23 Burst results for "Finlay"

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
Debt Default Blame Game: Is Biden Responsible?
"What did you think of last night's town hall generally? And then let's get to the debt specifically. I'll confess that I watched the Sox beat the braves last night to once again win their road series to go back home to finlay. In the playoffs ahead of your guardians, I've seen some of the coverage this morning on the default question in particular, there's no reason to default speaker McCarthy and senator McConnell on both side. We shouldn't default. But it's really on Joe Biden's shoulders. House Republicans passed a good bill that would raise our debt ceiling in a responsible fashion by reducing spending up to $5 trillion for ten years and Joe Biden has continued to pretend like that didn't happen and that he has no responsibility to either support that legislation or propose an alternative, I know that they've begun negotiations this week. I hope those proceed and orderly fashion and that Joe Biden accepts the reality that the American people sent a Republican majority to the House of Representatives in part to stop the runaway spending in Washington.

The Defiant - DeFi Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on The Defiant - DeFi Podcast
"App. Tell them the defiant sent to you. So what you're describing is a lot broader than what we now understand while it does, right? Meta mask is a place where you hold your different assets. It's a way to kind of interact and access different web three apps. It's like, I don't know, I think it's viewed as kind of this gateway to crypto and to web three. And now as a recently, it also lets you swap within the wallet itself, but what you're describing goes way kind of beyond that. You're describing something that's more similar to a Google. You're describing this place where the app lets you find kind of what you're looking for and even recommends places or services or things that could be useful. Yeah, that's kind of it looks very different from what made us today. That's interesting. Yeah. I think that one way that it's critically different from what Google does is that Google tries to solve these problems in a largely global way. So if you type in car mechanic, it may ask where you are. And it may incorporate some of your past search history, but what it's not doing is incorporating totally private personal social network type information. And meta mask, we are trying to build a user centric cryptography first user agent. So if we're talking about your wallet eventually helping you find, let's say, a good mechanic. Now it may not be that you're ever searching for a mechanic in the wallet. It may be that you go to a website and you connect your wallet to it. And then the wet wallet says, and the website maybe says, hey, in order to recommend someone in your social graph, I need access to some social graph information. And hopefully we're able to do it in a privacy preserving kind of selective disclosure kind of way. But that's this whole open creative challenge to cryptography. Like, what is the most privacy preserving, most kind of user consent preserving way to interact with the web. And we don't want to interfere with the web's development. The web is full of human creativity. And it's only getting more interesting, especially with all this AI stuff going on, right? But these AIs are still just working with kind of public data. And we're in this kind of weird tense relationship between wanting all the benefits of an AI helping us with everything versus needing some domain that is private or local to you because that's how you hold assets that can't be taken from you or that nobody else has a total authority over and how you kind of preserve competitive advantage in the world, right? Private information is kind of like the heart of making a unique decisions in the world. So yeah, I guess you're right that it's kind of like Google in that it's like I do think that a user agent like meta mask should eventually be helping you do all sorts of things.

The Defiant - DeFi Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on The Defiant - DeFi Podcast
"Dan Finley is a cofounder of meta mask, one of the main wallets for people to interact with web three and our conversation will dive into dance background prior to cofounding meta masks where he sees meta mask heading in the coming years. Their privacy policies, a potential mask token, then hopes and dreams for the next bull run and much more. But first, then we'll tell the origin story of meta mask. I was working at Apple with my friend Aaron Davis, kumaris, and he went to a Bitcoin meetup and saw vitalik of a talk about Ethereum and we started talking about it every day at lunch and what we would make if we had a computer that you could just trust and run transparently and I had done a few experiments before I'd wanted micro payments for Reddit up votes and I'd wanted decentralized voting. I'd been following a couple of projects that enable their goal was to decentralize democracy or debate and all those applications had certain problems about establishing roots of trust. And so I had a few project ideas I was excited about right away, where I thought, oh, having a trustworthy computer could be a solution to this. So we were really excited to figure out what it would mean to build an application on Ethereum. And the first thing we needed was an account manager. And so we started building the road to the place we wanted to go. And it turned out that a good account manager on a permissionless extensible Turing complete computer that is still learning to scale and be private is a big long project, much bigger than I think any of us expected at the beginning. But it's been an obviously really important component of a successful decentralized ecosystem. And so I think we've kind of found ourselves growing into a new product category. Super interesting. So meta mask at first was viewed as an account manager. So how has that vision changed over time to what we know today?

