35 Burst results for "Fosse"

Awards Chatter
"fosse" Discussed on Awards Chatter
"Really thinking about pitfalls or anything. I really like to go with my first impulse. Yeah? And I mean, I think you were, there was no backlash, was there for doing all you were pretty. Well, here's the thing. I mean, you can't. Pay inequality is not a difficult subject to talk about. It's not partisan. And you can't really disagree with it. Right. A woman's right to choose, however. You got a little popular. Well, anyway, it's been interesting though. Just with each one of these crazy things that have wrapped the industry, you've been pretty, you've had a front row seat for better or worse, but all right, Fosse verdon so great. This is an 8 part limited series 2019 and I wonder, I guess I was gonna say it's like your first time doing TV since Dawson's creek, but the truth is it's like a totally different world and TV, right? Yes, that's what they were telling me. That's why you were willing to entertain it. Yes, they said it's not a long contract. People, yeah, lots of interesting content being created on television now and for me, I have always been looking for jobs that keep me at home in New York City. We moved from the country back to Brooklyn at a certain point and my daughter's life and I she has stayed. She has never left school for as long as we've been living back in Brooklyn. She has stayed in her community with her friends and that's because I've really sought out work that would keep me at home. And so, you know, a lot of this theater, greatest showman. These are opportunities that I was very excited about, and they also, and then doubly excited because they really worked for my family. Yeah. And again, same with Fosse, there I am, and I get to work at home. I know exactly where I'm going to be for the next 6 months. And connecting cabaret greater showman and Fosse verdon. I mean, would you have ever imagined, let's say, a few years even just before cabaret that you would be putting yourself out there singing and dancing and doing stuff that, I mean, it doesn't seem like that was the trajectory. No, absolutely not. You know, but I did, you know, the first, like I said, the first thing that I ever saw that made me want to act was a kids musical production. So there was something in me that was inclined in that direction. And that was sort of maybe secretly waiting or hoping. And there's a lot of joy in singing and dancing. When you sing and you dance, you feel like a child, you feel free. There's so much going on that you don't really have time to think critically because you are absorbed and rhythm and melody and time passes. Yeah. With brokeback, I think your character ages, I don't remember how many years, but not as long as no, not as long as from 1955, I guess when she and Fosse meet until 87 when he literally dies in her arms, so 20 two years was that aspect of it.

KOMO
"fosse" Discussed on KOMO
"Rick Fosse and Seattle, where it's 87°. Here's what's happening around here. Senator patty Murray might be headed for her easiest reelection yet. Jeff pozole has a look at the latest polls. Earlier this year, Murray appeared vulnerable in a crosscut Elway poll conducted in January, the Seattle Democrat was up by just three points, but then the Russian blood candidate shows up and it's Tiffany smiling and in July, very versus smiling, very had the poll by 30. Pollster Stewart Elway says, this has been a problem for Republicans across the country this time around as they have tended to nominate candidates that have little chance of winning. But he cautions that the general election is still several months away and a lot can happen in that time. Jeff pozole and northwest news radio COVID still has Washington's college students rethinking their plans, Ryan Harris tells us about a new report that says 25% of them have canceled their college plans. The report from quote wizard also finds that another quarter of students are taking fewer classes and 41% are studying remotely, quote wizard senior analyst Nick van zant tells me the number of students without health insurance nationwide has risen to 4.2 million since 2020 after falling when the Affordable Care Act allowed more to stay on their parents insurance until age 26. But if mom and dad lost their job, then you lost your health insurance too. Vincent says often students have other expenses so health insurance isn't always a priority, but the pandemic forced them to think about their health, especially since they're constantly in group settings. They're in the dorms of sorority fraternity. They're going to class, they're going out. And I think that's one of the reasons why it has a bigger impact. Ben Zayn says there are options for health insurance, but he says by far

Talk Is Jericho
"fosse" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"Sure sure axel does as well and you can really see it Both of these both these records. Yup yup absolutely. We got joe controlling for the first time. And i'll go with fourteen years. You know you talk about expectations in the alps and stuff. I remember on appetite. Axles things every song. So you're used to his voice which has made different forms but years that thing and so the first time of year is e. Sing a song. You're like ooh who's this. What's going on here. But i grew to love both of these songs. I just like fourteen years because if you listen to the lyrics and the writing it's mostly you know assuming and and reading into it myself and i've read read this as well. that is. he's kind of writing about the band and axel and how axles getting a little wild and they're not really getting along and they're hosting it. I always thought that was great. It is he's kinda talking about maybe trying to send a message in axles on the track and then they would sing. It live together at the same microphone looking at each other. You know while the song's about their friendship you know having troubles or whatever which i. That's great yeah oh interesting. Yeah they've known each other for years when when they when they wrote the song zero throng. So it's all rooted that him and that that's that's what it was about. Fourteen year silence fourteen year. Like oh yeah and like we said is very interesting to the fact that that by the time this came out those fourteen years rupp because is he was gone. all right. we're making our i flip flop in the track listing. It's going to be perfect crime versus yesterday's and i'll start that debate off after. Say thank you once again. A diamond dallas page indeed ep. Yoga fosse's on the road as you know. And we're having a great time rock with everybody we had had some huge huge shows tickets and selling like hotcakes. Which is great. But i'll tell you. I wouldn't be able to do it night after night for all you crazy. Fayza fans it's not for. Ddp yoga he keeps me loose and limber and performing at the top of my game. And because i'm also able to still do a e w shows in-between fuzzy tour as well. So i'm giving it all on staged in the ring. Feeling great thanks the dp yoga equity the same thing for you as well as easy on the joints..

BrainStuff
"fosse" Discussed on BrainStuff
"But hey there's still time. These episodes based on the article princes mysterious pustules springs stubbornly keeps. Its secrets on how stuff works. Dot com written just windshields. Prince stuff's production of iheartradio in partnership with house networks dot com and is produced by tyler thing or more podcasts. Iheartradio visit the iheartradio app apple podcasts. Or wherever you listen to your favorite shows looking for a way to buy. Bitcoin and crypto at gemini we believe crypto is for everyone which is why we built the easiest way to buy sell store in earn more than forty cryptocurrencies. Whether you're a complete beginner or an experienced trader gemini has all the tools you need to build your crypto fortune and tap into the incomparable growth of crypto visit gemini dot com for details gemini. The crypto platform built for you. Hey is this is mattie in kansas ziegler and we have a podcast called take twenty we want to kick back and hang out with you but we know you're busy so let's take twenty every week to talk to vent to get real twenty minutes to catch up and talk about everything that's on our minds and yours. Listen with us for twenty minutes. When you're in the car putting on makeup working out cleaning your room avoiding doing your homework take a break from whatever you have to do and hang out with us. Listen to take twenty on the iheartradio app on apple podcasts. Or wherever you get your podcasts..

BrainStuff
"fosse" Discussed on BrainStuff
"Steph. Learn vogel bomb here. It's possible that there's a giant deadly serpent hanging out at the bottom of the fuss steel spring in the burgundy region of france. It's also possible that there's no serpent it's a legend concocted by ancient inhabitants of the village of tone air where the spring is located. But nobody's ever been able to get to the bottom of it because nobody's ever been able to get to the bottom of it. Fuss dion is a karst spring Karst being irregular limestone region with sinkholes underground streams and caverns the spring. Bourbons up an average of eighty two gallons. That's three hundred eleven leaders of water every second which is an unusually high discharge rate for this type of spring but the velocity of the water varies from season to season. What you would be able to see the spring if you visited the fuss tian oh which translates to divine pit. By the way is a circular stone pool that was built in the eighteenth century filled with jewel pound water turquoise amber and sarah leeann of colored by the minerals in the limestone caves from which the waters emerge the opening of one of those caves is visible from the edge of the basin because humans have been using the fossils since before anybody was keeping track for drinking washing cooking and bathing there are stories and legends about the spring. Some of which we know and some we don't in the middle ages. It was thought that there was a serpent that cruised around deep in the heart of the festoon and some even thought it was the portal to another world the spring features prominently and accounts of the miracles performed by the seventh century. Monk saint jean de rome. I hope i said that correctly. I do not know french He arrived in the area in the year. Six hundred and forty five c to clean up the spring which was at the time and unusable swamp the monk reportedly doug bass lisk a monster. That's half restrain half lizard out of the spring and killed it allowing people to regain the use of the fusty own for drinking washing etc. These days the full steel looks very civilized from the outside and it's stone basin surrounded by a communal washing place that was built in the eighteenth century to protect washer women from the elements as they did their laundry in the springs water but below the surface. The spring is just as wild. As when saint joan arrived detainment. The great mystery of the full steel spring is where the water actually comes from. There's certainly a lot of water coursing out of it. And like other karst springs the water emerges from a network of subterranean limestone caves. It's thought the faustian is fed by both rain. Water from the hills around tenere and at least one underground river however no diver has ever been able to find it source and many of those who have tried haven't come back alive. No one even attempted to plumb the depths of the fusty on until nineteen seventy four when two divers undertook navigating the maze of chambers and narrow tunnels of the spring. Neither of those divers came back to tell us what they had seen in nineteen ninety-six. Another diver attempted it but he lost his life to the fusty own as well for many years after divers were prohibited from diving into the spring until twenty nineteen when a diver undertook exploring about one thousand two hundred feet. that's three hundred seventy meters of passageways. Luckily he returned alive but didn't find the source of the spring. Nor did he find another dimension or a monstrous serpent..

BrainStuff
"fosse" Discussed on BrainStuff
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Podcast Metanoia
"fosse" Discussed on Podcast Metanoia
"You include who. Mr jacob jacobs being g-go sayer check on celia he can i scored annoy cheap silk or some alinksy nice. Thanks almost this age was your daily had barely taken by spikes they didn't that day-lewis lab is mentioned as my sedately follow. Dodger proverbs does eventually illinois a win. Sedate them being european capital razors days voice kinky zahra marv of you feel jesus phillies. Why swelling do usoz lobbyist fosse dodge dove as we say asia arizona described zado pillow do do dodgy electricity as a pillow. Bristle geno call security zero. Dodge call mid-wicket goo vikings poise. Rice ages threesome miso. Will say scoop do care. False dodgy destroyed. Took us quizzes in dodge yet to cancun stripe to squeeze in chita when it got getting mancuso throughs imagine use those every dodgers snow sacrifice. Comes those news nacion not spill damage estimates some genomic jimmy sewing kimmel's dam was in quickly sam's in king quorums result physiognomy as our security cameras swag and on sufficing product severe digest terms. But don't pass how nigeria problem. He also lame. Kill say visa. Moro's jaising theresa orders for separatist omonia mayes murphy toilet affair sober. Dr gordon drops d'hiver dodgy drop smith.

