35 Burst results for "Forty Minute"

BIRTH YOUR VISION PODCAST SERIES
"forty minute" Discussed on BIRTH YOUR VISION PODCAST SERIES
"To kind of what together in collaboration and really deliver this powerful message which is all about you know the simple way to be able to create a purpose for life and so i just want to just welcome you to this wonderful platform region. I thank you so much for being on the show today. I'm looking forward to it. I really. I'm excited about it because like you said i'm not for the situation the way the world is starting to be together today and for that absolutely indeed we've had we've had so many people who have made some incredible connections just because of the pandemic and it's amazing this is one of the connections to be quite on so there's been some kind of great benefits that amount of cheating so he know abou- Your journey were talking about twenty years now delivering birthing this amazing Talk show of yours or the way. In the bahamas. Tell us about this journey. How you've been able to get yourself motivated. How you've been able to now be inspired and onto this dream on c. You actually birth. It's it has not been easy what it has been necessary because when our pictures something in your spirit and you know that. It's which you're meant to do. I can tell you there is no legal. Walk away from it and if you do you will live a life or tragedy because the purpose but he was a new typically for me. Johnny has been one that has been cianci. Mom the idea. The concept was birth after my mother passed away from breast. Cancer She raised six children on her own. Basically and I wanted to my light at wanted because she had bought so high to give me night and make sure i was okay. I wanted to on a with the rest of manley. So i went on a pasta to find out what my purpose watts and in doing so i got a vision was sitting on and i got a vision of myself on a forum talking women and i was talking to these bent. This forty minute. We're trying to hold onto the words that i was saying and the said to be the purpose of your life is to help women to come to understand that man and things. I'm not sauce. But i if he later after the show was given to me the whole woman from bear everything within me has been walking towards but that purpose there were days days where i was crawling underground crying given up sometimes When i was at certain studios. I wouldn't get what i was being or driving home studio ninety a friend and i'd be crying on the phone. Tell it i'm not doing. I'm tired. I'm not doing it. She'd be on the phone quiet violence then she'd be like you're finished now because you got to get back up and you can begin back. You gotta get back in there. Because you you ain't gonna give up give up and god allow you so you just gotta be next week. Couldn't make it up. And i have been not a road high can tell you. It's been a journey for many people in a greens and visions and sometimes it's so hard for them to actually take the right steps to be able to actually birth those visions. So what sort of advice would you actually give them on what to do with it. Be say this Once you've come to the realization that found what it is the dementia to one of the things that i suggest that you find a quiet place..

Crime Junkie
The Disappearance of Ryan Shtuka
"It's mid february two thousand eighteen in beaumont alberta a town about forty minutes outside edmonton and heather. Stupa is enjoying her saturday night at home with her husband's scott and their two teenage daughters. They have one more kid ryan. I mean i say kid but actually is twenty and he doesn't live with them anymore. He's out chasing adventure with a friend. Working at a ski resort called sun peaks for the winter now about ten. Pm and heather is in the midst of texts conversation when a notification pops up on her screen. From one of ryan's friends. This guy. james sexually the friend that he went out to sun peaks with for the winter and kinda registers at the messages. From james. And things you know. I wonder what he wants but before she gets to that. She wants to finish what she's doing so she just kind of like swipes up to clear the notification finish her thought or her little tech chain or whatever and then clicks back and as. She's reading this message from his friend. It's almost not registering. What james is saying. Which is basically like heads up. Ryan didn't show up for work today. He's not answering his phone. And we're worried so we just went ahead and reported him missing to police. So you're probably going to be getting a call just like f. Why heather immediately gets james on the phone. He's like okay. What the heck is going on. Start from the top. Tell me what happened the that maybe she can just help. Take the temperature down. A couple of notches like problem. Solve this mom style. Yeah is this just a couple of friends freaking out over nothing right. Yeah get him involved. I totally support us. James says that he and ryan and group of other friends had gone out on friday night. I see this bar on the resort called mommas then according to jean strong's reporting for the sun peaks independent news to another place right next door called bottoms for this like silent. Disco thing that they had going on silent. Disco is like when everybody gets their own pair of headphones. And that's how you hear music that the dj is playing right. Yeah okay well in true twenty year old fashioned. James says that no one was really ready to go home when bottoms close for the night at one. Am so they decided to all head down the hill and off the resort to this like little get together that they heard was going on. This was happening at a house. That was just around the corner from where james and ryan lived anyway so they figured like okay. We're gonna head down there. Maybe have another drink and then we'll just go home. They ended up catching a lift down from the bar to the bottom of the hill and then they were walking the rest of the way to the house party and listen to me. This whole trip took like ten minutes tops by one thirty. Though james was ready to go home he tells heather that he saw ryan stand up and he thought that he was right behind him. In a couple of other people who had left the same time but somewhere during their walk home i guess they looked around and realized he wasn't

In the Garden
Baked Pears, Listener Calls, Harvesting Garlic, and Chestnuts
"Hey joel hello. It's a beauty out there today. Very nice yeah. And i hope to get up and spend a little time in the garden this afternoon myself. So interesting experience The my son. Jake and his wife nikki where the place we rented has a bunch of Pear trees and we noticed that the pears were dropping. You know it's sort of like apples. Early ones drop and the friday night. I came home to dinner. They had made. And one of the things they made was baked pairs. And these were the dropped pairs. It came down and they weren't more than maybe two inches or maybe three and i was so surprised. I sorta figured well. They were hard and and really unusable but they had they had cut them down through the stem and the seeds. The long way opened them up. They put him in a in a big baking pan and put on now. Oh butter and some honey and put them in the oven. Three fifty for about I think they figured it was about forty minutes and all because they kept baking them and they were absolutely fantastic. They were you know big pairs and i would never have thought. Those little hard pairs would would be edible at all but they turned out to be absolutely delicious and they topped it off. with maple syrup and a little brown sugar of course and that helped but they were absolutely delicious terrific. I did that one year. And i actually could do it again. Now because tapani. The place. Where i where i lived. I mean literally off the huge development behind me and all around me and all that but it used to be an orchard out there and yell it's bay and so there are a lot of very old and Vestigial i guess is apple trees and a lot of them look like a cross between crab apple something else. Small hard little apples long story short. Exactly what you said you know bake them in butter a lot of people sarah sugar and they're delicious

ICYMI
How Does TikTok's Algorithm Know You so Well?
"The wall street journal or team at the wall street journal under journalist stern created over one hundred automated talk accounts so accounts run by bots watched hundreds of thousands of videos on the app. And what they found was kind of amazing. Yeah i mean the pricing. I would say but amazing to see it visualized and put out in a concrete way. That isn't just you and i. I think this is how the algorithm is reading me exactly so many people have a kind of suspicion as to what makes them work. And it's kind of been informed by what to talk said which takes officially says that shares likes and follows player role. What content your served. But the wall street journal found that the most important thing was none of the choices you're really making. How much time spent watching it every second you hesitate or rewatch. The app is tracking you. Just how quiet. The north through this one powerful signal to talk learns your most hidden interests and emotions and drives you deep into rabbit holes of content. That are hard to escape. So each of the botts was programmed. Like a human like human with a very limited scope of passions. There would be a bought with interests of. Let's say depression and forestry that was one of the right like the sad tree loving bought it took to talk not very long to figure out the specific interests per bought somewhere between like forty minutes to two hours. A single night for me in bed on tick-tock.

Unexplained Mysteries
The Disappearance of Brandon Swanson
"Year old brandon. Swanson loved the landscape of minnesota. His home state as a teenager growing up in the small town of marshall one of his favourite activities was speeding down the countryside in his green chevrolet lumina he also loved. Seeing the wind turbines that dotted the landscape. Brandon was passionate about the environment and believed in the importance of renewable resources in two thousand seven after graduating from marshall high school he enrolled at the local technical college to study wind turbines located in the town of can be. His college was only a thirty mile drive from home. The proximity allowed him to commute to classes without having to stay on campus. Five days a week brandon made the forty minute. Try a straight shot down. State highway sixty eight may thirteenth. Two thousand eight was the last day of the academic year rather than go home after his final classes random state out and celebrated with his friends. He started the night at a house party in lind minnesota a town about seven miles south of his home in marshall. He had a few drinks over the course of several hours and then said he was heading to another party in can be friends at the party. Didn't believe brandon was drunk at the very least. He wasn't acting like it so they didn't worry about him. Driving brandon made the mile journey back to can be without incident in joined a second set of friends. He had another shot of whiskey but still he seemed sober enough to drive around one. A m brandon finally headed back home. He said goodbye climbed back into his chevy lumina and drove off into the minnesota night. It was the same drive. He'd made so many times before right down highway sixty eight but this time. He was driving toward disaster at one fifty four. Am and net and brian. Swanson woke up to the sound of ringling cell phone when they answered the call. Brandon told him. He needed their help. He recounted the accident describing how the car slipped off the gravel road and into a small ditch while he wasn't injured and the car wasn't damaged. Brandon said he needed to be picked up. The swanson's asked for their sons location. He said he was on state highway. Sixty eight somewhere between the towns of marshall and lind is parents hopped in their car and drove. It wasn't far brandon and his parents believed they were within a ten minute drive of each other but when a net and brian swanson arrived at the midpoint of the desolate highway between lind and marshall. They didn't see their son anywhere.

AP News Radio
Pope Voices 'Affection' for Americans as He Meets Blinken
"Secretary of state Antony Blinken has met with pope Francis in the Vatican the Vatican says pope Francis voiced affection for Americans at his meeting with the secretary of state the pontiff according a top diplomat a substantial chunk of time for government official who isn't a national leader spokesman Matthew Brunei says the audience in the apostolate palace played out in a cordial atmosphere lasting about forty minutes however it's not known if the two discussed the shop the divide among American bishops of giving holy communion to politicians supporting abortion rights like president Joe Biden I'm Charles Taylor this month

AP News Radio
Canadiens Beat Golden Knights 3-2 in OT to Take 2-1 Lead
"The Montreal Canadians made the most of all my sins vanish for game three beating the Vegas golden knights three to two in overtime Josh Anderson tied the score with less than two minutes left in regulation and buried the game winner in O. T. it looked like me we had a lot more energy than them we we came out hard and and it's kind of late tonight and in a huge game that that we need to win the hands were without head coach Dominique Ducharme who tested positives called nineteen prior to the match up assistant coach Luke Richardson field in Montreal pulled off the win despite trailing the stock department thirty to eight after forty minutes when they killed four penalties goaltender Carey price was yet again solid in this one pushing aside a total of forty three shots L. A. Larry here in Montreal

