35 Burst results for "Four Generations"

The Eric Metaxas Show
Greg Locke Describes How People Open Themselves to Evil Spirits
"Is it that people something happens and they get whatever term it is, they get demonized, somehow a demonic entity, a demon, an evil spirit, gets into their lives and harasses them, and some people hear voices, they don't know where to go to who to talk to about it. I'm sure a lot of pastors say, oh, you know, go to psychiatrists, and you get some meds for that. If it's a demon meds can not fix it. Right. Absolutely. You can't cancel out a demon, right? You can't counsel out a demon. You can't medicate a demon out. Number one, one of the biggest ways is other than a generational curse, because God's plainly says, if you're born into a family where there has been witchcraft, occultism, satanism, idolatry, deep levels of religion other than Christianity. He said, I'll visit the iniquity of the fathers into the third and fourth generation. That's a 120 to a 160 years. So there are people that are born with a generational curse because of oaths, for example, to secret societies, the masonic lodge, things like that. There are people that are born with such as a spirit of rejection, the spirit of abandonment, because maybe the mom, word curse that child, like, oh my goodness, this is another mouth to feed. I can't believe I've got to carry this baby. Full term. I don't need another baby. And at that moment, don't think that that baby emotionally and mentally can not receive that word curse and that allows a legal contract if you will of an evil spirit to slip in and babies can be born with a spirit of abandonment of spirit of rejection and their whole life. They wonder why every single relationship they have turns out to be a crap fast because they always feel abandoned. They always feel rejected, much times through molestation, abuse, people are opened up to Shane and guilt. The number one way that people open themselves up is a colt involvement, known or unknown. It doesn't make any difference. You mess with the ouija board when you're 8 years old, you open yourself up to a whole plethora to a whole Pandora's box of evil spirits, witchcraft, curses, people mess around with seances, addiction to horror movies, celebrating Halloween. I mean, there's a lot of ways that people open themselves up to witchcraft. And so that's one of the commonest ways that people are open to evil spirits. There's many of them.

AP News Radio
Kim Jong Un reveals his daughter to the world
"North Korea has unveiled the little known daughter of its leader Kim Jong-un who attended a missile launch with her father and mother North Korea's state media released photos of Kim alongside his daughter watching a soaring missile from a distance Other photos showed her with her hair pulled back wearing a white coat and a pair of red shoes as she walked hand in hand with her father by a huge missile the photos and announcement mark the first time the Norse state media has mentioned Kim's daughter the move has drawn keen attention on a fourth generation member

The Dan Bongino Show
Harriet Hageman: Conservatives Are Welcome to Move to Wyoming
"I mean it from the bottom of my heart it is just a beautiful state if you have any trouble believing the existence of the almighty go to Wyoming for a sunset or a sunrise and it will disabuse you of that silly notion right away But you have a lot of people moving into Wyoming I'm trying to turn a very red state maybe a little less red or maybe even a little purple You know it's great to have people want to come to your state but do you find that that local pressure you know down here in Florida we thankfully have a lot of conservatives moving in which is turning Florida redder but are you finding that Wyoming that's becoming a bit of an issue people taking their liberal values over to this conservative state I think for a period of time we did and first of all thank you for talking about my state that way That's exactly how I feel about it I am born and raised here fourth generation my great grandfather came here on a cattle trail in 1878 from Texas So I've got a deep deep roots in Wyoming and I love my state What I am finding is that we are getting locked down refugees So I believe more conservatives are moving into this state For a period of time I think we were getting liberals but over the last two years we're getting an influx of folks from Oregon Washington and California because they are truly escaping the madness from there And so I as I have been campaigning and I'm now at almost 29,000 miles in Wyoming since I since I started this driving around the state I have met a lot of people who are moving here because of our conservative values And I welcome them all with open arms We want people to come to Wyoming but we want them to understand our culture our history who and what we are We don't want to change that We are all for innovation We're all for those kinds of things but our conservative values are what has made Wyoming what it is So we welcome people with open arms if they want to come here and be a part of this great state

WABE 90.1 FM
"four generations" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM
"Rundown along with some bright newcomers on the horizon but start Eric with this is us which is a frequent tear jerker It follows generations of a sprawling interracial family and it left a big mark on the industry Tell us about that Yeah you know it's almost like a pavlovian response When I hear that theme song the tears start to well up in my eyes and I start to get emotional What's interesting about this is that it was I think considered kind of an experimental way to reinvent the family drama People who've seen the show know that it's centered on these three people who are siblings to blood siblings who were born on the same day and another child who was born in the same day who was adopted into the family of a black man And the series goes back and forth in time so we see them as children we see them as grown-ups with their own children and even grandchildren that was such a big hit that it inspired some other kind of copycat shows But to me this is us came about at a time when network TV was trying to compete a little bit with streaming and trying to give us some different kinds of shows and I think this is us might be one of the best examples of what they came up with during that time And one of the most compelling stories is this character Randall Pearson who's played by Sterling K Brown a black man who was adopted into this white family as a baby He was always challenged to sort of understand what it meant and to assert his own blackness but also be a part of this white family And then in the end in this final season of episodes his mother is ill everyone's reacting to it but he's reacting to it particularly strongly because he was really close to her And so we have a little clip from a recent episode where Randall was talking a little bit about the impact that his mother sort of coming to terms with her own fading life has had on the family.

AP News Radio
Conspiracy theorists flock to bird flu, spreading falsehoods
"Poultry poultry poultry poultry farmers farmers farmers farmers are are are are frustrated frustrated frustrated frustrated as as as as conspiracy conspiracy conspiracy conspiracy theorists theorists theorists theorists flocked flocked flocked flocked to to to to bird bird bird bird flu flu flu flu farmers farmers farmers farmers in in in in states states states states like like like like Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Wisconsin Iowa Iowa Iowa Iowa and and and and Nebraska Nebraska Nebraska Nebraska and and and and had had had had to to to to call call call call millions millions millions millions of of of of birds birds birds birds to to to to prevent prevent prevent prevent an an an an outbreak outbreak outbreak outbreak of of of of avian avian avian avian flu flu flu flu from from from from spreading spreading spreading spreading Brad Brad Brad Brad Moline Moline Moline Moline is is is is a a a a fourth fourth fourth fourth generation generation generation generation Turkey Turkey Turkey Turkey farmer farmer farmer farmer he he he he knows knows knows knows the the the the disease disease disease disease is is is is a a a a real real real real thing thing thing thing he he he he nearly nearly nearly nearly had had had had his his his his family family family family business business business business wiped wiped wiped wiped out out out out by by by by an an an an outbreak outbreak outbreak outbreak in in in in twenty twenty twenty twenty fifteen fifteen fifteen fifteen he he he he says says says says the the the the misinformation misinformation misinformation misinformation people people people people post post post post in in in in Facebook Facebook Facebook Facebook groups groups groups groups insisting insisting insisting insisting the the the the disease disease disease disease is is is is an an an an elaborate elaborate elaborate elaborate hoax hoax hoax hoax caused caused caused caused by by by by five five five five G. G. G. G. cell cell cell cell towers towers towers towers or or or or some some some some kind kind kind kind of of of of bio bio bio bio weapon weapon weapon weapon just just just just make make make make him him him him want want want want to to to to beat beat beat beat his his his his head head head head against against against against a a a a wall wall wall wall experts experts experts experts who who who who study study study study conspiracy conspiracy conspiracy conspiracy theories theories theories theories say say say say false false false false claims claims claims claims get get get get rehashed rehashed rehashed rehashed with with with with each each each each new new new new crisis crisis crisis crisis and and and and gained gained gained gained popularity popularity popularity popularity because because because because they they they they give give give give believers believers believers believers a a a a sense sense sense sense of of of of control control control control the the the the more more more more vexing vexing vexing vexing and and and and scaring scaring scaring scaring the the the the phenomenon phenomenon phenomenon phenomenon the the the the dilemmas dilemmas dilemmas dilemmas are are are are the the the the more more more more we we we we grasp grasp grasp grasp for for for for kind kind kind kind of of of of fantastical fantastical fantastical fantastical ways ways ways ways to to to to understand understand understand understand John John John John Jackson Jackson Jackson Jackson is is is is the the the the dean dean dean dean of of of of the the the the Annenberg Annenberg Annenberg Annenberg school school school school of of of of communication communication communication communication at at at at the the the the university university university university of of of of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania we we we we want want want want to to to to be be be be critical critical critical critical but but but but it's it's it's it's being being being being able able able able to to to to separate separate separate separate out out out out the the the the legitimate legitimate legitimate legitimate things things things things you you you you should should should should be be be be concerned concerned concerned concerned about about about about these these these these are are are are the the the the the the the the powers powers powers powers that that that that be be be be from from from from sort sort sort sort of of of of figments figments figments figments of of of of your your your your imagination imagination imagination imagination I'm I'm I'm I'm Jennifer Jennifer Jennifer Jennifer king king king king