The Bechdel Cast
"fosse" Discussed on The Bechdel Cast
"Away from this famous play i wrote and i don't know if i really wanna keep perpetuating this story. And so bob. Fosse approached her in the sixties and was like i need to make this into a fosse hands musical. It's an emergency. You need to let me do it. And she said oh. Yeah and it wasn't until after she died that he was able to get the rights. Because i think that Money plus st plus. Not living creator equals oh whoopsie daisy. I have the rights. It is like i mean. Am i glad that bob fosse scammed his way into the rights to this kind of but it is but the ethics of that i was like well. That's kinda fucked up. She said she said no. Bob she said no. I don't know because our right. That was the only other thing that i had that i was like. That's something yeah and that it kinda relates to this quote that will share from an article on scifi dot com hot entitled the real story behind. Chicago's mary murderesses. Roxie hart and velma kelly and this is speaking to the general atmosphere and what marine dallas. Watkins was reporting on so quote the press and the public eight up the gossip the details on dresses and the sob stories. About bad men booze and devilish jazz prosecutors began to think you couldn't convict a pretty woman in this town as for watkins. She believed her influence was key to the acquittal of both the mary murderesses as she felt the pair were guilty and likely lying through their teeth. She had mixed feelings on that. So she wrote about it in nineteen twenty. Six watkins went from reporter to broadway playwright with brave little women a satirical stage play. That would later be retitled chicago. It was she who transformed a non garner their victims husbands lawyers peers and reporters into characters. Like roxie hart. Velma kelly billy flynn mary sunshine and go to hell kitty. She hoped this dark comedy would highlight. How appearances and sex appeal had become too important in the justice system unquote. So that's really interesting. I mean that's like that the such a bizarre journey for all of this to go on. I think it's an interesting way to. And i think you know the ethics are certainly up for debate because you could argue. This is not necessarily her story to tell. It's i'm sort of like. I don't know it doesn't bother me that much. I i like it. Because it's she's not claiming that it's the story of beulah on. She's you know changing things she's like. I don't know i. I think that that it's really interesting. How got made. And how i do. I mean i'm always interested in like how creators opinions changed towards their own work. Wants it sort of out of their hands. And the fact that like mary sunshine was i. I didn't even realize this. Until i was doing this research segment but that mary sunshine was like this kind of amalgamation of reporters that marine dallas. Watkins thought were too easy on. And kind of you know eating up this bullshit from clearly guilty people and also like a way of poking at herself for how she covered the story at the time and almost like a way of. I don't know like giving the finger to herself in her own work. it's very. it's like this right complex shit because mary. Sunshine is noticeably. The only woman reporting on these cases in the movie so right. That's very funny. yeah. I don't know but to me that kind of just i. It's sort of the cornerstone of what this movie is about. Which is that.

Lyudmil Collection123
"fosse" Discussed on Lyudmil Collection123
"Sports tv. I'm kim story. He looking guy needle story toe. You get you may kibo. Cuny ramadi look the muslim without my up. Don't you meticulous. Did you stay. Mediocre identity shop and density notaby at now navigate on your akimasa that guida meteo citizenship goto fund by this battle. Kill thought evacuate. Kordofan that you'll be now what that he had eye. He'll novato badejo saints. You know the guy. She must sports dances. Folk orchestras amazon. Diary no mceniry fosse manos. But that's such a good a ameritech. Her story story omani nine york famous. Mata sake i can't gorgon i. She's not is it south amos skew. Joan i'm retired tagged soga guy..

Classic Movie Musts
"fosse" Discussed on Classic Movie Musts
"A huge attributing factor too. What makes how to succeed in business without really trying. So wonderful is what bob fosse brought to to the theatrical version of it and he gets a a a strange credit in the film which i think it's a musical staging by and that is from what i've read because originally on broadway for the excuse me on broadway. The a choreographer was hired because of a particularly enigmatic number and quickly enough it was discovered that that was all he had up his sleeves. And bob fosse was brought in and bob fosse being actually quite generous said. I don't wanna take this credit away from him and kind of stomp on his potential career. So i will take this other lesser credit. But it's bob fosse. That does the interesting choreography. And to your point about editing from what we know about bob. Fosse's films that he actually directs and edits. The editing is out of this world so we almost get this fascinating mixed bag in this film or we get some of those. Bob fosse moves that are taken to a whole different stratosphere when combined with bob fosse's editing so we get the moves but we don't get the editing and so it's just not quite bob fossey but oh my god. Can you imagine if it was. Bob fosse and bar listeners of apparently one of the great numbers which was fully filmed and in the original release Coffee break anybody. Who knows the score for have succeed in business without retrying knows that coffee break is one of the great numbers. It's cut from the movie and it was cut solely for the reason that the premiere at radio city music hall and radio city music hall had very strict standards about time and kind of the last minute. They said david swift. You've got you've got to cut something. And and he. I think incorrectly said to himself in terms of the narrative. I don't need coffee break And none of the principals is involved. You coffee break. So i'm gonna cut it. And then when they release the dvd they were gonna put it back in and the footage was lost. One it's one of the. There's a treasure out there somewhere. Maybe maybe the footage isn't entirely lost. I give anything anything to see. The choreography the fossey brings to coffee break. Because he said elsewhere the two pieces in this show that he was proudest of were coffee break and a secretary and obviously we secretary is not a toy is such a wonderful number in this film. We'll get to that but.

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
Jennifer Lawrence to Play Talent Agent Sue Mengers in Biopic
"Big movie coming out. I know a lot of people have problems with her. I don't. I like the girls work, and I think she's gonna do a great job. Big project about the famed talent agent Sue mengers is being shot around and on the movie will be Jennifer Lawrence playing Sue mengers, listen, this is gonna be, I think this is I know it's very Hollywood and only people in Hollywood my nose Sue mengers is, but nonsense. Sue mengers was, I mean, forget what a colorful character she was. She was a female agent who crashed the Hollywood boys club of being age of being an agent. I mean, there were no female agents like this. She, I know it's for Robert Evans. She was amazing. Big, big, giant personality. Big kind of a New York Jew personality, which I love. I feel at home with people like that. Might go on Apple and might go on Netflix. No one really knows just yet. But Sue mengers, Evans had some great stories about her. She worked at MCA. Icm. William Morris, she represented clients in their heyday. Barbara streisand, Candice Bergen, Peter Bogdanovich, Michael Caine, Diane cannon, Cher, Joanne Collins, Brian De Palma, faith on a Bob Fosse Gene Hackman, Sidney Lumet ally McGraw, Steve McQueen, Mike Nichols, Nick Nolte, Tatum O'Neal, Ryan O'Neal, Anthony Perkins, Burt Reynolds, sybil shepherd, gorby Dow, Richard Benjamin, pull up prentice Tuesday Weld. Are you kidding me? She died about ten years ago. There was a play about her, Bette Midler played her in the play and bet was great. I'm not a Bette Midler fan, but she was born to play Sue

The Canine Paradigm
"fosse" Discussed on The Canine Paradigm
"That's why you're paying that person for their time because they have been so abundant and collected so much vast and carefully cherry picked not cherry picked in a bad way but cherry picked in a way that has given them the fortitude to give sola information back on that specific subject matter and up. Could be what you want doesn't matter you can insert anything into the bracket of what he's that while it could be sent tick shit could be aggression. It could be abeyance. It could be agility. Could be flyable it could be a voss man of things it could even be not dog related but whatever it is you can be very thankful that you had somebody that aspired to greatness that they did go out there and they learned all these things they applied. They went through the torment in the tumultuous times of finding at what was fucking up on them and what was causing absolute havoc and then they learned they white through that so then they can. They can actually help. Fosse track you through that they can say here The things that you can expect to encounter. It's for you however you and i can't predict everything that you will do however here is what i did and they you might say me for version two and version three and version four but let's stick with version one female something again which is more palatable. Something that is a chunk down version that you can work with that. Weren't over frustrate you that your dog and you will benefit from and then when you're ready that's to guide liberal toy. Yeah it's a tricky one because it can be hard to determine when you're talking like you're looking for someone to learn something from it can be kinda hard to determine. Who is that person. I agree you might say. Someone's online stuff or the concept that they put out or he them say something or whatever and then you gotta be careful. We have resources time and money to learn from people and it can be hard to then sort of. What think that you going in for that person. That's like yep like if done the research there they all the stuff and then they have an can. You could really be led down the garden path. And that's that's one of the tricky things to think about online stuff as well. I think as a person that has been doing online south you know. I started in it because i heard podcast and someone was saying that they were separation. Anxiety specialist and that they exclusively did stuff online because it was just conversation base. Don't do any dog training when i'm just doing separation anxiety. I never actually a hand with the dog. And that was the first time i'd heard about and i was like. Oh that's interesting. I can't imagine doing that. But i think that's interesting. And just from a business standpoint. You're no longer travelling totally cut. Stay on your heads and it sort of led me to sort of think. In that time i was like and also..

GamesMyMomFound
"fosse" Discussed on GamesMyMomFound
"I would buy it. You make buckets that way. It's not enough okay and the other question. The reason this group is from. Ron hunt tone. Well you're going to need to answer this question. What the hell is this fair. We hope we answered it an rpg. That is really good. That never came to america. Unfortunately yeah it's a guy it's up there you know i. There's there's so many there's so many really classic games that never came to america. Live alive is one of them. I'm bummed i'm more people can experience if sagas giving love than i may be one day live more hopeful than i am off your question or funny. I should say memory so back when final fantasy The chronicles came out five four trigger. I remember talking to some random guy advantages. And we're he's like oh. I hope that they make another thing or something where they are some other collection for. Ps one they put secret. I'm like they should put levant. And i wasn't talking about this game and just played it. Remember the guy is looking like what the hell are you saying. And it's just to be at that time that that mike thought that would ever be a chance that he put this game on. Ps one thing come on and that's never changed. That people still have the same reaction. What the hell ever bring up quite often. I have talked about this game a little bit on the show before and i talked about games. Play matt this game. All right and then i have a couple of comments from the rpg. Collective group I one from jim lowe is it pronounced live or live alive however you want to pronounce it because we both have pronounce different ways. Whatever you feel like in that time one guy says i always pronounce it live alive. That's how it sounds. I always live as i've said dr entire episode. They lie yeah. I it's changed for me. It's hard to say there's no pronounciation of not like anyone's ever said it in english that you know made the game so yeah square. Get on it. So from ahmed fosse. Hassan close exclusive in japan..

