36 Burst results for "Few Years Later"

The Mason Minute
Stamp Collecting (MM #4638)
"Day, The other the U .S. Postal Service announced the new stamps that were coming out, the new designs that were coming out for 2024. And it took me back to a day when, gosh, I was probably what, 12, 13 years old, I collected stamps. And I got into it pretty heavily for a brief time, but I thought, does anybody collect stamps anymore? There used to be stamp collector shops in malls, just like coin collector shops. You don't see those anymore. I don't even know if it's a thing anymore. Since the Forever stamp came out, stamps, there aren't as many of them. Prices, while they do raise, they don't look any different. The Forever stamp doesn't have a price on it, so the same stamp no matter what the price is. That was the one thing about stamps. You could have a six cent stamp, or an eight cent, or a 10 cent, or 25, or whatever we're up to now. 50, 60, I don't even know what we're paying anymore. I got my Forever stamp sitting here, and I only use one or two a month. I don't mail anything anymore. But it's interesting, a hobby that was so big and so popular for so many years. I had so many people giving me stamps and helping me out, and stamps from all around the world. It's kind of sad to me, something that was so cool and so interesting, thanks to the world we live in, isn't quite as cool as it used to be.

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Fresh update on "few years later" discussed on Mike Gallagher Podcast
"There's a social media influencer named Bill Mitchell, who has been all in for Ron DeSantis, has been harshly critical of Donald Trump. He posted a message to his followers over the weekend about his support for DeSantis. And the message was directed to Trump supporters. And I'm really, really interested in your response. How you're going to receive what a DeSantis supporter says to Trump supporters as Trump continues to widen in all the polls. He continues to soar. He continues to surge. He says really, really blunt things about the state of America. Ron DeSantis is coming off his TV debate with Gavin Newsom. There seems to be a lot of turmoil in DeSantis world. Lot of upheaval at his Super PAC and the Never Back Down PAC. People are leaving. People are quitting. I don't know, being let go. There just seems to this campaign doesn't feel like it's getting traction. We'll know in a few weeks. January 15th will be here before you know it. I came to work today in a really kind of an emotional mood. I'm very grateful. I'm so extraordinarily thankful for the love at Christmas time and over the holidays that we're witnessing. There's a lot of challenges that we face, but there's a lot of real strong, powerful agents of good. And listen, Christmas is always tricky for me. I have a really rough history of Christmas in my life. From the time I was a little kid, Father Christmas decided to smite me with taking my dad from me on Christmas Day when I was 11 years old. I was a little boy in Ohio and my dad died of leukemia on Christmas Day. And so then it was my mom and me sort of powering through together after my dad's passing. And then my mom died a week or so before Christmas, a few years later. So it was hard. Christmas has always been very, very significant for me because I used to love Christmas. And then I hated Christmas. And then I met Denise. And I love Christmas all over again. And then I lost Denise. You know, she died June 29th, and she told me a few days before she died, thank goodness this isn't happening at Christmas time. She said, you'd never recover. I said, I don't know, I'm going to recover anyway. Uh, we had very candid conversations. Um, as I, I hope many married couples and partners can have, um, it's, it's a blessing to be able to talk. I always feel sorry for people who lose a loved one abruptly because you couldn't, you didn't have a chance to say goodbye. And saying goodbye, um, and talking candidly like that. And Denise was a very blunt spoken woman. I mean, she set her mind even when she was, uh, you know, realizing that she was soon going to be in the arms of the Lord. Um, she, uh, was so worried for me. And so Christmas, I still do my best to spread the Christmas spirit. I kind of feel like God's given me some challenges with Christmas and I like to, I love Christmas. I go crazy now with my kids, I, and my friends and my family. I, I go overboard because to me, it's a time of year that is very, very special, very significant, very important. And over the last few years, this prison fellowship, angel tree campaign has become a big Mike Gallagher show tradition. And incidentally, once in a while, somebody will say, Oh, we should stop talking about these prisoners, kids, and raising money to send Christmas presents and Bibles to these kids. Listen, I get it. I appreciate your patience. It's, it's one time a year where we all ask you to open your hearts and your wallets and, and share the love of, of, of Christmas with these children. Well, the numbers are coming in. They are out of this world. Joey Hudson has been working with a donor who's, who's giving us $10,000, which is incredible. That's 400 kids who are going to get Christmas presents and Bibles and messages from their incarcerated parents on Christmas. The number on the screen that you'll see right now is 2,669 kids. That's insane. Do you realize it's only December the 4th, right? 2,669 kids means that you've donated $66,725 so far and add 10,000 to that because this is being processed as we speak. And guess what? That's $76,725. Our goal is a foul is 4,000 kids. We're almost there. We're, we're over 75% of our goal. So my, my Christmas wish today is that you'll keep the momentum going and you'll continue to give to our angel tree campaign. If you go to Mike online.com, the angel tree banner is at the top of the page and you'll see the way to donate a 25, 50, a hundred, maybe a thousand, whatever you can afford. Maybe we'll get to our goal. I don't want to ask for too much, but all I know is that right now today we are sitting at $76,000 in donations, which is incredible for just a few short weeks. That means 3,040 kids have been sponsored by you. These are children of prisoners in America. These are kids who have a mom or dad or maybe both parents in prison and as a guy who knows what it feels like not to have their mom or dad at Christmas time, this campaign really resonates with me and it just helps me to continue to what I hope blesses this audience with a Christmas tradition. Please, please, please go to Mike online.com. You'll see the angel tree banner at the top of the page. It just takes a couple of minutes of your time right now. Tracy says the number on the screen is 2,669 kids and you can see the number. You can see this number on the screen. You'll see the total on the banner and as you give, it takes about two to four minutes to cycle in, but whatever you donate, you'll see that thermometer start climbing. Boy, wouldn't it be incredible if we could hit maybe 3,000 kids on the screen, which will really be 3,400 kids since Joey's got this 400 child-sponsored donor of $10,000? I'm so grateful for you. I'm so thankful that I get to come to work and be surrounded and I'm going to get emotional here, Tracy. Tracy came in today and put up a little Christmas tree in the studio and we got lights on it and I'm smelling those pine needles and I hung an angel tree banner, which is a reminder that these kids must never be forgotten. So please give what you can. Go to Mike online.com, click on that angel tree banner and thank you for blessing these children with Christmas and remember, they're going to get a Bible too and a lot of these kids, they're going to get turned to the love of Jesus Christ and God through your gift. Thank you so very much. The angel tree campaign, go to Mike online.com and click on that angel tree banner at the top of the page. Presence or a testimony of God's love for the incarcerated parent and the child too. All right, let's get down to some politics here. I want you to hear Bill Mitchell. This is a guy who is a social media influencer.Big, I think he used to be a Trump supporter and you know, it's funny, some of these ex-Trump supporters who went with Chris Christie or Ron DeSantis or Nikki Haley, they're like reformed smokers. I mean, they are, they are really a lot. They're a lot to take and this Bill Mitchell has been all in for DeSantis and he's been all about bagging on Donald Trump. Wait, do you hear what he says to Trump supporters? And I want to see what your response is to his message because a lot of people are saying even the DeSantis supporters are starting to throw in the towel. I want you to hear Bill Mitchell's message and see if you think that's what he's doing too. 800-655-MIKE is our number. Welcome aboard. It's the first Monday in December. Great to have you here on the Mike Gallagher Show. Take the Mike Gallagher Show with you wherever you go 24-7. Download the Mike Gallagher Show app wherever you get your apps. And never miss a moment of your favorite talk radio show. Hey, hon, should we get this? This is not just Walgreens brand cold medicine. Sure. Oh, you know what? Better grab two. And that pain reliever. Oh, also vitamins. This is being prepared for whatever they bring home from work this season. Stock up on Walgreens brands to get high quality products for a whole lot less. Walgreens. Buy one, get one, 50% off Walgreens brand health and wellness of equal or lesser price valid through 12-30-23 on select Walgreens brand health and wellness products with My Walgreens. Restrictions apply. See Walgreens.com for details.

The Mason Minute
Stamp Collecting (MM #4638)
"Day, The other the U .S. Postal Service announced the new stamps that were coming out, the new designs that were coming out for 2024. And it took me back to a day when, gosh, I was probably what, 12, 13 years old, I collected stamps. And I got into it pretty heavily for a brief time, but I thought, does anybody collect stamps anymore? There used to be stamp collector shops in malls, just like coin collector shops. You don't see those anymore. I don't even know if it's a thing anymore. Since the Forever stamp came out, stamps, there aren't as many of them. Prices, while they do raise, they don't look any different. The Forever stamp doesn't have a price on it, so the same stamp no matter what the price is. That was the one thing about stamps. You could have a six cent stamp, or an eight cent, or a 10 cent, or 25, or whatever we're up to now. 50, 60, I don't even know what we're paying anymore. I got my Forever stamp sitting here, and I only use one or two a month. I don't mail anything anymore. But it's interesting, a hobby that was so big and so popular for so many years. I had so many people giving me stamps and helping me out, and stamps from all around the world. It's kind of sad to me, something that was so cool and so interesting, thanks to the world we live in, isn't quite as cool as it used to be.

The Mason Minute
Stamp Collecting (MM #4638)
"Day, The other the U .S. Postal Service announced the new stamps that were coming out, the new designs that were coming out for 2024. And it took me back to a day when, gosh, I was probably what, 12, 13 years old, I collected stamps. And I got into it pretty heavily for a brief time, but I thought, does anybody collect stamps anymore? There used to be stamp collector shops in malls, just like coin collector shops. You don't see those anymore. I don't even know if it's a thing anymore. Since the Forever stamp came out, stamps, there aren't as many of them. Prices, while they do raise, they don't look any different. The Forever stamp doesn't have a price on it, so the same stamp no matter what the price is. That was the one thing about stamps. You could have a six cent stamp, or an eight cent, or a 10 cent, or 25, or whatever we're up to now. 50, 60, I don't even know what we're paying anymore. I got my Forever stamp sitting here, and I only use one or two a month. I don't mail anything anymore. But it's interesting, a hobby that was so big and so popular for so many years. I had so many people giving me stamps and helping me out, and stamps from all around the world. It's kind of sad to me, something that was so cool and so interesting, thanks to the world we live in, isn't quite as cool as it used to be.