Scientific Sense
"finlay" Discussed on Scientific Sense
"What's good about that outcome and philosophically. We would hope that you would come to a final answer. And that's what the philosophy will. Cy is the final into the final. Good but i agree with you. That in ordinary conversation we thinking much more In terms of intermediate goals this thinking is actually quite quite interesting team. You know if you think about social media for example right a windy use. The combs has talked about before terms like should Denison implicit expectation. And then most More often than no not. Those expectations are highly tactical right. It doesn't it's nowhere close to the foundational outcome That you desire and so you know in some sense. This has cut to curtail thought. I don't know what term would be vinnie. Sit in front of a computer and getting social media you you essentially have curtailed. Your thought process to be extremely tactical. It's almost like a different way of thinking. You see that yes. I think that i disagree with anything. You sit this so The kind of example which came to mind to me. Maybe because you mentioned social media is is a political discourse And you know you've got your democrats in facebook communities and you've got your republicans facebook communities and the throwing around with like goods and or should and there's a whole lot of humans common ground rice within those communities where We will accept that. This is what we want. This is not what we want and My fist instinct would be to you. Know i understand Say for example in campaign context a republicans use of should might be assuming a goal like in order to get republicans elected whereas a democrats use of should could be assuming in order to get democrats elected And then there are much deeper more profound questions about were. Why really will those things anyway. What what's the good of gazing a republican elected. What's the good of guessing. Democrat elected End of these different groups assuming these goals because of some deeper fundamental assumption that you're having republican governments is the path to citizen good Maybe happiness Or and so there is a question about the very important christians which which has tackled in check duration. My book which. I didn't do you too about how how we should ultimately understand lobes.

Scientific Sense
"finlay" Discussed on Scientific Sense
"So one example is If you're at the dinner table and your child is talking spitting food all over the place and you say we don't talk without Full at this table. So you've said something which is clearly false. Some of us. I talking with our mouths full at the table. But by saying that you communicated demand during expectation that other people you want this to be true and you speak other people to make true so if we apply the to the the case of you should drive more slowly. I suggest that was speaking that way. I'm communicating mike expectation in my demand that you share my consent about the wellbeing of the district And so i think i climbed has prescriptive false In the if you like the more pejorative seen signal activity that we started off by talking about the making demands on you by speaking as if we shared the skull. Even though we don't so you might want to redirect and push me on this but how it's supposed to. Yeah oh so so. I guess the sort of the unified idea there. Steve so I can't get used idea that use the would should in any context. Dennis a probabilistic Now the in the car example disability low probe of something happening but that has extremely costly Outcomes if that were to happen and so even the probe ladies are lower that cost higher and ken site. I used the term shirt now. The the complication is though is that if the unified terry is showing that it is really probe listrik than if the probability assessment or in some sense cost assessment are different for different people for instance religion. You know religious There's a good often do often used these terms as says you know. They have some assessment of probability. Let's say But the the people that talking on share that right so so so don't be ultimately. Even though there is a unified system ought to be back to sorta pragmatics if probably quite different So one thing to say in response to that is that should claims on. My view can definitely be false So if the probabilities that a speaker is pointing towards not actually the case. Then this should statement is simply false on my view So if for example we have a religious teacher who say's in a you should You should Go to church every week on. I'm going to interpret that as meaning something like you know if you want to receive eternal life. Venue should go to church every weekend. Another in other words.

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
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Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"These things a possible and you mentioned vague tangible examples of a slot coming out of the canine using my patient exit as an example. Appreciate that but you also beautifully put that keeping things simple full predictability is so key in that's the takeaway a lesson from that. I guess a couple of questions to make the if someone is going to try this making more. Tangible is obviously need to speak their technician. Make sure they're onboard. Be is those dimples. Maybe you'll be teaching a suck expert for those young dentists those dimples. That also needs to be prepped into the tooth right of bit of spice the faucheux. So i mean. I put a cramp up the other day on instagram. Just discuss about material choice nine said. Hey guess what material using on this preparation and then the giveaway was. I put this very mechanical slot inside the tooth which is totally inappropriate for ceramic right and then it was gold. There's a gold crown but it could easily have been. Pfm but these things. Am i right in saying that. The kony is ceramics is just not even go there. It has to be metal. No i might add. Initiation works beautifully with konia. Eight with the great thing about. He can macho by lot using shot laundry and nick mitzi enigma. Life say third. My prosthetic lincoln match up his drumming to the boss line bonds zucconi at to the to the ignorant of so. If you're absolutely right ceramics. Look don't like sharp edges. They like smooth round organic shapes. And we've got those does very little problems. In terms of fracturing so seriously. I've been used in babies ads for thirteen years. And i've had very very few problems with stocks of venereal both line or stuff breaking off by these said with a for example a rounded organic slot or a wrestler. Yeah distantly and also. Would you be doing these dimples. Flowing nipples into the konia framework is absolutely definitely definitely done something. Because i i was too afraid to go down that route but it brings me confidence about your that using using the as but i think you have to respect the fact that the buzz that using the way that you shape the prep it has to be completely different to what we're doing metal plus right definitely. Yes so deal. Justice really boosted with these backings as well as the work really really well. But they can particularly oprah notorious that can create speech issues. So i i liked to do the dimples. Basically subtractive rests in opera..

