35 Burst results for "Garvey"

Northeast digs out from winter storm, faces power outages

AP News Radio

00:39 sec | 7 months ago

Northeast digs out from winter storm, faces power outages

"Parts of New York and New England are digging out of a northeaster. Michael garvey of Pittsfield, Massachusetts, says he and a snow blower have become a familiar sight. This is the third time probably within 24 hours I've used my snowblower with all this snow. The snowstorm that began Monday night in lasted through Tuesday dumped as much as three feet of snow in some areas, peterborough, Massachusetts got 35 inches, there were tens of thousands of power outages in the region, and trekking site power outage dot U.S. says some 67,000 homes and businesses were still without electricity by Wednesday evening. I'm Donna water

Wednesday Evening Third Time Tuesday Monday Night 35 Inches Three Feet New England 24 Hours New York Michael Garvey Pittsfield, Massachusetts Tens Of Thousands Of Power Out Donna Peterborough, Massachusetts 67,000 Homes U.S.
"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:40 min | 7 months ago

"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Edition of the Bloomberg surveillance podcast, a conversation with park garvey had a global debt ING. I think you've got to look at the shape of the curve Tom to understand that this is a really unusual set of circumstances. We haven't seen the version that we're seeing now. In the past four or 5 decades. And that tells me that the back end of the curve is pricing in a huge degree of uncertainty. I'm not convinced it's entirely the rate cut narrative. I think there's a bit of geopolitics out there. I think there's the reality that the Central Bank is holding lots of bonds out there. And I think there's anchoring. I have this conversation with traders all the time. They say, oh, we think the tens are going to go back to 2%. And I would say, why? And they say, well, that's because that's where it was. We're not going back to where we were. This is brilliant, and there's a lot to unpack there and we don't have the time to do the unpacking today. We'll do our fabozzi later. The bottom line is we are to force standard deviation move off the great moderation. Going back to 1985. And that's part of that yield curve spread. And if I look at two years compared to 30 years, as you say, truly we're in new territory, does it signal depressed growth or a duration of subpar economic growth? I doubt that very much. And here's why if you look at where neutrality is. I would suggest neutrality is around 3%. Why 3%, 3% is two, two and a half percent inflation. A half, 1% real yield. Hear the

park garvey Tom Central Bank
"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:39 min | 7 months ago

"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Surveillance podcast, a conversation with park garvey had a global debt ING. I think you've got to look at the shape of the curve Tom to understand that this is a really unusual set of circumstances. We haven't seen the degree of inversion that we're seeing now. In the past four or 5 decades. And that tells me that the back end of the curve is pricing in a huge degree of uncertainty. I'm not convinced it's entirely the rate cut narrative. I think there's a bit of geopolitics out there. I think there's the reality that the Central Bank is holding lots of bonds out there. And I think there's anchoring. I have this conversation with traders all the time. They say, oh, we think the tens are going to go back to 2%. And I would say, why? And they say, well, that's because that's where it was. We're not going back to where we were I meant this is brilliant, and there's a lot to unpack there and we don't have the time to do the unpacking today. We'll do our fabozzi later. The bottom line is we are at a four standard deviation move off the great moderation. Going back to 1985. And that's part of that yield curve spread. And if I look at two years compared to 30 years, as you say, surely we're in new territory, does it signal depressed growth or a duration of subpar economic growth? I doubt that very much. And here's why if you look at where neutrality is. I would suggest neutrality is around 3%. Why 3%, 3% is two, two and a half percent inflation, a half, 1% real yield. Here the

park garvey Tom Central Bank
"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