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast
El American: Unapologetically Pursuing Freedom
"Debbie and I today are gonna do a joint interview, which we do occasionally. And we're just delighted to welcome to the podcast and the program Jorge granier Phillips. He's the founder and CEO of el American. We're gonna talk about el American, but Jorge is an entrepreneur he's an award winning media producer. He's produced shows for Netflix, for Warner Brothers, ABC, CBS, and he's now building all American, which is America's first bilingual conservative platform for Hispanics. Yes, it's a little correction. It's Phelps. Phelps, so sorry. Yes, yes. So welcome to the podcast finally Jorge. It's great to have you. Thank you very much. Thank you, Debbie. Thank you to Nash, it's a pleasure to be here and an honor. Thank you very much. Yes. Jorge, tell us about el American. This is an exciting idea because of course Hispanic programming, at least in this country has been dominated by telemundo. It's been dominated by the left politically, and it seems like you're trying to create an alternative. How did you develop the idea to do that? Yes. I think the idea came to us me and my cofounder during the last, I say three years. We started to see a trend within the media that was wearing and troublesome. There was also an issue of polarization in the U.S., which we had seen in our native Venezuela. So we got together with a group of local investors all from the Hispanic community from different parts of the United States, and we decided to create an alternative in the new segment that treated and Hispanics in a more fair way. And provided the foundations of that this country was built upon and why we came here looking for a better life and are now into our second, third and fourth generation of Hispanic steering in the U.S..

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Harriet Hageman States Her Case to Represent Wyoming in Congress
"Because you've got to sell yourself on why you would be best for the constituents of Wyoming, or is our Liz Cheney's actions enough to have her get defeated? Mike, you know, that's a really good question. And you're the first person to ask it, but it's something that I address every single day, both with my team as well as internally in my own head. And the reason I say that is because you do have to have that balance. And what I often say to people is that I'm not just running against Liz Cheney, I am running four Wyoming. I am a lifelong Wyoming height. I'm fourth generation, my great grandfather came to Wyoming on a cattle trail in 1879. I come from a ranch. I have a lot of family members here. I went to Casper college on a livestock judging scholarship in the 1980s, then went to the university of Wyoming and graduated with both my bachelor's and my law degree. I have the credentials and the experience and the knowledge to be ineffective congresswoman. It's just that simple.

NBC Nightly News
Inside Look at World’s First 3D-Printed Rocket
"Now to our series the new space race in our exclusive inside. Look at something that could revolutionize space travel. It's the world's first three d. printed rocket. Here's jacob board. It wants took thousands of american engineers more than a decade to get something into space. Now this company says it's huge three d. printers can make a rocket in two months. Maybe less we have a fourth generation printer if you haven't talked about publicly yet but it's ten times faster printing than this so instead of building a rocket few slides in sixty days. It'll take six days. Not only can the company make the big parts of a rocket like a nosecone but they can also make all the intricate components of the engines to one zero. The first launch plan for twenty twenty. Two relativity rockets is like a lower budget competitor to spacex carrying satellites for nasa the department of defense and a half dozen private companies at about a quarter of competing launch prices. But with one point three billion in funding it doesn't exactly feel low budget clients. I'm assuming are going to pay you enough to somehow make this all work more than enough to justify it. We make twelve million dollars launch from the customers. We signed up. We've signed up more launches than any other company in history before flying. Ellis doesn't just want to make deliveries into orbit though. I want to put a million people in mars. How far out into space do you think a commercial space industry can take it. It's really about the time line. And i think i liked it very much to back when we found founded the new world with christopher columbus. Yes certainly it'll be government. I dislike the new world was and then it'll transform into commercial. Ancient ambitions built on new

Climate Connections
Regenerative Agriculture: Kelsey Scott Is a 125th-Generation Land Steward
"As farmers grapple with climate change many are turning to regenerative agriculture practices these techniques help store carbon in the soil and make the land more resilient to extreme weather. The approach is increasingly popular but not new regenerative. Agriculture is really just a return to how this landscape evolved with the indigenous communities as the stewards prior to fourteen. Ninety two kelsey. Additional scott is with the intertribal agriculture council and owner of dx beef. My favorite thing to do is introduce myself as a fourth generation cow calf producer but a one hundred and twenty-fifth generation land steward of the great plains on a ranch in south dakota dushi. No scott uses regenerative grazing methods. She rotates where her cattle roam so the grass can rest in grow deeper roots and as the animals move. They dropped manure than adds nutrients to the soil. We're really trying to encourage our cattle to impact the land in the way that the bison did as the great plains was evolving. She says her goal is to nurture not just her animals. But the plants wildlife soil and people at the end of my prayer and lakota. We say madaka or yossi which means we're all

Quirks and Quarks
"four generations" Discussed on Quirks and Quarks
"And what my group has discovered is that ddt is reducing our ability to maintain our body temperature in. because we're not burning those calories where storing them as fat essentially these are fascinating findings particularly in the context of an obesity epidemic. We've been more likely to blame on things. Like inactivity bad genes or even tv and video games and obesity is not the only so called lifestyle ailment. We're seeing there are also concerning rates of cardiovascular disease diabetes some cancers and infertility and this gets us to a science you may have heard of before. It's a science. Were just starting to understand. It's called epa genetic inheritance and it might explain just how all this is happening. Dr michael. Skinner is a pioneer in the field of epa genetic inheritance from environmental toxins. He's a professor in the school of biological sciences at washington state university dr skinner. Welcome to our program. Thank you very much. Do we know how many generations the effects of ddt exposure can be passed down through. We've done studies in animals and taking it out. Four generations however it's similar to other species in implants flies worms. It's gotten forward over a hundred generations. Wow how do these effects from the exposure to an environmental toxin like td t actually reached through all those generations. so it's it the only sell that actually can transfer information from one generation to the next is your lines that means your sperm or your eg. So essentially what happens is the epigenetics which i can describe in a minute. Actually shifts are changes in the germline and that gets permanently programmed and so then that gets transferred to the next generation which changes all whole series of traits in phoenix types in disease onset in the offspring. But they're germline also gets reprogram in it gets passed the next generation this keep going for hundreds of generations will. How is that process different from what we hear about genetic inheritance. The genetics is essentially sequence. Is the sequence of nucleotides in the dna and so that actually has a numbers of genes in the genome. and so let's say the human. We have twenty five to thirty thousand genes in our genome and the sequences wear worthy jeans. Sit and so essentially what was been thought for the past hundred and twenty years. Is that the genetics. With dna sequence somehow controlled biology now. We know that that's not accurate. It's a very important part of biology. But what actually controls what genes are on and off how their expressed y different cell types are different. Y different diseases develop is pretty much. The epigenetics. The controls the gene expression itself. Not the sequence. So epigenetics is a separate different type of molecular control from the classic genetic sequence. It's more these chemical or modifications factors around the dna regulate what genes are on and off and it gets inherited ally..

StarTalk Radio
"four generations" Discussed on StarTalk Radio
"With with arnold What allen draft. So the fritz all right so anyway you had a problem with one problem with A terminator he's very well thought through so well thought through through so he goes back in time to kill the the possible parents of of John connor leader of the of the new movement are the resistance but only add to do is prevent his parents meeting each other. I mean you can go back four generations earlier and just put on a different train so they never meet and that entire genetic lineage cover exists right right so this idea that he's got to kill them and it's gonna be all bloody that made it like a violent movie but it could have been on a little more with with less blooding gore but also just the fact that when he comes through he comes out butt naked. Remember that out in this bubble and you remember why had to come through but naked. Because i am flesh off into skeleton because nothing no living tissue. No dentition may go through right. Nothing's ever the time machine. Except of course hair is dead so he would have been totally bald. Come with no eyebrows. Nothing okay. I just thought i'd say that was an inconvenience alabi..