Reason Podcast
"fosse" Discussed on Reason Podcast
"And and summers off of course and anna month off between christmas and easter. And all of this kind of crap you know. what do you do there. And there are signs that you know the You know the major teachers unions are pushing really really hard to to maintain the site. They were not opening up. You know until everything is safe and nothing will ever be safe enough for teachers to return so you have that question where there is a parallel universe where masking mandates are absolutely gonna stop things from happening whereas you have most of the people flouting mask ordinances as they exist and this brings me to build. James matt welsh when he talks about. Pete rose and ray fosse colliding in the one thousand. Nine hundred seventy all-star star game You know the the fact of the matter is it's illegal to block the plate as a catcher but it was widely practice and that bill. James says you know you can't have a good society where people are openly flouting laws at leads all sorts of problems and you can actually see that informing his later work on various kinds of social issues from baseball but it is true. It's not good to have a society where people are openly. Flouting island that up by rains up for the last part of that answer. Except for when. Nick said the word fosse and my brain was like bob buzzing and i woke up and saw jazz and started snapping napping and then right back this way. You know what. Bob fosse would've would've tagged by vision. Just wonder dancing gifts. I catherine t. And by the way i if i may just say i'm bob willis when i think about fosse of course i think of roy scheider in the same way when i think of patent i think of george scott and when i see pictures of bob aussie unlike terrorism. Vieira all that jazz. If you're not waking up in the morning peter rubbing like really bad aqua on your hands slapping your face after taking a bunch.

Broken Brain with Dhru Purohit
"fosse" Discussed on Broken Brain with Dhru Purohit
"I don't even know why. I'm struggling to say this. But it's so it's diverse. But i'll just say it in a it's umbrella point which pesticides so pesticides herbicides rodenticides fungicides side means to kill you know but it's really designed to kill very small organisms through most of the time they're either estrogen neurogenic and man. The amount of pesticides are consumed today. Like we haven't even gotten our finger on it exactly because again people aren't this people is being studied. Now don't get me wrong. But the level to which just takes time because those industries so powerful we're talking about big agriculture. They're using these very cheap compounds to increase their yield. They can they don't care they're number. One objective is not your health. It's to make money and so anything they can do to fight this information getting out but anyway so they're either estrogen or neuro. Genetic wanna study that. I shared recently on my show which will vote. One of the most eye opening for me was that we've got clara fosse musical or para forces in example. It is well established now. The corpora falls increases the rate of brain development abnormalities for infants in in the womb higher rates of Of miscarriages for women who are pregnant. Who are exposed to clip paraphrase. But it's been caught up in red tape for years. It was actually about to be banned. But then his kind of found its way back into circulation where it's still being able to be used without Without without much warning to it. And so that's just one example but one of the interesting studies was that parasites found to disrupt microbial gene expression. All right so. This is a good point to emphasize here in this episode too is that you've talked about this multiple times on your show the majority of genes that we have so we will look at ourselves and we see where human but we have upwards of four to ten times more bacteria that make us up..

Whimsically Volatile
"fosse" Discussed on Whimsically Volatile
"Oh sure because you can't be that genius without having negative sides. No that's true. And i think that's often an aspect that people forget about you know wildly talented people or something. There's going to be some strange things going on. There's got to be there are there. Couldn't be at the level out right and especially with warhol with his extreme removal from say normal interaction with people sociopathic narcissistic personality disorder. You know very much. So yeah i mean the way that he would play with people. Essentially as particularly in the late sixties. I wanna get that war enough book. Mary warn-ups book camera. What it's called. But it's about her days. In the warhol time she talks just about how you know he would pit people against each other and at that time of course the factory was riddled with speed Oh i found out something really fun. So i'm monitor offer. Add adderall before it was called. Asteroid was called arbitral before they removed one element from it. The pink pills. That warhol took all the time. We're on patrol. So i was like. Oh how fun. I love that he was a son. Yes exactly if i was on deck. It'd be like the bob fosse drug. I love that. Isn't that pink pill what what they say killed. Maryland was a pink pill. That's a good question. That went killed marilyn. Oh that's right right. That she accidentally took yeah. I'm fascinated with old vintage pills. I love appeal box. Oh like the whole yes like. Yeah the full glamour of the substance abuse. That's what you want if you're gonna if you're gonna do something just have all the accoutrements get all the stuff and have a nice little case for it. Yeah don't just have it. Crumpled up in some Tissue again no dollar bills please will you. Those are filthy What was i going to say. Oh the the the church Camp thing so there must be other things like that other church getaways and oh yeah kinds of things like that's how i like..

Gugacast
"fosse" Discussed on Gugacast
"He's new boston. Fosse's we started to shurmur issue milk sanctuaries. Some was because as soon as hugh city of mice. No says mighty. Smu quotas some centuries but as little thin kissing me will g attending wadham is say some whiskas do more safer the cut the session the output franklin jettisoned. What odds my spot. It didn't come as we'll see franken. Heaven's joke is basic services domino At different google proceed without foster budget border yet complete education days. You premiere episode. You go buy shit out of boca started coop. Judaism what he should know sabi on. Is he throwing shade. Novelli tries to be but all who earn rutta. Those mu days you're beginning see dodgy. Pena been a book. You would've premium scholars major news program. Have we seen a major concourse. Louvain kiara postpartum his newest feature article meals. stays autism. What cities could be some grass anymore. The epa qualitative. We've as you call from the mental. I seen in those days. I mean travelling scholar mission squad tumors okay squalor stacking because but he's made you jeopardy one. Keep postal shen. Lock up feet. Post a boston or post. We should the fresno ease. Here's your zapata quixote guiding you have radical students.

Astronomy Cast
Volcanoes On Mars Could Be Still Active
"Bars is cold and dead today but the massive volcanoes tell us what the planet used to be like millions and even billions of years ago. But how volcanically. Active is the planet today. That's what nasa mars insight. Lander is to figure out alright. Bars insight volcanoes is there active volcanoes on mars. Today may be and in. This is such a new result. We picked this topic before the science result was published through peer review. And it's kind of awesome when randomness like that occurs. There is a new paper out with lead. Author david horvath and it discusses. How in serbia's fosse there appears to have been explosive. Volkan ism only as within the last fifty thousand years fifty thousand. Wow and soon that's rabid. That counts as active vulcan. Ism today and what's kind of awesome. Is that location. Matches up loosely. With where insight has seen some well seismic activity. Okay so then the question. So i guess the answer then is maybe. Let's let's go back to the beginning here now. I don't know if we've actually done. We haven't done an episode on insight in detail yet. I don't think so. So can you just give a brief overview of what mars insight is. Is there to do so. This is a fabulous little spacecraft that has proven that sometimes a world can defeat the most well intentioned of spacecraft insight landed on mars with two major missions. The first one was to put down a seismograph that would be able to detect faint earthquakes. And it's such a sensitive seismograph that it can see the waves of an earthquake if everything is perfect not just propagate through the world once but actually bounced through multiple times and because of this they can use a single seismograph to do the kind of science that we require multiple seismographs to do here on earth. Were things are a little bit more noisy because we have like trucks mining and things like that.

Radio Boston
Gabriel Sosa's billboards offer messages of hope in Boston communities hit hard by COVID-19
"You've seen them. It's a series of bright colorful billboards with powerful messages of hope in english and spanish like one in roslindale square big bright letters against a solid background. It ain't easy but keep going. The inside bill unsigned billboards. They've appeared in east boston. Roslindale roxbury dorchester. Boston communities hit particularly hard by covid nineteen and they are the work of gabriel sosa. So says grew up in miami and is now a visiting lecturer at the massachusetts college of art and design artist teacher translator and we spoke with gabriel sosa recently about his art. Heidi thanks for having me. It's great to have you so i there's so much i wanna talk about both in sort of form and message but let's start with message. It is a simple hopeful loving message. How did you land on it and sort of the variations of the messages. You're using it came from a long process. I was scheduled to have a public art project at some point in the spring or summer of twenty twenty i had been thinking about the different ways that that could take place and listen to the pandemic and then i really came upon this idea of. What can an artist offer right now. And i thought well you know arts can offer. Space for critical reflection can offer a space for comfort and is based on solidarity and then they use of the words. North fascinated me growing up in miami in a cuban american community. Those words are so intelligible cross spanish speaking countries. There's this kind of special flavor of solidarity with that. You can be standing in the long line and someone will look back at you. Either miami or havana. And say hey. North fosse's limits this way of saying you know. Hey i got you. That's where that spirit came from. And then it just seem logical thinking about my My bilingual miss my cultural mess and the large finnish speaking population in boston that it made sense to offer both in english and spanish. This new fascinating easy. Let's talk about this idea of solidarity. Which you you say. This work expresses these messages of hang in there. Keep going express. What does it mean to you. And and how do these billboards express a kind of solidarity. It means that you understand someone that you are wish them and hopefully that expresses itself in some way to be on on the same page to know where someone is coming from. Why is that so important right now. Well needless to say the world has changed right before our eyes were about a year into this pandemic things that seem sort of unthinkable or almost a little sifi for us have become normal and not only the pandemic but also in this country everything the twenty twenty brought us and i think just being able to to say to someone look i. I know what you're going through or i can sympathize with you. I think he's just one of the most important gestures that anyone can make. Let's talk about the medium. you chose for minute. We we just finished talking about the message. Producer jamie bologna. And i were both so struck by your choice to use billboards. I think we share a fondness for billboards and the you know that sort of passing way. They communicate with people in their communities in their daily life. What made you land on. Billboards came from a place of my being interested in text in the public space in this kind of range from things like bumper stickers window signs street signs painted on ashfall adopt myself. Would something i can do that. Shares message that considers social distancing that's visible and then sort of seemed like a logical option and there's also such a rich history of artists that have used billboards as a media. I mean there's spending coincides thrown is there's crew gird at scott so it was really exciting for me to tap into that traditions. Well

Radio Boston
Gabriel Sosa's billboards offer messages of hope in Boston communities hit particularly hard by COVID-19
"You've seen them. It's a series of bright colorful billboards with powerful messages of hope in english and spanish like one in roslindale square big bright letters against a solid background. It ain't easy but keep going. The inside bill unsigned billboards. They've appeared in east boston. Roslindale roxbury dorchester. Boston communities hit particularly hard by covid nineteen and they are the work of gabriel sosa. So says grew up in miami and is now a visiting lecturer at the massachusetts college of art and design artist teacher translator and we spoke with gabriel sosa recently about his art. Heidi thanks for having me. It's great to have you so i there's so much i wanna talk about both in sort of form and message but let's start with message. It is a simple hopeful loving message. How did you land on it and sort of the variations of the messages. You're using it came from a long process. I was scheduled to have a public art project at some point in the spring or summer of twenty twenty i had been thinking about the different ways that that could take place and listen to the pandemic and then i really came upon this idea of. What can an artist offer right now. And i thought well you know arts can offer. Space for critical reflection can offer a space for comfort and is based on solidarity and then they use of the words. North fascinated me growing up in miami in a cuban american community. Those words are so intelligible cross spanish speaking countries. There's this kind of special flavor of solidarity with that. You can be standing in the long line and someone will look back at you. Either miami or havana. And say hey. North fosse's limits this way of saying you know. Hey i got you. That's where that spirit came from. And then it just seem logical thinking about my My bilingual miss my cultural mess and the large finnish speaking population in boston that it made sense to offer both in english and spanish. This new fascinating easy. Let's talk about this idea of solidarity. Which you you say. This work expresses these messages of hang in there. Keep going express. What does it mean to you. And and how do these billboards express a kind of solidarity. It means that you understand someone that you are wish them and hopefully that expresses itself in some way to be on on the same page to know where someone is coming from. Why is that so important right now. Well needless to say the world has changed right before our eyes were about a year into this pandemic things that seem sort of unthinkable or almost a little sifi for us have become normal and not only the pandemic but also in this country everything the twenty twenty brought us and i think just being able to to say to someone look i. I know what you're going through or i can sympathize with you. I think he's just one of the most important gestures that anyone can make. Let's talk about the medium. you chose for minute. We we just finished talking about the message. Producer jamie bologna. And i were both so struck by your choice to use billboards. I think we share a fondness for billboards and the you know that sort of passing way. They communicate with people in their communities in their daily life. What made you land on. Billboards came from a place of my being interested in text in the public space in this kind of range from things like bumper stickers window signs street signs painted on ashfall adopt myself. Would something i can do that. Shares message that considers social distancing that's visible and then sort of seemed like a logical option and there's also such a rich history of artists that have used billboards as a media. I mean there's spending coincides thrown is there's crew gird at scott so it was really exciting for me to tap into that traditions. Well