The Mason Minute
Stamp Collecting (MM #4638)
"Day, The other the U .S. Postal Service announced the new stamps that were coming out, the new designs that were coming out for 2024. And it took me back to a day when, gosh, I was probably what, 12, 13 years old, I collected stamps. And I got into it pretty heavily for a brief time, but I thought, does anybody collect stamps anymore? There used to be stamp collector shops in malls, just like coin collector shops. You don't see those anymore. I don't even know if it's a thing anymore. Since the Forever stamp came out, stamps, there aren't as many of them. Prices, while they do raise, they don't look any different. The Forever stamp doesn't have a price on it, so the same stamp no matter what the price is. That was the one thing about stamps. You could have a six cent stamp, or an eight cent, or a 10 cent, or 25, or whatever we're up to now. 50, 60, I don't even know what we're paying anymore. I got my Forever stamp sitting here, and I only use one or two a month. I don't mail anything anymore. But it's interesting, a hobby that was so big and so popular for so many years. I had so many people giving me stamps and helping me out, and stamps from all around the world. It's kind of sad to me, something that was so cool and so interesting, thanks to the world we live in, isn't quite as cool as it used to be.

Mark Levin
Rashida Tlaib Accuses Netanyahu of 'Genocide'
"Obama the Nazi Iranian side in Tehran to stop attacking American soldiers. Has she? No. She doesn't say that. But my buddy Tim again. He posted an answer. En hamas. From the river to the C. I like that Mr. Biden. Now how can you say, I mean, Gaza Strip was Egyptian. So how do you end apartheid when it comes to the Gaza Strip? The Israelis say, let your people go. Egypt, open the gate. Let people go. Apartheid. This is something the radical South African governments come up with, which experienced horrendous apartheid for hundreds of years. And now they have used that phrase. It started about 20 years ago. They've used that phrase against Israel. It's an apartheid regime. It's been picked up by the Hamas network. It's been picked up by the Soros networks. It's been picked up by all the radical leftist entities. And regurgitated. Now permanent cease fire, isn't that strange? What does that mean? Does that mean Hamas is going to stop raping and killing and maiming? It's going to stop having little babies in ovens and decapitating them? Is that what that means? No. It means Israel surrenders and Israel continues to be victimized in horrific ways. That's what it means. So Rashida Tlaib remains in Congress and this guy Santos is out. Tell me, which is a greater threat to the American people? Greater threat to liberty. To humanity. This guy Santos, who sounds like and looks like a Rashida Tlaib, a special pleader for Middle East terrorists. Oh yeah, I said it and I mean it and I can prove it. Which is a greater threat? And by the way, the hypocrisy of the Democrats in the media. This guy Santos. Look, I don't know anything about this guy. I don't give a damn about him. That's not the point. But there's Menendez sitting in the U .S. Senate. An armless long of indictments. And for all I know, he's innocent. I don't know. Guy's got gold bars in his

Mark Levin
Joe Scarborough Is an Absolute Ignoramus
"His government and the jerusalem post articles both of them that i read in the course of the last eighty two hours which were the really the first to break this information italy clear that the information per se got caught caught up in the bureaucracy got caught up in debates within the israeli military the initial information was collected by a woman who wasn't even really a full and so they started to dismiss her she pulls the information together she doesn't have a date the information is the head of intel for israel has already said he is going to and has resigned there's no information whatsoever that this government either bennett rapid and guns or yahoo in his coalition but for some reason bennett lapid and guns escape all scrutiny even though the information was bubbling around during their government a year netanyahu what happened it yet now it ignorance and this tirade about the west bank west they use the term west bank because the more orthodox jews not tend to live in judea and samaria the indigenous homeland of ism they want to take judea and samaria they always have on the left the democrat party and give it to the palestinians to take pressure off of jordan pressure off of egypt with the claim that this would be a two -state solution and the radical left in israel israel agrees with them just as we have our radical left they do too that's led by a hotblock left -wing parties in israel so menachem begging wanted nothing to him and now of course it's net yahoo so listen so listen to this tirade cut to go and let me add that look you at the chaos in the west bank that i lay all at the feet of benjamin netanyahu and policies over the past ten years you see ladies and gentlemen jimmy carter was big new he her daddy kept insisting that quote -unquote the west rid of the palestinians they had their eyes given the west bank which of course when you use that phraseology it shows number one complete ignorance and number two that you obviously hate the state of israel because there is no west bank of jordan anymore they sold it for nineteen years that's it when they took it during the nineteen forty eight war for independence i didn't blame his policies for the attack in plaza but the chaos in the west bank that threatens any peace process moving forward and also threatens another a second front in this war third fight in this war what is he talking about not anytime during this diatribe you'll notice does he blame the palestinian terrorists the iranian terrorists the hezbollah terrorists the p l o it's creation arifats baby a boss who's a terrorist joe scarborough has gone full thomas freeman in full barack obama and he's an ignoramus complete moron but it doesn't matter he talks about net yahoo the way talks about trump this guy has as a serious mental problem he really does go ahead the united states has the right to say if we're going to continue propping up your government if you don't have faith that's right there stop right there the united states is propping up the israeli government how is the united states propping really government joe scarborough wouldn't talk this way about about a genocidal maniac in any part of the world you're propping up the israeli government? let tell me this dumb bastard a little secret in the war for independence the israelis didn't get any help from the united states none other than citizens when they it could illegally sending weapons jews in the united states but it was illegal in the united states the then get support from anybody nobody got it? the british were their enemy nobody

The Dan Bongino Show
The Difference Between the Y2K and AI Crises
"Off the ledge because I not I am seriously freaked out I am NOT an apocalyptic guy and in the end I ultimately think that we could find a way to harness this thing but folks I think the way to stop AI is only going to be to unplug it which would basically unplug everything and you really do want to go back to little house on the prairie hey Paul I mean we can't even afford to do that we have nuclear actors now we have computers that are containing dangerous chemicals and viruses I am freaked totally out about this AI thing now here's one of the reasons I'm not going to spend a whole segment on this because I do want get to back to something that happened in the debate and PolitiFact strikes again which is amazing but the technical side of it alone scares me artificial intelligence is clearly something we were not designed to do because think about it from just a strict tactics perspective from a basic SWOT analysis you would do in business strengths weaknesses opportunities threats SWOT analysis is so simple yet it's one of the most valuable lessons you learn in business school even if you don't draw the grids you have this massive threat right? of a super intelligence just as a threat so how do you take advantage of a strength to mitigate that threat or mitigate a weakness to mitigate the threat and the thing about the threat of AI is I don't have an answer for you there because we don't have any strengths against AI we have none it's smarter than us that's the whole idea of AI why am I bringing this up again with this heavy news day because yesterday Peggy Noonan who I like her writing at the journal I get it she's not a Trump person it's okay we're allowed to have different opinions we don't have to like I don't dislike the Santis people and Haley people I believe in ideas not politicians it's fine I of get a lot complaints every time I mentioned Peggy Noonan she writes great stuff some of you know some of it I think's a little whatever oh why'd I just stop there's anybody know you pee ones Jim why'd I stop what time is it come on and you're the producer brother it's coffee time so one o 'clock hour you got to know this by yeah now man it's gonna go into book or some edit version number two the artificial intelligence Peggy Noonan wrote a piece about it last night it's a really good one she talks about AI is the y2k but it's actually real remember y2k the world's gonna end every you know enough I mean really nothing happened like it all and the y2k thing was a big deal to me because I had met Paula just before that and Paula was a computer web database developer and she was working overtime on making sure the y2k crisis didn't fit didn't affect her firm SIA where she worked Securities Industry Association at the time now SIFMA so she worked there and they fixed that the problem with AI is and you know it's funny Jim you and I just had this fight right about that fight of disagreement about it did you not say to me yesterday during the break Dan I know don't it sounds like y2k right right and this is before the Peggy Newton but she must have listened to us on the break she had like a she was beaming in ESP or something but I said to Jim and I don't know I think you thought I made a good defense the y2k crisis was describable and definable we did not allocate enough digits to compensate for the flip in the clock to the year two done everybody knew what it was okay let's fix it my wife's firm they realize they had certain systems payroll systems and others queued to a four -digit whatever three -digit or two -digit system excuse me they changed it the problem with AI in

The Dan Bongino Show
Gavin Newsome Exposed as Total Loser
"Party and it was even more bothersome about this whole thing is we had this debate last night and gavin newsome look like it was going to be the nominee by the way look like a complete zero a total zero now i don't really care in the primary where you stand okay it's totally up to you everybody's welcome here there's a said angry very short it's part of the political aisle i've had to just completely block and cut out of my life but i don't hold any ill all towards any other candidates in the campaign i don't because i'm a conservative i don't worship politicians unlike some of other these people it's guy if you're worshiping anyone tromp or de santis a year i'm sorry you're lost you should be respecting the ideas of conservatism which is ironically one of the reasons i supported trump last everybody's like oh he said this he said okay what did he do okay he did x y and z it's the same reason i supported santas de for governor of florida yeah i don't like him he's grubby well what did he do that's all i care about don't you don't fall in love with these guys fall in love with outcomes any outcome last night don't i care where you stand is the republican party in the conservative movement won that debate hands down it's not even close by no serious objective measure to gavin newson not come out of that looking like a total loser and may you say i saw a couple people in my chat we had a good crowd this morning in a podcast but a couple folks said oh i don't care i'm supporting trump uh you should care uh you should care because gavin newson is most likely going to be the nominee folks joe biden is not going to be the nominee is it possible yes i'd be stunned he is not going to be the nominee this to you this i thought was the moment of the night listen i've said this on the air multiple times if you're a p1 you know you you know know i did dave some of you get that if you're gonna debate because i've done it many times i've run three times for office if you're gonna debate you gotta bring a prop on stage peep not a stupid prop like a rubber chicken or something like although that could work too it depends we have a tough time stuffing that in your pocket bring a prop whoever winds up winning the republican nomination if you do not bring a copy of the 40 check to joe biden that allegedly originated from the chinese communist party dependent on uh you know depending how on much information comes out in the coming days we've got a lot more coming out if you don't bring a copy of that check on stage you should be guilty of political malpractice and immediately thrown off the stage and banned from the party people long of that props the santas team understood the assignment last night this is em on stage this at this polls out the i'd like to use a different word just says it's not okay though because i thought friday's and whatever uh... this is let's call it the feces map for the city of san francisco where gavin newson was the mayor and hilarious the thing about this for a case so friends who know this is this is real there's an actual map uh... of how to navigate around human waste in the city of san francisco the santas whips the actual map out this was i think his moment of the night check this out when looking at total time a government is about this is this is a map of san francisco there's a lot of plots on that you may be asking what is that plotting well this is an apt where they plot the human feces that are found on the streets of san francisco you see how almost the whole whole thing is covered because that is what has happened in one of the previous greatest cities this country's ever had human feces is now a fact of life except when a communist dictator comes to town then they cleaned up the streets they lined the streets with chinese flag he's not