06:39 min | 7 months ago

"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"I think the way the fed is pursuing policy here is it's kind of smart. I know the fed gets a hard rap because of missing the early rate hikes with 25s from here is quite smart. They got to keep on 25s and level off and at a certain point in time this degree of tightening has got to hurt you. If you are part of global Wall Street, it is my requirement for the day. You must listen to our entire part garvey interview with ING financial markets, find it out on all the social that we do. I really can't say enough about the sophistication of the gentleman from Dublin with ING again over where we are and certainly his modeling of a new regime of inflation speaks true to the short term data, Lisa abramo it's the ten year up 7 beeps, the 30 year bond up 7 beats, we're seeing huge moves in the bond market. 6 months ago when people saw these kinds of levels, they said, bye. And that's why in November, we saw these levels. And then we saw yields come down. This is the key question for today. Are we watching the persistency of inflation that suggests a new regime that means that 4% for a benchmark bond in the United States is actually fair value for a longer period of time. To put things into perspective, I'm going to do that right now, Priya misra and Lisa bramlet are far far too young to remember when bob Redford stood outside the Plaza hotel in the way we were in with Barbra Streisand. They said memories, I guess what? Productivity dynamics are back to 1974. Someone who has been expert it measuring this over to our financial bond market is Priya mizra of TD securities and she joins us this morning. We're looking at the history of this and we're also looking at your brilliant call and inversion, although some have been brave recently and said, look, higher yields, I get a coupon along the way. I want to be brave here in February and March of 2023. Did the bravery the courage did it slip away this morning? Thanks for having me on. So no, I think you have to be patient. It's hard to pick the absolute top in yield. You're talking about having confidence. I don't have a ton of confidence in the front end because we know inflation is sticky. We know all services ex shelters driven by wages. It's a very tight labor market and companies are holding labor. So it's possible that inflation remains persistently high through the year and the fed, we think in 25 basis point instruments may have to keep hiking. Maybe 5 75, maybe 6%. So that very front end of the yield curve I think is very driven by data in the near term. The long end, that's your view that's your neutral rate view. And I think the data is strong on the consumer and the labor market, not because policy is restrictive. We are in restrictive territory. It's because the lags have not worked through. I mean, the fed fund rate cost 4% only in December. You have to give the economy more than two months for it to kill over. And I think that's why the long end is selling off. People expect that interest rates don't matter. I think interest rates matter. They just take a while to show up in terms of business investment decisions or spending decisions. Free, I want to go to the it takes a while. If I've got a 7 standard deviation move from very low 30 year yields out to very high 30 year yields stunningly out above the great moderation and I go back to whatever the new center tendency is, how long does that take? Is this a matter of 6 months or is it a matter of 6 years to get back to normal? So economic theory suggests 12 to 18 months from Montreal policy to work through. I mean, you could argue maybe it's a little bit shorter, maybe it's 12 months, 9 months. I will say something that may be making the lags longer this time. Is that the consumer entered the hiking cycle with a large amount of accumulated savings. Now, those savings are running off. We're tracking by the end of this year. We're thinking in the third quarter those savings are largely gone. That's when the consumer has to start to reckon with higher interest rates, tighter financial conditions, maybe a job market that's not as strong. I mean, they may not be a lot of firing, but job openings start to come off. So I think it's more later this year that we think consumer spending slows down the job market starts to weaken. So I don't think you're waiting 6 years. But we are watching those savings numbers. And the savings continue to come off. But today, if I have a job and I'm making 5% wage growth, wage gains and I've got savings, I'm spending. I think we're just saying be careful in extrapolating that because those savings will run out by the end of the year. How much conviction do you have Priya to load the boat on tenure to load the load the boat on 30 year treasuries? So I have much more conviction on the ten year and the 30th than I do on the front end. I don't know about loading the boat. I used the word I used, I guess, some few weeks ago when I started to lag in, I would like in some more because I think you're at we entered some around three 80. We went to some more longs at 4%. I think the fed's telling you that they have to engineer a hard landing. They're not going to say it's because it's very hard politically to get that through. But how do you get inflation down without a rise in the unemployment rate? So the fed will have to engineer rise in the unemployment rate, then these 4% ends will look really cheap, but it's for the peak of four ten. Now maybe it goes to four 25. So I think you want to have some dry powder to keep adding to it. But I think these levels in a long-term sense, I don't think our star is higher or the neutral rate should be much higher. I think the fed is committed to 2% inflation and we've seen productivity. I don't think the economy can handle very high real rates in the long run. Priya, this is such an important point, and it goes against what poorer garvey was saying where he said, listen, people think we're going back to the same kind of regime we were in prior. You're saying we are going to go back to that regime. What gives you confidence other than just the fed is committed to a 2% inflation regime, especially if a 2% inflation regime is different from the prior ten years, which it wasn't a 2% inflation regime as Tom mentioned. It was a sub 2% inflation rate. Right. So I think there are some structural factors that might be moving inflation a little higher. So if we were sub 2%, maybe the next ten years will be a 2% number. But I think inflation does if the fed thinks they want to get to two, they're going to keep policy restrictive for a while. They're going to keep that

fed Lisa abramo ING Priya misra Lisa bramlet bob Redford Priya mizra garvey TD securities Barbra Streisand Plaza hotel Dublin United States Priya Montreal Tom
"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:42 min | 7 months ago