WBZ NewsRadio 1030
"fosse" Discussed on WBZ NewsRadio 1030
"Sunshine Right now we could see snow later. It's 32 degrees on your Tuesday and 11 30. Here's what's happening in Washington. Right now, all the bridges are closed to the public. The area around the capital is inaccessible to civilians. You have to be a president or national Guard member. ABC is Pierre Thomas is there right now, With more security measures Coming is ABC News has obtained a new law enforcement bulletin raising the specter that right wing extremists like you and on and Lone Wolf Attackers might try to pose as law enforcement and military to infiltrate security. All this is the FBI targets nearly 300 suspects and storm the capital coming through 200,000 videos and photographs, much of it tips from the public. And that is why the FBI's vetting all 25,000 guards, men and women in the city or helping Was security, including 500 from Massachusetts in the nation's capital. Meantime, the president elect taps Pennsylvania's Health secretary, Rachel Levin, to be his assistant secretary of health. She will become the first openly transgender federal official to be confirmed by the U. S. Senate. Vienna's a pediatrician and former Pennsylvania physician general. She's also one of the few transgender people serving an elected or appointed positions nationwide. Ah, baseball executive with ties to Boston is out of a job over lewd text messages. That he sent to a reporter says WBC's Jim McKay. Jared Porter, fired by the New York Mets, says their general manager after a story last night from ESPN detail Ng inappropriate and graphic text messages he sent to reporter while he was working with the Chicago Cubs. Back in 2016. Porter was just hired a month ago as the new GM for the Mets. And now he's out of a job. He spent 12 seasons with the Red Sox spanning three World Series titles and left the organization as director of Pro scouting before his job with the Cubs. He also lived in Ducks Berry for his teenage years and was a 1999 graduate Affair. Academy Mets owner Steve Cohen on Twitter today, saying there should be zero tolerance for this type of behavior. Jim McKay WBC Boston's news radio. A funeral procession in Norton later this afternoon for Detective Sergeant Stephen de Fosse's, who died last week from Cove in 19 to Fosse's was a father of four. He served the community of Norton for more than 30 years. Procession set to start on Mansfield have at around 1 15. It will continue through the center of town to ST Mary's Church, which will be limited because of the pandemic. So the family and the department is asking the community to stand on the road.

Science Friction
Machines as kin or the new colonisers? Indigenous tech revolutionaries rethinking A.I
"Consider the machines. We make the robots we build the artificial intelligences the way programming. They're all designed to serve us rush. We have dominion over them. Not over us will follow a woman and technologists. Angie la believes this way of thinking about machines. It's like a computer bug in the program of western civilization and it's been programmed into all manner of things when we think about the different types of some call aji or agriculture or and then when we think about humans we can also refer slavery this the million over protocol comes from this understanding that men not women or not animal but man sits on top of all things in has priority over all manner of things within our world be and so what happens then is that we've got serious problems that are evolving within west and technologies. Mike technologies much critical technologies and cyber. Come out of the wool machine and so when we think about the origins of most of western technology. It's really problematic. The bias that we're finding in these systems. It's not a bug feature right. it's a feature white supremacy right. it's a feature of a worldview that understands the world and the people in in a particular way and so it. It shouldn't be a surprise to anybody that we're running into these problems and also why we keep running into them and we're gonna keep running into them. As long as we keep designing out of the same mindset which is a nicer mindset jason lewis as director of the initiative for indigenous futures and koterec's. What's called the aboriginal territories in cyberspace research network. He's professor in design and computation arts at concordia university in montreal. He's hawaiian and samoan but grew up in california. After he was adopted at six months. Old angie abdulah is found 'em boss woman of an indigenous consultancy called old ways new and on science fiction. I join you may natasha mitchell. For nine quakes. Celebration of aboriginal and torres strait islander. Culture always was always will be is the thing this year recognizing that first nations people have occupied and cared for these straddling continent for over sixty five thousand years. But jason angie want to extend that thinking to digital continents. Dj land as well and ask. How could the future of artificial intelligence look different. If more indigenous people are in the driver's seat what happens. If we actually consciously tried to take indigenous worldviews and use that as a starting point for building the systems thinking hard about how the technology we use as they're being constructed you know come out of a very particular sort of philosophical lineage. You know that sort of like kind of post enlightenment. Scientific revolution sort of like this emphasis on parasitism post cartesian of like you know the world is dividing these two to the physical world and then the spiritual world and they don't actually really needs you know all these things actually kind of inspect our assumptions about what technology is and what it could be. So what happens when you sort of take a different worldview rice or what happens if you take saying. Indigenous worldview a hawaiian worldview mohawk view. That doesn't have that clinton's duality right. That thinks about things in terms of their relationship to each other including if not in some ways privileging the non human right because that's also part of that intellectual lineage. Ride is the no man literally man not human. Man is the heightened center accretion that everything is sort of judged a comparison to him and also. He's only person really. Were talking to. But that's not the indigenous. Fosse's that i know of you know where there's the sense of relation even not only my in relationships are all other humans around the and i need to sort of be responsible to that and be reciprocal with that. But i'm also relationship with the non humans and i've been relationship with from the from the western context. We call things. So how does that change your approach to designing technology to extend this idea. You and colleagues explored the idea of making keen with machines. This idea that we have kinship relationships with non human entities like machines like artificial intelligences like robots. I mean tell us more about that because it it's one thing to incorporate a bird or a river or a tree or like haitian into your idea of kinship. Wouldn't miss shane bay. In a different category altogether. The machines are part of the natural world right so one of inheritances from this western monotheistic way of looking at things. Is this idea that there is something that is artificial in the world right. But they're made out of minerals in things drawn from the earth. It's just that we've crafted them in a particular way but they didn't come from some other real. They're not not part of the natural environment. And so i think that for me. That inside is one of the key insights. Okay we're creating this category which is really about separating ourselves from the things that we make out of this desire to use them and use them as we will and not have to worry or think about them and harrison to be provocative. Save them if we're talking about strong artificial intelligences that idea that artificial intelligence might one die possess will be designed to have consciousness. Then right we will necessarily be enslaving them. So yeah. what do you do when you've created a conscious being and if your mindset all along has been this is a tool. This is a tool the tool. I made it. I get to control it. Then you're going to run into some real problems right and we we already know. Western science has been used over and over again to justify labeling other people as non human. That's part of how the colonization of the americas and the pacific happened right. that's part of the justification is that they're not really human so we don't really have to worry about them. It's part of how then slave limit of say. Black people in the new world was justified. Because they're not really human so we can treat them however we like so we've already laid down a template. Many templates of you know making these judgments about what is worthy of our relationship is worthy of being in some kind of conversation with and there's a danger that will replay that template again with these machines.

About Federal Benefits with Winter Troxel
Trump and Biden hit campaign trail after dueling town halls
"Inviting campaigns preparing for multiple stops heading into the final couple weeks of the campaign. President Trump have a busy day ahead of him. He's going making those multiple campaign stops in Wisconsin and Michigan, then spending the night out in Las Vegas dividing campaign here in Delaware today, but the former vice president was holding multiple campaign stops this week, including in Michigan last night. Biden had a chance to speak to supporters about a number of different issues, including the auto industry, Corona virus and healthcare during that visit to South field outside of Detroit, But the former vice president refused to talk to reporters about accusations being made against his son Hunter and whether emails allegedly sent by the Bidens show any improper behaviour. Meantime, Biden's running mate, California Senator Kamala Harris, is off the campaign trail This weekend, she decided to postpone Travel and in person events until Monday, after two people Harris staffer and a flight crew member tested positive for Kobe Fosse's Mark MEREDITH.

Environment: NPR
Brazil's Environmentalists Worry Fire Season Will Worsen Amazon's Deforestation
"A year ago, there was an international outcry over his surge in the number of fires in the Brazilian Amazon. Now, as fire season gets underway there, the rainforest is facing the threat of even more destruction in the first ten days of this month more than ten thousand fires were detected NPR's Philip. Reeve says that number's up from last year? Fosse's in the Amazon is off to a terrible start. Brazil's environmentalists worried it's president is not thoroughfares starting. Yard Four. Judah. Story that Amazon is going up in flames is alive says Boston. We must combat this with true numbers. He says, the numbers that Boston auto dismisses the Lai come from satellite data collected by Brazil's space research agency. These show fires in the first ten days of this month are up on the same time last year by seventeen percent. There's also plenty of evidence on the ground them European neo a scenario. Dave. Dave still being. Bunch English Niche Flavio Terracini lives in Porta value a city in the Amazon state of from Bonia he teaches biology local university Tennessee on his porch when NPR reaches him by WHATSAPP, all signal and the key advice you fall off came on the forest, the Muslim. He says, he's holding pieces of burned leaves in his hand drifted in from the forest. He can see a lot of smoke on the horizon. He says, it's making the some red here in on a pool. There are fires all around us ash is falling in our homes or Richard Doug, every year Jane Dwyer is an American born Catholic nun who's taken Brazilian nationality. On Apu is a small town in the forest by a river that eventually flows into the Amazon. She's been there for decades helping impoverished farmers protect their land rights. Sister Dwyer says, the fires there haven't yet reached frightening levels but what is frightening is that the forest is coming now she's talking about illegal loggers even pandemic that cutting down trees dwyer says, she can hear them. We can hear it. We live where where the road is they take down in during the day and at night, the trucks are going every single night last August was the worst month for five is in the Brazilian Amazon in nearly a decade. Many of these are deliberately set by farmers clearing already deforested land for cattle. Deforestation rose in the twelve months to July third on the year before. So this Moorland to burn. International pressure on both NATO is growing foreign investors a threatening to pull funds from Brazil unless he does a far better job of protecting the forest most scenario is defending his government's performance Nasi you. And? We're doing a tremendous amount. He says. He punched to the fact that deforestation dipped for the month of July in May Boston narrow sent thousands of troops to the forest to help police it. It's too soon to save. That's making a difference since taking office Bolsonaro has weakened government environmental protection agencies. And the Alan Carr of the Amazon Environmental Research Institute believes the army lacks the expertise to protect the Amazon. We have institutions that have been dealing with the have a strategy to that. So when you give that job to another institution, it seems like it has to start everything again with the willed focused on the corona virus pandemic environmentalists fair the destruction in the Amazon won't get the attention. It deserves sister Jane thinks in her part of the forest this year it'll be even worse areas where there's more far coming down this year than last. So the fires will be worse put breeze NPR news reddish