Recipes for Success
Self-Care: Giving the World the Best of You, Not the Rest of You
"Always like to start at the beginning which is to define what actually is self -care and I'm actually just back from a weekend away where I went over to Edinburgh and I think the analogy that they always do in every airplane safety demonstration is really apt when you come to self -care which is oxygen mask analogy. So when they're giving a safety demonstration they always talk about how if it was the case that cabin pressure was to fall that you should put on your oxygen mask first before you attempt to help people around you and it's a very good analogy I suppose for self -care that you want to be looking at like what you need to do to give you oxygen and then you look outwards to see who else can I support now that I've sort of made sure that I'm protected and I can continue and I think it's a really good analogy and it's like this kind of left of you and that's a really important distinction I've learned over the years as well you know when people say a glass is half full or a glass is half empty and often what we do with self -care is you know like maybe we get a facial or we get our nails done and like we're topping up this glass or jug of water right but like if you keep pouring out of the jug without replenishing then all you're really doing yes you might fill it up but all of a sudden a week or two later is back to like dangerously low levels again so often what you actually want to try do is have that jug overflowing right so you're always full but the excess runs off and that's what fills other people's cups and really what that's talking about is sort of making sure that like you yourself feeling are good you're full of energy you're full of the joys of life maybe you're full of gratitude and then you give your excess to other people so it's not like you fill up and then you give that away and you're constantly in this fill it back up phase which sort of has a lot of effort attached to it it's rather like can you get yourself to a good place where you actually nearly have like so much that it's overflowing and you can easily give that excess away because it's not it's not detrimental to you because you have enough to continue to fuel yourself as well i really like that analogy like just as much as the oxygen mask one and i think what that reminds me it's self -care is not like one and done right it's like something that you always are sort of making sure that you have time for yourself to do that because you don't want to be trying to fill other people's gases from an empty jug nor do i want to feel that i'm having to take away from myself to give to other people because that can put you on a path towards resentment as well so what actually is self -care about like bubble baths and facials and you know lighting a candle and i enjoy doing all of those things so there's nothing wrong with those things as well but they're very surface level self -care and there is kind of two layers of self -care one is the surface piece but one is much deeper as well and it gets related into understanding your needs and values and living a life aligned to them it's your time it's your boundaries it's maybe having an understanding of your priorities so it's also when we think about self -care is making sure that we were maybe hitting on items that are from both of those lists so the surface level is the sort of relax rejuvenation the rest pieces could be a nap in the afternoon or it could be like i said going to the spa it could be shopping if that's what you enjoy it could be getting a nice cup of coffee out and just being able to you know sit in the sunshine and drink it or sit by yourself and drink it and have nobody disturb you probably harder self -care pieces are the the deeper ones right so it's the boundaries so saying no to people saying no to maybe even spending time with people who drain your energy like that's self -care in itself or if that's not possible it's maybe distancing yourself a little bit from those people i think that's particularly apt coming up to christmas because we do find ourselves in situations where we're spending time with people that perhaps we don't at other times of the year and it can be a very difficult and draining time of year for people it can be things like hobbies i chatted to shaz about this back in season one it's sort of something that we've lost a little bit as our world has got like so convenient and so automated and we're so busy doing all of these other things but like having time to do something that you're passionate about or you're interested in or that engages your creativity and your curiosity is actually really really important because it's carving out time for yourself and often these hobbies can be incredibly self -soothing because you don't think about other things that are going on in your life you're just thinking about not dropping a stitch or you last week and she was talking about how when she hunt horse riding she was literally you know you have to have full concentration because you didn't want to fall off the horse and hurt yourself so hobbies can actually be a really important part of our self -care routines as well

The Mason Minute
Side-By-Side (MM #4636)
"I've been following a story on the internet, and I believe it actually started as a TikTok, where waitstaffer servers judge people over things when they come into a restaurant, and they're talking about the things that they kind of judge people over. Whiny customers, customers who come in the last 10 minutes before the restaurant's about to close. But the number one beef is when customers sit side by side in the booth, when somebody on a date or a couple comes in and sits side by side. I have to admit that's one of my, I wouldn't call it pet peeves, but it's something that annoys me. Number one, I just think it's silly. It's almost juvenile. It's like something you do in high school with your first girlfriend or boyfriend. But more importantly to me, when you're sitting side by side in a booth or at a table, you can't look directly at the other person. I always choose to sit either across from my wife or at a table. Usually we're at a 45 degree angle, but I've often found it strange when people want to sit side by side in a restaurant in a booth. Not something I ever did with all the girls I dated throughout the years, and it's something I've never done with my wife, and I find it amusing that servers and waitstaff hate it just as much as I do.

The Mason Minute
Side-By-Side (MM #4636)
"I've been following a story on the internet, and I believe it actually started as a TikTok, where waitstaffer servers judge people over things when they come into a restaurant, and they're talking about the things that they kind of judge people over. Whiny customers, customers who come in the last 10 minutes before the restaurant's about to close. But the number one beef is when customers sit side by side in the booth, when somebody on a date or a couple comes in and sits side by side. I have to admit that's one of my, I wouldn't call it pet peeves, but it's something that annoys me. Number one, I just think it's silly. It's almost juvenile. It's like something you do in high school with your first girlfriend or boyfriend. But more importantly to me, when you're sitting side by side in a booth or at a table, you can't look directly at the other person. I always choose to sit either across from my wife or at a table. Usually we're at a 45 degree angle, but I've often found it strange when people want to sit side by side in a restaurant in a booth. Not something I ever did with all the girls I dated throughout the years, and it's something I've never done with my wife, and I find it amusing that servers and waitstaff hate it just as much as I do.

The Mason Minute
Side-By-Side (MM #4636)
"I've been following a story on the internet, and I believe it actually started as a TikTok, where waitstaffer servers judge people over things when they come into a restaurant, and they're talking about the things that they kind of judge people over. Whiny customers, customers who come in the last 10 minutes before the restaurant's about to close. But the number one beef is when customers sit side by side in the booth, when somebody on a date or a couple comes in and sits side by side. I have to admit that's one of my, I wouldn't call it pet peeves, but it's something that annoys me. Number one, I just think it's silly. It's almost juvenile. It's like something you do in high school with your first girlfriend or boyfriend. But more importantly to me, when you're sitting side by side in a booth or at a table, you can't look directly at the other person. I always choose to sit either across from my wife or at a table. Usually we're at a 45 degree angle, but I've often found it strange when people want to sit side by side in a restaurant in a booth. Not something I ever did with all the girls I dated throughout the years, and it's something I've never done with my wife, and I find it amusing that servers and waitstaff hate it just as much as I do.

The Mason Minute
Side-By-Side (MM #4636)
"I've been following a story on the internet, and I believe it actually started as a TikTok, where waitstaffer servers judge people over things when they come into a restaurant, and they're talking about the things that they kind of judge people over. Whiny customers, customers who come in the last 10 minutes before the restaurant's about to close. But the number one beef is when customers sit side by side in the booth, when somebody on a date or a couple comes in and sits side by side. I have to admit that's one of my, I wouldn't call it pet peeves, but it's something that annoys me. Number one, I just think it's silly. It's almost juvenile. It's like something you do in high school with your first girlfriend or boyfriend. But more importantly to me, when you're sitting side by side in a booth or at a table, you can't look directly at the other person. I always choose to sit either across from my wife or at a table. Usually we're at a 45 degree angle, but I've often found it strange when people want to sit side by side in a restaurant in a booth. Not something I ever did with all the girls I dated throughout the years, and it's something I've never done with my wife, and I find it amusing that servers and waitstaff hate it just as much as I do.

