopraxy orthodoxy is the easy part orthodoxy is just accepting propositional theological truth And saying amen. Amen what's harder is going out those doors and acting accordingly So solomon he puts his hands out and says hey Aaa Be careful to be loyal to our god and to keep his statutes his laws and his judgments Let me ask you do you remember you remember what your first car was? I got in trouble. I talked about cars recently What was it pinto? Was that what it was something like that? I got in trouble I called out a car and someone said that was my car. So i'm not gonna do that I'll call out my first car. My first car was a brown mazda b2000 pickup Man alive they were a lot smaller and they're making pickups these days pickups these days or something else You know, I had this little thing going down the road and like so I had this mazda b2000 pickup now I did love the car. It was my first car So of course, I loved it and I waxed it and polished it and shined it and like at first Then I went to college and still had the car and I had other priorities or other things that interested me other pursuits for my time and suddenly it wasn't even just a lack of washing the car Other things like I don't know oil changes just things that you just should do, you know, the common sense stuff I was like nah this This car hasn't let me down before right? I mean, I didn't give it an oil change in the last month So it probably doesn't need this one month. Well kick that forward a while. What happens i'll tell you what happens It ends up with me on i -5 north of eugene oregon on the side of the road having Say flipped a rod. I'm those you know cars better. I don't know what happened bruised a rod broke a rod Whatever there was a rod involved and it stopped working And so the car stopped working and it never drove again. That was it I kissed a goodbye it went on a tow truck and it was and it was gone We tend to prioritize the things that are important to us It's easy to ascend to propositional truth when it's right in front of us the people there at that time With the new temple and the hurrahs and you know the celebrations and the dinner on the grounds They were having back in this day. The people were excited. It wasn't hard to get them excited It wasn't hard for them to get amen and all that the hard part was in nurturing and caring For that which god entrusted to them down the road and for prioritizing the same things through their actions that they prioritize with their lips Right here and the sad thing was that they wouldn't When I say this is the high point of israel's history up to this point i've been it What does that imply? It implies that things got worse Which they did God made a promise I got you I got you in your future And they had made promises to the differences. They didn't keep theirs And so they backslid in the most egregious of ways to the point to the sad point as we studied in our review of ezekiel Last year whenever it was To the sad point that the same god who came to dwell in this temple in first kings chapter 8 would leave it and ezekiel 10 He would depart the temple leave it as ikabat empty of his glory There's things that have been trusted to matters of faith if you're a parent if you're a father There's things that have been entrusted to you to look out after your loved ones to nurture their faith To take care of their faith to take care of your own faith so that it doesn't get broken down on the side of the road When life circumstances throw you a curveball, which is inevitable There's bins in the road. You can't see coming So The way that we grow and sustain our faith is by immersing ourselves in the faith by doing what god has Said all right before we wrap up or in closing here I want you to notice at the very end of verse 61 He says something interesting and at first when I looked at this text a few years ago I missed it, but I don't want to miss it today verse 61 He said let your heart therefore be loyal to the lord our god to walk in the statutes and keep his commandments And then he adds these four words as at this day Solomon knew the people's history He wanted them to have that particular day emblazoned on their mind to do that Which they had promised to do that day in the time yet to come and yet As we said just a moment ago They wouldn't Roughly 400 years later after this text That day would be a distant memory and they would have forgotten it 400 years later there would be no more cheering There would only be what we call lamentation There would only be disaster Roughly 400 years later as we said before god's glory would depart the babylonians would show up. That's a bad trade They gave up the glory of god. They received the babylonians Ezekiel 10 says this the glory lord departed from the threshold of the temple and stood over the cherubim and the cherubim mounted up from the earth in his sight Same temple look Can that happen to a church to a denomination a nation? Yes, yes, and yes It can happen if we don't keep the first things first It can happen if we don't prioritize that which we're called to prioritize It can happen if we stop trusting god and start trusting ourselves It can happen if we ignore what god has said in his word And start coming up with our own precepts and following the wills and wants of our own hearts In this passage that we've read today Solomon god through psalm is reminding the people that hey, there's some intentionality i've made you a promise and yet and yet There is a degree of intentionality on your part That your future is going to be heavily predicated upon. What will it be? What will it be are you going to be zealous to do the very things that you promised me on First kings 8 that you promised you say you're going to do you say amen. Amen. Are you going to do that? You won't if you're not intentional about it and in time In time the temple might be empty and in time churches or denominations can follow suit and if you don't think that's possible Go to europe Go to new england Just see places that once not that long ago resonated that once With at least a cultural religiosity And all likelihood of something far stronger now be turned to just empty husks of what they once were If it could happen in israel if it could happen in europe if it happened to england it could happen in the bible belt Our responsibility Is to cling to that which god has delivered us once for all through the saints And to champion no matter what the world tells us no matter what's going on in the culture around us Let the culture go to the wind This is what we're called to adhere to and salman put it before the people in an old testament context Said do this and live The same is true for us Let's pray Join, dr. Toby holt and dr.