Box of Neutrals
"forty minute" Discussed on Box of Neutrals
"All the dots are getting connected. It's incredible all the dots and he was on the incredible staff. So it could upset peres. Well earned victory. Whoever you wear under the helmet and pears got the trophy. I guess this is going to be a great guests. Who died this everyone area. No one does not real not real god site people. Let's let's lewis hamilton. Because i guess too is looking at these rice right to tell you that Vistaprint was very lucky. I know we decided that because he crashed out because he's tie blew up buddy goes lucky because he didn't lose granted the championship hamilton. Could it be as much as Twenty points up or something like that. All was mercedes very lucky because after friday practice and even qualifying if you bought as or hamilton not getting for belt bought as there were absolutely no way there was a lot of. They could've finished well down the order or just obstacle points at all as they didn't and staff and also could have one red bull could have had the first one to in two thousand sixteen. So the weird situation where we neutralized kind of interesting. I guess that's what it is but this mistake. Hamilton made. Although can you even say it's a mistake. Likely i mean it was because he accidentally pressed the wrong button and who amongst us hasn't pressed the wrong button and you could tell us a mistake because lewis hamilton was just always messaging and when he discovered a off the press that button. It's not like he owns He's actually gone This stuffed up but the thing for may and of course it is. He's absolutely right. I mean he'd pressed the button but what like win. Is that ever happened. What how did he do it. That's why i want someone to do like a three of like an air crash investigations edition of hamilton instead of chinese new station. That always does really low rate reconstructions. Major tragic effects like three seventy in other massacres always have the rights to the royal claymation of olympics events. Tv what causes the dynamic loss on. Riots i think i think that's going to be asked future train the rice with but this is like okay. The jury this patent thing. How do you even do it. I watch the reply and you can go and say it on like. He's hands adjusts doing the regular. Like you know paddles as you would in your regular and then all of a sudden probably saw i've got too much going on inside the car which which is which is understandable unforgivable. But what. I the thing that tickled my fancy device was when Team radio and they cut to that shot of lewis in the cockpit and they had the team radio and said all all the magic but an anthony davidson new. Everyone just wait. You know what he did. I tell you it's absolutely right wasn't magic. He probably developed been probably. He's and he's sitting. Make exactly contel from net conflicted credible trade. You get that kind of coverage on sky. Sports such Up-to-date topical and also anthony davidson appeared dot com. All of a sudden like pulled arrested. It's almost like lost his accent and then suddenly it was anti wasn't prepared for but it's magic button wanna terrible for somebody that would ruin. The rice made essentially turned off his rear brakes. What happened and that's not gonna work out for you. But i it's hard to know who was the biggest loser out of this because we know of in parrots streak speaking strictly the championship contenders. Or do we just forget. Azerbaijan ever happened. And pretend that the knicks rice's ran seeks. Ni- it's it's it's going to be a tough laden very tough lady and it's like watching the x factor in justin bieber's and then you got old by these trying to do a cadillac and it's just a bit underwhelming. You need that buffer zone in between issue rice in the middle. We just need to go back to monaco again. All now the french grump phrase nick's story but the biggest is by far parental. Because the good points of. I think on a couple of times to that fairly such a shit job to as in they come into the sport. Everyone whinges you know. They say the tires have to do this in that and then they actually do a tie. That doesn't ever complain to the writings boring. So you never poorly the government. They get priced. What is just always attract the art criticism and mad conspiracy theories and really very much going via. Why do we review we doing this. Because every time something catastrophic happens the microscope they hate really turns up on them and yeah. It's the biggest louisa straight three west on grand prix with. I lock it on whether it was even their fault was just by myself. And i mean it's it's they paying for these pirelli pay to do this. And why would you because everyone complains. I don't know when i saw them both blow up because it was strolling tire failed in almost the same part of the track. It was easy to think that it was a fight. Like a proper filing tie like indianapolis style failure not quite but pirelli so to it off to a good college that that's not even the loaded taya which doesn't make any sense. I don't know maybe. I think there's a lot of quite aggressive reaction and from the verstappen's in particular and you never want us to react badly because that's police need to be involved if that's the case but I i sometimes. I think they've got to be caught a little bit slack. I guess mary we slow. He doesn't eat ice just an ambulance driver on heck with like the the the everyone all the tire. All the inventory epidemiology work and everything else wants would pay people Experts on that and one ties because they were very quick to blame purely before the rice david finished grunted those about a forty minute. Gap conducted laps basically but people very quick to blind poorly without knowing the full story and of course people point of just like well. It's the tame. It's the due diligence of the teams. That i how the law expanded they taught and if they do such a aggressive pitstops they they they know it comes with the territory on the cake. Frankly i've just realized something. Did you say during the week not to bring up. Veltri has again who doesn't deserve much more of a mention shocking rise. He said during the week that he's desktop background is what toda wolf called enemy building. He saw some like. He's going to know what these even say refused side that it's something that like he'll turn on his computer. It'll be the desktop back. I know fire him out like get angry. And nazis motivation. Maybe because he he's was crapping all the ties this weekend. Maybe it's just. Mario is in the background. Think and that's he's yeah he's just it's all the other thing maybe he's excited on this. Maybe you should change it to something more soothing. We need credit. Twitter can't cold Report has google searches He's obviously going to images. Try to find stimulating wallpaper..

Talking Tesla
"forty minute" Discussed on Talking Tesla
"Who would not have actually none of whom have ever turned a wrench in your life not true not true not true not true or even any tuning to talk tuning. Aluminum co covers trumpet. That's i can. I can do a mean toon. So i'm gonna. I'm gonna say he's not rate just about that i. I think he's talking about cartooning. We listened to it several times thinking that we had missed some context for your assertions. How many times did they listen to it. Several times. That was awesome. That was a one hour and forty minute show time or maybe just listened to that one part where we we shit about sandy and by we. Let's be honest we're talking about joel and it was really me. We're smart enough to not show up for that episode. Let's see you've scraped into some sort of greed base gumri at sling mud. It's my axel community. Tesla needs right now. We need this right now. We need sandy monroe. We need slinging ryan surge forward In its latest projects. There's a long way to go yet. Tesla and actually those tesl a the stock stock symbol. So there's a long way to go for for the tse stock. I guess away from yourself center. Yuppie angst the newest crap. How many tesla's have you guys got literally torn apart and evaluated and then offered a set of evaluations papers for producers consumers to study none but you have said something about how sennheiser audio products related a related. Ingrate de i said something heiser mike. Okay and i saw. Let's get to the point of this. Is you guys talk about sandy. And this young person gentlemen whoever it is could be a woman i said person okay. Es one nine one one somewhere. That's the guy's name all over all over the place. Usually whoever doesn't much matter like wasn't very happy with what you guys had to say about. Zanny monroe okay. Fair enough but weird just weird in general like the whole thing about like us being greedy because we said something about another person so actually tried. Commodore them like look. I think he misunderstood. We all love santa monroe where you think he's really important and and so i sent that out there. I'm like so. I think there's a misunderstanding. It and response. The response is great. Gutter the response to that was mel. Herbert what was said is on record. You can spin it but you've already lost any credibility as people of any sort thank. God thank god beyond musketeers. That's fine but it's interesting to see how you see. You see brains. That means you see branston calibrated breath a message into art of war. Good luck your done. First off not done yeah. He didn't even make this comment on the podcast channel. He made it on youtube which wasn't related to the chip any who. Yes you guys said some things about sending monroe being a a interviewer okay. You're entitled to your opinion..

Strange and Unexplained with Daisy Eagan
The Impossible Disappearance of Brian Shaffer
"At one fifteen. Am the security camera posted outside. The bar caught. Brian clinton meredith riding up the escalator and extensively heading for the ugly tuna celona forty minutes later at one fifty five. Brian can be seen again on the same security camera chatting with a couple of women out side the bar two security guards stand a few feet away most likely getting ready for the bar crowd to leave after last call at two. Am honestly even thinking about being at a bar at two am makes me tired on the security camera footage. Brian can be seen walking toward the entrance of the bar. But the actual entrance of the bar itself is out of frame as the drunken horrid of college. Students poured out of the bar at closing time. Clint and meredith waited outside for bryant. They called him on his cellphone but he didn't pick up in clinton back inside and check the bathroom but he wasn't there. Clinton meredith then made the assumption that brian had already left and hadn't told them folks. Can we please normalize not leaving your friends at bars. Just because you can't get a hold of them like unless they explicitly said you go ahead. I'll stay here and or they're not like incoherently drunk. Don't leave without your friend. Who gave you know warning that they were going somewhere. Well that's not. How clinton and meredith handle the situation. They assumed nothing was wrong and left But the next morning no one had heard from. Brian girlfriend tried calling him. His father tried calling him. He didn't pickup and then on monday morning. Brian was a no show at the airport for his flight. To miami with alexis by this point nobody had heard from him for almost forty eight hours. That's when everyone officially stopped assuming nothing was his family finally called columbus. Police department filed a missing persons report and shortly thereafter. The search for brian schaefer began

Inspire Nation Show with Michael Sandler
"forty minute" Discussed on Inspire Nation Show with Michael Sandler
"Okay a couple more questions on that. What is the age of the people that we meet. Oh yeah this is just something. I've heard from all over the world. Michael is people say that they don't appear to be any age is like it. Some people have said. Can it's just like i've heard people say of these about the age of thirty is but they say it's like the prime of life is the phrase people use all over the world. How about for parents. Who have lost what. We've had three miscarriages or for others. Who have lost Infants yeah well that happened to me. In nineteen seventy. He was thirty six hours old. And i'm still. I'm so sorry. Yeah well you know you know that feeling and it's And so what. I can say is I that's all taken keira. It's like people say they go through this life review and it's okay i get it and it's I haven't been there yet. But i know from people who've have that's what happens. Do they meet their babies. And how old do their babies. Here's the most interesting story along. Those lines woman was named by orton. And i knew for better. In nineteen seventy four newer for a long time thereafter and vie was thirty five. I think words when she had her near death experience. Which came from a forty minute cardiac arrest as she suffered during gallbladder surgery and she said that as she went down this tunnel as she was coming into this scene. She said that she saw Her mother who had died and then and she said that there was this other person there that she didn't recognize and this was a fully develops. I mean in the sense that makes sense that he was a personnel the prime of life and she said that's how she saw him but then she said i'll show her gestures. She said when she got up to him he did like this. If you can try to imagine that people are made of cellophane layers right..

YEK YEK JE
"forty minute" Discussed on YEK YEK JE
"Guinea to me to deduct high hyphen and it's on. It's on mondays episode. Any christiane young had in podcast in india really so africa mr dan year by by me and the good news copay result so upstairs. It's defend jalen and a douglas gonna been around. And i know that if you're listening to this podcast. We are recording this episode at eleven fifty five pm on a sunday. So it's crazy dude. Caught for us every thursday night. Yeah does after. We're going to stay in the studio for like three to four to three. So it's got honest about gun talk now do what this year and it's great. Thank you so much for making these for us and the fucking smooth now and by the we got guys need. That's what i do and loopier. Prime minister announced do city is. Where do i go harare. Another for who knew renewed from school i like. I like the color gear. We're going to do it goes looking. Gst monday up be without going into detail pm. You can announce the couvert measures. And i do ideals to boost disappointed down security be a few days ago a youtube video in this view benigno singapore or okay cool. Beatnik you dies. Doubly ring unkind measures. I do happen. That's why that's why it's so. I am botica youtube. i. I don't know we'll see tomorrow. So bike got on law abiding getting ready to jump on listening. Could the prime minister suburban michigan lavoro. I'm going to take out the ending. I wouldn't that's gonna put hanauer municipal lock edgy using ballooning all cut the crap club. Gay had any texting just to check off on monday because these guys as long as you did on monday. Wednesday and friday issue is fried eating us at the minnesota i brew today. Don't forget a couple cast appeared content that one takes so our botchy dead skin again in the womb. Nathan clark had young. Good good bullying bungee pantheon. Gloria or much much indicative on's on your smart commanding four getting through bikita gear. So is get after the package. Okubo uncle was very happy. Deaf another colleague will help me no less than my burden. Obviously again the hope under fanatically mike and during the interview the park park atlanta. Or i can do i can do. I can do this economic How ya getting sued interview about. Who came from data. Come back again. Then we do not talk. Decided and i i can look down forty minutes. I can finish this kicking. And look who up until the wet due to the payroll company. I'm john kunia kaput. You appear okay. Topic editors w editor. So expect edit this and me in me because no need to finish one in one week. That's long victory in one week. This loan equality. No i tell them that or you tell them. Okay google. Who could you go you have to sentinel. Dvd by one we. Yes good cable this five days. Five folk days okay. I give her a benefit. Adela gave because they're tonka do the region so do yeah kabuga domingo bingo. You must have to hobble. When do via kim mark what da gavea get. The video is very very short is a limiting forty minute globally. We have gone on columbia. Go in one week in one the finish cutting and under the fbi affects all the keys and shit like an assault in dimitar. Your order the people how good i could yes or no because because i go staff lago problem camacho okay. I'll try to be understanding or getting them. communists year. nola we work together but then because she's new so much. Yeah so going on clay thickener win and we're clinically jay. Okay okay. lacabeg the joke this. I don't know where again did ya. I i the yeah i draft davies to one. Just four fucking off. Who would assume with clan. You got really pissed off you can you. At least i try to talk to her. Because i don't be an asshole because at them the tank on andy again. I caught under four point. This guy did not all the talking. But i feel like an asshole. Did you see that s. Yeah pretending literally told her. Sorry i feel like an asshole. But i feel like you doing your work to do and do you have a problem. We've worked in down tournament. A bunch of questions just want to understand..