600 WREC
"four generations" Discussed on 600 WREC
"I see about four generations of people keep listening. Toe I heart radio firm or Neil, Sean and all your favorite artists. Find your I heart radio everywhere. There are hundreds of ways to experience I heart radio at home and on the go beyond the iPhone and android up and that I heard radio dot com Here's another way to connect I heart radio. Just ask Google assistant for your favorite radio stations, and I heard radio will be there for you on your Google home, Google many nest hub nest, many android TV and any device that uses your Google assistant. The convenience of playing all your Favorites. Hands free. Just say OK, Google play to get your favorite AM FM stations for my her radio. I heart radio everywhere you want to listen, including in your home and office through your Google home, Google Nest hub many nest, many android TV and any device that is Google assistant powered. Check it out for free now. Hurt radio anywhere You want to listen. I heard Radio Is there 1 45/92 1 80/1 11. I had a heart attack and a cardiac arrest and then a stroke. Your blood pressure numbers could change your life. Lowering your high blood pressure could save you from a heart attack or stroke. If you've stopped your treatment plan, restarted or talk to your doctor about creating one that works better for you Start taking the right steps and manager BP daughter work Now I'm trying to get better. Sure, whatever. Brought to you by the American Heart Association, American Medical Association and the Ad Council. Hi Heart where you Here are the top Steve Miller band songs that you've gummed up. Number three. Take the money and run. Number two rocking me and I know that it's true things keep Number one. The Joker Joker smoker Midnight pure more from the Steve Miller Band and similar artists Now search for Steve Miller Band on I Heart Radio. All your favorite music. All your favorite stations all free I heart radio goes one on one with Kenny Chesney to ask if he actually sings when making his music videos. I have to sing with it because I'm not that good and love sinking, you know, like I can't just Panama on. You know I can't So I sing along with it, but, you know I'll tell you when I get into the groove is singing a song especially when you sing on the road. As long as I have, you can sing it the exact same way almost every single time I do anyway, I don't do a lot of different stuff, you know, But, you know, I don't like do a lot of no..

Coronacast
Australia's Been Caught With Its Pants Down
"Know i've got a new metric now for the covid pandemic yes. Let's hear it. What time of day is the battery on my phone. Run well given that. You're basically turn all dr sworn i feel like it could happen at six o'clock in the morning. There was a little bit later than that yesterday. It was eleven. Am flat anyway. Let's get on with a story. That's all your secret. Sauce is blowing up your fine. Well let's talk about what we do know so far about that. The continuing outbreak melbourne. We we've sort of got about fifteen cases in the questionaire at least is are the numbers that we were hearing yesterday of about. Four generations of the virus from the original source that we know came from the side of the person you hotel quarantine through to the more races that came to light yesterday. There's still lots and lots of people whose tests is still yet to be processed but so far there seems to be a single chain of transmission which is reassuring even if the numbers are pretty big raw. Yeah so if you just look at the pattern here you've got the man called the waller man just like some prehistoric story here but the woman who's who comes from safest area. He caught it in hotel. Quarantine is he in negative and came out positive an adjacent room to somebody who was positive. So that's pretty outrageous and shows you how vulnerable we are and just luke if everybody's feeling relaxed and comfortable but hotel quarantine just look at that. This is what a fault in hotel. Quarantine does it stops state and this is so significant and we still try and pretend hotel. Quarantine is simply fantastic. This is what happens. So then you've got a man. I think was sixty who is actually called case five. Of course on the order of cases he was discovered he in fact is the earliest case in this chain. But there's a gap is a gap between the wall man and the man who is case number five as the first case in this chain.

Environment: NPR
How One California Community Protected Itself From Forest Fires
"In the foothills of california's sierra nevada mountains sits rock haven. It's a small private holding a forest of cedar fir and pine trees and for years. It was a ticking fire time bomb as throughout the west natural fire had been suppressed for a century. We had it rough even six times as much fuel on the ground as the average for california where you could imagine. That's a tele of the stuff that can burn. Jennifer lives in the east bay. She's the fourth generation of her family to use a cabin near shaver lake and is part of the association that collectively owns the land. She and her husband worked hard to convince everyone else. They had to do something about fire risk. We've been talking for members for you know maybe almost twenty years but many of the families were reluctant a century ago. A lumber company cut most of the trees in the area. When the forest came back people loved the trees and wanted to protect them. The idea that it was good to cut crowded trees and set prescribed. Fires was a non-starter we had ruled in our association. With you better tree and you know tweezers take it and blah blah. but by twenty fourteen. There was a new threat during a punishing drought bark. Beetles began killing entire stands of trees making the fire risk. Even worse mu white finally convinced her neighbors to hire a forester julianne stewart. Told them taking action was urgent. So it was really neat process and kind of bringing dot group of people together to realize like we're on the precipice we have an emergency. Our trees are dying. We need to do something. People compromised and made a plan then came the question of money. We'd never would've been able to pay for it all of that. In a timely manner can run up to five thousand dollars an acre to clean up recover and maintain a forest. That would mean about a million dollars for rock

Environment: NPR
How One California Community Protected Itself From Forest Fires
"In the foothills of california's sierra nevada mountains sits rock haven. It's a small private holding a forest of cedar fir and pine trees and for years. It was a ticking fire time bomb as throughout the west natural fire had been suppressed for a century. We had it rough even six times as much fuel on the ground as the average for california where you could imagine. That's a tele of the stuff that can burn. Jennifer lives in the east bay. She's the fourth generation of her family to use a cabin near shaver lake and is part of the association that collectively owns the land. She and her husband worked hard to convince everyone else. They had to do something about fire risk. We've been talking for members for you know maybe almost twenty years but many of the families were reluctant a century ago. A lumber company cut most of the trees in the area. When the forest came back people loved the trees and wanted to protect them. The idea that it was good to cut crowded trees and set prescribed. Fires was a non-starter we had ruled in our association. With you better tree and you know tweezers take it and blah blah. but by twenty fourteen. There was a new threat during a punishing drought bark. Beetles began killing entire stands of trees making the fire risk. Even worse mu white finally convinced her neighbors to hire a forester julianne stewart. Told them taking action was urgent. So it was really neat process and kind of bringing dot group of people together to realize like we're on the precipice we have an emergency. Our trees are dying. We need to do something. People compromised and made a plan then came the question of money. We'd never would've been able to pay for it all of that. In a timely manner can run up to five thousand dollars an acre to clean up recover and maintain a forest. That would mean about a million dollars for rock

The Fighter Pilot Podcast
A Discussion on Leveraging Emerging Technologies
"The last two decades american nato combat aviators have been deploying to combat operations in afghanistan iraq another locations throughout the middle east with a focus on supporting troops on the ground years pointed. The middle east have been focused on missions and environments were american. Airpower is all but uncontested. He sustained appointments can with budget sequestration that began in two thousand thirteen at work for much of the capital stock that the aviation community depends on performance mission sustained deployment cycles of also stressed or pilots entered families. Sequestration was followed by a sustained period of shortfalls implied hours in maintenance capabilities resulting in increased fatalities in us military aviation particularly in the marine corps. This many either leave service entirely or continue serving in the reserves or international gar leading short shortages of experienced pilots on active duty during this time united states has begun to contend with renewed russian aggression in eastern europe in syria as well as a growing threat posed by china as this new era great-power competitions beginning combat aviation is undergoing some significant changes. I an aging fleet of fort generation aircraft is being replaced in fifth generation aircraft generation aircraft combined low observable stealth technology sensor fusion medium-range air-to-air missiles and unparalleled radar detection range into one aircraft giving pilots and unmatched advantage over any aircraft shielded by hostile nation. All these airplanes are exceptional in their capability. They're very expensive to operate acquiring increase maintenance hours in costing more per flight hour than their fourth generation predecessors second military is outsourcing adversary training aircraft also known as red air to private companies. These companies are able to deliver cost efficient solutions to the military for adversary training capabilities. Other aircraft are not adequate to simulate the threat of a russian su fifty seven or chinese j twenty.