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"Route. Just might not canine. And if they have the high smile line and this is why looking at the line is crucial in providence aches. Go see how much they show if they show that. Canine really all the way up. A class is just gonna look away. Doesn't matter what color you know dental days. Okay is a compromise. But it's still not great so if we've got a route behind that and we can root phil stood in the drawn. Then they work really really well. But i'm always worn the patient. I'm really really manage their expectations because nothing last forever. Dot routes will probably split. I'll say to what we can do. This can put list or we can class the eighth in fronts so we can do either and go through the pros and cons. And i talk about the the post could split the roots at some stage and at that point we will need to add a class bouncy. It doesn't around dots. Canine because he cannot clasps in flanges of existing punches quite easily. So it's just making future-proof that's really important for attachments to work really well. It's crucial. That everything is braced properly on the other teeth. We don't want too much talking forces on the attachment because it will cause that attachment to fail quicker so this is why i love metal backings on. Let's see so the just if he could visualize resin bonded. Bridges resin bonding which does metal backings. I love those. My dentures like removable. Resin bonded bridges. So they got backing after backing after backing hidden away down behind it safe but died that safe in so many areas this offers great resistance to rotation odds rigidity on stability so it's juicing the forces on attachment so minimum to help it last as long as possible. That's a i mean there's so many benefits that Like i said the bracing the rigidity. So let's get mechanical failure. You can get a degree of aclu control as well because you have so much material to work with. And i imagine you're raising the vertical dimension to have those backings wanted to make sure we have coupling of the anterior teeth. Whatever i can definitely say. I like your comparison to reservoir and bridge so everyone can visualize the metal backings resin bridge incorporated within the denture But that's fantastic. But i know questions such a broad question and there's really impossible to delve deep into it. You've mentioned that scenario with a high smile line why that would benefit from it. Are there any other situations where you think okay. Maybe i'll need to collect these ryan's dodds as you said all think about incorporating retentive features into the crowns i think jazz yokkaishi talkin about you mentioned about this patient if you'll see has over three to three and the post areas are shots so and.

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"I get when i if i came to extract at satan fit this chrome dementia immediately of so much going on. They had trying to make it work and adjusting. Lafayette during my oh clues getting the crumbs fit and make an extra date. Managing the patient. All the has risen as aesthetics phonetics. All a risk is exactly why. I never thought to do it. But i think to contextualize. The question falls contextualize question. I think with the first part of only talk about the candy class or situation. I think you alleviated some concerns. So i think the rationale for doing anterior immediate cromwell was for patients who are light break the acrylic denture because deep by for example. But i think you've covered it very well the actually you can lead them. Open a bit or you. Can we line them immediately. So i think you hit to budget one stone on roy jazz with dot. Because so i do. And if i fail. Patient mcchord needs to go to the chrome quicker than nowhere light to lead them for like nine to twelve months. So we got re maximum shrinkage but in some circumstances i go quicker. We'll do the will do the immediate first and then once literally like one or two months down the line was started the chrome and we'll get the crown done and then i will re line it twelve months so i'll relying denture and i can. Do it really neat lake. Beautifully realised us agile so an i love using zinc oxide. Eugenol in larry yourself and not just really flows beautifully and say why we've got resorption and then i'll do a pickup impression over. That's often algae there and then rowen can just rely on us. You know beautifully for men just like spots on so you radically you could. Just get on with making you chrome straightaway. After extracts in the light weight later you could start. And i think that's more sorts of predictable way of doing. It really makes a lot of sense of the real. Learning is smiling. Because that's something that mark bishop drummed into me he. He's a huge level of zinc. Oxide us know so you can tell that he's had influence in. You may be. That was his influence. Maybe it wasn't. I can tell you from from being taught by marquis apps loves as we yeah brilliant so last big question is one right because i have zero experience of this summer had want to learn more. And i'm so glad. I have you on to talk about this. This is milled crowns. So for example the other day i made a fix case i replaced mobile and up onto your teeth.