Strange and Unexplained with Daisy Eagan
Who Killed Yvonne Layne?
"April first. One thousand nine hundred nine twenty. Six year old of on lane was found with her throat. Slashed dead in her home in alliance. Ohio twenty six year old. Yvonne lane a beautiful vivacious woman rebound in a pool of her own blood. Her throat slashed. While her children's slap she was discovered by her mother who had arrived to take her six year old grandchild to kindergarten of was a mother to five kids. David thorne was the father of one of the children although he and a von. We're not together anymore. The murder of a mother of five in her own home stunt the small town of alliance ohio. David had recently been ordered to pay child support and in his confession. Joe said that he was hired by david thorne to kill von so we didn't have to pay the father of one of the children. The motive child support thorne was ordered to pay to the untrained listener. This seems like a pretty clear cut case someone confessing in a good motive but when you start digging and talking to people and going through documents the more complicated things get and it seems like everyone around. A yvonne had a motive to kill her. I i came across the case on the website injustice anywhere which has since become a staple for my research into lesser known conviction cases for my other podcast unjust unsolved. I covered an episode a week telling the stories of people who believed were wrongfully convicted. David was one of them. One of the incredible things to me about. David's case is that it actually unknown there had been other media coverage before the attack grabbed headlines as police hunt for a killer. Dwayne poelman who you just heard in. The previous clips is an investigative journalist. Who looked into the case for three years and at the center of his investigation. Very serious question. Did the system convict the wrong man. However that was over a decade ago. And there's been no movement since i said in david's episode of unjust unsolved that this case deserves its own long-form investigation nachos twenty minutes or forty minutes. So here we are.

No Stupid Questions
How Does Facing Death Change Your Life?
"I recently had a near death experience. And if i died it would have been not funny exactly no but at least like no henry short story because i almost got killed in a traffic accident while driving back from getting my second covid vaccine shot. Oh that would've been a great short story right. I would have been willing to die for that story. But i didn't last start it so we have this. Lean version of the story in which the protagonist doesn't even die. But anyway i got my vaccine early in the morning on a sunday morning in queens which was about a thirty five forty minute drive from where i live and i'm driving back and i'm on the cross bronx expressway which is usually a highway. That travels at about half a mile an hour. It's just always jammed up okay. But on a sunday morning it was flying. Everybody's going you know. Not crazy fastball. Fifty five sixty like highway speeds highway speed and then all the sudden in the middle lane of this three lane highway under an overpass or would that be under an underpass. Under an underpass was a tractor trailer parked in the center lane at a full. Stop wow so. I slam on the brakes and i'm waiting to either fish tale and get killed or to hit him or hit on behind and none of those bad things happened anyway. Here's my point. I didn't die plainly but it was the closest. I've come to death in a long time. Maybe ever and. I expected to have some kind of emotional reckoning reassessment. I was grateful for sure. Don't get me wrong. But i did not have one of those hollywood moments like i am going to live my every day as if it's had less so here's my question for you today. Am i. broken is something wrong with me. Are you missing a chip. Or maybe this means. I've got a mature view of death. And that maybe even ready to

Hermit_Radio
"forty minute" Discussed on Hermit_Radio
"Thanks for being here man. Extra avenue kabir So for everybody tuning in. Let me. Just give you some context. Brian thompson was the host of the zen thinking. Podcast and the reason that that is important because his podcast helped me get through the lockdown during covid and was one of the first podcast types or audio sessions that Helped me understand a little bit better when i was in the early stages of doing Learning about zen buddhism but Brian today man i. I'm really happy to have you here. And you know we had a little sidebar conversation prior to this so what i'd like to talk about Is briefly as you can. Just give me some context and background about and how you got involved as well a little bit about me. I live in British columbia special little area called the sunshine coast which is only accessible by by boat or by air. But a forty minute. Ferry ride from the big city of vancouver on the west coast That's where i'm coming from Zen wise where i'm coming from is i never knew anything about zen. I never even heard the word until i saw. The word appear on a book in a bookstore. When i was like great. Tanner eleven and i don't know what it was but the words zen just seemed magical to the. I didn't know what it meant. I didn't know what it was by. Opened it up and it was just full of nonsense. That was so intriguing. I bought it brought it home and read it front tobacco. Five times had no idea what the heck any of it was talking about but it was still. I don't know couldn't couldn't shake it. It planted a seed in me that i needed to understand where once this nonsense they were talking about so for a couple of years in my teens. Try to meditate as this book was trying to teach me and i found it challenging yet calming in my teenage years but i never i never got beyond just this initial intrigue and then in my twenty s You know the life starts to happen. And i kind of forgot about zan. Even though i'm still philosophically curious about the nature of being and the universe myself and what does this all mean but you know i went down the path of what most twenty year olds do and you know socializing career and all this kind of stuff so i cannot. I lost touch with it for quite a while until i rediscovered Probably about fifteen years ago. I kinda rediscovered it. When i was one through like most people when looking for spiritual answers your had a rock bottom so to speak or you're suffering or you're confused her so i started studying again independently and i still didn't have any idea what it nets. What any of the stuff net. But again i. I just kept on reading it was there was something there so then i thought well maybe. Maybe i'd be to explore buddhism. Little.

NFL: Move the Sticks with Daniel Jeremiah & Bucky Brooks
"forty minute" Discussed on NFL: Move the Sticks with Daniel Jeremiah & Bucky Brooks
"Ready for your work out well until back and i think you guys do it just a mcglockton and that crew and code around said got tough we are. We go run forty eight g which toss wonder i three plays it again and so we ran the first replays of the game and when we put it it was fourth and seventeen and it glimpsing bureau so bad that i just remember slinky out of the stadium and just being like i will never ever go to the bottom of the hill and cole. I will never poked tire. That's what i've learned that. A couple of eighteen years doubt. Those were you there in ninety three north carolina. ninety three. yes. Oh we also. I'll i your coaching. And we play jaw in the role. So i was grad assistant at the gator bowl. I was at alabama. I was an alabama okay and yes down. Those new great running backs was that lee leeann occurred. Johnson puts you guys. Had i think sam shape might shade the masking We had we had david palmer. You know sherman williams at all williams a. coaching ninety-three. So okay i got my. I got my coaching career off to a good start in the ball game. That was a great game jar. Good man that was funny. Yeah yes that's that's the claim to fame We always used clips. It was always the measuring stick because why jordan at the time was the clips in legend but he was the office of coordinate. And so these always talk about a y'all know about another hits you go down there and so he georgia man. Yeah that's that's a great way. Sure ally awesome. Thanks goats i go through my workout. You can't keep a great figure like this if you don't go grind out coach that sure i wanna see. You're getting dangerously close tie with that tiger shirt. I say you just go all the way. I i'll see you all right buck. I mean he's he's great he can go on now. You can do a forty minute interview at daboh and you only need to pack three questions. You pack three questions. You're good man because he.

The Garden Report | Boston Celtics Post Game Show from TD Garden
Dick Hoyt, Boston Marathon Icon, Dead At 80
"Dick Hoyt passed away in 13 years. And again anybody who grew I grew up on the marathon route. This is every time that they would go by as the most inspiring moment of the race for anybody who doesn't know thirty two Americans with his son Rick who was a quadriplegic born with Cerebral Palsy and he ran it. He ran the marathon 32 times. They did three Iron Man's he ran one marriage with his son and two hours and forty minutes pushing the chair. The last one they did was 2014. This was obviously one of the like the massive highlights of any Boston Marathon in anybody if you were here it one of the things have been SpongeBob. Me to run the marathon. It's just and dick hard passed away today at the age of eighty so and inspiring story, you know, a true athlete terrific father and a million different things there and in just a piece of Boston if you grew up here that this is something that like this meant a lot. So this one shook me a little this is one of those where you feel it today. So this is what I wanted to give a quick shout-out to to the Heights and Dick Hoyt and anybody who ever, you know experience that, you know, you know how special that was. that that that happened to that

Midnight Double Feature - A Film Podcast
"forty minute" Discussed on Midnight Double Feature - A Film Podcast
"Guy and he's like yeah. Well i mean you fucking meant to shoot somebody asshole like what the fuck. I'd love just like shot him and he's like you all saw it. He had a gun he just something crazy. Like better not disagree with that. And he's gonna turn your really rampant about isn't funny. Isn't that funny. Look when he gets whenever like. They're leaving the buses outpacing the rest of the cars. And everybody's just kind of like staring at him. I job ordinary like. Can i have so much. And so that young man takes my heart with him. He's there has been great at the camera state on the truck over joe morton shoulders and he just monologues truck or the bus blows up in the background. Not making the gap. Yeah but i'd love. I'd i'd like to tell you that the boss was a fairy tale world. But i'd like to tell you that they made it all right and that the jump landed perfectly fine but a bus beating down. The freeway is no medical world. Everybody at home. Just enjoy the best nineties cheesiness. You can hear the next few moments on this shit dude. Yeah i love him race grabiner. I mean it's a very human but this is what the it's literally looks like the bus jumped like a horse and again so there is a great series. And i'm going to try and look it up here in a second just to do the right thing. It is either wired or vanity fair. That does these really great interviews with these people that are like really fluent in the industry but they come in and talk about films and it's like so they'll bring in a real doctor and no it's like a forty minute video of them covering these films. Yeah anyway somebody does this one and and they talk about how that jump and they i think they even use the same wording. It's like he bought it bucks up almost like i don't think like horse like he says like that or whatever but you can tell the second that it that it takes off. It has some weird as unbelievable trajectory like thing l. solve a little nuance things. They went to the trouble of doing like you know all the perfect camera shots. They have of them really running through the l. a. St rip in the trash can often see a hole in the ground. Like you have like the coolest trump in this movie. They would have tried to make it. Look a little more believable like this is a fantastic movie but that jump..