The Savage Nation with Michael Savage
Chicago Deli Offers Free Sandwiches If It Goes 30 Days Without Correcting Customer Masks
"Age of covert 19, a decades old Chicago deli issues a challenge to its customers. Manny's cafeteria in Delicatessen has been around since 1942. Now there's an incentive for customers to chew on. Besides the food, the giveaway works that we're trying to go for 30 straight days of not having to ask customers to properly wear their masks or put their man Gone. Dad, Raskin is the fourth generation owner of the legendary spot on the South Loop. He issued the challenge Sunday on Twitter, with the reward being a day of free sandwiches. So far, we have the restarted after two days, But Raskin believes customers who wouldn't mind gobbling up a load of free corned beef on rye or another delicious choice will seal the deal. People come prepared and we can give away those sandwiches

Discover Lafayette
"four generations" Discussed on Discover Lafayette
"You know a we didn't plan on covid or we would be further along cove it sorta. It didn't stop but it definitely Had us in a holding pattern if you will but marketing you know if i was you know talking about spirits in general Anybody can can make spirit. Not everybody can make a great spirit and almost very few can actually go and create a successful brand and haven't yet even though we're successful locally we have to be successful for beyond just the local community. You know to be considered a successful bran we could. Even you know that'll take years to to make that happen. You have an unlimited budget to just go by market space if you will but the good news is we have a great tasting products so marketing is the hardest part. But i don't think you can be successful marketing without a good product and the good thing about it as it doesn't spoil like the crawfish would are absolutely. I mean you don. That's not a small thing. When i consider you know the distillery. We definitely consider that we would not we would not want to be an another Sort of hyper short shelf. Life product crawfish shock shelf shelf-life two days fresh fish as maybe two weeks. You know but this stuff is stable for generations. possibly you know that you're talking about being a fourth generation which is very unusual. Mike to get past second and third generation is very unusual. So where you are is is unique but to see your family continue this. Are you hoping that this will be like a a stronghold hall for them to look out for growing the family business. Yeah that's quite honestly that's why started. You know. i think it's gonna take longer than my sort of working lifetime. Not my lifetime. Hopefully but my working time to to get it. Where needs to be now whether mike is or who wants to take all maybe some of our our people wanna take it on..

Discover Lafayette
"four generations" Discussed on Discover Lafayette
"I don't mean. I don't often take credit for things. But there's there's something that i did in our recipe that's different and I'm pretty sure. It was going to work because i cook a lot. And i know what what tastes. Good if that makes sense and i had a hunch it was just a hunch and we tried it and and it's in the ball you know it turned out to be because there's other people that have done right spot and their product did not come out the same They're no longer being produced. Because it wasn't very tasty if you will something I think ours is I think you know think we got some. We have legs as say. I was gonna ask. Are there others around the country that are in business. Are you an outlier there. There's only there's there's no significant commercially successful ri- space spirit. In america there are several craft. Distilleries that are making product out of rise. They sorta come and go Tamales irs really know rice whiskey on the planet. And that's kind of a scary proposition for me. Because i'm making so much of it and storing so much of it i keep thinking well you know. There's there's a reason for that. And i just haven't found it yet. But on the other. Hand the the reason i think there is known. As because of the timing of prohibition and and asia they make a lot of spirits out of rice but they don't primarily make whisky. Their japan makes very fine whiskey. But it's primarily on the profile of scotch because just happens to be caught on and everywhere else in the country in the world people made product with what they had available Most of the if you trace the the roots of of american whiskey it comes from scotland. So the scotch came here. They started employing. Their practices to make whisky out of the local grains and the climate was different and the grains were different so they ended up with a different product but it all sort of traces its roots back to scotland. Primary prior to prohibition there were ten thousand distilleries in america people. You know realize. I don't know how many there are today. There's probably three or four thousand active ones. I'm guessing but after prohibition they're only like three or four and and And i've continued. I guess those have But prior to prohibition all of those small distilleries were primarily forms. Just like me. You know the the former took his leftover grain and he distilled it or she the family whatever they distilled it as a way of preserving their wealth. And not there. Well that's about. Were preserving the grain..

Discover Lafayette
"four generations" Discussed on Discover Lafayette
"In the eighties and I was in the oilfield and anybody who knows about that time happen. You can't describe that to a young person you know. Even though they're all feels in big time trouble right now. Lafayette is not in big time trouble at that time in the eighties. When they feel crashed. I would venture to say twenty percent of the population literally left town and it sort of scored me as a young person you know. I never wanted to board any money. You know it's like pull the rug out from under people they've arrive raised to just sort of and so we've You know knock on wood. We've we do for money. I don't mean to say that we don't take take risks but been very Conservative and we are risk of very calculated and we try to grow the business of you know step by step and Decisions if a business person is listening They'd probably say well. Why would he ever go into fresh fish. Which is probably one of the riskiest things you can ever do. And that's just our just naive enough to try. I didn't know any better. And we're still doing it That was extremely difficult to figure out what we got. It done right. I'd like to take a break before we get into. Jt malik Distilling and look back another louisiana entrepreneurial story and this is one mike about the iconic camelia brand beans. Which i know you're familiar with being a rice. Former in twenty nine thousand nine we interviewed dense hayward of camelia beans and he spoke of the lavi has for his family business which began in the us and eighteen fifty when his great great great grandfather sawyer hayward relocated from bermuda to new orleans to expand their trade capacity and they began selling beans in bulk. Let's take a listen as you came up though is A young man. Did you see yourself. Working in the company was sort of expected with this multigenerational family owned company. It was something i wanted definitely was not something that was expected or even pushed and doubt. I mean i've always had the entrepreneur phone in me and Yeah it was something that i always admired in new even as a young child that it was a very special Part of who we are as a family and what an opportunity shoes. I just feel so grateful to be able to do what i do Just because of the the lives that we affect in a positive way well we had a guest on with another not as long a back as camilla beans. But i remember popey be. Oh we're here. With jason sikora multi generation family business. And it's very rare to see knows survive past past the second third. It's really unusual and severe our not to screw it up. It looks.

Discover Lafayette
"four generations" Discussed on Discover Lafayette
"I had a couple of contacts i went. I made a sales trip. If you will tell five or six places that would talk to me and told him what to do with it how to do it found some moisture boers and You know this was nineteen eighty nine Many of their cajun restaurants they ta- well not many none of the cajun restaurants that are there today. Were there at that time. So we sorta grew with the market. We educate the market and Now i have. I've have my back. I guess you will the crucial very popular in houston familiar because all field people brought it with them and so what else. A matter of time. It'll get popular in dallas. So i want to get out in front of it instead of getting behind. Everybody in my timing was a little early. I stuck to it and we We built a good route and that pickup truck became fridge a seafood company and Cba company now is is based in dallas and we service all texas at least all the major metro markets in texas Oklahoma and louisiana was kind of a regional distributor of What i call fine seafood. When i tell people i'm gonna seafood business. State usually thank locally. They think you know crabs and shrimp or something like that but that that's not our market we. Our number one product is salmon. I don't even know that. Yeah all the information i got. I didn't realize that it's the business that yeah that supports everything if you will. That's more upscale That's a different scale. Terrorism that's what allows us to dream a little bit with with the with the spirits and hedge your bets. Yeah so you really have branched out your seven. All this information people listening. They probably laughed here in this that this is news but that makes me love the story. Because you're probably have double triple. Nba's at this point you've had to learn as you've gone zero. They're all Through experience in hordes sweat equity and real equity to. I can imagine absolutely. Yeah so it's a family business though you don't have do you have other. Did you have to go out and get investors. If i may ask or is this still a family owned business. No so far. I've been very Persistent very tenacious. I haven't gone out and gotten investors That's a whole another story if you care to hear it but I came of age..