This Day in History Class
Leon Trotsky assassination attempt - May 24, 1940
"APP on Apple podcasts. Or wherever you get your podcast. This Day in history class is a production of iheartradio. Hey y'all I'm eaves and welcome to this day in History Class. A podcast for people who could never know enough about history today is may twenty fourth twenty twenty. The Day was may twenty fourth nineteen forty Mexican artists. W fosse GAYDOS and Stalinist agent. Gula Vich along with a crew of hitmen attempted to donate Leon Trotsky Trotsky was a Soviet revolutionary and Marxist threats who was a leading figure in the Bolshevik movement under Vladimir Lenin after Lennon died in nineteen twenty four and Joseph. Stalin rose to power in the Communist Party in Soviet Union Chomsky emerged. As one of Stalin's main critics and opponents Trotsky was against the increasingly bureaucratic Soviet state and called for more democracy in the Communist Party. He thought that the Stalinist policy of socialism and one country would hinder efforts for World Revolution in Nineteen Twenty Five. Trotsky was removed from his post in the war commissariat. The next year he was dropped from the Polit Bureau and in nineteen twenty seven he and his supporters were expelled from the Communist Party. In January of Nineteen Twenty eight Trotsky was exiled to a tie and Soviet Central Asia. He lived there for a year before he his wife and their son were expelled from the Soviet Union and sent to Turkey but he continued to write and criticize Stalin as well as people who had opposed Stalin but has settled for the regime. Trotsky settled on the Turkey island of principle where he stayed for four years. He completed his autobiography and his three volume history of the Russian revolution some of his supporters volunteer to serve as his bodyguards but in nineteen three Chomsky and his family were offered asylum in France soon enough. He was no longer welcome in France either and he moved to Norway then Mexico where he had been granted asylum skis settled in Koya con area of Mexico City at the Blue House the home of painter Diego Rivera and free to Carlo and he continued to write completing the revolution betrayed in one thousand nine hundred eighty six but in a series of trials in the late. Nineteen thirties many so-called old bolsheviks were found guilty of treason and imprisoned or executed many of the defendants confessed to having plotted with Trotsky to kill Stalin and other Soviet leaders Trotsky was found guilty of treason in absentia and sentenced to death on May twenty fourth. Nineteen forty Stalinist agent. Iosif Grigorovich

Filmspotting
Here's What We're Watching During Quarantine
"I've had for years box. Dvd set that celebrates the Chicago Bulls six championships in the nineteen nineties. The title is NBA Dynasty Series Chicago Bulls Real quick takeaways couple takeaways Scottie. Pippen totally underrated. I I mean. I know he's considered a legend and one of the top fifty basketball players all time. But but he's even better than that as far as the goat discussion. Greatest of all time between Jordan and Lebron James. All right I conceded. I think it was a year or so ago that Lebron has probably taken that title. I'm more than willing to be argued that I'm more than willing to be argued wrong as a Chicagoan but one thing is for sure after going through some of these. Dvd's Jordan is so much more fun to watch. I mean he just. He spent so much time doing beautiful things. High up in the air way above Lebron's had would have been so That's just a blast to watch now. You can't this is kind of a sneaky. Pick you can't stream this. Dvd set so. I'll take this occasion as an excuse to mentioned that. Espn's ten part Michael Jordan Doc. The last eight they move that up it was gonNA come out on June nineteenth. Yup the release date is April nineteenth. So obviously I can't wait for that listeners. I can maybe loan you my bulls box set because it isn't streaming but otherwise just look for the last dance this weekend on ESPN. I will be watching it. Yeah I have not seen the set that you are watching but I cannot wait for Sunday night. When the ten part doc starts it's been this mythical thing that's been rumored to be in production or potentially production for some time new house coming out and ESPN wisely bumping that up. I think it's something that a lot of people just like us are going to be watching my number three these fall under the category of blind spots and in this case there is a specific hook to Josh. Though it wasn't by design all explain it's my unofficial slash official. Bruce SURTEES MARATHON. So one day. I realize I'm kind of running out of options in terms of things that are really hooking me on net flicks and I know that there are some things I should get to real cinematic blind spots that have been mentioned on the show over the years that I feel regret about but they just seem heavy. I'm not ready for it yet. I need stuff. That's under two hours. I can knock it out and I needed to be reasonably entertaining but I do still WanNa feel like I'm getting some homework done. I do still want to feel like I've crossed something off my list that I felt for some time that I needed to get to so I went over to Amazon prime. And one of the things that popped up happen to be dirty Harry the first dirty Harry movie with Clint. Eastwood Don Siegel directed and right away. I realized how stylishly shot it was and so after I watched it I looked up who the DP was and I see that. It's Bruce Surtees. I think yeah I know that name. I can't really tell you what else he's done. I don't know much about his history's legacy at all but that is a name I have heard and oh I'll just file that away okay. So what's next? Couple of days later I go back to prime one of the film's POPs up. Lennie the Bob. Fosse directed film about Lenny. Bruce and that really is one for me. I've always been ashamed because I adore. Is You know all that jazz. Fosse's film I like cabaret quite a bit as well and in the TV series Fossey Verdon some of the making of Lenny POPs up in that TV series it. Of course POPs up in all that jazz as well. A lot of cutting to scenes of the fosse alter Ego Joe Gideon cutting the movie. That would become lenny so it was kind of just been a joke for me that I've never watched this film. I decide I'm going to sit. And Watch Lenny and. I'm watching the credits. And whose name POPs up is responsible for the Black and white cinematography. It's Bruce Thirty so then decide okay. Well this is just too convenient too much of a coincidence. We're going to make this happen and I'll give you just a little bit of background on him. Is He a name? That's familiar to you at all Josh. Young familiar with the name. I don't think I would have been able to identify any of his movies though right so he got his start as a camera. Operator working with Don Siegel and especially on Siegel and Clint Eastwood Films in the late. Nineteen sixty so movies like two mules for sister Sarah and Cubans Bluff and then his first role as a cinematographer. As the director of photography was Nineteen. Seventy-one it was the beguiled so that Seagal Directing Eastwood and then play misty for me followed that where he was working with eastward again but this time Eastwood as director that was his debut he died in twenty twelve and if you look at his. Imdb the early two thousands in the nineties were not good to surtees out of maybe twenty. Titles there's not one that really stands out as essential viewing and even at the end of the eighties. The decade closed for surtees with rat boy back to the beach and licensed to drive in the eighties for him was otherwise filled with a lot of eastwood's stuff prior to that so movies like Fire Fox and tight rope and sudden impact even honky. Tonk man his heyday really was the nineteen seventies which brought me to night moves. This is an Arthur Penn. Early Bleak Neo Noir starring Gene Hackman as a former football player turned disillusioned private. I would other type of private. I is there in the seventies and it's all set within the movie business so it's reflexive to in the mode of Altman's the long goodbye and then the one I most recently watched was another Eastwood blindspot. Which is Pale writer?

BrainStuff
How Long Can the Coronavirus Last on Surfaces?
"Let's talk about how long viruses can live on surfaces because between all those door handles credit card keypads and even our own cell phones we interact with so many services daily. I mean even if you don't hand your phone over to everyone you meet. You probably put down on say a table that other people have touched. And that's a fact of life but some of what we colloquially called germs that is viruses bacteria and other microbes that can cause infections and our bodies. Some germs can survive on surfaces outside of our bodies long enough to spread from one person to another. There's unfortunately no hard and fast rule for how long viruses in general can live on surfaces part of the uncertainties because viruses are diverse and have variety of surface survival rates the type of surface and environmental temperature and humidity. All come into play too so which surfaces are safe to touch. And how often do we need to disinfect? Them but wait. Let's back up a step what are viruses and are they even alive in the first place things that we generally considered to be living have more or less standalone ability to eat grow and reproduce a single cell. Bacteria or fungi. Or even sell from your body can do all those things because they contain the genetic instructions to do so plus the enzymes to carry out those instructions but viruses. Don't they have the genetic instructions DNA or RNA? But they don't have the right enzymes to create the chemical reactions necessary for reproduction. Instead viruses need a host cell which can be bacteria fungi or a plant or animal including a human a virus will attack a host cell and released its genetic instructions which hijacked the host cell's enzymes to make new viruses. That's good for the virus but generally bad for the host without a host cell virus can't survive long term however it does have a short window of time during which it can stay functional in hopes of infecting a new host and attaching to a host cell. Outside of a host viruses can either stay intact and remain infectious or they can degrade to the point that they're merely identifiable which means that you'll still be able to identify them from their genetic material but they won't be capable of seeking out an attacking host cells at the point that a virus on a surface is only identifiable. It won't be able to cause harm. The length of time that viruses can remain infectious on surfaces varies greatly there are baseline differences between viruses for example Rhino viruses. The viruses that are mostly responsible for the common cold will last for less than an hour on surfaces others such as norovirus which is a virus that can cause vomiting and diarrhea can last for weeks. Which is why. Norovirus can easily spread both through infected people and through contaminated foods and surfaces. There are several types of corona viruses. Most cause mild symptoms and are responsible along with rhinovirus is for the common cold but three types are known for causing more serious diseases. Moore's SARS and cove nineteen and because the corona virus that causes cove in nineteen is novel. The research into how long it can last on surfaces is new and ongoing a study published online on March Thirteenth of two thousand twenty by researchers at the National Institutes of health the US Centers for Disease Control and prevention and multiple universities compared the novel corona virus with the Corona virus that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome. Or SARS this is the most closely related. Human Corona virus to cove in nineteen and was responsible for the two thousand three epidemic. This study which has not been peer reviewed as of this recording found that the two viruses have similar viability in the environment which is to say not a whole whole lot. Something between rhinovirus and norovirus. The study determined that novel Corona Virus Can remain infectious for up to three days on stainless steel and plastic surfaces but survival on other surfaces was lower just one day on cardboard and four hours on copper and it was lowest at all in the air just up to three hours but keep in mind. Numbers are the maximum for the viability of the virus viruses. Start to degrade pretty immediately. When they're not an host the longer they're in the air or on a surface exponentially fewer of them will remain infectious. And if your immune system is working okay a lot of individual viruses need to get into your body either via your bucase membranes like your eyes nose mouth or via cuts in your skin in order for you to get infected. That's why direct person to person contact stilled easiest way for Corona virus to spread. And why everyone's telling you to wash your hands before touching your face. It's also why we don't have more precise numbers for how long corona virus or any virus for that matter. No matter how long they've been studied can last on surfaces. We spoke by email with Dr Alicia. Cray post doctoral fellow in epidemiology at emory university she said generally survival of pathogens on FEMME LIGHTS. Which are objects or materials likely to carry? Infection is determined by inoculating a surface with a known quantity virus and then sampling at various time intervals to determine the amount recovered. Scientists uses information to estimate a decay curve for the pathogen on the particular surface which can be extrapolated to longer time intervals the NIH and CDC team that studied surface variation for corona virus is still researching. They're looking into corona virus viability from snot versus phlegm versus poop as well as in varying environmental conditions because although viruses have differing baseline rates of survival on surfaces additional factors affect their ability to endure outside of a host like temperature humidity and properties of the surface itself. Cray said in general viruses survived longest at lower temperatures higher humidity and on non porous surfaces like stainless steel. However some viruses do well at low humidity. There have been a lot of theories about whether corona virus will lessen during warmer months because dry cold air like in the winter tends to provide favorable conditions for flu transmission. But we simply don't know yet. Dr Anthony Fosse Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases explained during the March Thirteenth Twenty twenty CNN facebook global corona virus. Townhall that when considering the viability of a virus on various substances it's probably measured in a couple of hours while he recommends wiping down surfaces like doorknobs and cell phone screens. When you can. He cautioned against worrying about things like money and mail and the end despite the differences in viability on surfaces among pathogens fo- MITES and contexts. The number one recommendation for preventing the spread of viruses is standard. If you've touched a shared surface wash your hands before you touch your face or any part of your body that might have a cut or other skin abrasion. The human skin is great. If keeping out cold and flu viruses a thanks to its PH porous nature. They survived for only about twenty minutes on our hands.