Awakend Wife - Marriage Advice for Successful Women
"forty minute" Discussed on Awakend Wife - Marriage Advice for Successful Women
"And so what exactly. i think. There's nothing wrong when it comes to acknowledging your partner's emotions or even saying out loud. So that your i guess you feel understood or you're on the same page. There's nothing wrong with that technique or that that way of communication but the the approach or the idea that you need to say it just to get emotions out of the way that actually becomes counterproductive. 'cause just like when people actually told us about this technique they use which hasn't worked very well otherwise it wouldn't be talking to us Another observation that i have made is that at the very beginning before we have help people. Or dave achy learned from our programs or are coaching style. Though come to us and actually quite proud and said well. I had a conversation with my husband just now and we were being real adults about it like we actually weren't emotional. This time they felt a sort of pride in being able to manage how they feel and not not express that in the conversation and let it impact a conversation. I get that maybe it feels like you have control but what. I actually feel when that wife told me that. Oh yeah i. I'm i'm so proud i just had a forty minute. Adult conversation with my husband is that she still feels extremely suppressed like yeah. They talked about stuff in an adult way so-called but she stuffed up like you can tell that seventy five percent of the things she actually wanted to say. She actually fell. She wasn't able to because she was busy. Trying to be an adult. So that pride. In that feeling of oh i was in control so it was. It was okay. I didn't feel that it was okay. 'cause she still didn't feel understood by her husband. They were still playing playing at fault. You know pretending he has so it. It didn't feel good for me to to see someone kind of struggling still with conflict and communication in her marriage and thinking being misled thinking that playing adult and trying to withhold these emotions. Not letting out..

Podium Time
"forty minute" Discussed on Podium Time
"Because there is one that i found. Ins p of but that particular ranger didn't keep in the same key. Florence price wrote it in d major going to g going back to d- and this was in seat at the beginning. I thought majors a wonderful key for orchestras especially for younger workers. Just why don't you mess with that. And so i honored her original immature. But i decided to modify the tempo the original. She writes it down show but then rights almost like an olive grove. And i listened to a couple of other people's orchestrations and they're almost displays. Bikes is by. And i myself am also an organist. And so i was trying to think all if once pressure the plane. That's during church. Doubt if she'd be just sailing through these beautiful harmonic progressions tried to honor her original temple marking and thinking more like the barbara da show sort of tempo about it before minutes and it's just stunning and i'm hoping that publishers will get it out sued. Because i've argument contacted by several. You know public school programs who are looking for more diverse repertoire. And they're like hey florence price working to get someone i said i'll get back to Published gotta be legal. I that's awesome yummy. Yeah don't forget that you guys please instruments all you conductors out there. So that's exactly. Yeah that's that's that's a good thing for the piece as well that that you knew you knew what she was implying that you know writing writing. I would like to think so. I think we all were possible whether it's a beethoven symphony or florence price piece. We try to get inside. The composer's mindset to try to wrestle with what they might be wrestling with when they wrote it to give a deeper understanding them perspective. I think we would all the time whether or not we realized that so. Let's our fingers that we get that published. Because i mean on all four minutes is so so flexible you can. You can just add that. You know it's not like a forty minute piece that you have to pergram around you. Can you can put that in. No problem exactly and i think one of the reasons why i decided to do We did in. September was to have this of in memoriam of those who have passed away at that point. It was when we're nearing two hundred thousand victims and we had already done abroad a couple of years before when lined up with an anniversary of the oklahoma city bombing of and i know that the virus da show is another common of. He's i was looking for something. That would be of a similar vein appropriate. Remembering and i'm not gonna lie gentleman. It hit me a lot harder. After i gave that final. Cut off being you endo albion tate. I kinda pause. And i had tears coming down my cheeks and i was hit in the way that i wasn't quite expecting very fortunate. Nobody in my family knock wood no as either had covert of passed away from it. But you know that piece it seventy spoke to me and in that moment in a way that i wasn't expecting adoration by price was that. Yeah we we play that. We hold a moment of silence after the off those who passed away. I'm gonna write that down now instead of writing it down later very smart so you guys have a recording of that somewhere that if someone wanted to hear what that satellite they could go in watch the league to state dot.

Good Life Project
Interview With Roy Kinsey, The Rapbrarian
"Tell me if this is true. Your parents met in a way that kind of foreshadowed your future in a little bit like they didn't mean a bar that didn't mean party is actually true that they met at a library. Of course it's a. I've had my own moments with that story. But it's the absolute truth. My mother was going to interview at. What was the large libraries in sta cultural center and my father was working at a desk. Saugus he Slip some gaming but yet that's that's where they met and then my mother was working actually on the the floor where the music was where all the film were. The vinyls that was this is not harold washington library This is before perr washes number and They met their first date was purple. Rain of the movie yet differs date was to go see preparation. The movie that is not suspicious. I eight yeah yeah. My dad loved france and it was really interesting. Because when i was putting out kinsey a memoir that is very reminiscent to me in a lot of ways of the story of purple rain Imprint the first place that i was asked to come pretty much to drop. The album actually was to first avenue for sold out show. And that's where my father lives now. My father has lived in minnesota for longer than twenty years. Twenty five thirty years probably which is why. This album is a purple winds wire at the vinyl herbal. But it was the first show that i was asked to come in do at prince's club where my father would walk at c be reforming in his hometown. Right before the shutdown so was the first and last show that i got to perform before we before the pandemic times matt. What what was it like for you. It was magical. It was so so amazing. I felt like it's called me. They're a felt like prince called me. You know called me to be there not knowing that things would shut down in a couple of weeks after that. But i think that it's sustained me in a way. I really miss performing and to be sold out show. I was called by desa so Of doom tree who lives in minnesota's a artist and author our own. Right of course asked me to come an open for her. So i do the sold out show and it was just one of the most magical experiences that i've had as far The reception was so so incredible and You know the people of minnesota really made me feel like a star that day in so it was just a lot of moments that were more magical more synchronised than even you know just the forty minutes i was on stage. It was just a whole magical experience that it's sort of like everything was leading up to that moment. Have you talked to your dad about that. His show yeah. It was so funny. My dad is very mysterious guy so when he came i didn't see him. He called me till we. It was a great show. And all that but i think just the way my mind works in the art. That was moving through in the art. That i was making and where i was in that space. I can't lie that i was like. I don't even know if he came. I don't even know if he was even actually here and van but me and my dad had this really interesting connection. I mean you have that connection with your parents. You have the connection with people that brought you into the world doesn't have to be so literal or on the phone or shortly proof or whatever life. I have that tie with my parents. My parents no when. I'm going through something whether i talked to them or not. Like they'll feel it from across town or prostate or cross country in so Randomly two or three weeks later. He sends me a video of me like on my last song. You know rocking the stage of okay. Right he was legit there. that's awesome. yeah. I mean as bad i think You know amazon. There's that connection. There's that sort of thing which. I'm fairly practical person. But there's also certain things like that that i just believe in you just feel something doesn't matter where you are I know you're also really close with grandma coming up as well right. Oh yeah my best details. Tell me more better ellen thompson. She was born in nineteen forty three in mississippi. And i love to speak her name. She was one of the first people that clap from me in made a really big deal out of me knowing how to read on my seventh birthday. She made me de. Protagonist of this book was a story of dr martin luther king junior. It should be around here somewhere. But it's right there so in this in this book that my grandmother gave me my tribute to martin luther king. Junior i am the protagonists of this book. And i'm writing a paper on martin luther king junior at tell the story of his life. But i'm you know in the beginning saying oh telling my cousins rookie creek turtle i have to write this paper on martin luther king junior Go into the story by the end of the story. I've told this whole thing. I turned it in. I get a on the paper. That is the book right. So not only. Did my grandmother clap for me. When she sees me reading. And saying that. I you know had a love. For words you should go to market a garden classes with me and sit in a walk me home and then when i began talking she would call me radio or lawnmower. She said because. I've talked so much if you call me that. And that was a foreshadowing in itself. Right i mean of me getting a on the paper. Maybe the paper was the black album. Right me. Being able to use my words for the upliftment of myself in marginalized communities in it was really just kind of like thinking about this is a power device and words in education literature a are powered by

The Paul Finebaum Show
Arkansas Head Coach, Eric Musselman, Discusses His Team's Success This Year
"Know there's a game coming up tomorrow but if we could just get some final thoughts on north we're violating the twenty four hour rule or not. But how does it feel to. I mean your fans are buzzing right. Now they've been excited all year but that really brought it home the other night. I mean the thing that that we're probably the most proud of paul is just the fact you know we got thumped tuscaloosa and we got beat before that at lsu When we were in bad rooch pretty pretty bad too and and We were able to bounce back between those two games. We had a really physical practice with weighted vests. And and you know. I'm not sure we had enough legs To play the fast place style of play that that obama plays and coach you know gets his guys really get out and run and and You know looking back. We knew that that practice would you know would would maybe set us back slightly but we're trying to think long term. We had a great environment. I mean we. You know i understand. It's a pandemic but we had a really good student section. Our crowd was good. There's there's there's been a lot of excitement over the last few weeks with the way that the team is played and and it was a big game. Th you know anytime you get a top ten cheap You know and you can you can you number one. You don't get a lot of opportunities to play top ten teams then when you do and you're able to to get a win. It is a big deal for the fans at former players boosters and and for the student athletes to reward them for for a lot of hard work but we have incredible respect coach oats and his team and we know that you know they're one of the top teams in the entire country so it was a big win. But you're right you gotta turn the page. And that's part of your team is having maturity when you do win a big game two to turn the page and get ready for your next game. I mean you're now final two days of february and and certainly you're going to be going through this now. You're going to be going through this in the sec tournament and ultimately in the nc double a. tournament for for a program that has not won a lot of big games lately. How drill that into their their minds. That this was fantastic. But it doesn't mean anything tomorrow. I mean i think you know all you can do. Really paul's just continue to talk. educate You know. I told him today that you know. I'm a lot older than them. I'm getting getting towards being an old man. And and sometimes you gotta listen to your elders a little bit on on some of these things that you talk about that you know the game you know tomorrow when we play l. s. u. the prior game against lsu doesn't matter and our pr- prior win against alabama doesn't matter there's forty minutes you've got to go out you got to be focused and You know it's. I think that that just kind of how it is and and You know the good thing is having gone through it nevada. You know none of those guys that we had there had really been through it either But i think the big thing is just understanding that each day. You've got to continue to get better. I mean even you know with with with three games to go now. We're talking about how we can get better. We're talking about improving our practice habits. We we do a to onto pick and roll defensive drill today that i'm sure they weren't really excited about doing a two onto pick and roll drill that might be. You would consider a training camp drill but we want to get better and anybody that aspires to play beyond college. Basketball should should want to become a better pick and roll defensive player so hopefully you know you can get your guys excited to understand that you know you're not just doing it for the lead these last three games and then tournament situations you're doing it for the longevity of your career as