"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"You have to be disciplined. You have to respect market price action. We started this year looking at a market that was driven by better than expected economic data. We are cautious of the view that the market is perhaps pricing in a little too much for the fed ultimately. We're going to be getting back to nominal rates of one and a half, 2% but in the meantime, you may go significantly higher. We still have more price increases to go. But there is an end in sight to this process. This is not the spiraling inflation that we saw in the 70s. This is Bloomberg surveillance with Tom Keene, Jonathan farrow, and Lisa Abramovich. Good morning, everyone, Jonathan Farrah, Lisa Brahman, time keen on radio on television and absolutely historic day and economics finance and investment John at 4% a ten year yield at 4%, a 30 year yield are worlds have changed. For a brief moment in time, the whole curve north of 4% and the two year time getting closer to 5 at four 90. This really builds on what we saw yesterday yields higher equities down off the back of what looks like sticky inflation, the prices paid component of the ISM data. That looks sticky. And then added into that, you've got Eurozone core CPI, all time high. And it is about inflation, and we welcome all of you here and I can't emphasize enough as we heard from port garvey and that brilliant interview earlier, we've never seen this on the Bloomberg screen, and to me, John, the singular point here is the standard deviation move, the oscillation, the 30 year bond from the quiescence. It seems weeks ago months ago to where we are now is over 7 standard deviations. That's a medical chart. In a single month, the two year has gone from 4.03% intraday low to four 90. That has happened really quickly. You mentioned poor agave ING, what's interesting about what he said and we talked about it briefly. For him, it's not just about where we're going to end up. It's where we're not going back to. He does not think we're going back to sub 3% on fed funds. His range the way thinks about it, three to 5. Just three to 5. In the measures in Carl Weinberg was brilliant up top saying, you know, we can get back to something as mister garvey talked about. Lisa, the center tendency back 30 years into 30 year bond now is about 2.3%. So does that maybe where we get back to is above two, but not that much above too. If you believe poorer garvey, maybe not, right? Maybe this is a new regime, and you ask Tom, what gets us there? What is going to be different about this time? Does inflation? Is it sort of the reversal of disinflation? Is it the sort of de globalization or reshoring or pick your narrative? There is this question of what is the new paradigm and can it subsist for three decades as the market seems to be quite so important in this? And to both of you, John, let me start with you on goods and services. David Rosenberg at Hyman and others say we will see that disinflation can regard and Powell hope and pray for that. That's the mistake for a heartbeat, didn't they? And now they started to look a little bit silly pretty quickly. I think they've got to be more open minded about the two way risk here. I know that people feel really passionate about going in one direction, other people really. In the other direction, ultimately, if you're a policy maker, you can't feel passionate about anything. You've just got to balance the wrist in front of you. And with that all in mind, they're going to go again. 25 basis points, and maybe again, and again after that, you want to know the average of the two year since March 2009, the average two year yield since March 2009, 1.05%. That's the average. We're at four 90. Right now, if you want the low, the low was only back in 2021, and we were at ten basis points. Let's get, let's get away from Susan bow ties. Lisa, what is a 7.1? If we break out to the new bank rate high, a 7.3%, 30 year mortgage. We're not there yet, but if we get there, what's it mean for our viewers and listeners? I'll tell you what it already means. Mortgage applications are at the lowest level in 28 years. You can see that people aren't refinancing. People aren't taking out new mortgages, they're buying in cash if they can. And so at what point does this really cause prices to come down? And then oh hey, wait a second, if the mortgage rates come down just a little bit. All of a sudden, people rush back into the market and buy again. I mean, this is the whole question. The quagmire of disinflation because the second that you get a little bit of softening and rates, it just bounces back. John, bring us over to Europe with much higher inflation than here. This conversation in Europe has to border on bizarre. Would it be clear how this different pass through to the mortgage market in the United Kingdom, the fixed rate mortgages are much shorter in nature. There's a much bigger proportion of variable rate mortgages there as well as they fear it all up front. When Lisa was framing the mortgage market in the United States, we were talking almost exclusively about the demand side. You and I have talked about the supply side. There aren't people willing to sell when they have a mortgage 30 year fixed at 3%. And I wonder how to supply sites going to develop Tom in the coming quarters. Data, we're going to do it quickly here, Citigroup just publishes they reaffirm 5% on China. They like the consumption model in China, John. That gets me to Brent crude $85 a barrel. What's amazing about this conversation over sticky inflation is that Brent crude, WTI, take your pick year to date. It's flat, has not participated in the hora around the inflation story. There's your yield on a ten year just north of 4% of four basis points on the session. You can call it 4.03% equity futures a bit softer in the face of all of that and you're a weaker Euro dollar just about holding onto one O 6 after we saw some core inflation in the Eurozone time at a record high. A perfect time into start to somebody really quite good at writing accessible notes of this turmoil. Liz young has had an investment strategy. It's so fine and more importantly can frame the emotion. Liz young, you say this is a louder and

Tom Keene Jonathan farrow Lisa Abramovich Jonathan Farrah Lisa Brahman John Carl Weinberg mister garvey Lisa ISM David Rosenberg fed garvey
"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:14 min | 8 months ago

"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Consumer, which is helping to keep the economy going is making the fed's job a little bit more difficult. Huntington national bank is my bank. My family has been banking. Thank you. Is that an Ohio? Yes. Okay. My family's been banking with them since I want to say Frank votes was the CEO. And we have always had a special relationship to Germany. Frank came over from East Germany and did a lot for Dresden to rebuild that city. I can hear though the Michigan in your voice, Jill. I'm not offended by it, but I can just, it's there. Thank you. So I wonder, I wonder what the economy of Michigan is like, especially around Detroit right now. Because the auto industry is doing so well in terms of margins, the supply chain snafu must hurt a little bit, but it revived. I mean, has the city has the economy really come back from where it was, say, ten, 15 years ago and when it was just destroyed by the great financial crisis oh, yes, it has and you should come and visit. If you haven't, downtown is thriving and we're very happy to say that the majority of our business owners and their companies are doing very, very well locally. So we see a lot of positive momentum going through this year and into the future. And of course, depending on the industry and the city as I look at our client base nationally, there may be a different story, but we have a lot of positive momentum in Michigan as a whole in the Detroit area, specifically. That is good to hear because a great great American city has been on its back for a long time for a variety of reasons. And so hopefully we can see some long-term improvement there. Jill garvey, thanks so much for joining us Jill as a senior vice president and senior wealth strategist at Huntington national bank based in the great state of Ohio. That's a big one. It is a German. She's up there. Yeah, yeah. Well, Frank votes was he escaped Germany in the Second World War as a young man

Huntington national bank Frank Michigan Germany Dresden Jill Detroit fed Ohio Jill garvey
"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