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"Overlaid with metal goes in hand with having the relevant consent with that patient and them being okay with that right dies true absolutely and it only works in certain cases. Were some patients really hides the lingual sore the politcial surfaces of the teeth. So they don't really joe very much of that so so if we can build they polite or surfaces. We leave the book alleges free so it's just politely possession. Quite often dark matter. Work is quite hidden but it is still dot still are. The patient is going to buy songs so so it can be quite cool but you dead right about that. The i think is really really good with chrome and this digressing slightly is prior to making the chrome framework to do pattern resin framework made which is just the same shape as the chrome. So it's it's literally like a mockup of where the metal the metal framework we can then try in the patient's mouth i can assess the of my working. Cast because if that fits. Well i know that the chrome is probably going to. That's number one number two. I can check the inclusion if we're gonna do if it's like a splints i can check the inclusion as perth sights on that acrylate kilner july on the pattern resin and also the other really important thing is patients can have a look in the mirror and i can show them where it's bright rach does mat zo. Are you okay about that. And that's really good. That is really brilliant. But you do that. For for all chrome cases you have this appointment where you try in the pattern. Resin the jury for example. Yes i do. And i will incorporate dot july pattern with say wax blocks. If i'm going to record the equation Aw is a trion with on as well. That's really clever. That's really clever. Now here's just me thinking out loud. Is that pattern resin. Is your your technician robin. Would he then use that pattern resin as the lost wax..

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"They are more resistant to to flexing. That's the good thing about that. The more the less rigid if you will so so just. They are more robust than a standard acrylics. The metal mesh is. I think it's a bit. we don't do it. I think it's a little bit pointless. But i can't really give you a really good scientific facts. Just chapman break and yeah less substantial is just not worth it and i'm not really answering your question. Particularly it's interesting to know if you are not routinely using metal mesh. We've we appreciate that and we can. We can learn from your clinical experiences. What you've talked about already. In terms of that situation we had to rely on relatively quickly. That's a great way to manage it the other way of just allowing things to settle and leaving it high if you like a proud and letting things settled rauma then committing yourself to a treating entire arch with restorations for example all then if you had to do any eminem plastic or opposing and sizes just to get them leveled up and that gives me. Maybe half a mil more spaces..

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"Justice so there's nothing wrong with that is totally normal because we're gonna plastic model which is which is going to be different than your mouth so dry put. The patient's mind at rest. Because if i didn't say to them and i have done in the past to be like is everything. Okay is it you know so. Just as a manages. Expectations troy amazing. So we listening you thinking oh my goodness i'm it's not me. This happened to other people and it's a great way to do it. I i don't have any clue spray. But i i first thing. I'm going to be getting now so i before i'll be honest with you. Before it's a bit of a lot of guesswork involved and it by painful so i think that protocol. That's a real gem right. There next question is kennedy costs four situations in a deep bite. So you can maybe talk about framework designed in generally good practices in candy classical situations but then anything specific we can do in these deep by situations that jan marco has specifically asked about okay. This really great question is there. So you know the kennedy class four is where a patient has upper or lower anterior safe messing so they go all that poster. It's still remaining. But he's got this big saddle ontario so off often in like close to division two cases they could have never really deep overbites and sometimes the the by is such that they take over a said sled past day. Joe they're and they're actually including onto the pallets so and that can really be a problem troll and things so quite often. I i'm presented with these patients. Were they open. Say say own restorer and i need to come out so won't go through only options of different approaches. If we're going for dench for that patient than the media denture will and this is where i don't do unless it's answering another question about immediate chrome partial ventures..

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"Is using clued sprite and is there a specific type of that's better for removal process. What was it. I believe it's the green spray isn't it is the greenhouse the powder you can get it from cancer. Bryson dental directs reno province called. Oh clued on. It's a little cow with a sprite new spray onto all of the surfaces and this this is either was a chrome os an acrylic based. Denture mccoy defeats it so where churches to spray on their. Take the mouse une trying states in the best way. Possible before hand jazz. What we need to do. I always check how they denture fit on off the cast. And if i'm unsure i don't speak with rohan about set so i would pick up the phone and talk to the danish about this i look. Hey don't now to get this on and off properly and though day so expert constantly doing it for maitland the making it so we go to the same path of insertion on the model as in the mouth so once you've got like a fail for an a mental picture of how this goes down. I don you take to the mouth and you try to do that in the mouth with patient lying back you can see what you doing wiggle just gently until it won't go any further but don't really take it out on because we've put the clued spray on a powder wherever it churches the to rub off on those bids and just just clarify in kloots break goes on the tooth and not on the framework not that it goes on the tooth and there's a denture that picks spray right is still the way around joss sprite. They fitting surfaces where the jones for against and they do all of those uniformly. The then what you're looking for then is show through of the pink or the silver that the area that is the problem area absolutely is and then you just gently grind away just using any any specific like folk for chrome is aimed specific. Bo- we should be a it's just a sham for crown probe diamond for a course wrong. And it's it's in use it in a speed increasing hump pace just next to the patient and then just shy of the off the but avoid the top of the collins did not social of the college. And then so do that..