Mornings With Gail - 1310 KFKA
"forty minute" Discussed on Mornings With Gail - 1310 KFKA
"Isn't it interesting that everything old is new again. The opportunity when it comes to transportation that pulled us reference starts with shovel ready projects in transportation rural broadband and public land maintenance to boost the economy and create jobs on transportation. He called for road improvement projects from the eisenhower tunnel to our rural roads up. He's remembering the rural areas of the state that our farmers and ranchers rely on while also reducing traffic and improving our vibrant are vibrant beloved main streets in the process taxes tax stack a little bit about taxes. He also resurrected his campaign promise to address. Tax reform saying remains his goal to make colorado's tax code warfare by getting rid of special interest tax breaks that quote benefit the few his planned overhaul the state tax code included eliminating the business personal property tax for thousands of small businesses which actually earned him a rare standing ovation from gop lawmakers okay. There's that doubling the earned income tax credit and providing up to six hundred dollars in tax credits per child for nearly two hundred thousand families through the colorado child tax credit and eliminating taxes on seniors benefits. He went on to say all of this along with the voter. Approved reduction in the state income tax will deliver the most substantial and comprehensive tax relief in decades for hard working colorado and and a small businesses. Now he turned to healthcare also voicing support but not elaborating upon what he would like to see need to reduce health insurance costs. And not a whole lot of specificity. They're turning to education. He spoke of the toll that the covid nineteen pandemic has taken on education said colorado and need in person school now not just for kids but also to alleviate the strain remote learning has placed on parents. Those comments also earned the governor's some praise from gop lawmakers. Who like many of us. What see our kids back in school as soon as possible. Apparently there was something for everyone to like in his forty minute speech. And we'll grant you the point that this was perhaps the it was perhaps. The most bipartisan speech of pulses entire time in office democrats enthusiastic about his plans on healthcare though not specific and education while republicans were excited by the prospect of making the business personal property tax. A thing of the past got to remember that reducing or flat out eliminating the tax has been on the gop wishlist for the past fifteen years with little if any progress first year lawmaker for example representative mike lynch. He's republican out of wellington. He told colorado politics he could not stand up fast enough close quote to applaud to apply to police when he talked about the tax. Incidentally lynch owns a small business. He said the taxes a huge burden and quote anything that can reduce the burden on citizens and during this horrible horrible year is wonderful referring to all of the effects of the covid nineteen pandemic particularly in twenty twenty forty minutes speech summing up the state of the state in colorado. Do you agree with governor policies assessment on shovel ready jobs where the state is headed and radically reimagining colorado. Or is that just a frightening nightmare. Nine seven three five three thirteen ten. Johnny attacks stunner thirteen ten k. f. k. text. Line eight fifty now. Thirteen ten k. Up kfi what's happening in your own backyard. Listen to no co- now with tanner's swint a northern colorado's voice thirteen ten kfi k. a. We have the games go to thirteen ten. Kfi dot com to see our preps college and pro game schedules..

Scuba Shack Radio
Flooded Mine
"It's time for another installment of on it. Store live here on scuba shack radio. And this time we're going back to season one episode two titled flooded mine flooded mine the premiered on january eleventh nineteen fifty eight. The show opens up with mike scuba diving. And there's a woman who is free diving with them. They're searching for a guitarfish from marineland of the pacific and that's when they encounter a c line who might calls a natural clown. He then says that he will be faced with a very different situation. Fifteen hundred miles inland where he's been called to investigate a mine. Explosion that has flooded the tunnels in the next scene. Mike is at the mine and he's talking to the head of the mind. Mr graham mr graham explains that the explosion killed thirty miners and he needs mike to determine the extent of the flooding. Mike tells mr graham that he can go thousand yards into the tunnel with his cylinder. Graham asks him what it's going to cost. Mike says we'll talk about that later. Now mr graham calls in bill henderson. Who's going to help mike. Bill tells graham that he sorry about his boy who was killed in an explosion. The scene shifts to mike being lowered into the mine in his full scuba gear with miner's helmet on he says he's been all seven seas on six continents but has never been in a mind before and never wants to be in want again as bill and mike or making their way through the mine. Bill tells mike not to touch anything. It's a tight squeeze and mike accidentally kicks a beam. That causes a bit of a cave-in. Well they finally make it to the water mike. Mike looks at his watch. And it says three twenty and he tells bill that he has forty minutes of air. Bill asks mike. What can you do if he doesn't make it back in time to which mike replies. Nothing bill tells mike. He's got a dangerous job now. Under the murky water. Mike is feeling his way along slowly carefully when he hears some noises. He doesn't know exactly what what they are but he sees a light at the surface and when he surfaces up he discovers to miners trapped in an air pocket barely breathing. Mike shoves the regulator in their mouth and smacks them starts yelling at them to breathe now the dilemma. How to get them out. There's no time to go back for another long. He can only take one out but who they draw. Rocks smallest rock stays the guy. Mike is taking out. Can't swim and he needs wait. So they load his pants with rocks mic shows. Them how to buddy breathe gives him as masks and off they go but not for long. The minor panics. Takes mike's knife and starts to fight with them. Mike drops might drops his light and gets to panic. Diver back to the air pocket. Mike goes back down to get his late and then he comes up and tells the minor to get some rocks. He's taken him out. This time keeps his mask and things go smoothly. We then see bill looking at his watch. It's four pm. Whereas mike suddenly bill sees the light. And mike comes up with the minor. It's been workman. Mike needs to go back but he doesn't have enough air and there's not enough time to go out in the mind for another tank. What can they do. Just an mike spots a welding torch where there's a torch there's oxygen tank has the same valve as regulator. What luck but mike need some tools to complete the rig now. He needs to go back down underwater To retrieve a toolbox he does and hooks up his regulator and carries the o. Two tank with them as he heads back breathing welding oxygen. Mike reaches the air pocket and finds the second minor limp. But not dead. He gives him the regulator and the minor starts to revive. He tells. Mikey sorry that he was scared. Mike says that's okay. You just didn't have enough oxygen this time. Mike says that things went a lot better than they made it out. We never did get the name of that panic minor nor did we ever find out what might charge mr graham for those of us of a certain age or watch a lot of old time television. You might recognize bill henderson. That's hank patterson who played fragile. Arnold the pigs. Dad on greenacres the episode sort of ended abruptly when when it switches to lloyd bridges on his boat telling us that three fifths of the planet is covered by sea. And how little we know so join us as we go below with si-hun as we've seen in many si-hun adventures. You never know where mike nelson will be going diving next. Stay tuned for future installments of seon. It's still alive here on scuba shack radio

Ready to Be Petty
"forty minute" Discussed on Ready to Be Petty
"To think of some to have pr reach out to her and help her from liz statement give her time create a safe environment for her but not the black. People were offended by her statements. Give time s. There's like some pretty damning things. I don't know if you want to go through some of the quotes that i pulled i do i. I and i think it's very important reasons. Why because here's the thing the forty minute video. Whatever i could finish. I got maybe one third of the way in before i had to turn it off. 'cause my blood was boiling. I was in shock that rachel had to sit through this compose himself so well good for her. I could not have gone off. I think what's so important. Is that and this. Goes back to the wristy. Racism in america's history if ritual had gotten a bit heated what people be as outraged as they were she came off a quote unquote the angry black woman. Or the stereotypical black woman. Thankfully she knew what she had to. She said her blood was boiling and she wanted to call him on stuff but she had to water herself down to make sure she let him sink himself. You know there's so much for example. The woke police. These are things that he says with his other racist friends and at his kitchen dinner table as he just felt like he could now. These are things that he's been seen his whole life and it finally came to light now. The woke police. Twenty eighteen is not sixty years ago. Buddy let's get that straight right now like i guess. Give her time yet. The rachel lindsay said rachel. Run in front of you. You didn't give her a create a safe environment. Creena safe environment for a racist allows for racism to occur. Why would i don't understand. How bad is something you want to do. He's the biggest thing i want to get across. It is okay. I'm happy that some people are outraged by this. And i think the biggest i want to project around when the on is that the big the big the best thing you can do. I think it's like christmas functions. You can do if you want to help by poc people. I'm just by people in general is to understand that you will never be able to fully understand the black experience. You know that just something. You'd never be able to walk in our shoes or walk. In someone's shoes is brown. You know light brown black etcetera but to to understand. Ask questions and create a healthy dialogue. What he was saying. He was happy that he richard could do is not a healthy dialogue was unsighted and it was with. Michael regressions galore. You know what i mean and apparently rachel said she was not even surprised. This was doing this because there's no. Pr no-one to tell him..

FoodStuff
The Power of the Praline
"Let's get to question let us for all liens are pralines or pauline's or lines. This is the first question what are they. Oh heck well a as it turns out the word of prowling can refer to a number of types of candies. What the word means in the american south is a soft fudgy type of carmel. Lumped with pieces of pecan and like a melt in your mouth super sweet rich buttery creamy confection with the contrasting crunch and complementary sweet buttery flavor cons so good. Oh my heck it's typically made by cooking a sugar with butter milk or cream or condensed milk. Maybe a little bit of annella and then at chapter have cons. An easter this constantly until it is a thick syrup softball stage for y'all candy makers and then you pour the the mass out onto a tray or a slab cool either in a single sheet to be broken into pieces later or in individual mounds sort of the the size and shape of a cookies when they're done they're dry the touch not sticky until they start to melt which they can like skin temperature You can get variations in there that include like rum for flavoring chocolate pralines peanut butter pralines chewier caramel praline. Pralines encased in hard chocolate sometimes called turtles cetera You can make them with other nuts too. I guess that is something. I've never seen but researching this episode. I have learned. That is definitely a thing. Yeah yeah okay. So in europe we run into some kind of serious linguistic confusion. Because in france from what i understand the word Prowling means whole almonds or other nuts that are cooked in boiling sugar then cooled so that it creates like granulated coding that keeps the almond inside fresh and i think it can also mean That confection crushed into a powder for use in like other candy making or baking. Or what have you here in the states we do call nuts that have been encased in a crunchy dairy sugar coating praline nuts and praline. Pecans are a holiday delicacy in the south. Yes meanwhile back in france. There's a related term of a means groundnuts or possibly praline knots cooked into a soft paste with sugar and chocolate and then coated in a hard chocolate. Shell like a like a bon. Bon yelm right. Meanwhile in belgium the word probably means any confection consisting of a hard chocolate shell encasing a softer filling one of the traditional fillings or perhaps traditional filling being prawning. Y'all it takes me like a really silly amount of time to suss all of this out i. It was like cross-referencing i. There was a lot of translating pages from french with google translate blake. I got very confused for a very hot minutes. Yeah that's one of the funny things about when you do grow up in an area and you don't realize something as regional venture outside of it and you're like wait you call leads. What and way for us. 'cause you just kind of assume the word means this turn out not necessarily yeah Yes so so. That's fun when you're googling it is it is it adds an extra layer of challenge of fun difficulty. A wrinkle an air history perhaps mystery what brolly are really great. Are we talking about well lauren. What about the nutrition. Well there. they're treat. It's you know it's sugar in nuts and fat it treats are nice. Tweets are great Not circling tristesse would imagine. I did find I guess this is a good transition into numbers portion. Because there aren't any numbers on pralines. But i did find one. That really cracked me up. And it was hyper specific to how many germans or eating pralines and how many were having more than one a day. And i just loved that this exists and is obviously not a well. Maybe not obviously but not the feeling we're talking about so i didn't include it but it was very funny to me that like only twenty percent of germans have proud leans more than once a day like a lot to me still. I'm just paraphrasing. Don't don't quote me on that but it was okay. Gave me a chuckle. that study did. Yeah yeah i Right right sussing out the numbers for for what. We are focusing on in this episode. Which is the american. South's version of that. Melty kind of fudge. Like pecan praline situation. Sussing that out from everything else was was was tough numbers size but i will say that at shops in new orleans that still make pralines by hand. I'm just i'm not gonna say consistently. I'm so sorry for anyone who is already being driven completely up the wall by this yeah shops new orleans. Still make them by hand out like for example Lays pralines a batch of two hundred takes about forty minutes to make start to finish and dedicated. Three person team can turn out a thousand a day. Whoa right hoof at the new orleans school of cooking. which does cooking demos and classes. They make thousands a day in overlapping batches and one cook who who mostly does candy making for them By the name of our ruffin told the la times. If i had to keep account on how many i make. I think i'd probably quit