THE EMBC NETWORK
A highlight from Erase PTSD Now! Dual Sympathetic Reset Procedure (DSRP) Removes Chronic Pain, Anxiety, & PTSD To The Pre-Trauma State - Dr. Eugene Lipov & Jamie Mustard
"All right, I'm here with Dr. Eugene Lipov and Jamie Mustard, best -selling authors of The Invisible Machine, the startling truth about trauma and scientific breakthrough. I'm sorry, a scientific breakthrough that can transform your life. Both pioneers in the area of dual sympathetic reset procedure. Guys, welcome to the show. Thanks for having us. Yeah, thank you so much for having us on. It's a pleasure to be here. Now, Dr. Lipov, I just finished your book just the other night, and I was just blown away at really how you kind of stumbled upon this procedure that's been going on since the early 1920s, but now it's like been revitalized. It seems like there's like this new resurgence of it, the Renaissance, if you will, of doing it again, and you're like the pioneer really spearheading that, and it just always blows me away. Like, that's great, but how did you get here? How did you get started and learn about this procedure being an anesthesiologist, I believe? I, thank you. Well, first of all, yes, I am definitely an anesthesiologist, for sure. Well, I would say it's not a resurgence. I think it's repurposing. What's new about it is we're repurposing the procedure for mental health. So typically anesthesiologists like, such as myself, who specialize in pain medicine, take care of pain medicine. So the history of the procedure was the first time Stelling -Ingdon block was ever done. That's one level injection here, 1926 for asthma. Since - What were they noticing, sorry to cut you off, but what were they noticing back in the 1920s that if you do a Stelling -Ingdon block here, and that's when you're pointing to the neck, for the people that are just listening to the audio, they may not be able to see, you're kind of pointing to the neck area. Are you, is that, would that be what I think is in the book is you talk about C3, the cervical spine, and C6 a lot. Is that kind of what you're talking about? And what was it doing for asthma back then? I don't even know how the correlation would be. That's a tremendous question. So, well, first of all, there are seven vertebrae in any mammal. Giraffe has seven, we have seven. So C7 is the bottom of the neck. C6 is right above it. C3 is almost up to the skull. So the standard technique was C6 or C7 Stelling -Ingdon block, one level. So they were doing it, they found that if you do an injection for asthma, it takes away asthma away. It's a really complicated reason. I actually wrote a paper on that a couple of years ago explaining a lot of the effects. It's crazy how that works, but that's outside this realm. Anyway, so we started doing it, we being anesthesiologists pain doctors. So as pain doctors, we have been doing Stelling -Ingdon blocks for arm pain, burning hand primarily since the forties. The first time I ever did the Stelling -Ingdon block was 1987 for CRPS or burning of the hand. And then, you know, I've been doing it for a number of years and then I had a patient that had hot flashes and we treated her hot flash using stellate. Actually, my brother came up with the concept because he thought, you know, hot flashes, everything is hot, burning hand, same thing. And I said - His brother's a physician, by the way, he's not a random guy that came up with the idea. He's a very smart dog. Anyway, we did the procedure and took away the hot flashes. We published and that worked well. Then Chicago Tribune came by to do a paper on me, basically saying how it's working. So they said, yes, it's working, but basically you're an incompetent hack because you don't know how, you don't know why it works, so you shouldn't be doing it. So I didn't disagree with that, shall we say. And they, what I tried to do is figure out why it worked for hot flashes. So I came across one paper from Finland where they were putting a throw card on the chest, putting the, moving the lung out of the way and clipping the nerves in the chest. And they were doing it for hand sweats. They found PTSD went away. So I wrote that paper and I thought, that's crazy how that works. I didn't, whatever. Anyway, so I looked at the anatomy. Turns chest out nerve goes to the neck nerve. From the neck it goes to the brain and that affects PTSD. So I called up my brother. I said, send me a patient's PTSD. He had one like that who was robbed at gunpoint and all type of bad things happened. Two months later, he was on his way to his psych ward. So we did an injection on the neck and his PTSD went away. That led to my first publication in 2008 and then that led to people following my work in Walter Reed, the Navy. I gave testimony in front of Congress and off we went. And then as we progressed, I'll give you more information later, but we found that when you do an injection two levels, C6 and C3, that's called DSR, dual sympathetic reset, because we're doing two levels inside of one that seems to be more effective. So that's our current latest and the greatest technique. Yeah, so amazing. I follow, you guys know my background and just I'm into this health. I'm into the biohacking. I understand a lot of this. And until reading your book, I never heard a DSR. And so I'm just so grateful that you are putting this out there so that more people in the world can learn. And I'm hoping that this podcast and many others will help promote it because it just, after reading your book, there's just so much transformation that can be done as you know, through just the PTSD or PTSD is referred to the book, the injury, because that's what it really is. Not a disorder for most people. It's an injury. And guess what? When you change the input that the body receives, the body can heal. It just needs the right input. And that's what you guys are doing. So yeah, so grateful. Can I tell about the PTSD thing, where that came from? Please. So there is an amazing psychiatrist out there. Thankfully, he's still alive, Frank Uggberg. He was number two man for NIMH, which is National Institute of Mental Health. He was part of the terminology development in 1980 for PTSD. So he came up with the term Stockholm syndrome. You may have heard of that. That's his terminology. So in 19, I think 2005 or 2006, he started to propagate this concept, PTSI, post -traumatic stress injury. Basically, if there is an emotional trauma, not physical trauma, no blow to the head, the brain changes. And we know that based on advanced scanners, such as PET scan and FMR, things like that. So when somebody says PTSD is invisible wound, my answer is you have the wrong scanner. If you have the right scanner, you'll be able to see it. Let me, can I comment on that? About Frank Uggberg, he coined the terms post -traumatic stress injury because post trauma creates a biological change in the body. Dr. Lipov in the early 2000s figured out a way to reset the body to the pre -trauma state in a simple outpatient procedure over one to two days. In 1970, Mr. Ockberg wrote a book with a bunch of Stanford scientists called Violence and the Struggle for Existence. Coretta Scott King did the forward to that book because it was two years after Martin Luther King was assassinated. And there's a chapter in that book called Biology and Aggression. And one of the things that they're proposing in that book, this is 50 years ago, is that we know that trauma is biological. And the reason we know is because if you traumatize an animal, a cat, a goat, a sheep, any animal, okay, it changes. It either gets very hostile or very timid. It's not, doesn't have a disorder. We've changed its biology. And, but they just didn't know how. So when, but Dr. Lipov with his dual sympathetic reset, he basically 35 years later, found that mechanism of what is causing that change towards timidity or aggression from trauma and the symptoms that make one act that way. And he's able to reset it in a simple outpatient procedure without drugs that is 85 to 90 % effective in the relief of the worst symptoms of post -traumatic stress. It's amazing. Jamie, and actually on your note, I was just thinking, and I can't remember if this, I've read so many books now, I'm getting them all mixed up, but I think maybe in the book you guys talk about, speaking of animals, if a duck or an animal gets stressed, right, they will shake, they shake because with the shaking actually pushes that stress out of the body. And I can't remember if it was your book or not, but they were talking about like, but if a duck or whatever they get in a fight, they'll just, they'll shake it off. And then they come right back into their clan or wherever they're at, and it's gone. They're back into it. But so I was just thinking about the whole biology, but you're right. We all think of this psychology, it's a psychological issue, it's a mental disorder. No, there's visible trauma, as you said, from Dr. Amen talking about spec scans and FMRIs and all those kinds of things. Yeah, I mean, you can see it on, I'll say this in my layman's terms, and then you can fix me. What Dr. Lipov is talking about is if you were using an FMR scan on somebody that has post -traumatic stress symptoms, feels it in their body, you would see overactivity in their amygdala, and you might see decreased blood flow to their frontal cortex, okay? So he goes in, he does this injection. It's the same $2 amount of anesthesia that goes into an epidural. So the pharmaceutical companies will never back it because you don't need to be dependent after you do this, right? And he basically, it's like rebooting a computer. He turns off the sympathetic nervous system with this anesthesia. It reboots 15 minutes later. It takes a few hours for it to wear off the day, but it really reboots about 15 minutes later. And when it comes back online, it comes back online at baseline, pre -trauma state. So what's really important about what you said earlier, Joel, about when you would talk about post -traumatic stress disorder or mental illness, is that's not what's going on when you see a traumatized person. When you see a traumatized person, you have a person with a broken leg you can't see. It is a physiological injury that we can now see and treat. And calling it a disorder or calling it mental illness, A, it's scientifically false, it's not true, and B, it's incredibly stigmatizing and it doesn't open up an opportunity for progress or fixing it. I believe that Dr. Lipov's innovation, he may, he'll find this incredibly, he's humble, but I think it is the most important medical innovation since the discovery of penicillin in 1928. In terms of the numbers, far more outweighs, if you look at how many people a year were saved by the polio vaccine in terms of lives lost, you might look at 50 ,000 people a year. If you look at people that do, even from the mildest forms of post -traumatic stress to suicidal ideation, you really, when we could talk about what the symptoms are, people that do this do not end up committing suicide. You know, the amount of lives saved from lack of suicide, less suicides alone, let alone all the various physical disease that's caused by the sympathetic nervous system being stuck in front of flight, the amount of lives saved by Dr. Lipov's innovation profoundly dwarfs even the polio vaccine. Well, so, hold on. So now I have to speak kind of medical science, right? I mean, that's essentially true. We don't have, I don't have, you know, if somebody asked me, it's like, show me the evidence, show me the evidence of success rates. So success rates are 80 to 90 % is about right.