Discover Lafayette
"four generations" Discussed on Discover Lafayette
"For the next generation Trying to bring a spirit to market you know and build a brand. That's a very daunting proposition. And i want to back up before we get into the main part of our story but you i branched out branch upon on words. They are big back in the eighties. You one of the first to see about aquaculture an option another interview with another Crawfish farmer and from what i understand. You can't just rice farm constantly. The land needs like you can't make it just on that and also somehow crawfish came into this. If you can talk about that was eighties. Well in the eighties. There weren't many kroth crawfish farmers crawfish farming if you will was not considered a an occupation it was there were few people starting to get into it but most people. We're doing it as a hobby or just something on the side. It was an a significant industry like it is today. it was just getting started. It had been built in probably since the sixties but we were certainly one of the first rice forms to sort of convert to a hundred percent crawfish farming. Meaning that we were all in china grow as a crop trying to make a living from it There were five or six of us in in our neighborhood that were doing the same thing. I wasn't the first by any means. But we definitely pioneers in the and you explain why. That's a good fit for a rice farm to look out that work on the land. Well when you grow crop any crop doesn't matter what it is. Most as noah realized that it's it's just not a good practice to try to go back to back to back. You know on the same piece of ground. You'll you'll wear it out or you you know your you're your returns. Start to drop you your crops. Just won't be as good. So a rotation is usually done and in south louisiana the rotation prior to crawfish was soybeans. Have been for probably twenty or thirty years and There's still a lot of that done today. But it's not a perfect fit. We have very wet weather. Not very good for for so are being so there have. You're a and former. You can get rained out and it can be disaster. So that's very little room for error. You gotta be really good at it and some people are. We just found the crawfish to be a much better fit so and and you know it was an experiment really at the time but over the course of the last thirty years. It's obviously just about. Everybody is converted to if you're arise former former. You're you're very rare so when you got into. Crawfish farming isn't just a growing the crawfish. I mean there's distribution and other things so this led your family your business to have to learn that industry also ride for distribution and say her so you know my brother and i were just getting started. We're not twenties crawfish formulas is not what it is today. They weren't as valuable as they are today. So it was difficult with the size and scale that we are were. I should say for us both to make a living from it. So you know. I literally got a pickup truck in. Jove's texas dallas and began route out selling our crawfish to russia. Wants over there. I'm back then there were. I mean literally. I was the first guy to show up with crawfish dallas. Nobody ice and crawfish shen literally naive alive that we just spring and live. I mean i went there..

Discover Lafayette
"four generations" Discussed on Discover Lafayette
"Mike is a rice and crawfish former along with his brother. Mark and he descends from a long line of rice farmers in acadia. Parish and twenty seventeen he launched jt mellberg distillers which makes fine louisiana spirits derived from rice. Mike frisia grew up in branch louisiana on his family. Rice farm founded by his great great uncle. John j. t. malik who started growing providence style rice in eighteen ninety six mike and his brother mark were among the first to add live. Crawfish two flooded. Rice feels katie. What started out as a hobby. On twenty acres of flooded rice fields is now a thriving rice and crawfish farm that has grown to roughly four thousand acres. He is a great story to tell one which not only captures the tenacity of our louisiana farmers but also one of an entrepreneurial spirit which has led him to continue to evolve his forming operations to eke out all he can from the land. Today will celebrate that precious food commodity which our culture revolves around rice. Mike freesheet welcome to discover lafayette. Thank you thank you for having me. What an honor. And i want to say before we get started when i was approached about this interview. I didn't get our connections are two daughters. Mia and taylor went to the academy out in grand kato so we had a connection. That wasn't putting together so it was a great blues. Wonderful enjoy the time there. I haven't seen me quite a while. That have fond memories of all their days in sports together. Absolutely so let's get started years up in acadia parish and your family the rice farmers. So would you talk about that growing up. Assure born raised right in the middle of nowhere in brandt's louisiana. There's a highway that sorta splits are form and half. That's highway thirty five. And as a child i have kind of a crazy memory but my brother and i used to literally lay on the highway and wait for a car. Come by so there's no traffic. You know things are a little bit different than today. But we're yeah. We're about nine miles. North of rain north. I did an interview. am i kids. Another's farm out there. That also helps young man that look into better their life After some bad choices. But it's beautiful land. Is you know once you grow up in the country. You sort of always drawn to it. If you're from louisiana you sorta drawn to the culture of the places and travel a lot We're quite unique. So you're it started with your. What was it great great uncle. Jt mountlake so he was the original rice farmer. John miller My great great uncle. There were seven siblings. Five of them settled in branch The other two. I think we're married and went different directions. But they literally migrated to louisiana from the midwest wrought after the civil war. There was a lot of people that did that. Back down. or sort of lamb promoters that promoted cheap and come down here and land of milk and honey type of thing and they were attracted to the land. Prices are assume smarter standard. It took them two years to get here. They came my covered wagon. So back in those days you travel. Do you stop somewhere. A crop packed it in a wagon. Don as far as you could eighteen ninety six eight.

Discover Lafayette
"four generations" Discussed on Discover Lafayette
"This is john swerved and you're listening to discover lafayette a podcast dedicated to the people and rich culture of lafayette the gateway.

WGN Radio
"four generations" Discussed on WGN Radio
"Fourth generation. Can you believe it? Wow. Jimmy, I I miss you so much. And, um, And of course I miss George. So much also. Um, but I miss just, you know, hanging out with you and being out there, and I think that this summer is gonna be a lot different. Hopefully and but meantime, I want to make sure that everybody knows about how incredibly delicious and what a treat your food is. So, um I am ordering from there. I'm telling you to different days Happy Valentine's Day Happy Fat Tuesday. People have been very All my customers and new customers are been so gracious and so helpful they want they want to help and they want to buy in and experience the food that people write me notes and stuff like that. We've been coming for 35 years. And I still need your food. And the guy comes every every week or every other week. He comes and gets like a court because I saw courts of stuff also to solve your you know by yourself. Just for two people. You don't have to order that much. It's gumbo weather, keep calm and carry out. All right, you two happy Valentine's Day Tuesday a 47. Here's the weather. And by the way, we're gonna talk to Bill Kurtis about something he's got going on. Starting today. First, Steve It's going to be snowing again this weekend with maybe some places getting 2 to 4 inches and maybe 3 to 5 inches in northwest Indiana, 2 to 4 inches likely through the immediate city of Chicago and parts of South Often to Juliet as well High near 15 Today, six tonight for a low back up to 14 tomorrow and seven on Sunday. It's 11 right now, and zero is the windshield After working this so hard to pick up four points in two games in Dallas this week, the Blackhawks gave up two points last night at home against Columbus of the Blue Jackets scored two goals in the final three minutes. And wanted by a score of 6 to 5 loss ends the Blackhawks three game winning streak, They'll try it again against Columbus tomorrow night upon Kennedy is still at about 40 minutes. How bound to O'Hare due to a crash.

Newsradio 1200 WOAI
"four generations" Discussed on Newsradio 1200 WOAI
"About four generations of people keep listening. Toe I heart radio firm or Neil, Sean and all your favorite artists. Heart. Where you here, the top Blondie songs that you filmed up number 31 way or another. I'm gonna find you. I'm gonna take it. Take it. Take it one day. Maybe next year, I'm gonna recheck from nature. Number two part of glass. He's mine. You not fear of losing you is just no good. You seem like a number one. Call me. You're more for Blondie and similar artists now search for Blondie on I Heart radio. All your favorite music. All your favorite stations all breathe. Extremely important for people to, you know, bundle up. It's cold outside. It's a good time to warm up to your radio Use. Radio 1200 W away. I Come on. Why they have.