03:39 min | 1 year ago

"garvey" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Do indeed Juliet and we also have a rate decision later today or at least a policy decision from the bank of Japan the BOJ is expected to stick to its easy money policy and ahead of that meeting we'd get or did receive data on core consumer prices for the month of February for Japan again 6 tenths of 1% That's a year over year reading and it's a little above market forecast So let's call it a hot read We're seeing a little bit of strength now in the Japanese handed one 1848 and then on the equity side we've got the nikkei weaker by two tenths of 1% The market in South Korea also coming online The cost speed down chest a tenth of 1% On the other hand we have positivity in the Australian equity market with the ASX 200 up about two tenths of 1% All of this after positivity in the U.S. session it seemed to be precipitated by a report on the completion of a Russian bond payment and it seems for the moment to have taken a technical default off the table will be taking a closer look at that momentarily Today in the U.S. we had both the Dow and the S&P rising about 1.2% NASDAQ comp up about 1.3% but remember there is this debate here in the states as to whether or not the American economy can withstand a series of fed rate hikes that may have been one of the factors influencing the U.S. yield curve lower doubt about the fact that the fed will be successful ten year treasury now at two 15 a two year at one 90 So in each case a loss in yield by between a half of one basis .2 in one case about one and a half basis points We'll take another look at market action for you in about 15 minutes Brian All right Doug thanks very much Let's take a look at this top story Russia seeming to have avoided default on a dollar bond payment which all the JPMorgan processed coupon payments and sent the money on to Citigroup JPMorgan was the correspondent bank and acted as a payment agent on the Russian bonds Padre garvey is head of debt and rates strategy at ING capital markets He says just because the funds have been processed doesn't mean that Russia is out of the Woods We're still waiting for confirmation that the foreign holders of these dollar bonds that are due to these coupons are getting receipt of those coupons And that's crucial It's all very well for the issue to say we've paid and to understand the process But it's a very complex process and until recipients receive the coupons and if there's a failure for recipients to receive coupons that would be a technical default Even so the move did spur optimism in Russian bonds and sent prices higher across maturities Well the frenzied rally in U.S. listed Chinese stocks may be starting to cool off Let's get more from Bloomberg's on man Fell as much as 8% We clawed back some of those losses but we still ended the day 4.6% lower The key question now is how we actually reached a bottom a policy bottom not just for a floor for equities right now and is Beijing really going to deliver on these promises that it's made in boosting growth and putting an end to these regulatory crackdowns Strategists at Morgan Stanley told us a more sustainable rally in the market would rely on a few factors These include China stance on COVID zero strategy an easing of geopolitical tensions and a revival in the overseas IPO market Coming up in a few moments we have Gary duggan CEO of global CIO office be with us live here on the program get some thoughts about the markets Now it's time for a global news Presidents Biden and Xi are going to meet tomorrow to talk about their respective.

BOJ U.S. Brian All Doug thanks Citigroup JPMorgan Juliet fed Padre garvey ING capital markets South Korea Russia Japan JPMorgan treasury S
"garvey" Discussed on Time for an Awakening

Time for an Awakening

07:15 min | 1 year ago

"garvey" Discussed on Time for an Awakening

"Are tired of hearing Negro men say there's a better day coming. While they do nothing to usher in that day, we are becoming so impatient that we are getting in the front ranks and serve notice on the world. That we will brush aside the halton cowardly Negro men. And without prayer on our lips and alms prepared for any free, we will press on and on until victory is ours. Africa must be for the Africans. And for the negroes, everywhere, must be independent. God being our God. Mister black man, watch your step. Ethiopia's queens will reign again. And her amazons protect her sewers and her people. Strengthen your shaking knees. And move forward. Or we will replace you. And lead on to victory. And to glory. Amy, jackass garvey. 1926. Brilliant and good afternoon brothers and sisters. We are so happy to have you here today. My name is William Rogers, and I am your host. And we have a wonderful program that has been outlined for you. We are going to be looking and celebrating and saluting strong black women throughout our land. Women who we know that have done marvelous things and have been right there in the forefront supporting and helping me change for family and our community. We've asked several ladies and women who are still out there in that battlefield. And today's program is sort of working in the shadows of the ancestors. Mer chose to reel. Either be wills, sojourner truth, Harriet Tubman. And all of those strong like a name on, I could be in here for the rest of the night. Naming that list very powerful women. So what we want to do is give honor to them. Your honor to the women throughout the world who had continuing to work with faces that we see continually shouting the cause for African people. And we want to look at those that are working now. What are they doing now? What are some of the programs that are being carried forth now in the building of families and communities? Where are they? Sister Jack was who was the last wife of the great Marcus garvey. Wrote that piece that I just read back in 1926 in the newspaper that garvey published called the Negro world. And he was very supportive of her doing that. Because for instance, he knew that many of our brothers sometimes drop the baton when we end the struggle and turn to frivolous things and ideas rather than stay in focused. On what needs to happen in our community. And so that was a, that was a frustration for our ancestors, mid at times during the years. If you read those biographies of those workers, they were back in the late 1800s after the years of slavery. You will see you will see that energy that disdain that they had for being slack and not continuing to fight. You can't sit down. This thing has to continue. And so therefore, her words meaning not to be cruel, and I'm pretty sure they would. He was a very powerful sister. But they were worried that the jaw and tried to get people to move into action. And that's what we heard. So tonight I've asked them a group of wonderful women to come forward and to talk a little bit about their work and their struggle and what they're doing and what they see, do you see some of the things that we saw? In 1926, so and what can we do? I think it's more focused on the solutions of what can we do to support some of the initiatives that are out there and some of the things that are out there to do. And as you know, this is a call in format. Interview who might be listened via the Internet, we welcome you to call us here. And we call two one 5 four 9 zero 9 8 three two. I repeat two one 5. We're not zero. 9, 8, three, two. And we can be more than happy to have your comment. You don't have to agree with some of the things that we are seeing and doing. That's not what this is about. This is a think tank. And I think tank, you come together with ideas, you explore the possibilities of both sides and then you work toward a solution. And I think that's what we've been trying to do here for very, very long time. We are operating on the time for an awakening platform. And we are part of the black talk radio network of systems. And again, as I said, this is the black reality thing. So with that, I am going to ask the very assistant and friend who actually was significant in helping me pull together this wonderful group of women that are here tonight and to talk a little bit about what they were doing. If she would come on and introduce maybe start off with herself and then kind of introduce the guests and a little bit about what they do and what they've done as far as she knows. She is the founder of a solar system. And she did that for many years. She's been a guest on the footwear M two. Once or twice. And so we appreciate sister lotus J for all the work that she has done. So with that, just to notice how you're doing tonight. Oh, just a minute. So I'm sorry I noticed that I had muted the mics because we were getting some background noise in some places. But I mean, let me unmute that and then you come on. So again, just notice how you're doing. I am great, doctor Rogers, and thank you so much for the opportunity for us to come on and talk. And I'm really grateful about from a woman's point of view, a female, to have a male, a brother, a man to acknowledge us as black women here in the community, women of African descent and just women of color, period. I appreciate the opportunity and even just your desire to give us a platform to talk about things that our ancestors have done in the past, what we're doing now and what.