The Eric Metaxas Show
A highlight from John Zmirak (Encore)
"Folks, welcome to the Eric Metaxas 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 Metaxas show. I shouldn't tell you this, but Eric hired someone who sounds just like him to host today's show. But since I'm the announcer, they told me, so I'm telling you, don't be fooled. The real Eric's in jail. Hey there, folks, welcome to the program I have as my guest this week and every week, the great John's Mirack, John's Mirack. Thanks for everything you write and for being a regular guest. The only regular guest that I have on this program, certainly the only guest that I have every week. You've written an article. Most of your stuff appears at the stream stream dot org. And I say over and over and over again, homework for people who listen to this program. You need to go to stream dot org, print out John's articles, leave them around the food court at the mall, get your homeschool kids to read them, send them. And I'm quite serious. You need to send these articles to people, post them on social media, because they're they're not just vital information on how to process what's happening to us in this country and around the world. But they are usually extremely well -written, always extremely well -written and often brilliantly funny. John, you wrote an article. I couldn't wait to talk to you about this. The title of it is Trump and legal team indicted for witchcraft, heresy and Sabbath breaking. A lot of us are struggling to not often brought in federal court. These are usually state charges. Thank you. Thank you for your sarcasm. It's such a level of sarcasm that only dogs can hear it. It is really kind of an amazing level of sarcasm. But again, I mean, I've talked about this earlier in the week. What they're doing to Trump, ladies and gentlemen. Ought to be sobering for everybody. Naomi Wolf, who is no fan of Donald Trump, wrote a piece on her sub stack that I posted on Twitter. And by the way, I hope you follow me on Twitter or I hope you're on Twitter just to follow me because I'm reposting John's articles and a lot of other stuff that you're not going to see anywhere else. But she wrote an article very, very wisely saying, listen, you don't need to be a fan of Donald Trump. What they're doing to him ought to scare you because it is unprecedented and it is eroding what liberties we have in this nation. So it's hard for a lot of us to process that this could happen in America. So, John, thank you for taking on the subject in your article. It's hard to know where to attack this. But first, let me tell you, stuff like this has happened in America before President Woodrow Wilson imprisoned Eugene Debs, the leading critic of American involvement in World War One, put him in prison for years for violating the Sedition Act. He languished in prison for years as if he were a German spy for simply saying he didn't think Americans should be drafted to go fight in World War One, which Woodrow Wilson had run for president, promising to keep us out of. So this kind of abuse has happened before. And no surprise, under a Democrat president who was called a progressive. Well, let's be clear that as evil as that is, as evil as that was and as comforting as it is to think that we have been there before, the idea that they're doing this to a man that was at least once elected by the American voter to lead the country that was probably elected twice and is beloved by scores of millions in this country. It is a chilling thing that things have become so politicized that that they would do this. And and, you know, the charges, I mean, you're mocking it in your article at Stream .org by saying he's indicted for witchcraft, heresy and Sabbath breaking. But it might as well be that. Now, let's get into that, OK? First, I want to ask a question and see if you have an answer to this. When Kamala Harris went on television and said that the George Floyd riots wouldn't stop and she thought they shouldn't stop. And when she put a bail for people arrested for arson in those riots, why was she not charged by a federal prosecutor for insurrection? inciting There's there's an answer. Do you know what the answer is? Eric Lancer, she's a light skinned pseudo black woman. No, no. The First Amendment to the Constitution. Oh, oh, the First Amendment. I forgot that that's still in effect. I'm sorry, John. Yes, well, I take back my previous answer. Yeah, well, it still applies to Democrats. That's the point of a narco tyranny. A narco tyranny is that the whole complex of constitutional and civil rights exists if you're on the side of the people in power. And we have all sorts of laws that can be minutely applied and used to prosecute people. But they will not be used if you're allied to the people in power. They will be used if you oppose the people. Excuse me. Let me let me clarify.

The Eric Metaxas Show
A highlight from John Zmirak
"Folks, welcome to The Eric Metaxas 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 Metaxas Show. I shouldn't tell you this, but Eric hired someone who sounds just like him to host today's show. But since I'm the announcer, they told me, so I'm telling you, don't be fooled. The real Eric's in jail. Hey there, folks, welcome to the program I have as my guest this week and every week, the great John Zmiraq, John Zmiraq. Thanks for everything you write and for being a regular guest. The only regular guest that I have on this program, certainly the only guest that I have every week. You've written an article. Most of your stuff appears at the stream stream dot org. And I say over and over and over again, homework for people who listen to this program. You need to go to stream dot org, print out John's articles, leave them around the food court at the mall, get your homeschool kids to read them, send them. And I'm quite serious. You need to send these articles to people, post them on social media because they're they're not just vital information on how to process what's happening to us in this country and around the world. But they are usually extremely well -written, always extremely well -written and often brilliantly funny. John, you wrote an article. I couldn't wait to talk to you about this. The title of it is Trump and legal team indicted for witchcraft, heresy and Sabbath breaking. A lot of us are struggling, but not often brought in federal court. These are usually state charges. Thank you. Thank you for your sarcasm. It's such a level of sarcasm that only dogs can hear it. It is really kind of an amazing level of sarcasm. But again, I mean, I've talked about this earlier in the week. What they're doing to Trump, ladies and gentlemen, ought to be sobering for everybody. Naomi Wolf, who is no fan of Donald Trump, wrote a piece on her sub stack that I posted on Twitter. And by the way, I hope you follow me on Twitter or I hope you're on Twitter just to follow me because I'm reposting John's articles and a lot of other stuff that you're not going to see anywhere else. But she wrote an article very, very wisely saying, listen, you don't need to be a fan of Donald Trump. What they're doing to him ought to scare you because it is unprecedented and it is eroding what liberties we have in this nation. So it's it's it's hard for a lot of us to process that this could happen in America. So, John, thank you for taking on the subject in your article. It's hard to know where to attack this. But first, let me tell you, stuff like this has happened in America before. President Woodrow Wilson imprisoned Eugene Debs, the leading critic of American involvement in World War One, put him in prison for years for violating the Sedition Act. He languished in prison for years as if he were a German spy for simply saying he didn't think Americans should be drafted to go fight in World War One, which Woodrow Wilson had run for president promising to keep us out of. So this kind of abuse has happened before. And no surprise under a Democrat president who was called a progressive. Well, let's be clear that as evil as that is, as evil as that was and as comforting as it is to think that we have been there before. The idea that they're doing this to a man that was at least once elected by the American voter to lead the country and that was probably elected twice and is beloved by scores of millions in this country. It is a chilling thing that things have become so politicized that that they would do this. And and, you know, the charges, I mean, you're mocking it in your article at Stream .org by saying he's indicted for witchcraft, heresy and Sabbath breaking. But what it might as well be that, you know, let's get into that, OK? First, I want to ask a question and see if you have an answer to this. When Kamala Harris went on television and said that the George Floyd riots wouldn't stop and she thought they shouldn't stop. And when she put a bail for people arrested for arson in those riots, why was she not charged by a federal prosecutor for inciting insurrection? There's there's an answer. Do you know what the answer is, Eric? Um, she's a she's a light skinned pseudo black woman. Oh, no, no. The First Amendment to the Constitution. Oh, oh, the First Amendment. I forgot that that's still in effect. I'm sorry, John. Yes, well, I take back my previous answer. Yeah, well, it still applies to Democrats. That's the point of a narco tyranny. A narco tyranny is that the whole complex of constitutional and civil rights exists you're if on the side of the people in power. And we have all sorts of laws that can be minutely applied and used to prosecute people. But they will not be used if you're allied to the people in power. They will be used if you oppose the people. Excuse me. Let me let me clarify. It it doesn't have to do with the color of a person's skin, because we know how the left hates Clarence Thomas. Right. And how they hate others. In other words, it has to do with what's in your mind. It has to do with what you believe. And if your beliefs are not consonant with what they believe, they think of you as an enemy and they will come after you. And that's basically why they're going after Donald. So it is it really is the ideology of the mafia, the ideology of a of a Latin American drug cartel. If you are on our side, we will protect you. We'll go a long way to protect you like they protected Jesse Smollett. At some point, we might throw you under the bus like Michael Avenatti, because we don't need you anymore. But you can get away with a lot. If you're doing it on behalf of the Biden regime and if you're doing it on behalf of the deep state on the other, you can burn down cities. The rioters who attacked various cities across America are winning legal judgments against the police because they rough them up a little trying to get them to stop burning the city down. Meanwhile, they tried to send Kyle Rittenhouse to prison for life or first degree murder for defending himself. They hounded Jake Gardner, an American combat hero, to suicide for defending himself and his elderly father from rioters attacking their business.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
Jake Tapper's "All the Demons Are Here" Is Flying Off Shelves
"Jake Tapper's got a brand new thriller out. This is it. All the demons are here. Welcome back, Jake. Good to have you back on the Hugh Hewitt Show. Congratulations. Another great thriller. Thank you so much, Hugh. It's great to be back. It is a very good read. It's also, I think, a very provocative metaphor. Am I right about that latter part? I think it's fair to say. Yeah, there are a couple of metaphors in there that are resonant to today's politics and today's news media situation, 100%. Even though the novel takes place in 1977, I played with some of the characters there and invented others to make it relevant to today. 1977 is my sweet spot, Jake. You're too young, but I lived that. I was a senior in college in 1977 and 78, so I lived all this stuff, including the blackout. And you got it pitch perfect. Who was your research advisor on 1977? Because you're too young. Well, I was eight, so I don't, it's true, I don't remember much. I remember The Gas Lines and Jimmy Carter and I remember Elvis dying, which was very sad to me because I was an Elvis fan. But as with all these books, you know, the first one, The Hellfire Club in 1954 and the second one, The Devil May Dance in 1962, I just dove into research from the time and, you know, Life Book of the Year, People Book of the, you know, Magazine of the Year, and read a lot and watched a lot of documentaries. Evel Knievel is a big character in the book, as you know. I watched a great documentary that Johnny Knoxville produced called Being Evil. Watched another great documentary about Elvis Presley called The King by Eugene Jarecki. And thankfully, 77 is recent enough that there's a lot of, there's a lot of documentary evidence and, you know, newspaper reports and stuff that's very accessible. And it was really fun. You know, my memory of 1977 is probably a lot lamer than your memory of 1977 because mine was just, you know, in my backyard. And I didn't know about the wild, you know, I knew of disco music, but I didn't know how wild Studio 54 was. I, you know, I knew, well, I didn't know about Summer of Sam and the Son of Sam Murders. My parents hid that from me. So it was a rediscovery of an era for me and it really was a very bizarre