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"Ever since so. And and ron worked with in the practice in hostels don't since we sat to life thirteen years ago he works full time for me. Owns just does some amazing work. And that's one of the things that i think if i another real tip for younger dentists are thank is if you really like doing dentures done what i would do is try and find international news a similar age to yourself who wants to grow and go on a journey unlearn with you and then over the years you can both improve together and go on this really susta journey. I think applies to all aspects of dentistry really. I mean that's a. That's a great jam right there but another one. I don't wanna go. Unnoticed is another breath of fresh air. That you said you mentioned your age you said you forty nine point now you comfortable that whereas young dentist are fine. We feel like we need to know. Well the on says three five years after qualifying. And and i think what you hala there is. I have some patients because it may be some many years later. When when would you say you reach the point. Post qualifying that you actually felt. Okay now. i'm approaching my peak in a way if that's the fact question so to be honest jazz. I think i've come back from cove as i'm living my dentistry more than i've unveil dot umn paying now and i still haven't reached my peak. Still getting better. And i think potentially secular with removable pros because having a pair of loops is really sufficient. What we need. I don't need a microscope to do dentures really well but we'd lose modification. I can go on. I might seventy or study. Do your patients will need you. Think i'm going to take yet. It's all john. Owns more to come. Exciting and scary and for us may mortals. That actually thinks that how. How could you not because subscribe to your newsletter. I see all these amazing sensational cases pose. Just wow i mean i just have to say you really do make a you have made rural sexy again and i think that You know you must have heard that millions of times so that's great so we're going to dive into some of the key questions so troubleshooting chrome dentures. Okay so let's about one particular scenario. Let's say and please do. Add in the context contextualize everything take the few to take things a few steps backwards if it will help students to to learn a bit more but the situation where you get to a chrome framework trying stage and you always. Do you always do that. You sometimes skip it. Tell us about the background. But what if you at that point and the chrome frame..

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"Which is your. They're the real passionate seen educate at the bottom of years ago as well your lectures a so engaging and funny and educational your online content. No one has ever been said. No one's fin shirt and it was a bit boring wherever you are just full of so many gems. Why i've been so excited. He's come on so please introduce self. So i'm actually based up in the northwest of england and i have a practice. Basting gosden was just live in lancaster. Prices in gosden and i have a referral process with my wife. Rachel and rachel is a specialist orthodontists on. We started the practice in about two thousand seven. And we've we've grown since then so we have a really nice referral base and and we also we've got to other dentists that work at the practice where those we've got sigheh tuesday specialist in perez on sex seda bads on. We've also got rob jacobs. Season ended on test so there's four of specialists the process that sorry. That's my dog barking in the background. So does what we have. Currently now i have been really focusing for the past. I would say. Twenty years of really an movable cross. I used to do a little bit of fixed as well as fixed on removable but around about six years ago. I decided to just take the plunge and just do nothing. Removable 's and twenty years ago. I i actually did a master's manchester with fraser mcchord and fixed on removable profit. On six. so i was six years qualified. This point i'd qualify in sheffield in ninety three in general practice for six years so So yeah qualified from sheffield and i really found that general. Pride says was unpredictable. Quite what situations where. I'd actually be trying to do something that just wouldn't work for a patient. And i would feel really bad about. The patients would be upset. It was just a real issue. May this predictability. So i i worked in. Various different practices. Did loss of courses with some great teaches. One person in particular is michael weiss who was absolutely amazing and that his coast and those sorts of things i. They made me realize something else. But i didn't actually know how to get from a to b to do to be really good at pro-saddam six. So that's why. I decided to go back in my master's in pros to sheffield so so what i did was. I saved up enough money to to actually leave work for a year. I moved back with my mom and dad's in preston and then i just handed my masters and it was really a great turning points in my career progression. No one ever talks about the sacrifices like to move in with your parents again and usually. That's what's involved when he when you have to do an kundun or a master's or a program that off you know x number years is a significant investment in time and money.