jackass garvey Sister Jack William Rogers Harriet Tubman Ethiopia Marcus garvey Mer garvey Amy Africa Rogers
"garvey" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast

The Bill Simmons Podcast

06:55 min | 2 years ago

"garvey" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast

"The mvp the dock good key through. His cat is pretty solid. Young ender for that title and it mukhi as it goes on. I mean you can't help. But mookie wilson is the most likeable man. Yeah and maybe the world history. I had forgotten the video when he got hit in the sunglasses. That rudo. yeah you had that in there some tapering training footage as all this old footage and jimmy settled with the fans tearing up the field. And i mean we're especially proud of one shot unaware we had nothing to do with it but following. Mookie wilson after the ball went through bucknor's legs. Sorry that sounds awful. I don't like all the way through the dog out into the tunnel and then known jot goodfellas asked into the Slaughterhouse where four. Five guys are on dressed because they kind of gave up on the game and not that they didn't watch the end but there watching. Tv's and david johnson's office stop and didn't want to move because they were superstitious. But it's it's it. Has everything really is one of the great camera shots i've ever seen. I knew who the cameraman was. We wound up getting a lot of local news footage. That hadn't been seen before and it is just an unbelievable sharp perfectly. The whole way in this guy is running behind moakley. Mookie wilson and And you just see everything. It is fantastic. Yeah i remember. We did the fab five doc right back. It was like eleven years ago and the timeout game with chris. Webber jason hare. The director found this video of after the game. Those guys walking back in the superdome The locker room but it was a long walk because it was. You know as a football stadium and it's just the camera on those guys as their realized what happened like weber's just like Starting to break down during the walk and his. You never know what you're gonna find with some of these local cameras or you know all this other stuff Well i'm excited to watch it except for really the last part which about to watch sounds terrible other. You were funny. Somebody asked me that recently. Won four world series is a body like yeah. it's still really bothers me. The most traumatic. Well let's by life other great for stresses. It forced yankee fans to root for the mets which they didn't want to do because the goal was still keep the red sox. Dan was the prime focus and goal of Of the yankees casino obviously hadn't won the curse of the bambino. They had to keep that going for as long as they can. So that part of it is great to did. Jimmy's sports bega may did that. Hurt the documentary at all. How he's like a dodger fan and a mets fan kind of depending on. Who's in the room. Did that come up are affected production. No no you have to understand. i went through. I'm going to take you through my here by the way. You've forgotten a team. So i'm gonna added into the mix so as a kid Throwing up brooklyn. I was a mets fan k. k. We moved to las vegas. Now my dad is dodger's fan has been his whole life. They were in brooklyn even when they moved to. La stuck with them. Moved to las vegas in nineteen seventy eight or seventy seven rather. There's no mets games on television. There's no you get the actual scores. Two days later. The box scores in the newspaper. Tough so i start watching the dodgers with my father and listening vin scully. I start rooting for the dodgers. And for many years i root for the dodgers and then the dodgers let steve garvey go to the padres. Now going to minor league games in vegas. Las vegas stars for a couple of years now and all these guys have gone up to play for the padres. So i've seen these guys Kevin mcreynolds who actually is in this documentary. You know all these guys bip roberts ilise players from the padres and i decided since garvey went to the padres i was going to root for the padres and i did until i moved back to los angeles as a sports caster and i was covering the dodgers and i Took a liking to player named mike be awesome. Perhaps you've heard of him. Yes with the fucking dodgers did to my other favorite player by. They sent him away. They send up to the roger denounce them and And then mike. And i wound up with the mets. That's right he's not morgan. Awesome now this is like listen. Elizabeth taylor dollar marriages richard burton and i got back together again. You know before. The pair corner to steve garvey thing. Yeah you wrote a piece for grant land. I think in our first year about what an outrage it was that steve. Garvey wasn't an hall of fame. People trying to find it the same one for the ringer if you want already though we will just reprint it so nine years of past. Ted simmons made the hall of fame this year sentence who appeared in one playoff series for The brewers arnold cardinals way i switched to the brewers of that point anyway. He was in the eighty two world series But if he's gonna make it. Steve garvey's not gonna make it. Steve garb is the best first basement of our childhood. He's not going to be an often. He he's the mvp it's are you trying to get me fired up again. Try to get fired. I fear that he's never going to make it made it. I mean that's crazy. What how did i mean how chacha right. You just need certain amount. They're trying to boost the catcher ranks. It's fine but i really was the best first baseman. The first senator. Ted stevens made it over. Piazza that would be a whole different story. Well no you're right simmons. I hope you will join me in this mission. To get steve byan in the hall of fame and then while we're at it let's get huey lewis and the rock and roll all yeah. Let's not happened now. That hasn't happened now. No god i know he knew where the hard rock and roll is right and it's in where the story that they asked you lewis in the news to open rock and roll hall of fame and he was manager said no thanks. We're not interested And maybe there's a grudge now many years later i like it. Maybe garvey had the same offer from cooperstown. You have no idea what today's parent corners brought you by nissan. The twenty the author twenty twenty two nissan pathfinders intelligent four by four. We get back outdoors when you have kids. Who are happy to get him outside. Camping offered fishing. You love fishing to get out there and enjoy it. Return to rugged in the on the twenty twenty two. Nissan pathfinder learn more at nissan. Usa dot com our special guests..