Over the Next Hill Fitness
Miles of Marathon Motivation With Jeannie Rice
"Tell me um about your marathon journey how many marathons have you ran so far weeks ago three weeks ago ready yeah I did that was my 131 Wow and then 30 first marathon so you know it's interesting it's a funny actually I told my friends and family when I when I reach hundreds marathon I'm gonna stop running a marathon not that I'm gonna stop running I'll stop for marathon and I'll do the half marathon and I'll continue to run so 100th math and I went to Boston again Boston is very special I guess because I was qualified night very beginning so I went there right after my hundredth marathon I'm thinking already next math and I couldn't so many I still want to do so now since then I've been 31 again 31 more so I am you know still have several math and I want to do so I you know is it easy no training is the hard part as you know anybody can train I mean you get to the starting line we can all get through it math either faster or slower but to get to that point you have to train so train for so weeks train is a tough you know I run 50 miles a week all year round either I have a marathon schedule or not so I am pretty much marathon ready whenever I want to run math and I just picked the one and then I do so 50 miles a week a pretty much six seven days a week once in a while I'll take the day off but you know my day off can be real easy one you know three four mile or none but normally six days a week I run all year round so what made you decide to go from that 5k to a marathon what was there any transition in there any like a 10k then a half or anything like that or you just went from 5k to I think I went seven weeks in a row 5k but 5k is like my speed world to me I am more you know distance runner although I do have a world record 5k I don't consider myself a fast but fast enough for my age division you know I broke the world record on 5k 10k even 1 ,500 meter and one mile this past this year I got all this world record time but marathon is the one I really you know a good at it because a marathon time when I first broke a world record when I was 75 years ago in Chicago and I broke the world record by seven minutes yeah those seven minutes the German lady had it for five years nobody broke until I did it and then I broke that year and then year later I went to Berlin marathon and I broke my own record by three minutes so I have a ten minutes in between so but there's a couple ladies are chasing of course it's fun about it we are not pro runners but you know they are chasing my record and record will be broken some sooner later just like I did this year now I'm move up to 75 and I broke 75 years old record mm -hmm so Chicago I only broke by four minutes so I mean I said only because I was hoping for seven minutes just like I did five years ago but this way I can break my own record again because I didn't run as fast as I want I plan to and I was hoping to so now next big race will be London and that's what I'm going for okay so you're going for all the world majors yes yeah yeah I don't have any marathon plan before then I do have a USATF cross -country that's only 6k 6k in December and I have a math half marathon in December Jacksonville and then in Naples in January that's a big race I go to Naples during the winter time mm -hmm I live in Cleveland Ohio during the summer but it's cold in here so I'll be heading down in a week or two to Florida and I stay there till April so but there's a big half marathon in Naples in January which I do that every year and I belong to running club down there it's a huge race people come from all over so that's my my schedule but I do a lot of 5k if it's a local 5k there is 5k I run anyway because to me that's my fun run and it's a speed work mm -hmm and I'm not really good at going to track every week like some people do I used to when I was younger and I don't do that and I still go once in a while with the friends if they want me to go I'll go but my speed work is local small races or I do on the road by doing this you know running schedule

Over the Next Hill Fitness
Hear 75-Year-old Jeannie Rice's Inspiring Journey to Marathon Success
"To the show Jeannie. It's so nice to have you here. Well thank you for having me. Jeannie I read your story in runner's world so I really was excited to have you agreed to come on the show. So how did you get started in running? It's a long story but I'm gonna make it short. Like 41 years ago, it's going on 41 years already I've been running, I made a trip to my hometown Seoul, Korea and I came home a few extra pounds. I would say five six pounds because I was just traveling and visiting family and you know even every day it's like a feast right? So I am a short person I'm only 5 '1 and the five six pounds was a little I felt like I was a little chubby so I started jogging around the blocks and then I got hooked and I decided that I am pretty good at it running before you know it and I was in a five mile race in local race and then I did very well at the time I was 35 years old and I was a brand new runner I just starting to jog a couple three months and I came in fourth in my age division it was a big race actually so I thought oh if I train I guess I can run faster so that's how I got hooked so a year later I did math on 1984 1983 I start running 1984 I did my first marathon and six months later first marathon was 345 and then six months later I did 316 which qualified for Boston at the time I was only 36 years old so I did go to Boston 1985 that was my first marathon and I got hooked so I've been running since then and my children were already older a lot of people a lot of girls I would say when they start younger age we know they get married they get you know have a children's they take some time off between their pregnancy or whatever but I was already I had two boys already they were already older so I just never stopped as I've been running 41 years straight Wow and your time hasn't really changed now has it because I looked at some of your times yes you know it's interesting um a lot of people my competitor now and they used to be some of them I mean one you know particular lady and from London she was Olympian years ago she was her best time is like a 240 something but now she's running my pace 330 ish but I never was there faster so I haven't slow down much let's I'll put it that way my first marathon was a 345 and then I got better to 310 but I never went under three hour so now I slow down a little bit 1015 minutes 40 years later I'm still running 330 math that's so incredible

Mark Levin
Hear From Dr. Yechiel Leiter, Father of Fallen Soldier Moshe Leiter
"Man his background his history and I wanted you to come on the program and tell millions and millions of Americans what this is like what's happening what's happened to your family and what about the future sir well thank you mark good evening thank for you the opportunity to address your audience my son Moshe was my oldest three eight children he was also my best friend he spent 15 years in the shaldad unit which is the Israel equivalent to the Delta Force actually he trained for some time with the with the Delta Force at at the age of 33 decided to go to medical school because he was intent on helping people and healing people he was about to start his experience clinical on October 8th but October we know what happened Hamas stormed into our communities slaughtered 1200 hundred people and he immediately went back into a reservist position he had spent even during the training the medical training he had spent 80 90 days a year doing reserve duty because he was a real expert field fox he understood the battlefield very well and that's why when he went back into his reserve in the reserve unit on October 8th and organized the his soldiers prepared them for war he was actually put at the command of the point squadron which which led the division the first division to enter the northern community in in Gaza from which the Hamas terrorists would fire missiles into our cities sometimes thousands of missiles at a time and he was killed when he led the operation to discover peers tunnel peers that would lead to terrorist headquarters and to their ammunition sites it was booby trapped a very heavy booby trap and he was killed along with three of his soldiers and three were injured seriously they lost their legs so it was a great loss for me personally I think for the IDF we we had thousands of people during our shiva the mourning period for him thousands and and many of prime mr. visited us the president of Israel I say about half the cabinet because he was very very well known he was very well liked and he was a major who had mastered a so masterful reputation half my heart bleeds for my son and my best friend and half my heart is very proud that I had a son who led the battle a civilizational battle against evil and sitting here listening it's very emotional obviously I don't know you I didn't know him and I'm thinking of the great men who have to go off to war whether they really want to or not but in times like this they're called to do duty and they go and they do so without objection and then I'm thinking about the leading politicians in my country here and how they never talk about the idea of soldiers they talk never about who they are they don't show their photographs they don't talk about their backgrounds their families what they've gone through and I assume you find that incredibly disturbing

Mark Levin
Four Killed in Hamas-Claimed Terror Shooting at Jerusalem Bus Stop
"The in highest American deficit history this year next year will be the highest deficit. We owe ourselves tens of billions of dollars and if you take the off -budget items like so -called entitlements we what's going to happen nothing good. the There's constant government's going to shut down the government's going to shut down the government's going to shut down. The government's going to collapse the economy is going to collapse that's going to make 2020 and the riots and pandemic the look like small potatoes when people lose everything and they're

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa
Dr. Raymond Moody & Paul Perry Join Melisa to Discuss What Happens When We Die
"So I have Dr. Raymond Moody and Paul Perry. Raymond A. Moody Jr. MD PhD is the leading authority of near -death experiences and the author of several books, including the seminal Life After Life. The founder of the Life After Life Institute, Moody has lectured on the topic throughout the world and is a counselor in private practice. He has appeared on many programs, including Today and Turning Point. Paul Perry has co -written several New York Times bestsellers, including The Light Beyond and Evidence of the Afterlife. He is also a documentary filmmaker, and for his film and the book about Salvador Dali. He has been knighted in Portugal, oh, that's interesting, a groundbreaking book, this is, that combines nearly 50 years of afterlife and near -death experience research to provide proof of the existence of the soul and life after death from psychiatrist and bestselling author of Life After Life. Dr. Raymond Moody and New York Times bestselling author, Paul Perry, after spending nearly five decades studying near -death experiences, Moody finally has the answer to humanity's most pressing question, what happens when we die? And in this book, Proof of Life After Life, both authors reveal that consciousness survives after the death of the body, featuring in -depth case studies, the latest research, and eye -opening interviews with experts. Proof explores everything from common paranormal signs to shared death experiences and much more. And you can learn more about each of these authors if you go to lifeafterlife .com or paulperryproductions .com. Welcome gentlemen, thank you so much for being with me today. Hi, thank you, nice introduction, appreciate it. Yeah, thank you. Thank you very much. So, first of all, okay, so, Raymond, you've been doing this since the 70s, am I correct in that? I'll just ask you each, you've been doing this work since the 70s? And what got you into wanting to explore near -death experiences? Well, fortunately, I was not exposed to religion when I was a kid, except very minimally. And so, I grew up with no idea of an afterlife. And so, I went to the University of Virginia at age 18 with intending to study astronomy, but took a philosophy course and immediately got hooked. And particular the book was Plato's Republic, which is, oddly, about a near -death experience. It culminates in a near -death experience of a warrior. And not just having no idea that anybody took the notion of an afterlife seriously, I asked my professor and he said that early Greek philosophers knew about cases of people who were believed dead and resuscitated. But had I no idea it still applied, but in 1965, in Charlottesville, I met a man who had such an experience, he was a professor of psychiatry there, and that really got me hooked and subsequent to that time, through my PhD in philosophy and then three years of teaching philosophy at a university, and then going to medical school and ultimately going into forensic psychiatry. But throughout that career, I've interviewed thousands and thousands of people who came to the brink of death and had these astonishing experiences. So that's how I got into it. It's amazing. It's really interesting. I can imagine it is a long process. And Paul, I'm going to ask you the same question. What made you interested in exploring this? Well, I was editing American Health magazine in New York City, this was in 1988, and Raymond and I shared the same agent, same book agent. One day our agent, Nat Sobel, called me and he said, would you like to write a book with Dr. Raymond Moody? And I said, I have no idea who Raymond Moody is. And he said, well, he's a man who named and defined the near -death experience. And I said, I'm sorry, I don't know what that is. And he said, well, you know, for a guy who's the editor of a major health magazine, you really need to get educated on things like the near -death experience, which was an offhand insult for an agent to talk like that. And so I said, sure, OK, I'll go meet Raymond. And Raymond was living in Georgia at the time. And I flew down to meet him and, you know, Raymond is an amazing person from the first time you meet him. And so we started writing this book called The Light Beyond, and I just got entranced by Raymond's account of near -death experiences and the stories we would hear. People would come by his house and tell their stories. And it just got amazing. So anyway, we wrapped up the book, The Light Beyond, and there was, in my estimation, a piece missing. And that was there was nothing in the book about children and near -death experiences. And Raymond said, well, nobody's done much research on that yet, except for one guy, a pediatrician in Seattle, Melvin Morris. And he connected me with Melvin. And I did a book with him called Closer to the Light. And it's all about children and near -death experiences. And after that, I wrote that book and then I thought, well, there's something missing here. There needs to be a larger study about people who have had near -death experiences and how they affect them during their life. So we wrote a book about that and on and on. Every book I would write, I would find a gap that needed to be filled. And that's gone now through, I think, 15 books on near -death experiences.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"few years later" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Very different place. And then only a few years later, when Russia defaulted on yeltsin I mean, obviously not the first to point out that last year was a very unusually synchronized year in absolutely everything fell. It's a bit hard to see that there's a good reason for emerging markets to have done as badly as they did. If you believe in continuing weak dollar, then you benefit just from the weakening of the dollar if you're holding on to emerging market assets, the yields both because of the sell off and because with higher rates anyway, they're offering more. The yields are very much more appealing than they've been for a very long time. A lot of these arguments do seem to be contingent on a continuing weakening dollar. Yes. Though, I guess it looks like we may have a continuing weakening dollar anyway. What about some of the other currencies though? I mean, are they stable enough that they can hold their own? The other huge wild card in the financial world at the moment is the yen. Which obviously matters quite a lot to some of the key emerging markets on the Pacific. I think it's close to certain that the bank of Japan will have to be considerably tighter in its monetary policy by the end of this year than it is now because the kind of intervention it's having to do at present is truly unsustainable. There will be new leadership in the first week of April. Yes. And something will happen there. And that could throw a real stunner in the works, right? We're going to be speaking with Garfield Reynolds a few minutes about the bank of Japan and how it did nothing this time around on yield curve control, which was a surprise to markets. But the end has been really a sort of a wild card, as you say. What was interesting to me about that reaction Garfield knows more about this than I do, but the speed with which the yen weakens again in the immediate aftermath decision showed that a lot of people really did think that Corona who's been in charge for more than a decade. Hugely important figure was going to basically give up on his signature policy right before leaving, which was always unlikely, but it was obvious from the market reaction that people really had thought this was going to happen. But the yin came all the way back within ten hours. I think it was. I think because you still reverted to the fact that this is only a matter of time. You still don't really want to be too far short the yen for much longer this year because it's very likely to appreciate. And yes, depending on how it's handled and obviously making sure that there isn't some big disruption caused by a major surprise to the market. The yen would be one of the other wild cards that could mess up the pitch we're looking at. We're not even going to talk about oil. Not this time. Bloomberg opinions, John authors. Stay tuned. Chief Asia rates correspondent Garfield Reynolds