How I Built This
A Conversation With Loren And Lisa Poncia Of Stemple Creek Ranch
"Today my conversation with lauren. And lisa pawnshop owners of stemple creek ranch stemple creek ranch produces beef pork and lamb on more than a thousand acres in marin county california. It's one of the only carbon neutral livestock ranches in the united states. Lauren is a fourth generation rancher and he and his wife lisa transformed stemple creek into an organic regenerative farm. Fifteen years ago today they sell their grass fed meat to restaurants and grocery stores across the bay area and also directly to consumers across the us. So my first question to lauren was how do you make such a carbon intensive products like meat carbon-neutral guy what we do is what we call a dance with mother nature so basically replicating weather nature and what she did across the great plains hundreds of years ago with massive herds of bison crossing the great plains they were regenerating the soil just naturally so they eat the grass in front of them stomp on the grass below and poop on the graph behind him that generated the soil and grew more perennial plants and really. It's a photosynthesis business so if we have a living plant in the ground that's capturing sunlight it's growing with photosynthesis pulling co two out of the atmosphere. Storing it in the soil. So are you able to actually measure it. We think of cows for example as creating methane and that contributes to carbon pollution. But are you able to actually measure how you're you're able to sequester. Carbon offset the methane that they release. We have some really good data. This is the fun part about our businesses. A lot of times people say oh. This is what we're doing but we actually have hard data. We started this. Marin carbon project about seven years ago and we did a study about applying compost and how the compost effects sequestering carbon or not sequestering carbon in our soil's applied with all of our other management practices like fencing off the right perry in areas planting trees diversity in our pastures and basically what the data seven years later shows. We're sequestering about a thousand pounds of carbon per acre per year. Managing it the way we are even our control. Plots are other management practices. Besides applying compost are really helping with sequestering carbon and having healthy soils well from what i understand mean one of the things that releases carbon into the atmosphere. When soil is churned. Right and you aerate it. So what do you do to avoid doing that. We have a pretty intense rotational grazing system or pulse grazing. We call it where we rotate the cattle round in large herds and we try and replicate mother nature. We're not perfect at it but we dry and it just promotes printing plants. That are going to make more more photosynthesis which is going to question. Moore carbons lauren. We featured you on our segment. We did on the show a couple years ago called how you built that which unfortunately to put on pause this year because of other things. We're doing And i had a chance to busy ranch As you know and it was amazing to see some of the things that that just blew me away For example you plant chicory plants. Because i guess they have deep roots and they aerate the soil. And you've got worm farm. So the worms like dig into the soil things like that. Can you explain that. So basically a lot of people would say what's your biggest limiting nutrient and california dry land pasture and many people would say. Oh it's water because we're dry half the year but that's not really truly are limiting factor our biggest limiting factors air in the soil because without aaron the soil. It's like a human with a three hundred pound weight on our chest so there's three ways to get air. In the soil one is with the plow. And when you're plowing with a tractor you're actually releasing carbon into the atmosphere. The other one is with routes routes get down into the soil and break up the soil. And when they die they leave air in the soil and the worms. So we're trying to embrace not the plow and embrace the worms and roots and so there's diversity in the pastors real important and chicory has deep tap root plantation has deep tap root. There's some other really awesome natural plants that have deep tap roots. That actually help break up the soil. And they're printing they live for you know five ten years and they're super nutritious. That kendall loved them and she loved them and they make great coffee. I exactly lauren. You're a fourth generation california rancher. And i know that as a kid you watched your parents struggle to make ends meet while they were raising cattle that they would sell to. You know larger cattle ranches. And you even vowed never to go into the family business. You are in the veterinary pharmaceuticals for a while. But you did come back. And you and lisa decided to transform the family farm into an organic grass-fed farm. How did you come to that decision. And why I think that really comes down to guys. You have to be dissatisfied with their current results to create change and try something different. I'm super passionate about raising high quality food and we had to figure out a way that we can do this and actually make money and not struggle so. We've figured very quickly the way to do that was to be the price maker instead of the price taker and having unique product do what's right for the environment at the same time we do. What's right for the environment where we're making money on it. We've totally flipped the whole and instead of just being a price taker and doing what everybody else does. We've gone out and changed our market and created their own brand and basically dictate to the market. What we need to be able to make a

Adventures with Grammy
"four generations" Discussed on Adventures with Grammy
"They would all come to her and say what should we do about this. What's the right way to handle that. Then she said it was time for me to go. I wanted to let these people grow in their responsibilities and so she said it was time to retire and then as she was retiring she was setting. I want to leave a legacy here. School meant so much to four generations of my family. Didn't want it to come on. Come apart and so. She started investigating. What are the critical things that the school faces challenges. Some of the parks that they were taking the kids to play in and gone on to do other things and they were renting out the for different facilities for a wedding reception or whatever they didn't want these little kids playing in the creek so they were constantly trying to find new places where the kids could go had a staffing problem. They had a financial problem. They had a physical facility problem And she said what we needed to do was just look at this as the critical things that this school to do to survive and thrive in. Continue to serve young preschoolers. And so she's been the person that's been kind of driving force to say. How do we make this into something. That will always be here. And she's committed this next stage of her life after having been a teacher there to now being the person who drives the sustainability of it. It's just great great story and the look in her eye when she's telling this story about her kids her grandkids and great grandkids was just something to behold and because the school requires the parent to monitor the child. They have to write something up so she now has Three generations of write ups of one of their kids that was in the school and she said when you go back to those and compare your kid your grandkid..

Newsradio 700 WLW
"four generations" Discussed on Newsradio 700 WLW
"See about four generations of people keep listening. Toe I heart radio firm or Neil, Sean and all your favorite artists. The free I. Heart radio APP is number one for music, radio and podcasts, All in one discover a new podcast from our library of over 350,000 titles. Here's an I. Heart Radio Podcast preview on Holly Thursday, February 2nd 1922 Shortly after 7 A.m.. Unusually cold morning in Los Angeles, California, But the town will heat up soon enough because the body is about to be found over the Alvarado court apartments home to some of the biggest names in Hollywood. You've probably seen some of them in the moving pictures. There's someone else of this in this exclusive Hamlet Guy and 404 B. He's a director with several Hollywood hits under his belt. Normally, he would be waiting for his valet to unlock the front door and draw his bath while his driver fired of the custom build McFarlane to deliver him to the studio. But not today. Today, everything is going to be different at Alvarado Cord because that director is bleeding out on his very expensive carpet. Stone cold Dead. On February 1st 1920 to 1 of Hollywood's most successful directors was found dead in his living room. A bullet in his back. His name was William Desmond Taylor on Within hours, news of his murder spread throughout Hollywood. Your chance to win $1000 text the nationwide keyword fun. 202 100. You'll get a confirmation, text and info, standard data and message rates apply in this nationwide contest. That's fun to 202 $100,000. I met you. I'll break 1000 more baby before I am through E wannabe off for the baby. Yours and yours. I'm gonna take on a bad phone booth. Every voice counts. Let's get at it. One thing I want to share with you is someone thought it was a joke to put me on Democratic list to raise money. Not giving.

Latino USA
President Biden Has Promises To Keep
"Back in november latina and latino voters helped deliver the presidency to joe biden in key swing states like georgia and especially arizona. Let the next. Voters helped turn former red states. Blue and during the campaign biden made a long list of commitments to our communities on day. One i'm sending to the united states. Congress a immigration bill. We're gonna find those kids. We're going to unite them with their parents. The opening school safely will be a national priority for the biden harris administration. Reverse trump's rollbacks of one hunter public health and environmental rules biden has said he'll invest in education and healthcare for letting us he said he'll stop border wall construction and that he'll work with congress to create a path to citizenship for undocumented people but in also said he'll crackdown pollution in communities of color and reduce incarceration so in the lead up to the inauguration that usa reached out to young denness and latinos around the country to your what promises they're hoping biden will keep and what they want biden to do that he hasn't committed to yet plus we're going to speak with these young people about how the changes they wanna see would actually impact their own lives. We're going to start this very non. Comprehensive survey by speaking with virginia. Blasio's virginia's a ninth generation daytona who up near a city on the texas mexico border were in the south texas. Brush country so a lot of trees and prickly pear cactus virginia is also an environmental science and policy consultant that usa producer. Scarsi spoke with virginia. And she's going to pick up the story from here. Virginia lives in a rural area on a fourth generation. Cattle ranch that been her family of for close to one hundred and twenty years. We inherited it from my great uncle. Who was a grand champion calf roper. During the great depression he traveled the radio circuit with his brother. You know they were fortunate enough to be born into families that had a lot of land and so they were able to run cattle and support their families. That way and my dad was enamored with that history of cowboy culture. He virginia and her brother on the land. She remembers running around as a little kid watching her. Dad moved these huge cows from field to field and she thinks growing up this way set the foundation for a love of nature that eventually led her to go to grad school to study climate change. And that's where she was. When in two thousand eleven he had still all the cattle on the ranch because the drought guy particularly bad and There was a national study. That came out shortly after that drought showing bet Climate change me the heat waves longer and temperatures more intense that year and so we know that climate change has already been impacting us. There had always been droughts in south texas though. Virginia says they got worse and worse over time. It meant the grass wouldn't grow. Which meant virginia's dad had to start buying a lot of food to keep his cattle alive so much so that he wasn't making money off his ranch anymore. You know it's kind of funny. Because i was always kinda hassling. My dad was like dad counts. Produce methane and methane is really bad for the climate but when it came to the point where he had to sell them because he realized a drought was so bad. It put things into a different perspective for me. Because i realized that he really didn't have a choice. I realized that we had kind of gotten into this plane. With climate change where it wasn't theoretical. It wasn't something far off in the future that could happen. It was it was happening now