The Small Business Radio Show
How to Leverage Amazon to Grow Your Business in 2021
"During the pandemic the use of amazon sword but so has small business owners selling their products on amazon. Here talk about how they can help. Your small business is carry kucic. Who is the of small business empowerment amazon. The small business powered team is focused on driving. The success of amazon's small business partners and works with teams across amazon deliver programs. Investments that support their growth carries a graduate of the university of florida's levin college of law where she earned a juris doctorate degree shows holds in history of english from covenant. College carry welcome to the show. Thank you so much for having me very so i could ask you. How did you end up being a lawyer from studying history and english extensive amounts of reading and writing. The really is i. You know when. I was In actually in high school had an opportunity to participate in a youth leadership program That included a track on the judicial system. And i just kinda got hooked on on everything that was involved in of course. Reading and writing is a big part to sorta leaned into those superpowers. I guess so. How did you pass from being a j. d. lead you to amazon and out small business owners. The phone question I do. I've today describe myself as a recovering lawyer. A my favorite time. Yes you know the thing that was fun for me about practicing law was you. You get to spend all day identifying issues in solving problems and so i really From day one enjoyed solving ambiguous problems. Where you had to figure out the root cause of whatever issue or opportunity was in front of you and then inventor way to the solution and so that took me from practicing law Up through a variety of roles on the business side where i've gotten to solve increasingly problems. focused on solving challenges For usually for others which leads to my my role today which is very good to spend all day everyday focused on helping solve issues challenges and make the world a better place for small businesses. I think a lot of people carry don't realize how many small businesses actually work through the amazon channel. Tell us about that So amazon in the us alone on amazon works with more than two million independent partners. They come in all shapes and sizes celena stores. They operate delivery service businesses. They use tools trim. Aws a build alexa skills. They published books with kindle direct publishing so amazon supporting small medium. Sized businesses is a fundamental part of our work there. It's a core part of what we do everyday. An extension of our customer centric culture. Our success depends on their success and our global head. Carrie i was gonna say in our in our store worldwide. We have over a million independent businesses selling in the account for over half of all products sold. And we've seen their sales continue to outpace our retail so we know that customers value them in this election they bring in an incredible way. The amazing statistic that over half of everything purchased on amazon is sold through independent third parties. Small medium sized businesses. That it's not really amazon. Really is the amazon marketplace right absolutely. Yeah the outlive sewing partners. The independent businesses bring those products role and bringing such a wonderful and diverse array of products across all categories. That customers enjoy now. Even i know most of us were surprised by covid. Nineteen who would know that once in every one hundred years right what happen last year but was my biggest surprise is that when ordered some from amazon. It couldn't get here in two days. I thought would never ever happen. Carry tell us about the challenges. They're really amazon. Face in the small business partners did during the height of the covid nineteen crisis absolutely right kobe. Nineteen created many challenges for small businesses. We you know despite it. We were encouraged to see that sense and through that time. Small companies have continued to grow with amazon. You know twenty twenty the number of us long medium sized businesses that surpassed one million dollars sales grew by more than twenty percents and more than thirty seven hundred surpassed him in sales for the first time. Which is just a really great business milestone for any prisoners owner. I'm those businesses have created an estimated one point one million jobs which is phenomenal. It's such an important part. Is you know what keeps our communities going and so we've seen as customers of increasingly shopping online on the past year. The businesses were using e commerce. House channel have continued to sustain grow. I'm in our commitment to supporting them. And adopting for the future has has never been more steadfast done a number of things both continuing work. We've been doing for years and new things. We did in twenty twenty to continue supporting them through that journey. And i think that's really the key role. The amazon plays a lot of companies have got into e commerce for the first time during covid nineteen and like all right. I'm gonna go set up a store. But they no incomes and i think that is really the key of getting involved in the amazon marketplace. Because you already have so many people looking for products right there absolutely One of my favorite stories. I think one of my favorite projects from twenty twenty was last year redesigned prime date support small businesses and we committed more than one hundred million dollars to help their growth over the shopping event through the holiday season and that included holding our biggest small business promotion. Yeah so during that promotion customers. Purchase dollars and products from participating. Small business selling on amazon. Ten dollars credit to spend on prime day. It's on a two week. Lead up to prime day. Small businesses included in that promotion generated more than nine hundred million dollars. In sales on prime day independent third party sellers had their two biggest as ever surpassing three and a half billion in sales which is nearly sixty percent year over year increase and even more growth than our retail business and then it also came with stories like the story of lia foods actually a seller based north aurora forty minutes outside of chicago and she makes african inspired spices but The fun part about her story. It demonstrates the power of selling on amazon and an event like prime day to find those new customers over to help those new customers find you. She shared that coming out of advent not only has she almost doubled her single day sales but her daily started trending upwards with all that new customer acquisition those stories. We really enjoy seeing so those who've never really men sold their price to amazon. What kind of rain moments are there. And what is it in a cost to market on amazon. Yes so our public schedule. So if you if any seller or someone considering becoming a feller looks online at those public public information fees range from eight to fifteen percent depending on product type and for business selling amazon. Really do that as a marketing cost because of the access to that three hundred million customers that it creates and then beyond the monthly in referral fees. everything's optional so sellers choose. What's right for their business. We offer as i mentioned a variety of services in programs than in its pick. What's right for you right so if you want to lean into advertising their options for you could choose what suits for your business if you want to move away from fulfilling your on products create more bandwidth for yourself to do other things there options to leverage by amazon into leverage the customer service support that comes without. So it's it's very much a choose your own adventure but each business owner can select the right fit for them and what fits their

IINK Podcasts
"forty minute" Discussed on IINK Podcasts
"What struggle berthier Theater completed the audit coyote. A good Kyle loosely a ticket. Lonely dot gov shanty better multi use next question. Please lockdown low cited Though place lockdown mate gase car megan's law of tightly or manic africa puts covid august by It groups duty. Your may not man normally village of duty. The outlook setup Let's night basically automotive near its night. Basically is the lobbyists Hamadi that because member diet. But i got to get Wt influence castilian Personality tire off the Could make gordon swings game to the family decides A i nicholson dot com. We see key it on new may become could be taken exclusive. It could get his opposite. It could write the ga so cut the cutler gals at their by Together tonight partly on Ba forty minute. You're ads override. His may is it will economic boy. Three story won't be raised in a few to be in my hand. Llegado teleki logos Two years upset Teaser took. let's see graham in in cut cut. That will make us economist Do okay next appears Hold you up buddy okay. Say applicable kyodo up emotional. Cheol the man. Ed delancey copybooks When kate cast but enough india whoa book went to coffee. That's on kickoff. This idea book state semitic library here. Don't kick up inside a book. Sirkin gear spirit of indiana when it from stars advance Yogi wanted to let gay. Were at this next person caucus Glob cottee. It yup nail cook. Some nicole Out there there's omnion you'll get that from negative manner lychner shoot Lending town may go need entity Daza order like may coffee ingram to make anything indicating. John's geeky me could do the family deliverable cool now in the donald Around we aleka decade do they knowlegde. Won't helpers kato mood. The many of lena stole escape biden wednesday at. That's larquie ongoing. What's ahead of cars at.

The Mindless Morning Show
"forty minute" Discussed on The Mindless Morning Show
"Where we go <Speech_Male> and we really liked <Speech_Music_Male> that idea. So <Speech_Male> we're going to do that. <Speech_Male> So that will be our <Speech_Male> next on <Speech_Male> one. Our next <Speech_Male> one on one whenever <Speech_Music_Male> that may be <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> Probably <Speech_Music_Male> not too far from now. <Speech_Music_Male> But we don't know depends <Speech_Music_Male> we're busy. <Speech_Male> We're busy evil. <Speech_Music_Male> We <Speech_Music_Male> got our interviews coming <Speech_Music_Male> up <Speech_Music_Male> and we're going to keep doing <Speech_Music_Male> those and that <Speech_Music_Male> will be the mindless morning <Speech_Music_Male> now. On however <Speech_Music_Male> every now <Speech_Music_Male> and then <Speech_Music_Male> you get a mindless morning <Speech_Music_Male> show. <Speech_Male> I don't know we're going to call it yet. <Speech_Male> Free <Speech_Music_Male> free mind. <Speech_Music_Male> Free bird <Speech_Male> revolt. I don't <Silence> know where we just <Speech_Male> have <Speech_Male> a twenty thirty. <Speech_Male> Maybe <Speech_Music_Male> forty minute segment. <Speech_Music_Male> I don't know <Silence> of us just <Speech_Music_Male> seeing <Speech_Music_Male> where we go <Speech_Music_Male> because <Speech_Male> it <Speech_Male> is fun. <Speech_Music_Male> And <Speech_Music_Male> i'm like we'll <Speech_Music_Male> have literally <Speech_Music_Male> no shown <Speech_Music_Male> in we'll just stop. We'll <Speech_Male> start and <Speech_Male> see where we go so <Speech_Male> let us know <Speech_Music_Male> what you think. If <Speech_Male> you're <Speech_Music_Male> pissed off about that <Speech_Music_Male> let us know <Speech_Male> it cool with it. <Speech_Male> Let <Speech_Male> us know <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> start and <Speech_Male> see where we go so <Speech_Male> let us know <Speech_Music_Male> what you think. If <Speech_Male> you're <Speech_Music_Male> pissed off about that <Speech_Music_Male> let us know <Speech_Male> it cool with it. <Speech_Male> Let <Speech_Male> us know <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Not going <Speech_Male> anywhere. We're just changing <Speech_Music_Male> our four manning <Speech_Music_Male> a little bit because we're going <Speech_Male> to be getting more <SpeakerChange> interviews <Speech_Male> to <Speech_Male> all the <Speech_Male> previous episodes <Speech_Male> that are <Speech_Male> under the midnight <Speech_Male> name they will still <Speech_Male> remain they <Speech_Male> will just be retitled <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> To basically <Speech_Male> get rid of all <Speech_Male> the midnight <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> the <Speech_Male> As well <Speech_Male> as our website will <Speech_Male> we're going to give the <Speech_Male> midnight section <Speech_Male> of the website but <Speech_Male> we will probably <Speech_Male> add <Speech_Male> like an <Speech_Male> interview section of <Speech_Male> like a whole list of <Speech_Male> all the guests that we <Speech_Male> have hosted <Speech_Male> and things like that <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> as well as other <Speech_Male> shows that we we <Speech_Male> have been in part of because <Speech_Male> we've been guessing <Speech_Male> on other shows lately <Speech_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> So <Speech_Music_Male> i <Speech_Male> think it's <Silence> something <SpeakerChange> that <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> we may have <Speech_Male> to go from <Speech_Male> making <Speech_Male> the morning. <Speech_Male> We don't <Speech_Male> label it as explicit. <Speech_Male> But i think <Speech_Male> we're going to start <Speech_Male> just <Speech_Male> completely being <Speech_Male> full on explicit <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> throwing <Speech_Music_Male> beer cans all <Speech_Music_Male> over the place <Speech_Music_Male> funded <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> all <Speech_Male> sorts of eggs. <Speech_Male> I mean. we're we're <Speech_Male> going to be <Speech_Male> might. Just <Speech_Male> start flying off the handle <Speech_Male> from now as <Speech_Male> i may. <Speech_Male> If you're listening <Speech_Male> only you miss <Speech_Male> you. Miss <SpeakerChange> the great <Silence> beard. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I mean i was <Speech_Male> just. I'm going <Speech_Male> to start doing that everytime <Speech_Male> now if <Speech_Male> you've <Speech_Male> air every time <Speech_Music_Male> i'm going to start <Speech_Music_Male> doing that every <Speech_Male> single time. <SpeakerChange> I can't <Speech_Male> wait <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> to be awesome. <Speech_Male> But yeah so. <Speech_Male> Those are <Speech_Male> future plans And we hope <Speech_Male> you like <Speech_Male> that <SpeakerChange> idea. <Speech_Male> We would love to hear <Speech_Male> more from you <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> about the <Speech_Male> bad this if <Speech_Male> you guys <Speech_Male> Approve of <Speech_Male> it or not. We don't really <Speech_Male> care. We're going to do it anyway <Speech_Male> but <SpeakerChange> you know. Give <Speech_Male> us your opinion anyway. <Speech_Music_Male>