Mark Levin
Eugene Robinson Pins Information Gap Issue on Right-Wing Media
"God, is this guy a fool? He's a menace miscreant malcontent. Is he an idiot or just a plain imbecile? Go ahead. Maybe they happened now. It's going to be that then that in fact they did never happen. It's like, what never happened? Go ahead. First timeline. And how can we? Thanks for nothing. You just blew 90 seconds of your stupidity. Now we'll never get those 90 seconds back. Jen Psaki is on the morning Shmo show. Now Jen Psaki is a perfect example of what I wrote about in on freedom of the press. Here she is a Democrat party hack, low IQ, stupidity on display. You look up stupidity in old an Webster dictionary and there she be. But there she is on the SLSD. Jen Psaki on the morning Shmo. If that's not a freak show, I don't know what is. Go. You know what we saw with Hunter appearing at the state dinner was in my suspicion was the president, his son wanted to come, so his son's going to come to the dinner. Was that optically easier for the White House and the White House communications team?

THE EMBC NETWORK
"eugene" Discussed on THE EMBC NETWORK

Mark Levin
What Does the Espionage Act Actually Entail?
"Aircraft for photographing defense installations section publication 797 and sale of photographs of defense installations section 798 publication and sale photographs of defense installations section 798 disclosure of classified information section section 798 temporary extension of 794 section 799 violation of regulations the National restoration NASA this was never intended to apply to a president or an ex president which is why it's never been applied to a president or an ex -president the espionage act has been in existence since 1917 it was Woodrow Wilson Woodrow Wilson used it to prosecute opponents World of War one including Eugene Debs who was a socialist candidate for president Wilson had him put in prison and he ran for president from prison and he two thousand people it's been amended since then but in its hundred and sixteen year history and it's been amended since then but in its hundred and sixteen year history check that hundred and six year history it's uh... it's uh... never been used against a president until

AP News Radio
7 dead in vehicle crash on Interstate 5 in Oregon
"Police are looking into a deadly crash in Oregon. 7 people died and others were hurt in a highway crash near Albany Oregon Thursday afternoon, the temporarily closed down part of interstate 5 between Eugene and Salem, Oregon state police say the cause of the crash is under investigation. From video and witnesses, it appears a passenger van was badly crushed between two semi trucks, the Albany Democrat Herald reported bodies covered in plastic could be seen in a nearby field as life flights departed, and a county medical examiner and paramedics worked the scene. It's heart wrenching. Motorists feel priced, talked to KATU TV. A lot of the officers, like the police, they see a lot of motion, so you know if something was really wrong. I'm Jennifer King

Dennis Prager Podcasts
UCLA Professor Debunks Gun Ownership Myth
"I'd like you to hear UCLA Professor of law Eugene woloch. One of the, I guess, few none leftists teaching at UCLA law. A video that he made for PragerU is gun ownership aright. It's important to hear. Here we go. Does an American citizen have a constitutional right to own a gun? Here's what the Second Amendment says. A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. Now at once seemed to me like that language only protected state militias and not individuals. Indeed, this is the view held by the four dissenting Supreme Court Justices, and the 2008 case of District of Columbia versus Heller, a landmark case dealing with gun ownership. But the more research I did, the more I came to realize that my initial view was mistaken, and that the founders were in fact securing an individual right.

AP News Radio
China says it will send peace envoy to Ukraine
"Chinese state media says president Xi Jinping has talked with Ukrainian president volodymyr zelensky by phone. Eugene deputy director of the department of Eurasia in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs tells a news briefing not long ago, Xi Jinping had a phone conversation with president zelensky as requested. The calls along anticipated conversation, after Beijing said it wanted to act as a peace media. Jin continues. China will send a special representatives of the government of Eurasian affairs to Ukraine and other countries and have in depth communication with all parties on the political settlement of the crisis. China has tried to appear neutral in the war, but refused to criticize Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. I'm Charles De Ledesma

The Officer Tatum Show
"Sexual Fantasy" School Assignment in Oregon Sparks Parent Backlash
"There was a video that I saw of this father, let me just say this. For everybody that's listening. Let's put this in perspective real quick. If you have a friend, a family member, or someone who's saying, they're not sexualizing kids in school, they're not, they don't have books in school where it's literally pornography, exposed to your children. The CRT isn't being taught in school, just know that that person is saying that isn't a complete idiot. And then let me give you an example of one scenario and we don't have to clip because it's too much cussing in it and other stuff that's in that clip. So we may not be able to show it on the radio. But I was watching the dead go off. It's a high school called Churchill high school in Eugene, Oregon. I was watching him go off. And he had made mention that the teacher had an assignment, and in the assignment he wanted the kids in the classroom to write on a piece of paper, their sexual fantasy. And what person that they wanted to do it with and right their initials.

Your Daily Prayer
A Prayer for Endurance
"We humans want answers given problem solved and pain ended. And that's not a bad thing. But sometimes these take time, and we don't like the waiting, we all experience trials and sometimes for reasons and links of time, we may never fully understand this side of heaven. Prayer, therefore, is essential to endurance because it allows the peace of God to surpass our understanding and for our hearts and minds to be protected in Christ Jesus as it says in philippians for 7. Endurance involves time and process. It is hard work, but good work, if in Christ, we let it have full effect. It is producing in us faith and character that withstand the wear and tear of life. There isn't a quick fix or alternate route to get from point a to point B in these matters. We can't go around it or skip steps we must simply persevere our way through it. However, when we let God work in our hearts along the way, we don't arrive at point B the same person we were at point a. We will arrive changed with our faith strengthened. We arrive perhaps looking a little more light Jesus. God wants to make us mature and complete, lacking nothing. He wants to grow and shape us to be like his son. He loves us so much that he doesn't want us to settle for immaturity or incompleteness. Jesus says and John 1633, you will have suffering in this world, but be courageous, I have overcome the world. Thanks, be to God, that while I don't always understand the method, I can trust the end result in Christ. We can endure all things because Jesus has overcome all things. Let's pray. Father God, you know my heart today and how I am struggling to endure one more moment of this adversity. It feels hard to believe you have good in store for me, but I trust that you are working all things for my good and your glory, strengthen me today. Grow and mature me so that I Latin nothing in my faith, help me persevere, bade me in your love and peace with the suffering waiting and lack of control is hard to endure. Remind me often that Eugene's have already overcome the world, including the struggle of mine. I don't want to resist or reject your work any longer, flood my heart today with trust and peace as I lean in and let you work in my life through the situation in Jesus name, amen.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
James Rosen on His New Biography of Justice Scalia
"Welcome back, America. This is a rare triple play for the YouTube show. The grand old pod will be devoted this interview. Highly concentrated Hugh podcast will be devoted to this interview and it's going to play on Thursday morning in the first hour because I want everyone to listen to this show to go out and get this book, Scalia rise to greatness, 1936 to 1986 because it's a rollicking grand read. It's not because James Rosen is a friend of me and then of the show and he is. It's not because I love the strong man. It's because I have long admired justice Scalia and I doubted that we would get a good book about him for a long time, but James Rosen is surprised me. Good morning, James. Welcome, congratulations. This is a fabulous read. Thank you Hugh for everything that's so kind of you to say and I'm grateful to be back with you. Well, let's get right to my number one burning question. What happened to justice Scalia's father's library? The volumes in the basement of the building that had like 5 different languages and I think it was Eugene Scalia, maybe it was father Paul went in with him when his father died. What did they do with all those books? That's a great question. I don't know the ultimate disposition of Salvador Eugene Salvatore Eugene Scully is library. There is the scene in the book where father Paul, accompanies his father Antonin Scalia to the home of Antonin Scalia's father after his death to dispose of this extraordinary library that the old man had and father Paul Scalia who was interviewed for this book told me that what was most remarkable about all of those books arrayed before them was that they were divided not by subject matter or by author, but by language. That's

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Eugene Robinson: Tucker Carlson's J6 Reporting Is 'Disgusting'
"Well, here's Eugene Robinson, one of the superstars of The Washington Post on MSNBC or MSNBC last night with chuck Todd. I generally don't like a lot of news covering news. News people could be because they were creating this fighting. We had a huge foot you can't you can't say with Tucker Carlson is doing what you do. I mean, it's politics. It's not news. It's propaganda. And so it's something that you have to cover. And it's shameful. It's disgusting and it's dangerous. Shameful and disgusting and dangerous. To show the American people video that evidently, the QAnon shaman's own lawyers weren't given access to. Which is going to be really interesting in a court of law.