Mookie wilson dodgers mets padres Young ender mukhi bucknor moakley Webber jason hare steve garvey goodfellas david johnson Kevin mcreynolds brooklyn bip roberts las vegas jimmy weber vin scully dodger
Top Seeds Fall: Bianca Andreescu, Belinda Bencic, Sofia Kenin Upset at Wimbledon

Bloomberg Daybreak Asia

00:22 sec | 2 years ago

Top Seeds Fall: Bianca Andreescu, Belinda Bencic, Sofia Kenin Upset at Wimbledon

"Three major upsets occurring at Wimbledon in the women's draw as fourth seeded Sofia Kenin loses her second round match to fellow American Madison Brengle. Fifth seeded Bianca and Rescue Falls trade sets at least cornett 19 Belinda Bencic loses two K adjuvant Notable winners include two seed Arena. Some Bellanca third seed Elina Svitolina, seventh seeded Eagles. Frantic eight seed Karolina Pliskova and 11 See Garvey.

Sofia Kenin Madison Brengle Belinda Bencic Bianca Bellanca Elina Svitolina Arena Karolina Pliskova Eagles See Garvey
From Slavery to Mass Incarceration With Dr. Byron Price

Black History Year

01:34 min | 2 years ago

From Slavery to Mass Incarceration With Dr. Byron Price

"What does black liberation look like to you. I think black liberation said marcus. Garvey he asked. What was the black man's government to meet us. Liberation we have our own institutions structures. We have our own economic system at the end of the day. give black people by agency. then that's liberation. We should control law schools. I mean how do you get people to educate your kids that enslave your kids and made it illegal for your kids at one point to get an education and so you continue to go to the same people for your healthcare and you wonder why you died from covert and a lot of different things. I mean when you think about how police shootings down. We should be hiring our own police force to police. Our communities like they do to meet us black liberation having this sort of independence being self contained within the us. Okay but not. The far too often will like in many respects like african countries in regards to like our institutions especially in store to black colleges. Universe rely on aid as opposed to developing our own resources. And so when you give them a you have no incentive to develop your own economic systems and institutions. Awful i mean you think about all the resources that we collect as greeks traces mandate circulating throughout communities. And so we don't own we don't control anything and we don't even a control. Viewed in were to meet s black liberation controlling institutions and having agency

Garvey Marcus United States
Reagan National Airport northern Washington DC noise study to be released

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:40 sec | 2 years ago

Reagan National Airport northern Washington DC noise study to be released

"If you live near an airport, you know what it's like. You hear that noise constantly. Well, an online meeting this evening might shed some more light on what can be done to reduce noise near one of our area's airports. If you're concerned about airplane noise north of D. C. You may soon get some answers. Findings from a community questionnaire and newly proposed changes to flight patterns north of Reagan National Airport will be discussed for the first time outside of the committee test was studying the area. The aircraft Noise mitigation Study meeting starts at seven. It will be hosted by Montgomery County, Maryland. Council member Andrew Andrew Freed's Freed's in in and and Arlington Arlington County County Board Board member member Libby Libby Garvey. Garvey. Find Find more more information information on on how how to to Join Join and and listen listen to to the the discussion discussion at at w w t t o o p p dot dot

Reagan National Airport Andrew Andrew Freed Arlington Arlington County Cou Libby Libby Garvey Montgomery County Maryland Garvey
Washington DC Reagan National Airport noise study to be released

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:31 sec | 2 years ago

Washington DC Reagan National Airport noise study to be released

"The latest studies on airplane noise north of Reagan National Airport will be released during a virtual meeting tonight. It will be the first time that anyone outside of those tests was studying airplane noise north of the airport. We'll see newly proposed changes to the way that planes come and go. Montgomery County, Maryland. Council member Andrew Freed Sin and Arlington County Board member Libby Garvey are hosting the Reagan National Aircraft Noise Mitigation Study meeting. The results of a community questionnaire will be released, as well as the newly drafted national approaches that were developed based on studying that

Reagan National Airport Andrew Freed Sin Libby Garvey Reagan National Aircraft Noise Montgomery County Arlington County Maryland
Federal Paycheck Protection Program Preserves 500 000 Jobs in Seattle Area