What The Suck?!
"forty minute" Discussed on What The Suck?!
"To do that because like i said it's our forty minute movie. Yeah he takes an axe to the back remember. He's against the cupboard. That's right okay. So we will go ahead. That was onscreen. We'll we'll give him kill three. That's right yeah so that was pretty legit and it was a good accident. He fell down. He had car keys in his hand so he was going to try to. That's right he was trying to get the car. Go get his. But but i want to say he also tried to fight the killer as well. He did didn't last long but he try. But what's funny is don't try. Yeah but see this month. Workers like retired strong. I mean my gosh. Yes i mean this guy's and people and holding them up by the neck and all kinds of crazy shit okay. Now that all these fools have done scattered and run around. And they're all in the house. Let's split up. That's that's always a good move and then we come back to kareem. Who is holding Believe you said her name was roxy roxy and apparently she'd been hacked up off green of course And then cutesy won the won the detective lopez she dives into a fucking a real safe room and and then the little red light comes on like okay. Now he's gonna tell you there. She ends up getting killed off screen. We see her dead. I'm just going to get to it now. So people start dropping like flies. And then we got our boy jonah hill. He's going to go out and try to get in the car and get everybody out of there. He takes the keys out of brandon's dead hands. It goes outside trust getting the car killer in the car takes his head and smashes his ass against the steering wheel several times crushing his skull four also punching him a bunch of times more. Kill for legit. Kill for now like i said folks. There's a lot more killing in his movie. Bodies are dropping. But you don't get to see all of them which is unfortunate because the kills all share we do see are not that bad all right after nerd. Boy has his skull. Crushed killer comes inside the house and the two brothers standing there kareem and the other guy. I can't remember his name. But hang on kareem and tell you right now. Marcus kareem and marcus. They decided to take this motherfucker on this when we find out how what i call..

Nerd On! The Podcast
"forty minute" Discussed on Nerd On! The Podcast
"I love when harry's looking at the tent like everybody's going into the tent and he's literally got this face on like what the fuck goes in and then you're seeing everybody kinda dub their place. And he's like i love magic like i just. I love about these movies. And it's it's it's the technique is used to like. Wow an amaze audiences but like the the weasley explain nothing to harry and then and then immediately like. Grab the fucking shoe dude. You're like whoa. it's like they had. They went on a hike. They had like probably a good forty minute hike to that shoe and never once was ron like by the way. This shoe is gonna no real quick. The thing that is that. I love the beginning of that. Everybody's asking arthur weasley where we going. And he's like he's treating it secretly. So how is anybody to know that they're going to this thing. It's like or like no one. No one is like by the way we get there. The tents are going to look really small like it's going to be fine like if you're new to this world i love it. I love because it helps the audience. Have the harry is the surrogate for the audience. That's just our was additioning to be in national lampoon's family vacation. That's why i'm not gonna tell you my plans at all but you have to understand what i'm doing and that whole sequences is completely different from the book. He's been in post postcards in the mail at the dir- sleaze from the weasley inviting and so it's it's a part of the story that's completely told different truncation in the film. It tickles me pink. There are some some key. Things i really wanted to mention was like the walking up to the port. Ki- was like when you're underneath or when you're lower than the grass and you're looking up was just like this terrence malick thing. I was just like okay. My bad we were doing this. Shit opening sequence. There's something really cool. They do with the camera in this film where they do. A lot of like kind of Brian depalma of like people look at the camera. Because they're looking at harry and it makes him feel like you know he's again just outsider. Feel which i really liked and they audience feel that way. The the film actually has a lot of this. I kind of paranoia. That i really kind of enjoyed of like you can't trust anyone series like keep your friends close and then like whoever did this is no friend of yours and he's just like who's out to get me. How can i trust. Even the students around me. Where is carmen sandiego and So i just thought those elements that they did in this film was kinda like it was kind of like what is the mesh of like here is back to form of like the first film. Like here's this mystery. But also with like prison ben affleck is how dark and grim. It is because all the death eater marks were just like. Oh god and just like lightning everywhere. It's just like debbie looms all the time well know the the opening sequence following negi need snake into the riddle house like sets up that..

Kingdom Family Talks Podcast
"forty minute" Discussed on Kingdom Family Talks Podcast
"I don't know how you do with it. But you have these moments in your life. That seems like evans. Silence at some bounce between you and popoff in saw in those moments related. I sometimes call even winter season but sometimes may be a sunset to one season in sunrise in another season. So yeah i get it. You've been through those two right. I think it's important for our our nurse watching to really say okay. Wait a second. This does this can be part of my walk with god is a winter season And what do i do when i don't sense here. God feel by feels like everything's kinda on mute. What do we do how we navigate that. Because i think that's part of our journey with god is having some of that and when that happens not if but when i think it's really important one. Stay in the bible you know. There's other even been times when i've been reading my bible. I stay pretty consistent every day But there have been times when even the bible feels wooden. You know indebted to me. I'm like us. But i i stay steady with it. I don't quit. I don't know maybe i find. Maybe i find some places where i like it a little bit more. I really like psalms. Everybody likes homes. I love. I love luke luke. I love that book and john show. I find books that. I like books in the bible and and just burrow into those and then i take walks. I take walks and i find Inevitably and invariably a walk and talk to god. Give garden earful. But then as i'm walking if it's a thirty forty minute walk then i i often times. We'll find myself sensing god not necessarily in this really direct verbal but just in this the impressions in awareness. And it's really. When i do that i find that it's not the advert conversations but they're very indirect and soft on a impressions when i settle into that there's connection and that's very powerful. It's it's it's there's a sensitivity to it. That i like and calibrates me so that i'm not just looking for god in one way but there's an awareness in my heart. That is more sensitive more tender more attentive israeli cool. Let me ask you a question. Because i was sitting with a young man right before at before this call and actioning hear his story on a luxury hearing people story but then also shared a little bit on my journey in story. And i would say. There's been by tweet conversation that i share in that i've had with god will add need that totally transformed my life. I mean i can go back to some of those my markers and say wow.