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"For helping patients to well before they actually comment safe and for some extra options and an immediate dench fit then. I can actually do that do i. Consent form and the a little picture of me going through consent form talking about what expect excetera and also i think importantly afterwards i can just do personalized video for the patients. Daikin revisits it from time after time you know so immediate dench is a settling in. Maybe the discovering certain problems may be a couple of days down the wash video again off. finley's pointed that out so it's I'm finding a really useful. And i think also they feel like we're a bit more of a person behind the clinician. Humanity rayleigh not so so there's actually this cows opposition also labra communication with lou s fantastic. You know my ceramicist is not onsite. Just do a whole video for him and show him the mouth and person and the shade exactly one saying say resi or guide services etc is terrific. I'm so glad. I hit the record button. Because this is a real gem that you're sharing. I in fact every episode have patricia dental poll. So i think a. We're gonna share this as fins producers under pol which is to to use loom because previously. I've been using loom as staff training so for example Sometimes come and go and if you record something once the training video then thus can revisit and you can have that one video. And sometimes i work in a team. Someone who produces my pod. And god forbid he leaves training manual on neum. But i like how you incorporate dentistry. I didn't think to do that. Especially with patients i mean. Wow the human touch you've added with the consent and allowed communication and a little points off to. It's that is really a level above. So thank you for opening my eyes to loom in zimbabwe. Must grow joss. Listen vin people The people listening to podcasts have been begging for us come on the plot consists of a two years ago..

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"Dentist. You may listened to episode. I think it was thirty. Seven is an unusual journey with the young dentists. And he's such a caring kind guy you can just tell right in. His dentistry is world class. Check out the cornish dentists. The dot cornish dentist instagram account. Follow alan is such a cool guy and he taught me this little tip on suturing because we had like many zoom session and many of you. I think will benefit from this. When your placing a suture. Let's say you placing a repeat four zero and your closing up a sock after an extraction. You're going to be you've been taught that when you actually tying.

Protrusive Dental Podcast
"finlay" Discussed on Protrusive Dental Podcast
"Welcome to episode fifty six with finland's sutton now we've all had these situations with dentures before you're trying to fit the framework which is just come back from the lab and it doesn't fit and you have this heartsick moment. Oh my god. What do i do now right. So if you've ever been that situation and you want to know how to fix it finley sutton who is a phenomenal. Dental educator will answer this question on this podcast few as well as so many others like. What do you do in a deep bite. And there's no space for the chrome or how about milled crowns and how to incorporate that..

Tim Conway Jr.
Grocery stores are preparing for COVID-19's second wave
"In his upper limits until six in the morning. It's another work zone in South L. Monty 60 eastbound Rosemead to the 605. That's where they have the two right lanes, compliments until six in the morning and in Montebello on the westbound side of the 60. I'm Finlay to 7 10. Caltrans has those two right lanes ConEd off fell scheduled to reopen by five in the morning. This update is sponsored by eye accident lawyer dot com KF eye in the sky helps get you there Faster. I'm Angel Martinez Settlement alert. 3.395 million for motorcycle victims suffering severe severe injury injury The The left left ankle ankle rip rip fracture fracture injury injury that that

The Candid Frame
Colin Finlay
"I'm excited I sit down and talk with here you man. I'm disappointed you can't see me dressed in my finest and freshly shaved respect for you. Yeah and doing looking at work and seeing some of the presentations you've done and just getting a a really good understanding of what your career has look like. I was really inspired. Not just by the work which I think is exceptional but I thought that you were one of the few photographers who focuses on the things that you that you do in terms of the environment cultural impact of socio economic issues around the world and one of the things that you really adept at is providing a sense of connectedness between all these what normally would be disparate things in the minds of many of our of Westerners tend to have such a topic and self absorbed obsession with the world revolving around us that we tend to sort of exclude things that we don't feel have a direct impact on us even though it does and I don't think that at least for for for Western people that that something that awareness that you have it comes naturally. I think it's something that at least for me has been sort of a learned. I've had to unlearn that kind of way of thinking and open myself up and I'm wondering for you. How did that sense of that connectedness? You know that I see in your work. How did you come to have that yourself? It's kind of interesting here just to kind of explore this topic right out of the out of the out of the gate here but it's just an overall feeling that we are all one connected human being we are all one connected earth country. There's no difference between myself. And someone number Wanda a first nations person in Canada. A polar bear were all part of this great mother nature all part of this earth and I see it. All is our earth our collective future art collective history that belongs to each and every one of us and all of us have a vital role to play in this world so for me. It's I see that connection point. I've seen the difference between a billionaire and someone who's on the streets having a tough time in their life were all these powerful magnetic souls that are all on our journey in this world. I respect an extraordinary operation for really each and every one of us who are on this path. Was that something you always had or? Did you have a moment of epiphany when you were younger? That sort of allowed you to see the world in that particular way is definitely something that was important to me from the streets of Belfast from my times experiences in Sarajevo some of those really powerful experiences in Haiti in the early nineties. When you're just experiencing something that is so powerful and so beyond anything that you could even imagine you'd be confronting in your life and the humility that is absorbed through every cell and fiber in my body as I photograph and spend time with extraordinarily powerful people. That frankly have the power have strengthened. Have courage that I do not possess. I am simply an observer a witness in that sense and I am a part of this journey that they are on in the experience of their life than you know. Ultimate humility to me comes from there in the eyes of the people that I've photographs from really understanding the depths. What their day to day realities like and then how I come back to this first world. It's it's a difficult thing. It was brutal that coming back in landing at LAX. In coming back into this world leading. When I just left behind That Internet itself is extraordinarily difficult to the least. I remember crying literally walking down the aisles of a grocery store and looking at their Sushi in all these meets and everything it's like my God and I'm in Saudi bullets. They're dependent on what food they can scrounge. They're taking their lives in their hands. Trying to get water for their family and Sarajevo not being shot and killed and he does understand life and such a different matter that it really comes down to a pitcher of water feeding your family for that day or providing one meal and then coming back here to realize you know what we have at our at our fingertips some so it starts to really bend and the beginning years of breaking May to a completely different understanding of other majority are. Have you know a lot of other people around the world on? That's an interesting term. You said breaking you in as if you had Basically Foundation that you basically emptied sort of destroy in order to build a a a new one with being way of describing. Yeah I also think that for me I had an extraordinary powerful desire within me to witness first hand the history as it unfolds being an apartheid South Africa before Nelson Mandela. Send it to presidency a lot of the different war-zones in and out of the genocide in Rwanda Darfur wars in the Middle East. A lot of fees experiences really changed me immensely and really broke down the nature of what I thought reality was for me and for my family and what that word means to me and how it's manifested within me and how it is indeed. You know change the way that I view the world. How did how did you see your work or hope for your work to be used during those those early years of your career and how change what was really interesting. Is that one of the first major magazines that I work with was magazine that you might have depending on where you're at school was called scholastic so that was the magazine. Went out to students I received when I was a student so lineup really establishing a great relationship where the editor they're Lee buyer and I really started to take on a lot of these projects around the world on children.