Kim Komando
'Parasite' Makes History at the Oscars; Picks Up 4 Awards
"A big night for a foreign film I'm rob Dustin fox news the ninety second Academy Awards is in the books and we've had lied to Hollywood to check in with faxes Machel Pelino Michelle our site is made history at the Oscars on A. B. C. and the Oscar goes to Paris the first foreign language film to win Best Picture I feel like a very opportune moment in history is happening right now I don't think the whole this on the June hello nineteen seventy four would three Renee Zellweger Joaquin Phoenix picked up the actress and actor awards for Judy and joker once upon a time in Hollywood grab two including Supporting Actor for Brad Pitt and marriage stories Laura Dern also picked up her first Oscar the MMR included tributes to both Kobe Bryant and Kirk Douglas rob Fosse's Michelle Pelino in

Marketplace Tech with Molly Wood
Gun owners want smart guns on the market but dont want to buy them
"This marketplace podcast is brought to you by ultimate software dedicated to putting people first with innovative solutions for HR payroll and talent management learn more at ultimatesoftware dot com ultimate software people first and by the Michigan Economic Development Corporation John Kelly founder and CEO at airspace experienced technology gee says in Michigan Revolution is in the air find out what planet earth is doing to help businesses make that possible at planet m dot com. That's P. L. A. N. E. T. M. Dot com eighty percent of gun. Owners thinks smart guns should be on the market but they don't want to buy them from American public public media. This is marketplace tech demystifying the digital economy. I'm molly would this week. Democratic presidential candidates are talking about the problem of gun violence but is there a technology solution that can make guns safer for decades gun manufacturers and even some startups have tried to figure out how to create a smart gun one that could only be fired by the guns owner owner and could be activated by fingerprints or a radio signal sent from the weapon to say a wristband gun researchers call these personalized guns but so far the tech hasn't gone anywhere. CASSANDRA prophecy is deputy director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and research. I asked her what the barriers are. So there are two main concerns. I think that are driving down the potential market for personalized gums and those are cost and concerns about the technology technology and I think one of the challenges were trying to way is that over the last several decades we've had changes in the reasons. People people own firearms forty years ago. The ownership was predominantly for hunting. Now the predominant reason for gun ownership is self defense against other people and if you're concerned about having a firearm to defend yourself in that kind of situation than making sure the technology would work when you want to be able to use use it could be a significant issue when you look at the overall numbers of gun deaths how many of those could potentially be prevented by personalized guns. It's really when we think about the benefits of what types of injuries by fire him could be prevented with personalized guns. We're looking mostly at injuries among individuals who wouldn't be able to purchase firearms so teen suicide by firearm unintentional injuries unintentional deaths by firearm among children and then also the potential benefit to drive down homicide by reducing the ability to use a firearm that is personalized if it was stolen but when you look at the burden of firearm deaths and the potential benefit it's hard to make a really strong case that having personalized sliced guns is really going to drastically drive down our burden of gun violence in this country. So where would you like to see investment in research go I. I think that we could do a lot more to understand. Who's firearms are being used in suicide? Even though fire suicide is the leading cause of firearm mm death we have very little information on where those guns come from when they were acquired how they were stored in the home and I think that we could do a lot to to improve our ability to respond to and prevent suicide if we could get some better data to understand some of these precipitating factors. CASSANDRA prophecy is deputy director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and research so far no smart gun has been sold at a gun shop anywhere in America and as to that question of cost CRA Fosse told us smart guns would potentially cost as much as a thousand dollars more than the dumb ones and now for some related links. There's a fascinating story in Bloomberg BusinessWeek from earlier this year about the long history history of attempts to create so-called smart or personalized guns and it includes this whole tale about a two thousand to law from New Jersey that said that his students sooner smart guns were sold anywhere in the United States then New Jersey's gun retailers could only sell smart guns within three years so oh no more dumb guns in New Jersey that of course caused an NRA freak out and death threats against a Maryland retailer who did want to sell personalized guns in two thousand fourteenth. That's at the entire effort back even more and over the years. No one has flight created a smart gun where the tech works perfectly in all situations. The Bloomberg story also includes a lot of details about how the tech industry has both tried to find an fund smart gun startups but also shied away from gun startups for fear that could lead to increased gun ownership and then of course there's the politics which is where we are going to end this podcast you can find the Bloomberg Bloomberg story on our website Marketplace Tech Dot Org. I'm Ali would and that is marketplace tech. This is a PM. This marketplace podcast is brought to you by Entercom Intercom. What's more of the Nice people visiting your website to give you money so they took a little chat bubble in the corner website and packed it with conversational bots product tours. NPS surveys all sorts of things that amplify your team and help you reach more nice people intercom customer unity got forty five percent more loyal users with intercom in just twelve months go to intercom dot com slash podcast to start making money from real time. I am chat then see everything else intercom can do that's intercom dot com slash podcast.

The Frame
Hostless Emmys Hit All-Time Ratings Low
"The Emmy awards were last night and for a second year in a row the ratings hit it and all time low but bad news for broadcast. TV was good news for streaming joining me to recap the ceremony is the chief TV critic at Variety Daniel Daniel Diario. Hi How are you. I'm good. I WanNa ask you this whole idea of the hostess award show. It feels like it's not going away anytime soon. If you were to grade the as on how they handled it. What kind of Marx would you give them. I would give the EMMYS a failing grade for how they handled filling in the gaps without got a host. I thought all of the interstitial bits all of the comedy all the attempts to explain to the audience what TV was fell totally flat. I will say one positive fringe benefit was that I noticed that fewer stars were being played off and the longer speeches were more impactful and more thoughtful every other aspect of the production. I thought didn't work and I missed the presence of a kind of guiding intelligence. Let's listen to the speeches that did get to run a little bit longer. This is Michelle Williams accepting her emmy for playing gwen Verdon and Fosse Verdon and so the next time a woman especially a woman of color because she stands to make fifty two cents on the dollar compared to her white. Male counterpart tells you what we need to order to do her job. Listen to her the. I think it's important to note Michelle. Williams has simone history with this. She went back for some re-shoots on the movie all the money in the world. She got paid a thousand thousanddollars. Mark Wahlberg got a million and a half so this is a personal issue for her but it feels like the really did discover something by not playing Michelle. How Williams off absolutely I think I mean I feel as though if you think back a couple of years when Nicole Kidman won for big little lies she ultimately we got to give a long speech about what she learned about domestic violence in the role but she was kind of fighting with the orchestra in a way that kind of sapped the dignity and meaning of the moment the fact that Williams was able to kind of speak in Kristalina way as composed she was carrying across these points that were personal to her relevant to the project relative to Hollywood. I thought it was really important on unfortunately with the viewership being what it was. I'm not sure how many people saw these great points but I I still think it was important. Let's talk about the viewership because it does appear that the ratings were an all time low for the Emmy Broadcast and it does. I feel like what was celebrated. Last night was not network television. I think Saturday night live with the only network show that picked up any emmy's in the primetime ceremony last tonight. Does it feel us if this is a network show that celebrating stuff that you would never see on any network. Yes it feels as though this is a network show that not only we celebrate stuff that doesn't air on network but stuff that never could I mean fleabag show. I greatly admired that was the night's big winner in comedy is so so far beyond I think what the great network watching still extant mill American audience is accustomed to that basically could come from another planet. I think what this means for. The EMMYS is an existential question going forward of what the show can do and where it should even be. Would this be better better served. If we put the Amazon Netflix would be better served. We put it on