Bloomberg Radio New York
"few years later" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Very different place and then only a few years later when Russia had fallen down to yeltsin. I mean, obviously, not the first to point out that last year was a very unusually synchronized year in absolutely everything fell. It's a bit hard to see that there's a good reason for emerging markets to have done as badly as they did. If you believe in continuing weak dollar, then you benefit just from the weakening of the dollar if you're holding on to emerging market assets, the yields both because of the sell off and because with higher rates anyway that offering more. The yields are very much more appealing than they've been for a very long time. A lot of these arguments do seem to be contingent on a continuing weakening dollar. Yes. Though, I guess it looks like we may have a continuing weakening dollar anyway. What about some of the other currencies though? I mean, are they stable enough that they can hold their own? The other huge wild card in the financial world at the moment is the yen. Which obviously matters quite a lot to some of the key emerging markets in Asia Pacific. I think it's close to certain that the bank of Japan will have to be considerably tighter in its monetary policy by the end of this year than it is now because the kind of intervention it's having to do at present is truly unsustainable. There will be new leadership in the first week of April. Yes. And something will happen there. And that could throw a real stunner in the works, right? We're going to be speaking with Garfield Reynolds a few minutes about the bank of Japan and how it did nothing this time around on yield curve control, which was a surprise to markets. But the end has been really a sort of a wild card, as you say. What was interesting to me about that reaction Garfield knows more about this than I do, but the speed with which the yen weakens again in the immediate aftermath of the decision to show that a lot of people really did think that Corona who's been in charge for more than a decade. Hugely important figure was going to basically give up on his signature policy right before leaving, which was always unlikely, but it was obvious from the market reaction that people really had thought this was going to happen. But the yin came all the way back within ten hours. I think it was. I think because you still reverted to the fact that this is only a matter of time. You still don't really want to be too far short the yen for much longer this year because it's very likely to appreciate. And yes, depending on how it's handled and obviously making sure that there isn't some big disruption caused by a major surprise to the market. The yen would be one of the other wild concerts that could mess up the pitch we're looking at. We're not even going to talk about oil. Not this time. Bloomberg opinions, John authors. Stay tuned. Chief Asia rates correspondent Garfield Reynolds next

KQED Radio
"few years later" Discussed on KQED Radio
"Howdy. I think you are all swell, the director of Spencer Williams, who a few people may know. But if the storm has made just a few years later, I'm certain will be a beloved classic. It just has all the makings of a film that people just really, really gravitate towards. It follows that the titular singer dancer as she Leaves Harlem for warmer climates after being caught cheating on her boyfriend, and even that just little little tidbit is enough to kind of pull you in. There isn't any tears of anyone climbing that tree from the ground floor is there What do you get? Mm. Always some good looking man would climb up in getting me. Don't worry about that girl. He was gonna bother you much. Can you talk to us about a film that you know you You wanted to reach out to your relatives or your grandparents or your parents and say, Why didn't you tell me about this? Yes, there is a 1975 documentary. That's a nearly a three hour look at the inner workings of the U. S welfare system called Welfare. Make an appointment with the maintenance people. Come on the floor. What do I do for tonight? What do I do for rent money? What do I do for food money? I haven't eaten in 33 days now. Except what I steal. Except what? I can't steal the chicken. I can't steal mistake. It doesn't fit in my pocket. Um, and it's spotlights. How these bureaucratic machines if you will can Dehumanize those that they're designed to help this exists. These are conversations. We're having now conversations I had in my household, but maybe necessarily didn't have the language to express. Um And there's just this brilliant quote that the documentary says that there is no middle class anymore. There's just rich and poor. And I'm one of the poor. I think that today people have a certain idea about films featuring black and brown people. How did seeing this vast archive help you think differently, You know about those kinds of, um Categorizations. Conversation I keep hearing is a lot of films are black trauma films like that kind of catch all phrase try and I think the kind of slavery epic or things were black people are suffering physical as well as emotional violence. Exactly. And I think this archive really says when we have a deeper engagement with black son of my history. It reveals that slave films or films that people automatically designate as trauma. Thumbs only are a small percentage of black films that have been made. Seeing this archive and working on this and still, you know, discovering films. I just know that there are just so many radical ideas and expression of blackness in block cinemas past That can really help shape black settlements, future. In the end. Who do you think that this is four, so to speak right now that it's gone beyond your sort of pet project, and it's really been, I think, highlighted quite quickly. That's information about it has spread quickly. Who is it forward to your mind? I think I do everything with black people and minds. But I also understand everyone can learn from this. You know whether you're a black person who has only seen a small amount of black films because you've disregarded them, or you're a non black person looking for a place to start and classic black cinema. I think there's something unblock film archive for you. It's fascinating how much falls outside of the spotlight. I think that's what I've learned from your archive the most. Yeah, definitely. My. My truest intention is that That is no longer the case that these films can get the being in the spotlight that they deserve. Well, my a K. Thank you so much for speaking.

KTOK
"few years later" Discussed on KTOK
"Really interesting. And, you know, you know me. I'm always like, Okay, let me bring it back full circle. What are the analogies here to planning our retirement? Well, it's we talked about moving targets before. Just how fast things change. There's some things that are never going to, you know, change when it comes to retirement, that some of the same things that we're looking for in goals. But as far as the headlines, administrations just what we were talking about before our different policies, those things are constantly changing and change fast, too. So the tax laws and retirement laws that were in existence when you sat down to start your lifetime income and growth plan. You know, That's why we monitor like you were talking about Brad because things can be very different. Just a short few years later, yeah, matter of fact, we do estate planning for our clients, and we have attorneys on staff that do that, And we're going through those state plans now to update them. Make sure that we have all the current statutes and and and that's an important process from a state planning standpoint, but also from the financial planning standpoint in the income plans. We want to make sure that the products that we used you know, 5 10 years ago are still the best out there. And, as a matter of fact carry is going through a change on our investment side where we're implementing the market Guard, which is a proprietary platform and And she's the head advisor on that, And that's just a I think it's a perfect for the times type of platform character talk a little bit. About what the uniqueness of that. Yeah, that's what I wanted it because for we're going to be talking about this a lot coming up in the future, But for those who have not heard of market guard, which they wouldn't have, because you guys are the only ones offering this right. We are the only ones that have it, and I'd love to sit down his clients and talk about it because it's a really good model for these moving targets you're talking about for volatile or potentially volatile market. It performs really well, because it's so I know I say this nimble and quick, but it is, um you know, it doesn't rebalance once a year or even once a month, it can rebalance as quickly as necessary and began to shift from equities. Into the fixed side. But at the market, let's say it begins to rebound like it did last year. Or even just upwardly tickets. Just going to begin to shift back over to the equity side. And and it does this automatically. Clients don't have to call and say, Oh, my goodness, sir, the markets taking it down towards get me out. Get me up. Put me in cash, or, you know, Conversely, I don't have to call clients and say, I think we need to make this but we're going to leave it to the algorithms and let them do their job. Because they've done a good job. So yeah, definitely call. Give us a call and let me sit down and show you the market Guard portfolio, and we are the only ones in Oklahoma that that can offer it So many times clients come to us and say, You know the reason we want to have you oversee our investments bread as we want to make sure that you get us out before there's a crash and and we look at and say we don't have a crystal ball. We personally cannot do that. But this is a mechanism that's proven to work and effectively accomplish that. And so we're really pleased that there's something out there that can begin to fulfill that objective for our clients.