Entrepreneur on FIRE
"eugene" Discussed on Entrepreneur on FIRE
"Eugene, we're back and I think you did a fantastic job of explaining a lot of things when it comes to private money lending. The story that took you there, all the ways that you kind of run your business around it, how you got it to where it is today. But I want to really understand the how, how does this provide you a stable income right now? What we do on the private manual side, I have investors that help me fund the deals that are coming across my desk. And I pay my investors 10% APR on their money. So on the front end, I charge a little bit more. To my client. So for example, on the front end, we charge maybe between those two 14% and maybe a few points up front. At the closing and we can give it a difference. So we pay to ourselves maybe two to 4%. And we give 10% to our investors. And this way, we help both buyers. We help our clients to get along. And we help our investors to earn money on their money. Now, one thing that I was really interested in when we were kind of going over what we're going to chat about today is you've actually created a list of ten things that you consistently work on to keep your dream alive. Let's go over those things. Ten things that they're going to work on to keep my dream alive. So number one, exercising. I like keeping my brain about the healthy through exercise and working out and doing self defense training. Number two, they lives. Well, I work it down, they lives into a category. There are old beliefs and new beliefs. So all the leaves are here's what I mean by that. There are so many beliefs that got placed in our brains since we were kids. That they put false perceptions of what is possible and what's not. And I think it's really important to create a new belief system.

Entrepreneur on FIRE
"eugene" Discussed on Entrepreneur on FIRE
"And started building relationships with people in the real estate space. And also found myself doing fixed eclipse, private vitamin. And in the private manual space, I was jokingly calling myself the bank. And after seeing more and more opportunities coming across my desk, I thought to myself, well, why not to open and become the bank? And about 5 months ago, due to lots of playoffs in the tech industry, like you mentioned there there. I found myself out of the job and decided to devote time to growing the private monument and business that it was a portfolio. Fire nation, this is the evolution of an entrepreneur that you're hearing right now that moves into the private money lending space. And I think I want to focus on that next Eugene. What exactly is private money lending? And let's talk about the role that it plays in your world today. Yeah, absolutely. So private manual engine, it's not your traditional bank where you go to get a loan private money and private money group of people or individual. That can lend you money at a higher percent rate than a traditional bank. When I started doing private money was in business myself, I didn't know a whole lot of the few simple things. That I was exposed to when I was doing transactions with the bank on the other side. So technically, I had only a bank clients perspective. So if you're a guy so thinking about getting into private money, I was probably 5 things with your command doing. And I'd say there are a bit obvious, but necessary. So number one is education. Number two is product number three clients. Number four, capital and number 5 education. So as you notice, I put education at the beginning and at the end. After I get a few engine deals, I found that there were some gaps in my notes and I started educating myself more to feel that to fill those gaps. So it becomes like an infinite loop, right? In a sense, where you learn, take action, you learn again, and you take action. And so on and so on. And probably the question that fire nation may be asking is this, okay, I mean, this is great Eugene. But how would you

Entrepreneur on FIRE
"eugene" Discussed on Entrepreneur on FIRE
"Eugene say what's up to fire nation and share something that you believe about becoming successful that most people disagree with. My name is Eugene, glad to be here. I think that's a great question. I strongly believe in a lot of attraction. You know, it's not really a scientific law. It's more like a philosophy. That suggests that your thoughts in bacterial reality. And what you're focused on is what you attract into your life. Like in other words, our body is like a massive and vibration specific frequency, right? And in order to change the vibration, we are in, we need to change the paradigm and paradigm is like an information that lives inside our subconscious mind that consists of different habits that we picked up from a moment that we were born. So once we change the paradigm, we change the vibration, we are in, and frequency we operate in, and we can attract the people that we want to attract the success, happiness and wealth. And actually, so one of the ways to one of the ways to use a lower attraction to achieve your goals and through journaling through journaling is that you have for your audience that you promote. I'm a big fan of journaling of getting all those jumbled thoughts out of your head onto paper, looking at them, thinking about them, kind of giving your brain a break from having to store everything up there and get it down on paper and then again, just kind of observe and look at your words. And then maybe look back a couple of weeks ago, what you wrote and you might be like, wow, I was an interesting state of mind there. Look at that. It's like a lot of fascinating things can come from that. And fire nation. As I mentioned in the intro, we're talking about how Eugene went from engineer to marketer to a bank operator.

The RELEVANT Podcast
"eugene" Discussed on The RELEVANT Podcast
"Our nation and to make a big dent around the world. Have this belief like

The RELEVANT Podcast
"eugene" Discussed on The RELEVANT Podcast
"Come from inside the church. Most people treat it like a problem to be solved. But Paul says, singleness is good. So why don't we believe him? CE white's new book, single as the second best doesn't ignore the struggles of Christian singles. Instead, she offers encouragement and hope for living the abundant life Christ has for all believers married or not. Marriage is good, but singleness is good too. I know this firsthand. You can find single as in second best on Amazon.com. Go check it out, search it up. CE white's new book, single is in second best. Search it on Amazon. Where our guest today is Eugene Cho, he's a pastor and author and now the president and CEO of bread for the world. A Christian advocacy group seeking to address world hunger. We sat down with them to discuss the hunger crisis, what's happening, what we can do to help end it. And the importance of advocacy in that. So here's our conversation with Eugene chum. I'd love to know like, what is bread for the world doing specifically to just help with families that are in need right now? And that can't afford food. Gosh, we are showing up every single day in the halls of power where decisions are being made in we're trying to humanize hunger and poverty in our nation and around the world when there's so much chaos. We're trying to remind people there are children that are still hungry in our country, specifically there's approximately 11, 12 million children in our nation who are hungry that are around the world, there's 45 million people on the brink of starvation around the world. And so we're constantly having these conversations with members of Congress with the administration, urging for certain policies, certain legislation that we believe, not just anecdotally, but through evidence based research that we know makes a difference. Whether it's snap, which is modern day food stamp program, whether it's the child tax credit, whether it's a relief and aid for certain hunger hotspots around the world. There's numerous things that we're working on. One last thing that I'll just say and I'm sure you'll have lots of follow-up questions, but from the last time you and I chatted, you know, I was talking about this bill that we had been working on called the global malnutrition prevention and treatment act. It's not our name, so don't send me any angry emails, but the global malnutrition prevention and treatment act. We have been working on that one bill for 5 years. 5 years. And two years in passing a nutrition revolution, which would pass and then three years specifically for this bill, which prioritizes elevates the importance of nutrition alongside food security. And this one bill was signed into law, went through Congress, went through both the House and the Senate and was signed into law by the president on October 19th, 2020. And so it's this will impact tens of millions of women and children around the world. But I take a moment to highlight that you're working on things years at a time. It's a marathon. And it's because we keep showing up during these particular processes in the halls of power. That kind of gives you a glimpse of some of the things that we're doing. Yeah, I think that is such a great overview. And one thing that I have always really appreciated about bread for the world is like you said, you guys aren't you're not like falling to a political side or a political ideology. You are really focusing on the policies at hand of pursuing laws that really benefit everyone on all sides and stuff. Which I think is so important. And so appreciated. I'm sure that's also very hard to play the political game in a very bipartisan world. They're very bipartisan America. So I do not envy you for having to go to all those movies. Well, on that note, please say a prayer for me and say a prayer for bread for the world. I'm actually very serious. I think I hope that those that are listening to this podcast folks that are following relevant. We believe in prayer where people of faith are ultimate allegiance isn't the left or right. It isn't the republic in our Democrats. Our ultimate allegiance is to the kingdom of God, and we know that God has an inclination if proclivity. God has a deep heart to those who are experiencing hardship and hunger and poverty and sometimes we can make either the theological mistake that people are quote unquote for or hungry because they're lazy, we fall into these myths that exist sometimes and then certainly we are living in a very polarized world. And so as you noted, red for the world as a nonpartisan organization, we're committed to working in bipartisan ways. Not just because it is part of our identity. But we also know that when bills are supported and bipartisan ways, they have more of an possibility to endure past administrative changes. Every two or four years when there are changes in decision making all the power, what ends up happening is people stop quitting things or changing things. One of the best examples of a bipartisan bill was something called pepfar. It's a president's emergency response to the aids epidemic. And it recently celebrated its 20th anniversary. And it was incredibly controversial, 20 plus years ago. And even Christians were really timid about talking or disgusting these things, but thankfully there were pastors and Christians and churches that began to put their weight behind it, and that one build the pepfar Bill over 20 years has helped save about 22 to 24 million lives mostly in the continent of Africa. And so this is a small glimpse of what happens when people can work together. And one more thing that I'll just say, the reason why it's bipartisan and threat seeks to embody that spirit is that hunger is not a partisan issue. It impacts every community every age, children, teenagers, college students, seniors, veterans, rural, urban, regardless of one's political affiliation or inclination, hunger, impacts everyone, and that's the reason why we are urging members of Congress to do their part to empathize, to understand evidence based research. And to do what we can to end hunger in