Ringer Dish
Emmy Awards 2019: The hottest red carpet arrivals, winners and losers
"Dash special edition really right littman. I'm Hellawell jam session teatime crossover event in the spirit of great television. We Love Crossover Event Lover Knock Great Television. What's going for it yeah. It's really negative because it was a really bad show we'll bounce Dallas and positively the phoebe Waller Abridge high of one in this is not fair. Thanks Jeff. Why why am I not in high too. I UH-HUH OH yeah yeah. It was a great night for her. That's true but to me. It was a television show true. No not definitely not what I mean. I think you know you're right on that note kate. Why don't you kick things off on a high for us. We're GONNA talk with highs and lows. We'll go back and forth all right start positive. I was the red carpet action pretty good pretty fun lot of color you know from the men and the women we love a color jacket. I'm I'm trying to do my best like Juliana ransack because it working your calendar at all you know mercilessly Nicolas Coster Waldo. They just like did the goal they are in Green. Yeah he looked really good. He looks great seen him look bad but I drew this award show as he does in every single still of photography taking him ever Israel. Where's the talks really well of any family well. It's a gift Lotta Pink and red dresses which I liked all of them. I think we were talking about just looks like a huge. Valentine onstage dynasty chic which I was into like Mandy Moore could've just like stepped off like an eighty soap op right and that's what I want for my fashion. We also have to Raji. GP Henson Great Yeah. All three of them have either watch dialing Hollywood on Netflix but I've heard it's really good it is really good and like the the first three episodes center around Dang Raji Henson's emmys dress code and yes this last year okay because Jason Baldness her stylist stylist and they're really good friends to show and so I was just thinking styling Hollywood and season two can't wait to hear about distress. They held it shadow styling Hollywood. One of Netflix few wins tonight. flicks yeah slow for them kind of great. Let's commercials now. ozark night were their networks commercials which wines the breaking bad movie. Yes that's true the Camino last hour. There were a few three just kept seeing the new netflix seven million. Leeann streaming sites now and there were commercials for all of them and there's a lot of apple plus huge. I feel like it anyway back to fashion. I also might think probably my favorite was purchase. There's Clarkson. She did like blonde more tissue atoms which is real kate everything you want from purchase. Clarkson ever but yeah it was great never looked great. We all oh really Zendaya so late though like we didn't really see your until she walked out in glasses she present which was fabulous. She's got the marvel money and she's a cool kid. So Oh yes you need to get there early. That's true. Actually she doesn't have marvel money anymore. Right right YEP per spiderman series is dead. Maybe they only mice. I'd still like to you see how that's ultimately resolved but yeah we know about that stuff too. I WANNA share that Kid Harrington who I generally have no interest in as John Snow or in real life but I thought he looks phenomenal Q. Like the Best I've ever seen him. Maybe yes maybe the best never looked tie really channeling Richard Madden which was a great look for him also recommended not show which was Sassou. Ask You guys see what Richard Man did in debt yeah bill t rex out of Lego instagram could for him huge flex. You know I'd like to nominate Emilia Clarke while around the gas are- if Valentino I I'd love to know about. I assume it's tape. That's involved in this attraction but she's wearing confidence. She looks great. I was so ready to root against I'm sorry I did but she made it a little bit more difficult than I had plans. At least you followed through my Rudolph and Michelle Williams both in floral patterns both looking great really really enjoyed that more Michelle Williams in a few minutes. I liked Natasha. Leones look also should we talk about Natasha. Leone clapping. Yeah you're cool. Kidman Adman clapping apparently it is interesting way of clapping. It is like she just learnt how a small child when you teach them how to do applies their hands together but she was consistent in it. She applauded for a lot of people which we appreciate. I really liked it. She was wearing glasses during the show. I just love glasses formal. Look look at the Oscars Golden Globes and EMMYS. It's very common and I think it's a great I would do it. Billy Puerto Ricans and also the formal yes. It's a great addition. It's fake furnished. We're on the same the same people to do it because like young always does it. Oprah as a love the former bosses Amanda. I'm happy to tell you that the Tasha Leo Gift of her clapping readily available for whenever you need that's great people are ready. I think that makes sense. I'm just going to try to do it in my own life. One more nomination. Naomi watts she looks phenomenal and black just logged in just great the new game of thrones star new game. It's just getting ready. I I liked we'll talk a lot more reckoning with routes but I like to the end of the show how David any off who is my one true love can be like and now it's over we did it and now it is over totally disavowing try to shut out any notions of the prequels and spin offs that are that are coming alright great injection positively positively we'll ride this enthusiasm into talking about the most awkward moment of evening which was allow a complicated one which was when. Phoebe Waller Bridge won on Best Actress in a comedy beating out Julia Louis Dreyfuss in her final season as Lena Meyer from beep and bridges incredibly happy. Kate was incredibly happy. Many people on the Internet were incredibly happy. Let's get this out of the way. This is a pro fleabag podcast. You're lovely about free. It's one of the best things that that I've seen in any medium in two thousand and nineteen. Maybe in the decade yet great up there yeah fix perfect episodes a season two. Yes at flawless sure but Julia Louis Dreyfus purpose is probably the best television actress of in history. Yeah I think she's like Lucille Ball and Carol channing. Yes and she had one for veep. I believe every season she had been nominated and she was going to break the record for the most emmy wins by a woman of of all time and she she is there's also a breast cancer survivor yeah and that happened between these seasons so I think we all assumed that this would be her emmy and and it was not and that's the way the cookie crumbles moreover everyone in the room assuming yes so it was like the most tepid response. It's a win from a show that is universally praised yes. I'm sure that no one's like fleabag doesn't deserve it deserve. It really sucks sucks. That's how the point just was such an incredibly awkward moment. Totally I think okay like root for history. It's like when you walk or it's and you want to see a record broken or you. You want like someone's got hot. Hand you want to leave him in the game but as long as possible like it's okay to root for history it's okay to experience that moment and it was just really awkward. Yeah and it's also a fever waller. Bridge did not really read the room in that moment. I was wondering I guess veep is maybe not a big deal in the UK. They don't care about it. They're like we have in the loop. We don't actually need the American version of IANUCCI stuff but she was like thanking her agent and I just it wasn't the note that you wanted at that. Moment also weird for her to be profusely thanking or agent given the feud between writers and agents right now. Yes weird moment. It was not mentioned once during the entire telecast now's house per day and there was a lot of ignoring everything going on TV. No one was talking about streaming services. Everyone was just you know thinking whatever likes Amazon that that helped them. A lot of Amazon wants by the way but yeah it just it. It was uncomfortable. Even though it was happy yeah it's like not undeserved served right with the moment felt wrong and it. Kinda sucks then for our bread shoes. True talent is actually Frank Kayla. I will say like she seems super for actress to me in that moment in a way. I don't like to acknowledge and I just like Oh. This is a real actress but she also had just been up there like I think it would have been different if she hadn't won anything yet yet right right right so she had just been up there. She's up there again. It's like Oh you again like everyone loves her but like it is. It would have been different than if it had just been the first win for few celebrity yeah so it's tough. It's a no win a little bit she continued to she did continue to win now. She did and it was awesome. That fleabag won best comedy. US totally detailing curling. Everyone say their favorite episode man you go first the last one I mean come on the answer here. I soon as you said that to me. I I also kind of don't think of them as discreet right so it's entirely it was just one you could put those together and it would be like one very long movie and it would be kind of perfect shorter then some worth celebrating movies kate the first episode the pilot was the second season yeah great one of the Jumpsuit Yeah Mine's the number three's Kristin Scott Thomas See Russia Kristin Scott Thurow's Jonzon hot priest socially tough but you got yeah Kristin Scott Thomas. Oh yeah that's a trade. That's funeral so many other version of one yeah one we don't talk about the new one in the really funny thing about season into fleabag is just like everyone acknowledges now including TV while our bridge how essential Andrew Scott as you play the AK Moriarty too many of us who watched Sir Lock. Yeah weird very greatest in yeah. It was really cool and she when she turned to him accepting best comedy. It was like we did this because Andrew. You're Scott came in and that was cool. It was great and also you finally got to be on stage which was good so a motive. Actually I just want to say I love back. I don't need any more Brett Gelman twenty twenty between fleabag and stranger things. Yeah Ozone Lot shred amount of everything done. We're done offense. I guess it's it's really inherently offensive thing okay moving on so that was like a low and then and then I within a low below the recovered itself yeah. Just I mean it is remarkable. It's saying that is a special as fleabag actually won the emmys. We don't see actually the best. Things don't usually win awards. That's literally every awards show and fleabag winning and phoebe Waller winning for writing. It's just like wow we did it. That's great yeah so that was good good job on this one thing good Johnson. Okay Okay Hi Michelle Williams speech amazing stuff amazing stuff. This is also what happens when you practice and you prepare and she had clearly given some thought to what she wanted to say and not. Maybe she wrote it. I'm not really sure because it was definitely well-crafted and she hit her points but it was more that she had an idea and she wanted to turn this into It's a speech about equal pay which is like something. She's been crosshairs about a lot. If you remember when they did the re-shoots for I guess it was called all the money in the world it was the Getty Nassar Getty show out of it so Kevin Spacey's the Laura for Christopher plummer and they did the re shoots her fi versus Mark Wahlberg fee. Yes she took like a daily fee and Mark Wahlberg at one point five million dollars and then it became a thanks so she I used that in order to talk about a Fosse verdant. FX And the support and what happens when you actually do support of working specifically women have car work. She just like she had the stats. That's she nailed it.

Talking Tech
With rate hike, YouTube TV lost me
"Hiring is challenging, but there's one place you can go. We're hiring is simple. And smart that place is ZipRecruiter. Where growing businesses connect to qualified candidates. Try it for free at ZipRecruiter dot com slash tech talk. Ziprecruiter, the smartest way to hire. Youtube TV this week jacked up the rates by one hundred and twenty dollars yearly and lost me as a would-be customer it justified the higher rates by throwing extra channels that I have no interest in watching. I want Alicarte TV not bundles how about you. Let's dive in on today's talking tech. I'm Jefferson Graham with USA today. So YouTube TV is one of the cable alternative services that sprung up with a fabulous value proposition. It would offer just the stuff you want the broadcast channels some cable networks and access to sports along with no cable equipment to rant and unlimited cloud DVR at thirty five bucks. It was a great deal at fifty dollars. You can forget it. Because then you start thinking, why am I paying six hundred dollars a year to watch Discovery Channel a e the USA network all those channels that I never look at on cable. That's where cutting the cord comes in there is so. Much free programming on YouTube, and I could keep myself busy with Amazon prime which I happily pay four four my shipping. I have enough to entertain me for months now. I love the idea of true court cutting and being able to still watch the occasional cable channel at my discretion. I like CNN you might prefer e or you might wanna see a specific show like Fossey Verdon, which is currently on ethics or something like killing eve or better. Call Saul CNN is problematic Fosse Verdon. I can help you there. CNN like most cable channels will not allow you to watch unless you can prove that you're a cable or satellite subscriber. The CNN go app on TV boxes like Roku and apple TV are worthless. To you unless you've got the proof did over the CNN smartphone app. So great. So we'll stop watching CNN. So they're a show like Fossey Verdon actually can be yours. The channel ethics won't let you subscribe without cable. But for twenty bucks, you can buy the entire seasons. Worthy shows on I tunes Amazon or each episode for three dollars the same goes for other hot shows like killing EIB and better call Saul. So if you want Alicarte like, I do don't subscribe to the cable alternative services like YouTube TV, it will only encourage them to keep on raising your rates and turn into another cable TV like monopoly. That's my two cents. What's yours? I would love to hear from you on Twitter where I'm at Jefferson Graham, you've been listening to talking tech, please subscribe to the show wherever you listen to great online audio I'll be back tomorrow with another quick it from the world attack. Thanks for listening. Hiring used to be hard. It was and still is one of the biggest challenges businesses face before it meant dealing with endless stacks of resumes flipping through them. And hoping the perfect candidate would jump out at you and the manual review process wasn't any easier. But in today's high tech world hiring can be easy. And you only have to go to one place to get it done. Ziprecruiter dot com slash tech talk. With their powerful matching technology. Ziprecruiter scans thousands of resumes to find the most qualified contenders for your job. And actively invites them to apply. Ziprecruiter is so effective that four out of five employers who post on the site get a qualified candidate within the first day and right now talking tech listeners can try ZipRecruiter for free at this exclusive web address, ZipRecruiter dot com slash tech talk. That's ZipRecruiter dot com slash T. E C H T A L K, ZipRecruiter dot com slash tech talk. Ziprecruiter, the smartest way to hire.