WBUR
"few years later" Discussed on WBUR
"Okay to something completely abhorrent. Rachel, you describe the case that took place in the 19 nineties, a man was stomped to death after propositioning another man, and when the case was taken to court The defendants successfully use something known as the gay panic defense. You say this idea is rooted in a misconception about discussed. So this idea that in this sense using the gay panic defense, So in this case, someone was able to convince a jury that the idea of this man making a homosexual advance to him was so repugnant. That being you know, motivated to kill. This person was somehow justified. And like you said it actually was successful in the trial. Now, the concept that I think so This is sort of this is moralizing. And this is getting people to become less judgmental towards the act of murder because of the fact that they felt a kind of a sympathy towards the feeling of a version that this person must have had, and therefore this sort of Outburst of rage is somehow justified the thing that's different about this, and I think this is an interesting point about discussing what makes it different from anger, which I think it's often confused with is that disgust is about Recoiling from moving away from avoiding the stimulus that's making you disgusted, And if someone were truly disgusted by somebody else, they would not want to get all over them and beat them to get death and get their blood and everything else all over them, because that would be even more disgusting if you already disgusted. Instead. If I'm really angry if I'm enraged by something, then I attack then I approach then I can, you know, demolish you and get all covered in you. And it doesn't matter because I'm just in a rage. So really, The idea about this being discussed is wrong. And what it was, is this person was affronted, you know, somehow, morally personally, whatever the case might be, and incited into such a rage that then he wanted to murder this person. So the idea of using discussed in this way is actually flawed because the person is not disgusted. They're just enraged. So that example of homophobia. Rachel makes me think about an idea in almost every society you go to, you see patterns of discussed that are modeled on social Hierarchies. In many countries, you have the rich, who are disgusted by the poor or upper castes who are disgusted by lower castes or people who are native citizens being disgusted by foreigners. What do you think, explains this? It has to do with something more insidious, and that's related to our feelings about our social environment and the people that are in it. And the idea that foreigners and strangers and so forth are threats to our social normal order, and that that then becomes somehow connected to our ideas about contamination and and protecting us somehow. The idea is that this somehow justifies and rationalizes racial prejudices and other kinds of prejudices, because if we stay away from the familiar, unfamiliar and the foreign Because we don't know what those immigrants you know they could be diseased, and in fact disease was often used as a way of anti immigrant propaganda that somehow justifies negative attitude towards them when there's no relationship between their ability to actually make us sick or not. In much of our life discussed feels instinctive. When we see a cockroach in the kitchen counter or smell rotten food in the trash Can our revulsion feels hard wired. But Rachel says it's not our sense of disgust is learned. The things that discussed us not only reveal a lot about our culture, they reveal a great deal about our minds. She remembers an instructive episode from her own childhood as we were driving in the car, and it was a beautiful, sunny summer day and the windows were rolled down and there were you know, we were going by fields and everything was very pretty. My mother from the front seat said. Oh, I love that smell. And so as I was smelling the same thing, and all kinds of nice things were in my visual scene. And my mother who I Love said I love that smell. I thought, okay, This is a great smell, And I then learned a few years later that saying that in response that smell was a very big mistake. So the smell turned out to be skunk. So when I said I love that smell on.

WBUR
"few years later" Discussed on WBUR
"And we did what people do now. People give blood to friends to family members, they make organ transplants. You know, and we made a pact. We said okay hand in had If I die, please use my body, so at least one of us can get out of here. So the fact that this is about cannibalism and the the people willingly resorted to this is something which is really caught our imagination because it really leads to this question of what would you do in that circumstance? Would you also, you know, traverse the line into this worst taboo. One of the things that I find interesting is that when I personally think about their behaviour, I don't necessarily feel disgusted by what they did in the same way that if you told me that someone was munching on their, you know, neighbors arm you know, there's something about essentially having your hand forced by circumstances. You're you're acting in a way. That is the only way you can possibly survive. That changes the way I think about whether this is disgusting. Exactly. It's only really disgusting when it's a willful, unnecessary behavior. So like you said, you know, you kill your neighbor and then decide to eat them. Um, but someone who is forced into this situation and the only way that they can survive is by resorting to an opportunistic situation. The person is already dead. That's a lot different, but the act itself eating someone who's dad eating another dead human being is the same. And again. This is how our mind changes the behavior from being okay to something completely abhorrent Ritual. You describe the case that took place in the 19 nineties, a man was stomped to death after propositioning another man, and when the case was taken to court The defendants successfully use something known as the gay panic defense. You say this idea is rooted in a misconception about discussed. So this idea that in this sense using the gay panic defense, So in this case, someone was able to convince a jury that the idea of this man making a homosexual advance to him was so repugnant. That being you know, motivated to kill. This person was somehow justified. And like you said it actually was successful in the trial. Now, the concept that I think so This is sort of this is moralizing. And this is getting people to become less judgmental towards the act of murder because of the fact that they felt a kind of a sympathy towards the feeling of a version that this person must have had, and therefore this sort of Outburst of rage is somehow justified the thing that's different about this, and I think this is an interesting point about discussing what makes it different from anger, which I think it's often confused with is that disgust is about Recoiling from moving away from avoiding the stimulus that's making you disgusted. And if someone were truly disgusted by somebody else, they would not want to get all over them and beat them to get death and get their blood and everything else all over them, because that would be even more disgusting. If you already disgusted instead. If I'm really angry if I'm enraged by something, then I attack then I approach then I can You know, demolish you and get all covered in you. And it doesn't matter because I'm just in a rage. So really, The idea about this being discussed is wrong and what it was, is this person was affronted, you know, somehow, morally personally, whatever the case might be, and incited into such a rage that then he wanted to murder this person. So the idea of using discussed in this way is actually flawed because the person is not disgusted. They're just enraged. So that example of homophobia. Rachel makes me think about an idea. In almost every society you go to, you see patterns of discussed that are modeled on social hierarchies. In many countries, you have the rich, who are disgusted by the poor or upper castes who are disgusted by lower caste or people who are native citizens being disgusted by foreigners. What do you think explains this? It has to do with something more insidious, and that's related to our feelings about our social environment and the people that are in it. And the idea that foreigners and strangers and so forth are threats to our social normal order, and that that then becomes somehow connected to our ideas about contamination and and protecting us somehow. The idea is that this somehow justifies and rationalizes racial prejudices and other kinds of prejudices, because if we stay away from the familiar, unfamiliar and the foreign Because we don't know what those immigrants you know they could be diseased, and in fact disease was often used as a way of anti immigrant propaganda. This somehow justifies negative attitude towards them when there's no relationship between their ability to actually make us sick or not. In much of our life. Disgust feels instinctive. When we see a cockroach in the kitchen counter or smell rotten food in the trash Can our revulsion feels hard wired. But Rachel says it's not our sense of disgust is learned. The things that disgust as not only reveal a lot about our culture. They reveal a great deal about our minds. She remembers and instructive episode from her own childhood as we were driving in the car, and it was a beautiful, sunny summer day and the windows were rolled down and there were you know we were going by fields and everything was very pretty. My mother from the front seat said. Oh, I love that smell. And so as I was smelling the same thing, and all kinds of nice things were in my visual scene. And my mother who I Love said I love that smell. I thought, okay, This is a great smell, And I then learned a few years later that saying that in response that smell was a very big mistake. So the smell turned out to be skunk. So when I said I love that smell on the playground with all bunch of.

NEWS 88.7
"few years later" Discussed on NEWS 88.7
"Main. You decide to pursue this. And and did you need money? I mean, I have to assume you need some money to try and and get this off the ground, right? So I got together with a friend. Her name was Francis. At business school. She worked at Google and we each put in $12,000, which is obviously a lot of money for us both. But it's what I had. And so we put in this money and we hired a team of engineers down in Argentina to start building a prototype and the idea was to build like a website, a dating website initially Yeah, Initially it was a dating website. Initially, it was this Facebook canvas happening that it was still I think that was primarily the idea. And it was initially clunky and complex. And it would like, ask you questions about your friends and had all these bells and whistles, features and it was way over Complicated. And And was it still called? Because originally called it secret Agent Cubit. Was that what you would still recalling it at that point in 2011? No, no, no, that was like pretty pretty early on. We moved away from Like it went through a few iterations. In the early days. It went from, like double OkCupid, the secret Agent Cupid to two degrees. Three degrees, and each of these names have like trademark issues. And I just needed like a placeholder name, and that's where hinge came from. I was like, I just It was a friends of friends app. And I was like, I just need a name for something that connects two things. Like it's the thing in the middle, and I was staring at a door and I was like, I'm going to call a hinge when we come back in just a moment. How Justin decides to simplify Hinch and winds up building an app that a few years later help decide to pretty much rebuild from scratch. Stay with us. I'm guy Raz, and you're listening to how I built this.

WHAS 840 AM
"few years later" Discussed on WHAS 840 AM
"His inventory grew to include things like creams, medicines, smoking cessation products and food flavorings, including something called Fruit, smack fruit, smack fruit smack a liquid soft drink concentrate that came in six flavors, and he had these representatives that went from door to door selling these products. Now guess what is most popular product was Yep, it was the fruit snack, even though I've read a lot of accounts about how the name is kind of intimidating. It is I I again feel like this is sort of a threat. Yes, This sounds like you get a knock on the door. Open the door and it's a fruit and they just smack you on the cheek and then walk away and that's Yeah, that's your day. However, the production of fruit smack cause a lot of headaches of the product. The four ounce court bottles were heavy. They broken transport they elite they were expensive. So once again inspired by Jello, he and his team got to work on removing the liquid so that a powder remained by experimenting with the ratios of flavoring food coloring, citric into Tark acids and decks. Tras. He designed an envelope to put the powder in and change the name to Who late been spelled A d E instead of a I D 10 since an envelope available in six flavors, Cherry raspberry, orange, strawberry and lemon, lime and grape. And these, perhaps obviously we're much much easier to ship out. Uh huh. And it's hard for any time I see the year 1920 the United States, it's hard not to feel like Prohibition. Didn't have something to do with the popularity of this product for similar reasons. This was also when Coca Cola was taking off and we talked about that a little bit and our soda episode. So Perkins changed the spelling a few years later, and it's sort of the stuff of legend as to why, But the most accepted stories suggest he did it because the government prevented him from selling a drink named Aid. A D e like eliminate or line made. When there wasn't any fruit juice in it. Oh, okay, right. The hyphenated name was an homage to jello. And, yeah, he used that kind of naming hyphen naming Way on several of his product names, so Makes sense. But mysteries history, I suppose. Hmm..