Morning News with Manda Factor and Gregg Hersholt

01:11 min | 2 years ago

Federal Paycheck Protection Program Preserves 500 000 Jobs in Seattle Area

"So did the Seattle Times and the Foster Garvey law firm other local companies received under $10. We're talking about two beneficiaries of the Federal Paycheck Protection program or from Cuomo's. Corwin, Take Pee. Pee Pee, designed to bolster companies and prevent mass layoffs has pumped as much as $11 billion into King Pierce and Snohomish County's since the program began. According to the P P p database, 86 companies in the three counties received loans in the 5 to $10 million range, preserving half a million jobs. Some of the loans, though, seemed to bear no relationship to jobs. The database claims of $5 million plus loan to it's a quad based evergreen restaurant group preserved 500 jobs. But it also says a similar loan to Seattle based co Imagine Health preserved zero jobs. Meanwhile, hundreds of businesses received P P p payments of under $150,000 most of them well under that amount, for example, and every beauty salon received $229 an amount the database claims preserved One job Corwin Hague Co. Moh news SOMEONE news time 604 and coming up. I'm Ryan Harris, seeking

Seattle Times Foster Garvey King Pierce Pee Pee Corwin Cuomo Snohomish County Seattle Corwin Hague Co. Ryan Harris
Cuomo grope accusation reported to police

Ben Ferguson

00:44 sec | 2 years ago

Cuomo grope accusation reported to police

"On New York Governor Andrew Cuomo after the most serious allegations against him Yet by a former aide who claims he groped her. She did not file a police report, though there is one on record, according to the governor's acting attorney, Beth Garvey, the alleged victim, not wanting to report the incident meant the state reached out to police and Garvey was their point of contact. The accuser, who has not been named, says Cuomo groped her at the governor's mansion last year. This and other harassment allegations have led more than 100 state lawmakers to call for Cuomo's resignation. The governor continues to deny inappropriate contact with any of his accusers and says he will not step down. A state attorney general's investigation is continuing. GURNAL

Governor Andrew Cuomo Beth Garvey Cuomo Garvey New York
"garvey" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

Good Seats Still Available

03:28 min | 2 years ago

"garvey" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

"And editing goodness We can't do the show without him. Of course and we thank him highly for his services. Once again this week We also thank you kindly for not only listening but supporting the show following us on social media sending us email buying stuff from our website. Whatever it is we appreciate it to no end and Thanks again for letting us down. Memory lane this week down to Philadelphia and the vet fascinating story. Take care until next week. We'll see Take it stop..

Divide emerges on COVID school reopening in rich, poor areas in Los Angeles County School Districts

All Things Considered

01:06 min | 2 years ago

Divide emerges on COVID school reopening in rich, poor areas in Los Angeles County School Districts

"Supply as coma cases begin to decline, and campuses look to reopen a pattern has emerged in L. A county school district. It appears schools and more affluent areas are reopening at a faster rate than those in low income regions. KCRW's Daniel Ciara gweilo has more in L. A Times study looked at more than 20 school districts across L, a county from La Kenyatta to El Monte. The results show agrees with higher daily covert infection rates, which typically have higher concentrations of low income families. Are more likely to stay closed. For example, the Garvey district in Rosemead is Majority Asian and Latin X and more than 80% of students there qualify for free or reduced lunch when Garvey will reopen, however, still remains unclear. In contrast, La Kenyatta, which has a small percentage of low income students and students of color Has maintained one of the lowest covert infection rates and L. A county that district started welcoming back its youngest students to campus in November. And this disparity in L. A education's not new, The pandemic has exposed a longstanding digital divide in L. A many residents of low income areas in South and east L. A have had challenges with Internet access. Taking walking