The RELEVANT Podcast
"eugene" Discussed on The RELEVANT Podcast
"Kids are heart shaped boxes don't matter. It's gonna be all the same when they go to my stomach. You know what I'm saying? I'm gonna say pray for y'all's wives. The G or Delhi chocolate people aren't even trying either. They just get like excess flavors and throw them in a heart shaped box. This is something they couldn't sell. Exactly. Oh, it's just caramel collection. Well, maybe it's because no one wanted the little mint ones. That's why we got a whole heart shaped box of Valentine's Day. The ghirardelli just looks at it as like overstock day, you know? It sounds like they're branded. TJ Maxx of the candy industry is like all the stuff that couldn't sell in the department stores goes to TJ Maxx. So you're saying that's what the heart shaped boxes are. The same, put a little foil on there. Excess inventory. That makes sense. We couldn't sell it at Christmas, so we'll put it in a heart box and offload the inventory 6 weeks later. We had Easter coming. We've put in big egg, sell it. Just change the shape to the shape. Change the shape of the container. And don't mess with the product at all, including the rest. I see you actually are probably right, Brad. Think about that. Think about this. After Christmas, all the leftover candy, the industry is like, what do we do with this? So they manufactured the hallmark holiday Valentine's Day for 6 weeks later, because the candy's still fresh enough to sell it, and we can just repackage it, remarket it. Just put it in big plastic. That's exactly what they did. Because actual Valentine's Day is terrifying when you know what the actual origins is. Massacre is the sacrifice goats and dogs and whip women. I'm like, what in the world was they doing? And why did we make this a holiday? I like to picture like a big bore room at the top of a skyscraper Manhattan where all the bigwigs from G or deli and Hershey's are just sitting around and like we got any new products this year. It's like the candy Illuminati you're saying. There's like a secret board room, a consortium. They're like finally ready to unveil the new flavor. They're like, no, not this year. I think we're just putting an egg again in April. And after we run out of heart boxes. Like literally, they have an innovative. We have got new flavors since I was a kid buying candy. It's the same candy. There's no new ones coming out. They figured it out. I just think it's funny that you keep buying your wife candy as a present. She doesn't even want it because you know you'll be able to eat it afterwards. You've hacked the system. Everybody else wise. It's really symbiotic for marriage. You know, you know, different love languages. You find a way, you know. All right, well, we have a great show in store for you today. Coming up later, Eugene Cho going this. He's a hero. We also have, at the end of the show, round two of worship are wooing, staying with the love theme.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Andy Ngo and Charlie Discuss ANTIFA's Blatant Aggression
"Play one O 8 of antifa disrupting our turning point USA event at the university of Oregon in Eugene Oregon play cut one O 8. We don't want this on our college campuses. You are miss educated. The people. But when you come in here, when you come in here and you lie about the way that our society should be. When you come in here and you spread this type of shit, it's what makes these generals bad. You want to play the game. Let's play the game, baby. Let's play the game. I'm not going to be playing the game. You got to understand that. Are you not trying to shut down my points? Are you supposed to live black voices? Let me hear 9 every situation. So what you heard there is two black conservatives, Stephen Davis, and Anthony Watson, who are part of the turning point USA team being shouted down by masked white liberals at the university of Oregon in Eugene because two black conservatives dare would have a different opinion, but the white liberals, of course, want to control black people again, a lot of liberals want to go back to slavery. They just want to admit it. So Andy, why is this not exactly, you know, why is this even a question on the modern Twitter? Have you seen Twitter improve at all since Elon took it over? In some regards, I brought a lot of attention to some of these violent extremist accounts by doing the thing that I was just punished for. And some of those accounts really high profile extremist accounts actually subsequently got banned after I brought attention, brought up the receipts. They said, this is this. This is where you can find those posts. And it was suspended. But then this seems like a big step backwards now. What's this new rule?

The Charlie Kirk Show
A Maricopa Madness Update
"This guy running Maricopa County, the elections who is an aspirational Democrat masquerading as a Republican, his name is Steven richer. And he gets completely celebrated by national media. So does Katie Hobbs, who's running for governor Secretary of State. Steven richer is the Maricopa County recorder. That's his official title. Maricopa County recorder. Listen to this piece of tape here. Back in 2020, how he reacted in 2020 election and then he invokes Mark fincham, who interestingly enough is now going to be running for Secretary of State in Arizona, play cut 47. Mark fincham is running for secretary of state process that if the election was completely fraudulent as he says, why would you run for secretary? What do you think dominion is going to rig it in your favor this time? Do you think that fraud doesn't apply to the Secretary of State's race? Do you think that things have materially changed since 2020 because Michelle Eugene Rita passed one pebble Bill? Why are you running if you do not believe in these elections? I would suggest that his actions speak a lot router than his words. Thanks. This guy's a total freak. And why is he running? It's because you do the courageous and the moral thing. Even though you know there might be problems, maybe you can overwhelm the system, Stephen richer, last time in 2020, the election was decided by 10,000 votes and based on revelations in 2000 mules, you allowed and enabled a ballot trafficking operation all across Maricopa happened in other parts of the state as well in Yuma county in particular. Completely and totally unhinged.

Yeah, But Still
"eugene" Discussed on Yeah, But Still
"He's being really mean on your last week appeal really tell you say you. Are you really think about your first match on. Live tv one of an entire arena. That was laughing at you. What the hell was that. Look what you didn't know. Well i don't wanna bring it to you. You're not a wrestler. What the hell no fucking way. What they love him. Oh no you. Dad channing eugene yeah oh no crowds. No no way you act the hell to be the same ring with you. You don't belong here so now. The only reason you have jobs. Because eric nephew no no again away and in here.