For Your Reference
"few years later" Discussed on For Your Reference
"Mark and i feel like dots a disservice Forbid for me to save because inasmuch as we didn't get to see a lot of water in the movie he's still qualms over it so it'll be interesting to see maybe a few years later with probably get a new version. Oh absolutely Maybe maybe leave it alone in regards to themes. I wanna talk about survival. I don't think we've Outrightly said but there is consuming Of human mate In in this particular film also in the actual accounts And i just wanted to talk a little bit about survival I guess bringing a little bit of levity. We've talked quite a lot about the history channel's tv show alone Obviously it's it's in more controlled environment. But i would say it is roughing it out more than big religious. That's my beds fight. Another day But we we were fascinated by the show because of the two components. There's physical survival which is hot enough depending on the terrain that they choose not particular show you have to find shelter. He after decide whether you want to be close to running water you have to decide where you're going to you know cokie food and and got the fish and all that sorta stuff so there's the physical survival but what i found more interesting was the emotional survival because it are. You only need so much time if your learned to be able to set up shelter and then for however many long time you need to be able to survive within yourself. Yup are good with being alone just their mind and the thoughts and not particularly tv. Show people just drop because they just couldn't handle it they had built palaces and canoes guitars. You thought you'd like yeah. I can't do this anymore. Yeah absolutely In regards to add wada's book he wrote by the tenth day. Everyone was aiding those who had the hottest time deciding. Everyone had a motive for doing it. That had helped them in the deep recesses of his soul such as returning to see his parents or children to not fail is loved ones to fulfil.

The Big Story
"few years later" Discussed on The Big Story
"Jordan heath rawlings. This is the big story. Justin length is an investigative reporter. The canadian journalist who has been covering the blood banned for how long now just Like six years. Maybe longer many many enough years too many years i think. Why don't we just start at the beginning For people who heard this of like a talking point in a political fight over the last decade or so. How old is the blood band. And where did it come from right so you you go back about four decades in and you've fair confronted with the really disquieting reality of the blood of the tainted blood scandal right. You had cases the hundreds of cases across the country Where folks received blood transfusions that were not adequately screened that ultimately led to sero conversion for hiv that ultimately impacted them With other new hepatitis diseases as well as other infectious diseases And it was a national scandal. It was absolutely shattered. People's illusions about the blood system a better health system right it. It it fundamentally you know weakened trust in a meal what governments ought to be doing to ensure the health and safety of people who rely on government services so you go back to that point and you realize the sort of risks inherent in what protecting the blood supply you know actually means and unfortunately from that you know there was a good thing came from that. Which was we actually had a conversation about what Ensuring safety of the blood supply actually means but on the flip side you also started to see This really sort of reactionary and knee-jerk blame placed on the queer community in canada. Who of course have historically faced higher hiv rates of that other

Beyond Picket Fences
"few years later" Discussed on Beyond Picket Fences
"Was worried about what would happen to him or like how. My dad might react violently. So i didn't wanna get hit. And i didn't wanna be responsible for someone else's harm so i stopped telling anyone like i just and i got really good at hiding what was happening to me and maybe a few years later an an adult in other parents home started molesting me and it took me years to ever report it to anyone because that had been so i mean i felt so ashamed a reported it and it in nearly went to trial which was terrifying to me. I was so ashamed to talk about related to my body and like had gotten that message that like it was really shameful for me to talk about and i was going to have to go testify in front of a courtroom full of adults. I was so terrified. I remember at that point that that was what i was in sixth grade. Yeah yeah so like. I went into the courthouse and the the prosecuting attorney had me stand at the at the witness. Stand to like. Can i get a preview of what it would be like and like picture the people out there and you know it was like a a preparation kind of thing which is like a really supportive for them to do and i was so lucky that he pled guilty right before it went to trial and i didn't have to endure the experience of needing to testify about sex-abuse that yeah. It was just so uncomfortable for me to talk about at that time. All those experiences that i had in my family had made me so acutely aware of how vulnerable kids are in their environments like remember feeling really silenced as a kid both by adults who who didn't want to hear me express my truth but also by the fact that i was a child and i didn't have the language to express what i was feeling and express what i was experiencing in a way that i knew would be received in..

KCRW
"few years later" Discussed on KCRW

Break The Rules
"few years later" Discussed on Break The Rules
"Trauma response right because they just don't have the words so a lot of a lot of that is going to be on on the parents plate or on educators plates to really seek out some connection with these kids give them a few minutes of safety so they can open up and explain what they're feeling and that's what they need. They need just a few minutes of safety so that their nervous system can kind of relax and they feel comfortable sharing now. I do work with a lot of parents where we talk about ways to address this trauma and to start to heal it in our children without their direct participation so to speak so they're not actively putting words to their trauma and and going through it and processing in a way that an adult would they are being given lots of safe space to kind of let their nervous system and their actual somatic physical body. Relax and they're being supported in other ways they're being supported with diet. They're being supported with vega l- nerve tone. They're being supported with sort of what i call terrain theory and finding that safety in nature and in the world outside around us. So i'd say that to encourage parents. Sometimes it's hard to get our kids to talk about stress and trauma because they just don't have the words and just because they don't have the words doesn't mean we should stop there. There's so many ways that we can address trauma that doesn't require that sort of you know i'm doing my little air quotes here but that adult processing of trauma. So that's really exciting. That's one of the things. I love to talk to parents about because there are so many ways to come at. It will really live in this whole graphic kind of world. So i may come at it this way. You may come at it this way. But we're all doing the same thing and making that bridge to healing through Trauma there's so many different ways. Do you have any practical ways that like. In conversation starters are examples of ways to get kids open up for for parents who are wanting to explore this with their child. Absolutely one of the best ways to do it is through safe loving touch so finding a time when you can snuggle vining a time when you can hug and connect on the couch and then you can kind of open up. The conversation with open ended questions. How are you feeling how is how is school. And you can kind of guide these questions and and of match them to your child's response so i'll share a little story. My youngest two are very vocal very verbal so doing something like this with them where we may be connected by reading a book we snuggle together and read a book and then we can. I can kind of talk and open them up and see what's happening in their social circle and see you know. See what where their chronic stress is coming from. Now my oldest. I remember doing the same things d'alene and we were watching the care bears the cartoon the care bears and they like to talk about their feelings. And so i you know. And leaned in snuggled up and i like to talk about my feelings and she said i don't so that kind of response is common and at that point i stopped immediately. Because that's a very clear boundary. She didn't feel safe talking about it. So so respecting those cues in those boundaries are really important when you're opening up these conversations and when you do hit hit that that boundary with the child as a mother. My first instinct is to tear the boundary down. You know no. We're going to talk about your feelings. But that's really counter productive and allowing vat answer to for the child allowing that child to put up that andry and maintaining for the child creates a whole different kind of safety that we aren't even aware of safety in their nervous system a safety in their somatic experience. What's actually being in their muscles. So that's really important as much as we want to get in there and fix it. I mean i am. That's why became a doctor. I liked to fix. I liked to problem solve but when a child says clearly. I don't want to talk about this. Then then i don't and that allowed her to later open up. She knew that there was a space safe. Space for her and that her boundaries would be respected so a few years later that allowed her to open up and process and then we extended that processing to to professionals. And there's all kinds of ways to do it. But i would encourage parents to start with a safe safe activity that kind of that bonding that attachment whether it's snuggling reading a book you know if we're talking about my son it could be a wrestling giggling tickle match. You know whatever it is the connects and gets your child to feel safe. That is a good point to start opening.

Read Between the Lines
"few years later" Discussed on Read Between the Lines
"She taught me a lot and in that time that she was there on my meadow. I milked her and made cheeses from her milk and got to know her and got to know also the way that the local farmers thought about animals and how they treated them and what they expected me to do as you know because of having this cow living there and that determined me i decided i did not want to have anything to do with animal husbandry and at that point i became vegetarian. What were the expectations they had. Well i start when she arrived unbeknownst to me she was pregnant so she gave birth to this beautiful calf in the middle. And that's when the trouble started really all. The farmers said let her do that by herself. You didn't have a vet present. You let the animal the calf suckle her and now you'll never get them apart. I'm an i was supposed to have taken the calf from her virtually immediately and castrate the calf if it was male and basically separate them and then sell the cap straight away for veal or something like that. Those are the sort of things that i couldn't countenance it. It just struck me as entirely cruel and also revealed to me that the the meat i was expected to it was part of came from that sort of setup that set of circumstances and i didn't want anything to do with it but of course that's only the first step ever is to say no to something is is very important but it's a very early step in a process and consequently for me. I became vegetarian. But then i also started questioning the use of dairy. Because i got to know this cow. I knew what the suffering that she was put through and others like her where there they are kind of manipulated to be pregnant more than they ought to be. And therefore to produce milk and to produce milk for longer and in greater quantity than is natural for them. That's one thing. And i didn't like the fact that the child and the body fluids were taken from her constantly and so i then became very doubtful even of my vegetarian stance. And at that time. I met my now husband who was also detari. I can't tell you how rare that was all by itself. Oh that's that's very good. That's very yes very lucky and Leap basically became vegan together was a joint decision and we were both really ready for it. We asked all the questions and done a lot of research and that became a very natural step for us very natural choice and a few years later after we been married for a time we had our first child and again made a decision that we would.