WSJ Tech News Briefing
How Tech Companies Are Changing The Way They Price Things
"Chances are you've changed the way you spend your money. This year from the tech companies have noticed everyone from apple to amazon. Zoom has been experimenting with the way they price their products to try and entice and keep customers joining now to talk about. Some of their strategies is our personal columnists nicola wedding. Hey andy cole. Thanks for being here. We're going to run through the specifics in a minute. But i want to start by asking. Why look at tech. Companies pricing moves this year. What are these decisions. Tell us about the company's cigarette question. I was curious about whether or not the economic downturn prompted by this very unique pandemic would prompt companies to consider new pricing models. Or in what ways would test traditional pricing schemes. And the reason why it's unique is because economic downturns sometimes forces prices down until in this case. No one was flying into some flight. Prices went down some airlines offered. Buy one get two free seats deals. But in other cases prices went up because grocery van was higher because supply chains were in disarray. Because operational costs were higher for places like restaurants so is really interesting. Look at how companies are reacting. To this unique time i think we often think about economics and pricing models as firm that nothing is new and that there are no real experiments and pricing. But the truth is when there is a moment like this one. Nobody really knows how consumers are going to react. And so in a way a lot of these companies conducting experiments and we saw a lot of companies. Take some different approaches to that. So let's run through some of the examples we saw and we'll start with entertainment reminded us how hollywood adjust in the world of closed movie theaters. Obviously it was a huge hit. Two movie theater industry because being locked in a closed room for two hours isn't exactly cove friendly disney to interesting approach. It launched disney plus very recently and that was probably a saving grace for the company because there are lots of areas of the company that were not doing well like parks for example and mulan was. One of its biggest blockbusters this year to two hundred million dollar. Movie is the remake of a classic. A favorite of mine and they decided instead of releasing it exclusively in theaters which is normal to charge thirty dollars for early access to milan with called premier access and it was an interesting move because they were going to charge thirty dollars which is a pretty high price for streaming service as an add on to what you're already paying which is six ninety nine month for disney plus and offer that early access for three months and then make mulan apart of the larger library in december for centrally free included near subscription. So kind of just charging the price that it would cost to go see the movie at the theater but from your couch now. Milan might be a bit of an anomaly. Because of a number of factors including concerns over where the movie was filmed which was in a part of china where the government has been accused of committing some human rights abuses but batted mind. How was milan received the gamble. Pay off it fell flat. Most analysts say because of two reasons one is because there was a lot of controversy around the filming location. The ceo admitted this himself. And the second reason is that the price is really high and instead of framing the premier access price as discount for disney plus subscribers so they could have charged forty dollars for non-subscribers and thirty or twenty five dollars for subscribers to make feel like. You're getting something out of it. You know a deal. The church this premium price too subscribers. So milan didn't quite work out. It sounds like but is this something that streaming services and entertainment more. Broadly make testing. Interestingly disney's biggest rival one of disney's biggest rivals warnermedia decided to release. Its entire twenty. Twenty one slate of films included with hbo. Max not opting for the premiere pricing model and disney's next release which is pixar soul will be included in the disney plus subscription and not as premier. Add on. so you know that sort of indicates that move london. Do super well for disney. But i do suspect that if we are staying away from movie theaters well into twenty one well into twenty twenty two that they will try this again for another blockbuster release maybe with a lower price. Got it okay. So let's move on to apple. They released ton of new products this year and played on what you have dubbed the. Goldilocks effect. Can you tell us what that means. Goldilocks refers to a good better best pricing strategy. So this means you get three options or three buckets of options that represent sort of like the budget the mid tier and then the expensive model for those who have a very high willingness to pave the latest and greatest features apple for a long time has released new models one or two and then discounted previous models older models to sort of represent that good better best strategy so the budget option was always like last year's iphone this year. They released a record number of new iphone models so five in total and actually the budget option is a new phone. That was released this year. So i think what that says about apple said moving forward. They want their entire lineup their new lineup to represent more pricing tiers to appeal to wider swath of people so even those who are willing to spend just a couple hundred bucks at a phone can feel like they're getting a new iphone sort of expanding their addressable market. And as you mentioned. This is a tactic that apple has used since long before the pandemic but is there a reason sort of doubling down on this in a year like this one. Yeah you know. One of the pricing consultants. I talked to says that more pricing tiers kind of a protective measure for some companies apple is a premium brand so they can get away with selling a multi thousand dollar iphone in during an economic downturn but the lower end iphone. se. That's just a couple of hundred bucks you know. Three three between the four hundred bucks allows them to keep the customer that has a tighter budget in their brand. And hopefully that person will upgrade to a more expensive iphone in the future got it and in a similar pricing move. The fitness company peleton introduced another more expensive stationery bike and lowered the price of the existing model by about three hundred fifty dollars. So what fa logic with this move. Eso not exactly good better best because two tiered pricing system. A lot of economists called this committee classic price discrimination where someone who has ohi willingness to pay more features will pay for the very expensive two thousand four hundred ninety five dollar by plus with all the bells and whistles and those are just starting to get into a stationary bike gang but really wanna peleton are willing to pay the eighteen ninety-five price. This one research paper. That i discussed in the peace looked at this williams sonoma case where two hundred seventy five dollar. Red baking appliance wasn't selling at all and then williams sonoma a more expensive model and then the cheaper model. She sales doubled. So you know. Peleton may have been drying from this classic case here we. We don't have exact numbers on its performance but in earnings calls peleton was very bullish on. It's cheaper model and said that it would continue to be its bestselling bike but what happened is during the pandemic people were more willing to pay for premium equipment because it was replacing their gym membership. And so wait times for this. Newer by plus are now up to ten weeks and wait times for the cheaper bike are know almost half that that time so it seems like maybe peleton should have priced. They're more expensive by maybe even higher or maybe they're less expensive lake even more affordable. So i think that brings us to the fourth big pricing strategy. We saw which is this trend of companies dropping walls and generally making more of their product or service accessible for free. You just right into some of what we saw there. Yes so early. On in the pandemic a lot of companies were responding to this very sudden turn towards work from home and being online and not really being able to communicate with with other people in person so zoom for example lifted their forty minute limit for k. Through twelve educators eighteen other service providers lifted data caps. Comcast made its network of xfinity Wifi access points free for everyone. You don't need comcast subscription. The list goes on and on what they're sort of taking advantage of is the fact that free is great advertising and free something really miraculous to our brains. Were very persuaded by zero dollars. There is this very famous study of students who had the choice between a one set. Hershey's kiss or twenty six cents lynch truffle and when given that choice most students picked the lynch truffle but when the researchers lowered the price of the hershey's kiss to free and the lynn truffle to just one cent below. Even at the price difference was the same. Most students opted for the free. Hershey's kiss so free has a very strong pull on our psyche and these companies. Think that in offering free services they spread goodwill but they also increase the amount of people who are using their service and the thinking is that potentially those people will pay for other things in the long term. so nike is a good example of this. They made their are trading club app. Free the premium subscription cost some amount of money to be able to work out with their very chiseled very good-looking trainers and These trainers are wearing like clothing. And there's a short cut in the app to buy nike apparel and so in making the free They're able to sell more naked goods so they're actually making it free permanently. Yes that nike move definitely worked on me but i wonder aside from that. What is the business case for this option. I think i'm still a free user of zoom for instance which is not making them any money. As far as i know we have seen some indications at this early working for some companies zoom was extremely well positioned to do well this year but in making their service free they got more people acquainted with the service and they started rolling out new products like this new pricing page for people like trainers to charge for zoom sessions. And so i think if you're used to using a service you're more willing to hand over your credit card to that service and their revenue shot up. You know something like over three hundred percent this year year over year that may have something to do with the fact that zoom was like the premier video conferencing tool that we all leaned on but also has to do with the fact that they have a really robust free tier that allows most people to use the service without paying for for extra stuff finally we have subscription model and it sounds like the grocery delivery market is a good example of this. Yeah so home. Delivery exploded this year. It allowed people to stay away from grocery stores which all of a sudden became dangerous activity and Walmart really capitalized on this moment by offering a subscription service It's called walmart. Plus and it includes free unlimited delivery from local stores. The thinking is that it pays for itself interest deliveries walmart says. What's interesting about this example. Is that you know. Walmart really rushed this program out and so they had very scant perks and the program cost ten dollars a so that easiest comparison the laziest comparison is is tames on prime which on top of free unlimited delivery offers you know this giant entertainment bundle free photo storage etc etc until i think it was is hard for people to justify the price between walmart plus and amazon amazon prime. But we don't have numbers for walmart plus yet and it may very well have been a success and walmart plus and amazon prime aim to do the same thing which is try to make walmart or amazon the default shopping choice in her mind and i think walmart plus is a good way for walmart to become more salient in people's minds. And let's just break that down a little bit more. How does the subscription model actually work to create sort of a stickier relationship with consumers. Yeah other examples are dash pass. Switches door dashes new membership tier which lowers delivery and service costs for its customers. These companies are trying to keep switching costs high. So you want to feel like the more you use this service. The more you safe if you delivery cost three dollars typically for every order the more orders you deliver the more you squeeze out of that thirteen dollars. A month subscription so they're trying switching costs high and trying to increase the willingness of customers to buy without thinking are those are the five strategies we said at the beginning that this is sort of a big experiment. So what are the takeaways here. Are there certain hypotheses that are clear winners and losers will i. I think one of the the clear winners is definitely more pricing options for customers. That said can self select into whatever tier. they're most comfortable. Paying and that maybe premium pricing wasn't the right move but the truth is this pandemic is to go on for several more months or potentially another year and Pricing changes all the time and in the course of my reporting the story had to change multiple times because the prices kept changing perks. Kept being added onto bundles into it. Seems like companies are still trying to figure this whole thing out as we all are very enough all right. Our personal tech columnist nicole new. Thank you so much for joining me.

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
Zoom suspends 40-minute cap on meetings for the holidays
"Zoom suspending. Its forty minute limit. On from free accounts for a few days during the holiday video conferencing platform lifting limits from ten am eastern starting wednesday to six am eastern on december twenty six and again from ten am on december thirtieth to six am eastern on january second the global freebie aims to help loved ones separated amid the pandemic celebrate virtually zoom calling it a token of appreciation to users the company previously suspending call limits on the final day of hanukkah and over thanksgiving kristin goodwin fox news

The Trader Cobb Crypto Podcast
Bitcoin Bounces, Alt Coins Follow
"Roddy so small. Watch this today. I mean the market con of played. What are we not. I mean we. We certainly saw off Throughout the session in fact from the break of yesterday's law yesterday now the die before we move roughly three percent low so you know it was continuing that selling momentum it was starting to increase in the price of which it was coming off but then it reversed and now we've got bullish candles now. The interesting thing for mayo. The most important thing for me is how far we recovered from the low. All of the die we recovered about five point four percent now as much as the only closed off what it close up one point two percent. It's way price came from. Its reading the information accessible on that shot but that candle align its tokes to make it says a lot to me and it's now bullish candle. It's in the cradles. Aren't certainly not a crime. Tried from our point of view given the fact that we do not have that wonderful. Simplicity fantastic trend. But it's there The two days also in that cradles iron as well now not decide that they want further not at all but if we were to move higher i six three. I think thousand six hundred thirty We go to break but this looks like the market is still a little bit on will at wants to do and that the guy in comes from that daily candle it was selling off it had broken. The pride is low. it was. The friday was down. Four point five percent down over three percent at one stage there yet. We bounced back. I want to look at the journey of bitcoin. What it did throughout that some threat session. All to for example there was a little high low in ohio and of course it's not the cleanest clearest transnational another trend that. I'm looking to try but a detroit. Sell off a guy from the cradle zayn and filed. It did not get to move law. The market decided out to the market saw that not. We're gonna continue to move higher. All is it just david pullback before the next ditlow these are things that are right now right now. I certainly still short tried. I have a couple of the that are their modest but a guy. It's the clarity of direction is just not really strong right now especially given yesterday's selloff in pull back up to closing strong will was closing strong close than where it was at its lows of course and of course the ball. We've got something very similar again. Bitcoin was up one point. Two percent closed. I ten thousand five hundred forty. Where now down point four four hundred and seventeen and not ready telling me too much a guy like i said the The cape point ready. The high obviously is closed. Eighteen thousand six hundred thirty bragged that with what you see it. Climb back towards nineteen thousand but again the the there is not a real strong confirmation there of trend on a theory actually looking for short. Yes tonight closed up three point four percent and the guy just to talk you through. I will let kendall tells me from. Its lies to its close. It recovered point full sent. That's my main fate. That's a big move under though it didn't close up three point six percents nothing to be studied that Dying in that cradles the two days still hanging in there with could continue to console it for a while but if the high of yesterday's candle for seven twenty six we might see further nothing really special that exile pay close up four point two percent yesterday which ends up being recovery was on its lies. Fifteen point five percent a big recovery from excel pay still continues to be a quad volatile. Dies saying some big moves up and down quite frequently. There are fifty seven point six cents carney game and one percent today so far with them only just opening about forty minutes ago Bitcoin cash. I'm not really interested in bitcoin. Cash still back within that channel and it's very messy now. It closed up point full of percents stick with the same fame That was a recovery from its lies of five point six seven percent where two hundred and sixty nine dollars right now which is flat on the lot going closed up point five of a percent and as much as there are lower highs and lows and a twelve hour clearly showing downtrend. There's no notebook leah a great short traits to meet the staging a guy and just requires a little bit more patients and two white to say if that market can deliver. What is that. We're off to in terms of confirmation of direction. A guy from its lawyers to where it closed way recovered seven point five percent at seventy seven dollars and eleven so right now down point four percent on the day Still busy guy. Still very messy shot up point three percent yesterday. The recovery on yesterday was fox. Six percent there's not much interest for me for aol. Still it's just not ready. Got himself in any sort of position to be. I guess capturing more tension to eighty rot now. This one of the closed down it closed down one point six two percent now the recovery for they a very messy job was also six point two percent. It's a very horrific looking shot. It is really really ugly. It's lacking a great deal. The four there is a down trend. somewhat it's just not very good in. It's not a child i'm really Sorry considering for any directional trading he hundred sixty nine ninety four Cost to buy one right now. bonnets pulled back the twenty seven dollars closing the One point seven percent which also recovery was from its lows on that support roughly around about full point seven percent. It's the only one in the top ten currently up at some point one of the percents not a great deal and at the twenty eight dollars and nineteen cents a game. A market looked trend. Number four is not bad but without support twenty seven. It's not one that i'm going to be. I'm able to thrive myself out. If i'm honest. Cow donna no no the daily it was up. It was well full point eight percent at a giant recovery from its lies and thirteen bounce back. Thirteen point eight percent from its To where it closed a guy hip. It is a bit choppy. It is a bit messy much assignments. You pretty much majority of the market. There is potential for a shorts It's just it's the now that's really the one that would have more attention more than any of the other time frames at this stage but a guy white for that confirmation. Fourteen point six cents is what will cost you to baucau donna right now which is down point. Six seven of sent yesterday for lake. It was well a three point. Eight percent and the recovery from its lows. It isn't a bit of a downtrend. Rotten handle the smoothest but today recovering from life is nine point six percent of a strong rejection of those laws which is pretty much saying across the entire market yesterday so much we have seen a little bounce off. We're gonna continue haro Pullback for more down with momentum