Bangarang Radio: A Podcast Network
"eugene" Discussed on Bangarang Radio: A Podcast Network
"I listen i was. I was hoping that i was like okay. Like he should know this one. Because it does e-right i listened to that song earlier today so Another reason another reason why through that one in there. Okay all right art to more man to more. You got this all right. If if if you're just joining us for this livestream this is called eugene levy or does eugene levy no eugene levy pretty much. This is so corny. But i hope someone's enjoying it. Okay number eight true or false prior to shits creek catherine o'hara who plays maura and eugene levy Prior to shits creek they had never worked together before. Okay wonderful. that was once again. They're dear they've been working to will. They both started working together. Early on in the The second city toronto days on the way back in the seventies so wonder if that was the setv days yes. I well i think it was. She was was she was she. No she was in the sketch comedy. Tv cable. i'm. I'm almost positive good for her. It's been a long time all right so this is the last one okay. And i'm pretty sure. I know this is like i said i made the i didn't wanna make these too hard you know. Oh here's okay but before we go on the last one. Share this comment because this is funny. This is a good question veronica. Veronica from from pop punk takeout is asking. Would a eugene levy cover band called the dan levy cover band or a dan levy band. Who could be. it's be i. i think we have a session. That or would you call it shits creek. Will you couldn't do that could you. I still we're still like learning and kind of worrying about that worrying about. Were like waiting for the season assistant right. Yeah i mean we. It's going to happen right unless eugene unless unless you know. Eugene is cool with all of this in well. Here's what berry saying he said. No dan levy is their side project in libya's or side project okay berry says no. It's it's it's actually the side project so okay so very very is a The say of our lead singer. Oh dear friend of the band very cool very cool keeps keeps a bryant line and Appropriately outings someone's gotta do it right. Say somebody does very. Yeah thank you berry. And thank you for Veronica's well so all right. Our last question. All right you ready for this okay. So this one is the easiest. One i swear the name. Then the name of eugene levy's character and shits creek is a johnny bravo. Be johnny rose or see johnny english. Yanni rose hey you never some pretty good impression you that was not bad..

Bangarang Radio: A Podcast Network
"eugene" Discussed on Bangarang Radio: A Podcast Network
"It took me like i watch. I binged watched that whole show on that. So and i didn't realize that sarah has daughter was twyla and so like i forget i think it was like the very like literally the very end like the last midway for me. It was like midway in like the first season. Where i'm just like you would have thought that like if dan is as son. You know what. I mean like in real life. Why would you not at that both play. Do you know what i mean. Yes alexis be a laos. And i'm sure they've explained that in interviews maybe man no no. I'm into sub. But i haven't i haven't had all that much time but yeah i enjoy eugene respectively. Oh hell yeah hell yeah man. Wow you're a see. I told you. These aren't so bad some of them are going to get a little tricky but All right so here's number three Eugene levy was raised in a jewish catholic or family jewish. Yes are right. So eugene levy so far knows eugene levy you get three out of three so far a number four so in the movie american pie eugene levy was told he could improvise most of his dialogue for his character. Is this true or false in a. I'll repeat it for you so in the movie american pie eugene levy was told that he could improvise most of his dialogue for his character. Is this true or false. I don't know that when i'm going to say i'm gonna say true. Yes nailed it again. You were kind of try to treat me when. I was told that it was like okay..

Bangarang Radio
"eugene" Discussed on Bangarang Radio
"Every year they do every year they go up and down. You know they may live in minnesota but they you know they they They spend their winters down down on the gulf. Okay sip you all the way down credible. Yeah that's something. I've always wanted to do. It without question is do the whole you know from from bottom. Yeah yeah that would be. Have i the money nor do i own a boat and after seeing all the boats that you've seen you would probably never ever worn own right. You are right. Like i think i'm good enough of it right. Yeah fiberglass or aluminum. Aluminum light fishing bow hunting. Duck hunting boat. So yeah right. That's a little different. That's a lot easier to just all hall around you. Ding it up. Nobody cares relatively cheap. Easy welding to fix or crop and renew. Yeah yeah exactly exactly so so. Let's let's get into eugene levy. Not the band are not the actor. But the band of yeah. Yeah and you know. I thought i thought it would be fun to test your knowledge to see how much you actually know about eugene. Levy i knew this is coming to. Yeah i mean. I don't know if anyone has ever done this to you in an interview. But i'm thinking like this band is called eugene levy naming their band after the actor and also their logo is from the american pie movie. I mean they have to know. You know at least some things about eugene levy so so this is what we're going to do. I've got. I'm trying to think if i made it to ten questions. Oh my god. I made it to nine. Okay tonight this is. This is going to be fun. I promise 'cause 'cause it's all multiple choice okay. This is all multiple trips. I might do okay. I'm no no no. I'm not that much of a dick. Like and i tried like some of these are a little hard but like i said they're all multiple choice and true and false so i mean you know what was that show that you had to do you know you had the choice and it got harder for the million. No right of who wants to be a millionaire. Yeah this is who wants to be eugene levy. No i think. I think we'll call this. Does eugene levy. No inching levies. That's sweet that's really cool psyched. I love all right so now before we start. If you get more of these correct than incorrect i will get you whatever piece of pop punk pizza merge that you want assure will a hoodie. Whatever it is operatives sent out to you because you deserve something right. I would've it. Would've been pizza but actually it could be pizza next time you're in chicago absolutely let me know and you know we can. We can meet up for pizza's in fact questions. That'd be great. Yeah all right so you ready for this. Let's do all right cameron here..

The Puddcast
"eugene" Discussed on The Puddcast
"When thrilled to welcome to the podcast. Thanks for joining me today. Welcome to the show. Thank you really glad to be here. And to make a new friend likewise likewise i have been reading the book and i'm loving it and it's it's giving me all these memories of my own life and so i thought i would. I would set the stage for this conversation with a memory of my own. Where it's about. It's gotta be nineteen ninety four and i am about eight years old nine years old and my grandfather was a what we used to call a lay minister. Maybe we'll just call him by vocational now in the presbyterian church and he had this study off his bedroom he was also an accountant and so in his office study he had all of his financial stuff for all of his clients and trusts and charities that he worked with and then he had all of his theological books and he was the only person i knew had computer my grandfather even up until his death always had the cutting edge technology and i used to go and play on his old. Ibm computer before he had windows. And i remember. He had this book on this bookshelf. This white and blue book cold the message and it stuck with me from like eight or nine years old often. As i was waiting for games to load. I would sit there and how would look through his book shelves and there was this. This book is white and blue book and some sometimes it would be up on the shelf and symptoms. It would be on his desk. And i often used to look at it and i used to go The new testament in in modern light. Whatever i forget the tagline that was on that for probably probably the first edition of the new testament that i realized in hindsight he would have had. I guess i guess he was reading all the new stuff as soon as it was coming out. And so it's really special me to start reading. Eugene story that you've so beautifully written. And i'm not. I'm not eugene peterson expert. I i have not read any of his other works. And i haven't even thoroughly read the message and i feel a bit embarrassed to say that i feel like it's a missing piece of my life that i've kind of orbited from a distance and so in a certain way i feel really privileged that i get to actually really stopped my journey with his whole story. Thanks to you're writing a burning in my bones so thank you. Yeah collect. I love that story and as you're telling it i'm thinking how much eugene would love that story because you know One thing that. I think a lot of people probably don't quite get because you know i don't know twenty million copies or something or sold at the message in but he didn't write that for the vast american really he. He wrote that for his his sunday school class. It's how he was. A lot of fear was happening. In the in the late sixties early seventies In the baltimore suburbs and he realized how overrun his own community was with fear. Buying guns and building bomb shelters and escaping the awful inner city in in he just thought about how unchristian this was and so he wanted to lead them through galatian book of freedom in. We're we're to be free. People not driven by fear and he was a mesmerized by the text of relations. And yet he said after three weeks like people's eyes were glazing over. There were bored out of their mind. He couldn't understand it at this. This text is liberating and so he. He said we'll next week. I'm gonna translate it in So they live in hartford county maryland. I'm going to translate this into hartford county and And he said he passed out. The the white sheets of paper had that little section translated for that week and like nobody even touch their coffee. They were in and he's like i'm onto something and so he kept doing that. In that ultimately made its way into a book he wrote relations called traveling light in the beginning of each section. He would he would offer the little translation he had done in an editor eventually Saul the book read. The book photocopied pages in cutout. The scripture part and pasted them altogether and carry them around for like a month reading and meditating on reflecting it and ultimately very long story. But that's how he ended up writing the message but it was very particular people it was it was for these quiet spaces for people who are hungry and he was hungry to when he wanted to share a conversation about the living word and and even when it expanded and he realized he's writing this full translation that was gonna hit the you know the market or whatever he would say you know he he would have in mind. He was translating for the truck driver that he knew in for someone who was sitting in the third pew you know and so all that to say i think he would absolutely love just this individual story of one person. One grandfather you sitting there really wanted to play a video game in something catching your attention that you just carry with you Eugene was known for his smile. I think he would be smiling really big at that story. Thanks that's such a cool Road there's this. I've heard seth godin talk about when we try to create something for the world doesn't work but when we can allow ourselves to just authentically create something for one person it so increases the likelihood that it will connect with them that that and then ironically that tends to connect with other people far better anyway. Which sounds like you. The message is kate is a is a proof text for that. Yeah and i would say that was eugene's kind of just who he was You know he he meandered through long wilderness of failures and rejections and he was never pastor of us ever be considered a large church. Never that he was just even toward the end of his life when people would ask him. Or what are you must grateful for about your life. In one of the things he would say is. Oh that i got to be you gene calm. And you know when you hear that and you can really Lived his life to have such deep gratitude that he just got to be the person god made him to be Because i think most of us actually spend massive amounts of our energy striving to be something. We think we're supposed to be or some image. And i do think it takes a kind of humility in and grace and just comfort with how god's made us to do the kind of thing you're talking about where we can. We can offer the one gift we have. The one person in front of us trusting that god will do something with that or not. And it's not in our making. And i think that's one of the reasons why eugene was so meaningful to so many people is because there was something that was deeply true about what he offered that felt like in a time. When christian publishing's specifically was exploding the the money around it the the celebrity the the building of the platform all the language you know.