KNBR The Sports Leader
"four generations" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader
"Is a member of the fourth generation of his family committed to preserving the highest standards and the finest quality of jewelry in America from San Francisco and Palo Alto to Greensboro, North Carolina. You've told us so you prefer high standards and fine quality. You have kept true craftsmanship. America from our family to yours. Thank you. Thank you. From five generations, Shreve and company won 50 post off Human square and in Palo Alto, perfectly situated in the Stanford shopping Center, you guys my name is Sue Stevens. And I'm the creator and founder of Knox Material, the most powerful natural male enhancement pill on the planet. Years ago, I noticed my own husband struggling in the bedroom, and I found that over 88% of men suffered with their performance at one time or another many guys they're just too embarrassed to admit this problem and ignore it. I was personally Motivated and determined to find a male performance solution for my husband. And then everywhere. After years of research we created knocks a trill truly the most potent male enhancement formula available today knocks a trail goes to work fast and will satisfy your partner beyond her wildest dreams. We guarantee it. In fact, my husband swears we've created by Agra on steroids, and I know it will work for you. That's why I want you to call now and take advantage of our special free bottle offer. Call right now and get your free supply call 806 year old 57923 That's 860. 57923. It's like Viagra on steroids. Improve your sex life with your free supply. Call 806 057923. That's 1 806 057923. If you're feeling anxious, stressed or lonely in these difficult covert times, call Cal hope at 1833317 hope to talk to someone who can help. That's 18333174673 hope will persevere. Whether you're a pro on the job site or managing properties clean.

Lew Later
Qualcomm Putting Some Apple in Snapdragon!?
"Will you know that. Apple's been making a lot of progress with the silicon products. Put out and most. Recently people were talking about the m. One the mobile chip for laptops. And it'll probably make its way into desktop computers. They're pro stuff eventually some version of it they'll throw in exxon it number in there whatever. It is a bunch more course. So that's been the most recent thing that people have been talking about is kind of the performance. They've been able to achieve for a company that's so fresh to that market. But they're not really that fresh because they've been doing big things in the mobile processor department for a really long time with a series lineup culminating in the most recent version world away in a fourteen. Yes iphone twelve. Twelve pro Ipad air right has a version of that doesn't it. They put a different name on it. When it goes in the ipad honestly can't remember. Did they put an x. Or something huts in the okay. It appears to fourth generation ipad. Air as well okay. So anyways look. They're doing big things to the point. Where if you check the benchmarks. If you're one of these people apple just been crushing it for a really long time now. This doesn't always equate to being the fastest device. Interact with it. It really depends on the use case. Scenario and benchmarks are benchmarks. Take it for what it is but it does mean something. It means that that apple is doing big things in that department with the those engineers that work there and It's been a differentiating characteristic for them is not just the stuff has been an amazing performance perspective but also that they are so very integrated you know from the design and then the software and the The whole picture so it has kind of left people on the android side. Maybe a feeling a little little lacking now the necessarily me. Because typically. If i'm on the flagship snapdragon like not bumping into those performance barriers in most cases. But you know every company wants to have these bragging rights will listen to this. What took place today. Qualcomm hired a company. Called new via a nubia is a company which was a branch out of numb from a number of employees responsible for having worked on chips at apple. Okay these dudes new. They go out of their way. Like you know we can. We can do some stuff now if i. They were focused mostly on server side of things. They were not necessarily focused on mobile but obviously qualcomm saw something in their potentially whatever intellectual property exists inside of there while i hope not just their minds but also somewhere inside of their records and their designs or appease their you know whatever it is that they're working on qualcomm obviously thinks if they're gonna by the way they they spent one point four billion dollars qualcomm thinks they're going to extract some of that and potentially put it into their products via the snapdragon lineup. So this into this for a second okay. New was founded in two thousand nineteen and it was a a trio that were involved in the most important chipset companies from intel amd the api arm and broadcom and they worked at apple where they played a part in designing the high performance a series chips for iphones and ipads. That's the key line right there. And we've been talking about this in the other direction with apple and tesla apple out there grabbing some tests engineers tesla executives. It's like what do you know about it. Yeah it's a shakedown piece falling out there. That's how it works. You know they flip them upside down like the change comes out of the pockets. Yeah in cartoonish way. And that's how that's all they have to do and then they just send them on their way to go work. We got the change out. Your pocket. of course doesn't work like that. No i mean this stuff happens. How corporate world all right. That's how it goes so even though these guys aren't necessarily working a mobile chips right now qualcomm believes. There's something in there that there's a chance to do something. Big

KGO 810
"four generations" Discussed on KGO 810
"On we're anticipating on bank insurance and tax fraud he may face in New York State Rico charge from the attorney general, the U. S. Southern district could take the case They brought against Michael Cohen and prosecute in from individual one who directed the criminal acts of Michael Cohen, Donald Trump, and we will have a piece up very soon. That D. C report. Maybe tomorrow maybe the next day about a major new development in a money laundering case, which is really been Donald's principal source of business, criminal money laundering for Russians, and there's been a significant development we found in the case We've been paid. Intention to in the public record that goes to this. It's not conclusive, but it indicates that things are moving forward. One thing about Donald is his whole life. Who are the people most closely associated with him that I've document. They are. Gangsters. Gangsters. Mob hitman in Atlantic City known as the young executioners, Irish Gangsters, Russian Gangsters, Kozak Gangsters. He's surrounded himself with criminals because he's in Donald Trump is the third generation head of a four generation white collar crime family. They don't break your legs. Break your finances. Well, can we expect help from the Republicans? If in fact they want to distance themselves from Trump and these because part of me says, Like, you know, the attorney General Garland is going to be sitting there thinking. It's a fun going to ring and it's gonna be Joe Biden going. You know what I mean? Is buying you gonna pull it trump and say, you know, we should let the states deal with this right now, because we haven't nothing. Joe Biden is going to interfere in the operation of the Justice Department. One of the things that it's not a requirement, but the Donald Trump changes. The attorney general's operate as the lawyer for the people, and they operate independently, and presidents don't tell them what to do. And we've seen presidents furious and frustrated because of that. That's why you try to pick somebody who you trust. It's why Jack Kennedy put his brother Robert and his attorney, general, Um Uh And so I don't. I think Biden will go in the high road in that area and leave it be. And I think that local U. S attorneys will decide which cases they're going to bring without this thing. This protection racket interference we saw from the Trump Administration. Um one of them's gonna happen. Donald Trump, by the way is imagine, Chip that you are one of the people on trial for, say, murder or seditious conspiracy in especially seditious conspiracy in the, uh Attempt at the Capitol. Wouldn't you want to call Donald Trump is a witness for the defense. Even if you're a hostile witness to try and mitigate your damage in front of the eyes of the jury. Well, Pence resign and I will he will he resign Intense partner, do you think No, I think at this point any possibility that which we've discussed on your show in the past, uh he's blown that by attacking pence and it is a sin. Donald is a man who, if he, if, if the save his own skin, it was necessary to throw even CA under the bus. He would do that, Donald. Donald has you and I are not people were objects. There is no connection to other human beings. You know, Donald can't tell a joke. He has no ability. Anybody who's a parent, you know, knows. You have to learn to laugh at yourself and Donald can't do that. I've never seen him. I've never heard him say one self deprecating thing in this whole period. David is I? Yeah, the next time we talk it, maybe maybe a different world We're looking at here. I don't know. I I still have a hard time fathoming how this all happened in four years, But I'm sure the seeds have been in the earth for a long time before. That was one last thing chip for go. Donald is not the disease. Donald is the symptom of the disease to mar that you need to address and part of that is we cannot ignore the economic carnage to the bottom 90% of Americans. That's something I've been writing about for years and neither party Takes an interest in it and does much about it. They certainly they may talk, but you know things get worse and worse or is my brother of the manual laborer said. You know what the Democrats done for me but give in to the Republicans. Well, I'll tell you this one of the things about DC report that order that I love is how how Well, you explain this stuff in a matter that is efficient, efficiently written and yet explosive enough to get a person. Really understand the issues at hand. So that's good stuff and congrats. We'll talk to you again soon. Be safe has always David by thank you So much for your time. David Cay Johnston again Pulitzer Prize winning journalist D C report dot org's I mean that they do really right. Well, they say, and 500 words what some people need 1500 to do. So what that part? I really appreciate the brevity. I rest the show. It's just you and me talking about this 80 88 10. You can text me a 415 80 88 10 or you can always email me a cipa kgo radio dot com. T Geo's Mark Thompson takes criticism seriously Call my show Hate on May I love it, And they do. I think Mark is the most dangerous person in the world. But no one is better it ripping Mark Thompson that Mark Thompson mark too many likes short of and kind does years beginning to bleed marks both in and James Thompson family again distinguishing themselves in so many ways. Good. If you're critical of Mark's being critical, go listen to Shawn. Vanity or something over Thompson 10 to noon. I k g 08 10 specific private money is a local company on downtown Nevado. They manage funds that are excellent alternative to the market. I've been in the market since I was 20 years old. So I know of what I speak on. I loved mortgage investing. I tried it a couple times when I was younger, but didn't really hit me until I am. I was in my fifties and I realized Oh, you know what? This really makes sense, especially in California Pacific Private money clients right now are getting over 8%.