Pass It On
Repair and Reuse!
"Cops when my boy is lumber. Jackets sleeves got shot. I missed it cops and suit them on after moving cuff bonds. Mrs W Finlay sustained struggling of those of Bruce. I knew you're going to lumbered lumberjack. Kit Yes what is that? It was sort of like a flannel leaves. Really sorry I remember them. Baser when them into combat in the nineteen seventies all usually a titan. Sort of like Ambiente. Ya I know it was funny. Cuffs and Friday cola yet but the notion of huffing arms extended by among knitting it. Go I can tell you. Know those low of young men who sought. I don't want thought on will told by models whilst the Mustang Badge of honor no thing Nice Dis. If if somebody were to do that Ginny. We'll know if your mummy but to think like if if you yourself and I don't mean necessarily specifically you. Coney provide like if if one oneself was to like you know to patching and sewing and extending the life do you think in today's modern youth would respect if I look giving longevity to a clothing I mutation is what maybe I don't know if I I. Yeah I probably wouldn't necessarily bump in chase me why they have to extend the arms not back and other arms go but surely only aren't exactly but your fool rank surely the arms similar speeds of the of the torso. I guess an jacket style probably was there'd be a bump covering at the win. I'm imagining somebody with a jacket. Sort of to go bugaboo Chris. This is definitely a mentality. I will pick up in the sixties and seventies if you had. Pus owned colludes secondhand clothes. Very very obviously mended clothes. It was a bit of Tinky Ish I saw but nowadays those are sort of reused repurpose re will mentality. That did not exist for me. I was a child. Yeah it does remind me of L. Initially went mainstream at it. Because I I know that a low of them Mike. Have you crafty Nariyoshi hipster? Frayn's food certainly have said that they want the they like the idea of you taking something that was you know. Bought maybe second hand and then patched in Belleek can the sixties you would you would take pride in the you know floral prints you'd put in your knees of your then in jeans or whatever bud light. You'd never the Netflix went into the mainstream. I kinda thought might because you know all of that can a more progressive does eventually lead by dame but it it can estate as I think