CXMH
"few years later" Discussed on CXMH
"To tell our listeners about it. The next system was to be my my segue. Yes yes. I talk with my friend. Nia baker who is a therapist here in atlanta. And who has you'll hear when i read her bio but kind of this entire background of working with What would might say like people who've experienced trauma rights like sexual abuse homelessness all sorts of stuff like that. And so we talk about some of why that's so important to her just the idea of of trauma and what we learn from from people when we kind of you them as like okay. You have survived this thing as opposed to like okay. This thing has been broken stuff like that but we also get into a lot of kind of nervous system stuff right of like. How do we make each other. Feel safe be connected right all that type of thing a a great job of explaining it in a way. That's not know if you're listening in you're like what what is this. I don't i don't study by all like hang me neither She does of explaining non packing in an understandable way and then saying okay as as faith leaders had we. How is this useful in terms of like our community right things like that in just a lot of fun because i love neo. She's great and it's always fun to to have friends on so we will get out of the way. Especially because i hear a guy doing yard work outside my house here We'll get out of the way. Listen to my interview with nia baker. I enjoy al right today. We are so excited to be joined by nia. Baker nia is a therapist and the executive director of active resilience counseling and coaching in atlanta. At as working with beloved atlanta a nonprofit organization that works with women who have lived through trafficking prostitution and addiction. She has specializations and training in areas like t trauma working populations like the homeless those who have experienced sex trafficking in more. This is also one of the cool times that i always love which is where our guest is extremely qualified. But also i have the honour of cutting her as a friend so nia welcome to the show. How are you doing today thank you. I'm happy to be here. I'm doing pretty well sitting in a warm room with my pop and drinking some coffee and getting to talk to a friend. So it's it's pretty. Say i love that. Is there anything else that our audience should know about you. That wasn't in your your bio there. Wow one of the things that i have started becoming more increasingly interested in And cannot say that. I've gone through the training. Although i've done some experiential work And it's something i think. Just make sense based on some of my areas of like hobbies and and things that i do that are more for fun than for some sort of professional career and I think i'm starting to include now. In some of the ways that i think about therapy in the ways that i think about healing are Some things close to my heart gardening and painting and The reason i bring those up. I've been considering and working towards going through this not experiencing training which is a lot more around by the experiences space And uses that as a way to actually promote healing the brain which is pretty cool. Yeah that's awesome. So i noticed one thing that kind of goes like a through line through your bio there and even what you were just talking about which happens to be working with individuals who experience a of trauma right and i know. We've we've talked about trauma before in this show. But i always think it's helpful right up front to get kind of a working definition for the conversation. So how do you define trauma so to speak in wise Something that you're so passionate about working with. I define trauma as any any type of an experience where whatever the stimulus is could be. I've been thinking about this a lot. More recently related to our bodies. It could be a stimulus that you know actually impacts a part of our body Bruises it but also if we think about that from the way receive information. It could be something that we hear or see or touch like temperature But anytime that we experience a stimulus and our nervous system get so heightened that it moves into a shutdown response. We're now when we experienced a stimulus that reminds us that past emulates. The nervous system is threatened by it and so for some people that is actual physical assault or sexual assault for some people. It is a way that someone has responded to them over and over again or maybe multiple people We talk about that a lot. More thinking what about someone who is experiencing homelessness and the the ways that oftentimes people will without knowing it. Just something that we you know. Our bodies how they respond to each other We might look away from them. We might not maintain icon ttacked which the nervous system reads is. Oh i'm not seeing. I'm not understood anything from from that level too. You know i. I am someone who i try not to buy will burn my tongue on a cup of coffee or hot chocolate pretty regularly and every single time. I'm so terrified can happen and i consistently experience at that but anybody who's to their tongue tiny little trauma right. There's a way that you feel it afterwards. it's not just. oh wow. That was hot and it's over. It's a wow. That was hot now. Like i might. It feels raw and so When thinking about physical trauma or emotional trauma and emotional trauma is just. It's held a nervous system is impacted through In responses related to feeling safe in an environment. Yeah yeah. I love that broader definition. Because i know sometimes we think about trauma is kind of this elite level of you know has to reach a certain point and i think it was a on cobra longtime ago on the show talked about this idea of capital t. trauma in lower case trauma. Where like there. This whole range of experiences that we can describe as matt iq and that's not taking away from like. Oh if i had a bad day that was traumatic. I'm not downplaying. The things that we would say are like some people might phrases actual trauma quote unquote. You can see my acquits But there's there's also lower t trauma in terms of like there is kind of a lasting impact and universe system in like that type of thing. So i love that. So why. Why is that these various types of traumas that that are listed in your bio and things. Why is something that you're so passionate about working with as as a therapist. I get really excited about it. Because they think well. I joked with people. I think there are many therapists. Who might agree with me where we it's the wounded healer. Principal right we. I went to therapy school and was really interested in and excited about it and then looked back a few years later and i was like i think i went to therapy school because i need therapy. Actually what was going on And i had never been therapy before. I i went to my clinical program and while i was there was like you know. I don't even think that there are these. I think it was one of those people who i'd grown up.

KLBJ 590AM
"few years later" Discussed on KLBJ 590AM
"Welcome back sports Talk. Jason Antebi Toby No. Taking a birthday day off, squeezing one more phone call here. 51283605 90. It's rich on K O. B. J. What's up, Rich? Hey, guys, just listening to the show on the Vegas best. I wanted to throw in a little bit of tribute to make you ponder the rest of the weekend back in back in 1991. When the NFL went to 16 And, of course, the Packers and the stewards. The only succeeds everyone the Super Bowl. There's only been 15 seed ever to win the Super Bowl, and that year it was the New York Giants when they lost 38 to 35 in the regular season. The Patriot from Tom Brady threw a bomb to Randy Moss knows the closest the Patriots came to losing until the Super Bowl when they lost to the 52 Giants. And I just find it ironic that this year Tom Brady in Tampa Bay is the fifth seed there in the Super Bowl and during the regular season. Lots of Kansas City chiefs by three points again, so that you think about that when you have a good weekend. Thank you. Rich. I thought you're gonna ask me a trivia question. You know, just black styles on how smart you were there who caught the pass from Eli Manning that won the game for I mean that I think of David Tyree. Right. Tyree Tyree. Exactly right. You like Manning escapes. Eli Manning Hall of Famer with those two Super Bowl rings, escapes the sack and hits David Tyree. I lost a lot of money in that game, and in that game sadly Great linebacker who was traded to the Patriots to win a Super Bowl. Never, he didn't He never won a Super Bowl. He was a great linebacker, and, tragically, he took his own life a few years later. In yourself. Bingo. Yeah, you're saying that was a sad part of that deal. Nice picture mad as we head into the weekend, and I'm sorry to bring you down on that. Yeah. Eli Manning to me is not Hall of Fame material. I'm sorry. He won two Super Bowls and I'm the one talking about rings, but Yeah, I agree. But I think the name plus the two rings. I think you're gonna wind up having Eli Manning in the Yeah, that that's that's 2007. I remember correctly. The Dallas Cowboys were 13 and three that year, maybe a number one seed, but certainly one of the top two seeds because that was the year Tony Roma went on vacation. Jessica Simpson, Jason Witten, and whoever his lady was. It was his wife and one time Kabo or something like that. Oh, yeah. Then they got beat by those giants and their their first game. Patrick Crayton dropped in an easy pass over the middle. That could allow for that was Tony never should have done that, You know, never show you talking about. He went to Kabul for three days when they didn't have a game for two weeks. Get out of here. What was his focus on? What was his focus on for those three? Clements? Have you ever seen Jessica Simpson in person? All right, As district asked John Mayer she sexual napalm on, all right? I think that's him. John Mayer to talk about on that, But hey, out of the same thing ever right? T O was crying after that game. Quarterback guys talk about the vacation that's unfair. I just turned him into Bill Clinton. That's It's unfair of sex. That woman didn't Tony did not have sexual relations. There. It is. All right. Hey, as long as we're just talking about sad and death doll it. John Chaney passed away today. Hall of Fame college basketball coach. Longtime temple coach passed away at the age of 89 to John Chaney. To me will always be the guy who tried to get in a fight with Calipari in the in the press room. He was a fiery guy. He was great. He was great. He's one of those guys that you always remember when they well, you're younger when he ESPN first went on the air and 79 in the early eighties, when all you had was big East basketball in basketball from the East Coast. How would just get a maze to watch John Chaney? Our buddy bill showing went to Temple? He went to Temple. Always loved Cheney and stuff. But I always like to watch Cheney as he coached the basketball game. Really, really. Old school old school coach. Yeah, it is. Certainly Calipari youth advantage over Cheney. But I'm gonna make John Chaney a minus 1 60 favorite in that matchup, Ferocious tenacity for Royal pirate predator kind of soft. Uh, sleep doctor who's the most famous temple graduate? Hold on. I think I know, but I don't want Oh, I don't want to say he's not a very good place right now. Okay? As a Bill Cosby it's Bill Cosby. Yeah. Hey. There's a pretty famous on my morning show. That's how you know it's real famous, Famous on my morning show photo of me and my ex wife and Bill Cosby on Yeah, became famous because after our divorce, she would she had posted it or she kept it in our social media's, but she cropped me out of it. And now I'm like it. Looks like you cracked the wrong wrong one out, right, baby, But I'm not the big house. That mistake, man. Yeah, I met Bill Cosby when he performed at the Bass concert hall backstage with a he and Quan Cosby. No relation. Remember that picture Kwan had posted one time of he was given Cosby Cosby, the Jersey remember that? Why did you do all those things, and I just want you like you never just wantedto beat the Hokies behind your wife's back. Now you're doing all these other things Don't do that man. All right. Speaking of soft Calipari, Friday, Kentucky, Texas is off for the offer this weekend..

WNYC 93.9 FM
"few years later" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"You're damn wrong. There's no way my gorgeous daughter will marry our good son. And it was just going back and forth back and forth. So he felt that he had to demonstrate that no matter what he will be with me, so he started missing his classes. And he would come to my classes and sit there. So the teachers from his glasses would write him. You have to attend. You have to attend Boom boom boom, So The end of the story was very sad. He was kicked out of university for missing classes. And he was taking to the army where he had to go to the army. Yeah, Yeah. If you were kicked out of university, you have to go to the army. Wow. So that was my first experience, dating a Russian point. Yeah, a pretty dramatic end to a first relationship. The drama didn't stop there for you, Lena. A few years later, she dated a Russian guy from Barone ish, a small town about a day's drive away from Moscow. They went to visit his parents and stay for the weekend. One morning, she came back from the shower and caught her boyfriend's mother examining the bed sheets and later I asked my boyfriend what was she looking? And he said, Well, she know I was so people of colossal she thought that the she's beater T. And she was very surprised that they were clean. But again, it was not racism. It was pure ignorance, pure ignorance, and this woman adored me. Later so, but I feel that enough is enough. And it's time for me to to be with people that knows who I am. Don't look at which eats and don't ask stupid.