Voice in Canada
Echo Device Low Power Mode
"Today i want to tell you about a feature that you may or may not know about and this goes on in the background with your echo devices and this is called the echo device. Low power mode. So where's do well. It reduces the amount of energy that your echo device is using and this like. I say it happens mostly in the background now. This only works some of the newest devices so specifically if you have one of the echo dot echo dot with clock latest generation fourth generation the spherical devices. It works if you have the echo fourth-generation bigger spherical device that works. And if you have the echo show ten it works other devices. Unfortunately a don't don't apply for this feature but basically what happens is this gets activated. The low power mode gets activated automatically When you are not interacting with your device so for example if your device is just idle siblings idly sitting. I li sitting there. And you're not interacting with it and you have one of these devices then it will go into low power mode and then that low power gets turned off as you start to interact with it now. There are a couple of catches. Your device does not go into low power mode if any of these apply to you so number one if there is a spotify account linked to your amazon account if there is an active notification going on and you would know that because it'd be a pulsing yellow light if your device is connected to an external speaker or if your device is directly connected to a smart home device or lexi gadget through zubi wi fi or bluetooth so unfortunate. That is actually quite a few circumstances. Where it doesn't get activated but nevertheless I think this is great. That amazon thinking about this in terms of you know. Can you reduce the power consumption of your devices and the answer is yes long as you meet certain requirements so they go a little bit information about what's going on behind the scenes again. This isn't something that you necessarily turn on or off. It just happens if it can. And anyway i think it's great.

QUEERY with Cameron Esposito
Best of 2020
"Lucky for me. Growing up in a family where i was. I'm the fourth generation. Also cillian yorkers luckily in new york. Everyone uses her hands. I mean just as such a part of who we are new yorkers. My mother actually went to school. You know she came out with a lot of experience. Is you know in the hearing community and You know my mother often would go to studio fifty four new york actually. She is big dancer. Used to go there all the time and is very very very good within reacting with hearing people so when we were kids of course my mom was very much sort of that bridge right. She kind of taught us how to you know work interact with young people. My my mom always really pushed on her to play on hearing leagues to play sports. And you know when of course we would always asked like. Why are we playing here kids. She's they at some point. You have to learn how to interact with them and now looking back that experience. I'm incredibly grateful for that. Gave me right. I never really felt a big difference between hearing people enough people. I really more or less felt that hearing people just spoken to language you know. They were kind of a foreigner arms kind of foreigner all of our raw close friends in the neighborhood role hearing so it really wasn't interesting experience. Certainly and that of course contributed to my experience on america's top model and now with my career in the industry ninety percent of the people that i work with live in the hearing world. So you know for the first twenty five years of my life. Things are very different but of course really impacted that. I'm so thankful you know. But i definitely wasn't sheltered by any means we'll sports that makes so much sense is a great idea especially because baseball has signs. What what sports did you play. Yeah absolutely absolutely To be honest with you. I played just about everything i could. You know baseball. There's actually a really interesting history. You know dating back to sign for strike were to ball or to all the different gestures and those were actually created years ago by deaf. Baseball players name was dummy hoy and he was the first baseball player who ever made it professional in the eighteen hundreds and when he got into the police he communicate with people and so they developed a essentially a system of hand signs or hand signals and the rest is history. Now we see that you know those hand signals have made it to all sorts of other sports how we communicate across fields and yet because of percent while i was i was reading the gala. That is where the football Huddle originated because folks were signing and needed for anybody listening that want anybody to be able to signing. And they didn't want people to see the signs right yet against playing against another football team. Obviously if you're communicating sign language across the football field you can see you know across the football field. You can see exactly what the other team is planning for. So that's where the huddle was invented. And you know i. I don't know why hearing people thought it was great idea but you know i guess they really love it now. You see it on. Tv every sunday right. I mean i get. I mean maybe it also just. Is that thing of you know feeling protective in lake. You're part of a group which again would be mood. Which makes so much sense. Why your mom would suggest that like it's it makes perfect sense and i also curious now that i'm like realizing 'cause i just had the we're listening. D do you interact with podcast you personally as a human to be honest with you. It's kind of another thing. So podcasts are typically just done through spoken english in with and with a lot of them. Dan provide transcripts which pretty extensive and occasionally. I'm happy to to pull it up and give it a read through but it's not the same experience as it would be. You know to listening to a conversation you know if there were podcast with you know say sign interpreting or something that i could essentially listen to you through my eyes. I think it'd be a lot more comfortable and i. I might even be a fan. But i think it anyway but you know honest with you. I don't have any favorite podcast. Really come to mind. That makes perfect sense. I mean i will say. I do not think it is a an art that is accessible like. I just don't think that it's something that folks are focused on making it accessible for for hurry appearing folks and i won't even say as a comic you know A lot of times. When i've provided in asl interpreter. Which i've done many times. It usually comes per request. Which again is something that like. I could continue to work on But it is it is the rise is on the deaf. Hard of hearing person to send me some random tweet or to get in touch through my management overbooking. The show and that has happened many times. But like one fucking bummer to have to constantly work to be accommodated right right. Definitely definitely you know. It's it's always a matter of reaching out but it's just so become part of a part of what it is you know. We oftentimes which wish accessibility just come to us. Yeah you know it's funny. I actually for Trump's large meetings and for his large rallies you know he he doesn't provide interpreters and so a group actually sued the white house and finally they are putting access and transcripts up live while lawsuit and that makes much sense to that that that it would be important. I mean to read what he's saying that specifically that person versus being able to see what he's saying comprehend what he's saying in a visual format like that is so it is so impactful. His presence is so impactful in a negative way. But it's it's part of stuff fidelity. You're absolutely right. you're absolutely right. Yeah i mean honestly he downplayed the whole thing right and continued to deprive millions and millions of americans. You know of their access to participate in the democratic system and to vote. I mean it's just while do you think there is there any is there anybody. Is there any art form were. Who's doing a good job with this. Is there anybody doing a good job. Making things accessible for you like just in general. Yeah i mean now that. I guess now that you're saying time like this feels like it would always be on you. You know like i just. I can't think of something. And i thought maybe you had that like magic. You're like this team. Yeah i mean it is definitely a constant. It's constantly constantly a lack of access But yeah. I can't think of anyone specifically while i mean i i will pursue for my partner is. She has an autoimmune disease that affects her energy level and affects her ability to get around show also and she can use some if she's walking sticks like as a as an aide but the particular ones that she uses their hiking sticks so i think it can look like i think it can look like stuff's going on right in the she also visit visually. She's one of those people who doesn't necessarily look like she's dealing with right and It's been really. I opening traveling with her that so much. A part of general community of disability is really just an invisible. Definitely