Science Vs
Race: Can We See It In Our DNA?
"June morning in Washington DC, and we're in the White House's East Room where a press conference is set up. There's an expectation in the air. Everyone stands and in walks President Bill Clinton. Clinton walks up to the Partium and faces a room full of photographers reporters and scientists behind him on a TV screen is some scienc- that very cheesy imagery, a double helix, and the words decoding the book of life. Good morning. We are here. To celebrate. The completion of the first survey of the entire human genome Clinton is announcing that the human genome project had hit its watershed moment and mapped out the human genome for the first time reveal nearly all three billion letters of our miraculous synthetic code and on that stage. One idea that was front and center was about race race had always been this concept that carried a ton of white socially. But did it have any scientific meaning will now this project had mapped the DNA of five people who had ancestry from across the globe, including Asia, Europe and Africa. So what did they find? Well that day in two thousand it was announced that on a genetic level. These people would basically no different ugly. One of the great truths to emerge from this triumphant expedition inside the human genome is that in genetic terms. All human beings, regardless of race or more than ninety nine point nine percent. The same one of the lead scientists on the project took the stage and drove this message home, the concept of race has no genetic or scientific basis. There's no way to tell one ethnishity from one another. So these guys might have thought they were closing the door on the idea that race was biological. But actually this announcement left the rice door ajar because ninety nine point nine percent the same that means zero point one percent different. So in the twenty years since this announcement, what has science found out about that tiny bit of difference between the soul does race live there. Because that's what some people starting to say. If you're looking at someone from China, you're looking at a man from Kenya. Yeah. There's something different about them. So your instinctive understanding is correct race is real these are biological fats. They're not sociological construct. And this idea that new science shows the races, a real it's taking hold in dot corners of the internet where white supremacists using it to make even bigger claims. The genetics proves the white people of the smarter superior rice. Okay. So what's happening here for centuries race has been a political and social idea, but where does science fit into this today? We're to answer the following questions. One. We'd new science can we see race in genetics and two if he can what those differences main like could one race be smarter than another. When it comes to race. There are lots of opinions, but then Dez science. Yet. This is actually an area science has missed up for a long time. We'll tell you about that too. Science says race is coming up just after the break. Episode of science Festus is brought to you by dropbox dropbox is more than cloud storage. It's an entire collaboration platform. Why teens can ship projects coordinator, sinement and communicate Finlay discovered? What dropbox can do for your team at dropbox dot com slash flow. That's dropbox dot com slash flood. Welcome back today. We're talking about race. And we're asking scientifically does it exist. And by that we mean that when you look at how DNA can you see consistent differences that separate people who are black or white or Asian or what have you, but understanding the science behind race is super complicated and messy poly because it has this dodgy scientific history. To tell us about it. We got professor Dorothy Roberts from the university of Pennsylvania into our office and put a microphone in front of a I have a giant puffy thing in front of my mouth fuzzy it's furry it's furry and pretty quickly. We got into the history of race and science thirty told us that really began in the seventeenth and eighteenth century in Europe. It was the age of enlightenment. Science in Europe was having a heyday and scientists were racing to understand the world around them. These typologies were classifying all of nature, they were classifying plants and animals and rocks. You know, other aspects of the natural world, and they included human beings. Colonialism was in full swing Europeans with sailing to Africa, the Americas and Asia and seeing all these people who looked really different to themselves, and so they started to categorize them too. And this was a particular pastime of this highly respected botanist, cold Khaldun, Nias kirwin may Swedish typology just had a very prominent enterprise of classification. Call slaughtered people into several categories, including European African Asian and native American. Oh, yeah. And he had some wild cod categories to like there was this one called you win lupine ass- or get this. Wolf boys for children raised by wolves really widdly that one didn't catch on. But what did catch on with some of the descriptions that he and other scientists gave? Of each race always giving Europeans the best adjectives. He's Dorothy white people are characterized as beautiful, and they're also characterized as the most rational and black people are described as prone to violence to laziness to illness to mental disorders, call also described Asians as severe and haughty while native Americans were reddish and obstinate. All through the seventeen and eighteen hundreds scientists ran with these ideas, claiming that you could see real differences in the bodies and brains of the rices and very quickly a clear scientific hierarchy was formed with white people at the top and everyone else underneath them. And all of the scientists thought they were being objective. But we can now see in hindsight that they were being woefully subjective. That's even too mild a term they were being racist. And part of the reason these ideas was so powerful was because they were very useful for justifying slavery as well as colonization more. Generally after all if science says that Africans or native Americans are less group of people, then it's okay to take them land. And enslave them it made the. Domination of white people over other people seem as if it was just following what nature had planned.

NPR News Now
Gas company linked to explosions in Massachusetts
"Transportation Safety board says there does not appear to be anything intentional about a gas explosion. That triggered fires and dozens of homes across three, Massachusetts towns, killing one person and injuring at least ten others, Robert. Some wall says they're investigating Columbia gas and looking into the company's records and his Quincy Walters from member station w. b. you are reports. Many residents are still waiting to return home. The town of Lawrence is mostly deserted. The exit ramps to the area are closed, and roadblocks prevent people from going into neighborhoods that haven't been cleared yet police cars, escort city buses filled with residents going to get belongings to bring back to shelters where they'll stay until they've been given the all-clear who say, Peres waits for a bus at a shelter, a left, my home evacuated on Thursday. I haven't been back to my own sense. I'm a disabled vet any medications into clothes that I have on me is what I have hundreds of people are waiting to return home for