The Frame
Through the eyes of Annie Leibovitz
"From the Mon broadcast center at KP. See see this is the frame, I'm John horn on today's show what the cancellation of Pearvel shows on Netflix might mean for the future of the TV business then from antiwar demonstrations to Arnold Schwarzenegger, riding horseback. Any Vits has photographed at all we walked through a new exhibit of her early work was not a good photojournaling. So I was going to have to tell more my story from my point of view and left journalism behind eventually turned to portraiture because it was a way of having real licensed to do what you wanted in a photograph and the country swing band asleep at the wheel is still rolling along fifty years after its founding all that coming up on the frame. With so many new players jumping into the streaming game including Disney, apple and Warner media. Twenty nineteen is likely to bring some big changes to the TV business. We called up Daniel Feinberg a TV critic for the Hollywood reporter to talk about what the future could look like to TV viewers. He's just finished covering two weeks of presentations from broadcast networks cable channels and streaming services at the television critics association meetings. We started with the news from earlier this week that net flicks. His canceling Jessica Jones and the punisher to marvel shows which not coincidentally are also Disney properties. There is no question that we are on the brink of some sort of key transition point. And regardless of what you choose to call it, whether you want to call it these streaming wars or the road to new cable, or whatever you wanted describe it as there are things that are changing that are going to dramatically reshape what the media landscape look. In five years in the same way that five years ago, it looked completely different. And I think that there's no question that the cancellation of the marvel shows on Netflix is a. Assign a gesture in a certain direction because these were very high profile shows for Netflix when they premiered and they were part of a big programming strategy. And now, suddenly all of the marvel properties are really part of aid Disney, plus or a Disney marvel streaming strategy, and so they don't fit with Netflix anymore. And I think that you're gonna see something with the tug of war over something like friends, I think that we are only at the beginning of what is going to be probably the biggest story in where television is going in the next year and a half probably. And that is basically that the people who create those shows used to see companies like Netflix as a source of ancillary revenue and now they see streaming services as direct competitors. So they're trying to pull their content back at their launching their own streaming services. Is that the bigger picture here? I think that is definitely the bigger picture. And all of the things that the Netflix and Hulu have kind of taken for granted as the foundation of their. Business model, you know, the for whatever we want to say about the apparently twelve billion dollars that Netflix last year poured into original programming acquired content is still a major portion of what people actually stream on Netflix. Whether it's whether it's friends, whether it's the office, whether it's all of the CW shows, and that's great for Netflix because it allows net flicks to have that kind of foundation, but it, but it's also a business that the people who actually own those programs want to be in. And so is Netflix original programming is it enough if suddenly the studio start taking away all of their prestige programs. Yeah. I don't know. Let's talk about a couple of new programs one that's on Netflix. It's called Russian doll and one on Hulu called Penn. Fifteen. These are shows that seem to be getting a lot of attention. Are they worth checking out? And how are they doing so far? I think they're absolutely were checking out, and I think we had absolutely no idea how either one of them is doing. Let's look says not put out a press release boasting that forty million people in some form or another have watched Russian doll. So I don't know all I know is that it's a really good show. It's a really smart show. It's a show that plays around with with format and with tone, and with style in very impressive ways. So Russian dolls. Definitely we're checking out, and I think Penn fifteen on Hulu is is a lot of fun to gimmick is the two co creators are basically playing junior high versions of themselves. Devil dis her last night at camp. How was even possible? I don't know what happened in the middle of her sleep. That's so unfair that happens to me surrounded by actual preteen and teen actors, and it's it's a really good show about the awkwardness of being a teenager. That's maybe aimed at older viewers who survived those years. I wanna talk about a couple of other shows that might be worth talking about FOX has a series called proven innocent pop has a series called flack and DC universe has a series called doom patrol or any of those shows are other things that you've seen jumping out in terms of midseason or early start shows that are coming out either. Now, or very soon one of the shows that if you've watched any BC in the past couple of weeks, and you're going to see as we move towards the Oscars this weekend that is getting a lot of buzz for ABC as whiskey cavalier whiskey cavalier. One of our best agents. I intelligence proven to be a huge asset to the bureau. You and your fiance recently parted ways. Yes, we did mutual most commercial, but I'm totally fine with it. We have the footage. How? It's a show that I would say succeeds at its goals, and that's something that I wouldn't necessarily say about say proven innocent, which is a very very run of the mill entirely forgettable legal procedural at the very least whiskey cavalier is pretty people Scott fully and learn Cohen or the stars are attractive and fun. And they're having a good time. It was shot in Europe. And it makes actual good use of European locations. It's got all of the depth of a very very shallow puddle. But on the other hand, it's fun. And it's the same with with DC universe is doomed patrol, which is kind of quirky kind of odd and of vast improvement over DC universe's, I live action show which was titans, which was all gloomy and glum and unpleasant. So there's something to be said for improvement one of the other things that happens at the as is that critics get sneak peeks, maybe it's some footage. Maybe it's a pilot of a show. That's not going to be on for a couple of months. Is there anything that you and your colleagues? Saw that might not be coming out immediately. But that you're really interested in seeing what more there is the series. Well, I definitely can't review. The one episode I've seen of FX Fosse Verdon, but I can tell you that that show which starts Sam Rockwell, and Michelle Williams is definitely going to be worth one that I'm looking forward to checking out. It's the story of Bob Fosse, Gwen Verdon. And so there's a lot of fifty sixty seventies cinematic, and Broadway and musical references and dancing and choreography. And I'm not gonna say anything more than I'm looking forward to seeing more episodes. Daniel Feinberg is a TV critic for the Hollywood reporter. He is also the president of the television critics association Daniel, thanks for your time and your insight. Thank you for having me. Coming up on the frame, any leave of its walks through an exhibit of her early work.

Correspondents Report
The new 'troubles' in Ireland
"Now on assignment in Northern Ireland. European correspondent Bridget Brennan went to take a look at an uncompromising new generation of Republican terrorists calling themselves. The new IRA the group has claimed responsibility for a car bomb and a string of hijackings in recent weeks. So what motivates them when so many across the island of Ireland a craving a lasting peace? Bridget. Brennan spoke to a young Northern Irish academic who spent the better part of a decade finding out peace in Ireland peace across these islands is a precious thing is the thing that we in the U K, this Bain fees and constant debate about what brings it could do to that hard fought pace processing Ireland and Northern Ireland. And there's a phrase you he quite a lot win talk of Briggs and Bill I in borders crops up, and it goes something like we all remember the dark days of the troubles in Northern Ireland. I actually don't remember much about the troubles. I was in primary school. When the Good Friday agreement was signed. But when I was in Northern Ireland recently, I realized of course, it spoon. Deep into the sake of people about my age there, even if they were only young when the conflict stopped. It's the reason why I sought out Dr Murray mcglinchey, she was absolutely fascinating to speak to she's a celebrated young Akkad from Bill Fosse. She's become totally absorbed in the history of her home. I remember when I was starting at we have family in Dublin, I left here in Belfast, and we were returning after a visit to family in Dublin we were returning to Belfast and our busts my moment. I was on a bus that was hijacked when we were taken off at gunpoint and the bus was used to block the road. It was at the time of the Drumcree disturbances. And so things like that really did have an impact and left me with a lot of questions about what was going on around me. And I wanted to make sense of it. And then and ladder years in two thousand nine I went along to a meeting. And Kleinert monastery that Chen fan were holding. And that was a public meeting about whether or not to join the PS, and they were trying to persuade the community to join give their support to the PSA. And I and I sat in the actual church of the monastery listening to this. And I saw you know, some there was a bit of a break owed at the back of people saying that their son didn't die for this or or just express opposition to the direction. What Xinfei and we're moving and. You know, it really picked my interest. Morita ease the perfect person to speak to if you want to know more about the so called dissident Republicans, these a hardline Republicans scattered across the island and Maria did about seven years of research into them republicanism is historically difficult to reach community. You know, we can't simply consult are a meeting minutes, and it was very important to me to actually quite and speak to Republicans on the grind. So I interviewed ninety three hundred Ireland, and I also went to feud some current prisoners Mugabe prison, and so it was a long process, and it was a times of difficult process because it did bring the attentions of the security services by that. She means you stopped and searched while riding her new book unfinished business, she been hanging out at some Republican events which caught the eye of some of the security services and her work also to inside prisons to talk to dissident Republicans who. We've always rejected the peace agreement, and I love the process of going around and really getting into the psyche of what people think, and I one of those moments probably was going to end demagoguery prison at which is based just outside Lisburn here in the north of Ireland. And that was my first time in a prison. And I went in not you know, as an academic. But I went in with the other families on a regular visit to see the prisoners. And what was remarkable? There was that the families of these prisoners had actually given up their visit for me to win. Now, given they only get a limited number of those felt that was quite remarkable. So when I went through the same process that the families and friends go in visiting their relatives. And so the process involved at one point sitting dying the drug dogs walk in arraigned to which all seemed very surreal and before I was then brought onto the Republican Landon in the prison. I asked Marie sir of couse about Brexit him with a she thinks it's been a motivator for these groups in some of these hardline Republican groups like the new IRA. But I mean when you look at what people term dissident Republicans, there are techy letting traditional Republican ideology and principles. So if. You stand around gravesites at art in today at some of their events, you'll hear the Republican ideology and message that you would have heard in the seventies or eighties from the mainstream shin Fiene movement. So for them it's very much about traditional republicanism. And we've even them we've heard speculation recently about Brexit. And are we seeing the increase of republicanism in the wake of Brexit? And I mean, Republicans are very clear that their position isn't a response or reaction to Brexit. But rather Brexit is seen as an opportunity to be exploited. Scary thought Europe. Correspondent Bridget Brennan with that report.

Dr. Drew Midday Live with Mike Catherwood
Kavanaugh accuser will do "whatever is necessary" so Senate has full story, lawyer says
"Denial for the president's supreme court nominee. Let me sobriety. Fosse's? Brad Kavanagh releasing another statement after the woman who accuses him of sexual misconduct in high school university. Professor Christine Blasi Ford went public earlier today cavenaugh visiting the White House where FOX's John decker is live Senate Judiciary committee chairman Chuck Grassley said in a statement that anyone who comes forward as Dr Ford has deserves to be heard. So I will continue working on a way to hear her out in an appropriate president and respectful manner. And that approach has the support of counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway, she should testify under oath. The Senate Judiciary committee looks like they are headed that way. Saying he too wants to meet with the committee saying in a statement, this is a completely false allegation. I have never done anything like what the accuser describes to her. Or to anyone Lisa? Meantime, John at this point. The judiciary committee is still scheduled to vote this Thursday on sending the nomination to the full Senate.