The Puddcast
"eugene" Discussed on The Puddcast
"Welcome back to the podcast with me. Jonathan puddle this episode one hundred and seven. I guess today's wind collier win. Is the author of a brand new biography of eugene pearson. The translator of the message and author of a great many wonderful books. I had such a special time in this conversation with win. That was really a beautiful gentle soul full discussion kind of felt like meeting like meeting a kindred spirit when there's been a posture for many years. Who's counting posture. Poll souls challenge ville virginia. The today is the director of the ut pearson center for christian imagination at western theological seminary michigan held phd university of virginia. And and he's written a number of other books himself up so today we talked all about eugene peterson who was his values. And there's a lot in here around the subject of ordinariness of holy ordinariness. And i think an invitation for pastors to a holy simplicity in their work. And so. I think there's going to be something encouraging in here for you. Whoever you are. I am loving this book night. Recommend you guys go get it. Checked shots for links to buy the book to learn more about win and his work and of course for the transcript of this text you prefer to read it there are a couple of audio glitches throughout this one. We were having some internet connection difficulties. My apologies for that. The transcript is a little clearer. Weren't sure what when was saying at any point. Go and check the transcript. And i was able to type.

Audio Theatre Central | Exploring Family Friendly Audio Drama
"eugene" Discussed on Audio Theatre Central | Exploring Family Friendly Audio Drama
"Sound like a camel or is it constellation andromeda andromeda. So yes we do. We have worked on odyssey. it's our thirty fifth year. Thirty five thirty four. What i thought you told me. It was the thirty four thirty fifth. There'd be we'd be on a boat somewhere celebrating. Oh then maybe it's the thirty fourth what's it came it came out in eighty seven Wherein in your k thirty four Yeah so You know as you as you are aware the phantom of ao is just in love with the characters of connie an eugene. They they've been the the mainstays of the show. The ones that have been constant over the years and the same voices since the beginning of the since the introduction of the character and so for for each of you. What do you think it is about your character that just resonates so much with people on. I'll answer i. Because i want to quickly interject that. If if they like the show that they might like Tell you later which is On youtube and other places. It's a brand new show. But i why you gene resonate with people because there's something sympathetic about somebody who thinks he knows a lot but doesn't know a lot and Seems to be in charge and isn't in charge and our seems to lord over others but really knows he's not of this earth or fish out of water a fish out of water. Maybe that's it. I don't know. I was just kind of rambling with my answer there. Maybe there's something in there. People sort of relate to the the social awkwardness that he sometimes finds himself in. You think i think so because any kid is usually in an awkward position because we live in a world where these adults these taller people rule us and tell us what to do and they seem to know everything and we don't seem to know much of anything we've got our little pals we can commiserate with each other but they speak their own languages and and and we just. There's so much we don't know if you try to watch the news you don't know what's going on the news and and That's that whole world of adults so yeah so people can relate to fish out of water. I think pretty easy. Especially if you're a kid over one. I was one. Yeah i heard that. Yeah well i. I am so blessed i get letters from people like at least it seems like two or three a week anymore as time goes on more and more people right and and they share that they can relate to. Connie i guess they think i do a pretty honest portrayal of qadsie motions my emotion slash my emotions and and that resonates with people. I think they like the relationship between i think. Connie and eugene have like a brother sister relationship like you're stock with them. You're not gonna leave them. You love them but they get on your nerves and you gotta you know. There's that kind of tension that and and i think a lot of our listeners logged to families and so they can relate to it that way you know. We're hoping that we get to do more episodes and they kind of bring the show back through the funnel where we can still react with each other even though our lives have changed a bit. I think look at us. We've known each other for two years. We still talk to each other the same way. Our lives have changed. And even though eugene's married. I think there's lots of things that it's just the way they relate to each other. I think it doesn't matter the situation. It's the way they talk to each other and you know sometimes even kinda take each other for granted you know. There's a lot of things that that i think people realize. Oh you know. This is how i am with so and so and maybe i need to be a little nicer hard on them or tell them my like occasionally you know. Maybe that's why i don't know. Does that sound right. Well that makes a lotta sense. Yeah also. I'll never forget the time i saved your life when you're in the trunk of the car. This is on an animated thing and it was going to go over this cliff. And i don't know if you ever saw that life but you are in the trunk of the car and eugene is risking his life to try to prevent the car from going over the edge. You know onions. Well it turns out you weren't in the trunk after all look but seriously that was. That was very very emotional. That was very dramatic. Yeah i think there's a lot of things that come up in the show between our characters like that where you realize you don't realize how much you appreciate somebody until you think you might not have them in your life and more. Yeah yeah yeah. That's point in isn't it. it's beautifully. Poignant what's interesting is hotting. Eugene are pretty famous within the show within the world of people who know the show and enjoy the show but we in the last three years we may be were in one scene together Or one show together while in the same episodes navy wants. We're working on that yeah anymore. Connie eugene interacting. We're applying all the influence we don't have as we've been applying for the last eight cracks me up when people send me. There's suggest in some like yeah. Yeah they listen to me never right. They've got their own agenda. And we got to trust god for the rest and if anybody out there thinks eugene connie should be in a scene together kind of episode right contact all the people who write and produce the show and why will and i decided. Hey you know what. We really like interacting. So let's duro podcast eve of people really and it's funny because you know the main thing is like with our book in you know this. Jd will kind of always said tongue in cheek is to prove once and for all that the characters we portray or nothing like the people we are in real life. It's you know it's pretty darn close. So i think what was my thought. Who would my thought. Was you search for the thought now. I'll support what you just said for example. I'm not wearing glasses. Yeah that's true. I rest my case this to this family. I talked earlier today. They said does he. Have you know coke bottle glasses. I said no. In fact we'll ryan has the best eyesight of anybody. I know he doesn't even need reading glasses. And he's even older than me. I am v. What i know dirt. So you have terrific is set. So we i think our personalities what i'm saying is we've gotten feedback from those listening to the podcast and i would encourage everybody. I've gotta learn how to do the podcast ads in the youtube ads. I'm supposed to tell people to write a review. And i'm supposed to tell them does say nice things or hit like ring a bell or do these kinds of things but the actual feedback notes. We've gotten his. Hey you guys sound just like connie an eugene and they really love it so at least we're giving the people what they want well. In haiti we should talk j. d. because he's been doing a podcast for amir decade..

Quick News Daily Podcast
"eugene" Discussed on Quick News Daily Podcast
"On monday out there. I'm unwrapping mcdonnell steak. Egg and cheese bagel look at this steak and juice running down assigned to a little bit on rapper. Here and then. A fluffy egg and rail cheese folded oversaw looking. Just so good Grilled onions on bego two thumbs off. Madonna steak egg and cheese bagel for breakfast. Love.