Daniel Ciara La Kenyatta Kcrw Coma El Monte Rosemead Garvey
'P' is for Passion

Sprinkled with Hope

09:14 min | 2 years ago

'P' is for Passion

"I are bringing tia today. The letter p from our hope series which is passion. So how do we find our passion. How do we do that. I kind of want to go back to one of our guests that we've had on our show and pre kumar who was from india and she brought up something really really cool and she said if you wanna have passion. Take money out of the equation and seriously. Is that not the truth there. What zinc about keith. About what you guys would do or what you could accomplish if money just was not it right like you took money out shane. What would you do. What what kind of things would you take. Part in i would travel. Yeah exactly and so. Would i write because that. I'm totally passionate about traveling. And so i just want you guys to to think about that. What kind of things would you do if if money was not a factor in it wasn't in the equation so Gary voinea check. The often is called gary v. 'cause a lot of people can't pronounce last night but he's an american belarussian entrepreneur and he said skills are cheap. Passion is priceless and that was really cool because yeah we can learn a skill and it's pretty easy to to get right but how hard is it to get passion and keep that passion and and let it continue to drive you and i think that's that's really it. What i wanted to talk about was the word passion. And i looked into it a little bit and from its if you look at it from greek and latin meaning. It's to suffer and i thought that's interesting to suffer means passion. But think about it when you had when you're developing your passion. Whatever it is you have in order to build that passion. It's gonna come with a cost. It's going to come with some suffering. You know you might. It might take you forever to find your passion. But i just thought that was so fascinating that the were the word in greek and latin means to suffer and i think we have to go through some suffering to get to our passion Let me give you an example. So we love to travel. We talk about that a lot. But i didn't growing up i didn't we didn't travel a whole lot I had to learn that. That was my passion. Sometimes i can't live out. My passion can't travel every weekend. Because i don't have enough money but so i have to suffer through some of that in order to see my passion through. I just thought that was so fascinating fascinating to to see it from that side or that perspective the other side is the passion that we typically think about which is an intense enthusiasm towards something or a compelling desire to do something that that's my passion of traveling is just that i love to do it I don't think i was born with it. I don't think anybody is born with any passion. You have to find it within you know. When i was growing up a little child i loved to play soccer. I had baseball cards at collected. Had garbage pail kids. And i when i was thinking about this. I remember sitting at the table with grammy and talking about dodger baseball. She would be reading the newspaper and she'd be. Hey you know about this player this player and she taught me to be passionate about dodger baseball and still lives within me today. i can't see as many dodger games as i want to live Especially right now. But i love taking my family to dodger stadium and it brings me back to my childhood when we sat in the stadium watching ron say and steve garvey dusty baker and all of those phenomenal players that she allowed me to see the passion in dodger baseball. That i have today Now you know it could be. A people could have a passion for animals or art or hobbies like dancing or singing or writing or yoga. anything. But i don't believe that we are born with that. I think we have to develop it. And we have to go through that suffering like they're talked about to develop that passion. Howard thurman was an american author philosopher and educator in civil rights leader and. He said this. Don't worry about what the world needs ask. What makes you come alive and do that. Because what the world needs is people who have come alive. And i think that cannot be more true than it is right now. They we see so many people that are not coming alive. They're just going through life. Just almost robotically and i think if we have something that we're passionate about anything hopefully you can hear it in our voice when we talk about travel and that passion that really is a passion of ours and if we if we don't focus too much on what the world needs and what we think the world needs and that we come alive. We're going to be much more passionate simply about living life. I love that you brought up grammy. 'cause she she is an awesome individual and Sad that i can't spend as much time with her anymore. Obviously because she's passed on but She i think you brought up that in my life. One of the things that grammy was super passive passionate about was swimming and she. I'll never forget. She was the one that taught me how to swim. Grammy was a fish and so she was super passionate about the water. I mean grammy was passionate about a lot of things right. And i think that's where some of our passion comes from is from the some of the things that she taught us and i think that's why shane and i really love to swim so much. 'cause grammy would. We would always swim whether that was in the ocean or in her pool that she had in her backyard. But we would all i. I swear every time. I saw drama we were. She was always swimsuit and we were swimming. Yep that's what. I remembered so i i. I think that's true is it's like find something that you really love and i think a lot of times. It's like going back to your childhood. What is that thing that you did as a child that you don't do now that you're passionate about and then what's stopping you from continuing those things. Shane and i love dodger baseball. We got that from grammy. We also love swimming. We got that from grammy when we were kids and so i think a lot of times. It's about you know what what was it when you were a child. And why aren't you doing that thing. Now what what is stopping you from having that passion. I think passion is like a fire. That's with inside you rate the just. Nobody can extinguish and that. You don't want to extinguish it. Can night that fire and let it burn within you. i also want to bring up something That i was thinking about too as i was thinking about passion I think it kind of goes back to Another episode that we recorded with benita condie. And she said this in an. I think it has to do with passionate as well as that when we put our blinders on is that thing. We're passionate about just right here. And we can't see it. We can't we just have to take these blinders off to to be able to see that thing where we're passionate about typically. It's right in front of you. So if you don't have a passion or can't find warner of wondering how do i get more passion. It might just be right in front of you. You just have to open that fear up a little bit maybe to find that passion that theme that you're super super passionate about yup. I think often too often. We get comfortable in our comfort zone and we think well. We don't need passion in order to live and i would strongly disagree. I think we that's why we're talking about passion that's why it's part of our hope series because we strongly believe that in order to live life and come alive. You have to have something you're passionate about. It doesn't have to be many things it can but if you're passionate about one thing then it's going to help you So have you ever thought about your passion being something a tool to motivate and inspire others. Think about that.

Grammy Baseball Gary Voinea Gary V Shane Kumar Steve Garvey Keith Howard Thurman Dodger Stadium Swimming Dodger India Soccer Baker RON Benita Condie
"garvey" Discussed on 790 KABC

790 KABC

06:08 min | 2 years ago

"garvey" Discussed on 790 KABC

"The law firm of Rohan Gurvey and win And today as usual, I am here on a football Sunday to be the managing partner of your life. And I'm staring at a football game right now. Sitting beside a former NFL player about to speak to another former NFL player and then later in the hour will speak to May. Ray McElrath Bay who is the subject of the Disney film. It's a great movie. Called safety. They call him Ray Ray and Ray Ray, the real ray ray. Not the actor will be with us in the second half hour of Garvey's law. And if you've seen Disney movie safety, you don't wanna miss that. And even if you haven't you don't want to miss it. I wanna welcome to Gurvey Islam. My guest co host for this week former NFL player played for the Eagles played for the Raiders played for the 40 Niners. And, uh, I played for Texas Tech in college pass from home, But happily blooms could be going to the Super Bowl against Brady. Never note. I've been good one. That'll be good with toes. Elio Hanson, Welcome back to Garvey's law. Jose Leo. Thanks for having me. Thanks for getting me out the house. I've been Been in the house for since March. Just bunker and down you're in for you might be over. But you told me you played a little bit of golf though you you got because you could stay 6 ft apart. You don't have to be in anyone's face and golf. Yes, The golf is one of the sports where you you can actually social distance a little bit. So my life is pretty much been drive to the golf course and drive it home. Yeah, it would have been really strange if you were playing in the NFL. Now, you know, you got guys on the sidelines wearing mask and then they're hitting each other and tackling and everything without masks on. That would have been tough. Um, I don't know. I don't even know how how will be here to play without fans. I mean, the fans is part of the thing that pumps you up, get you when you run out that tunnel and you see your screaming fans screaming, whether it be home or away. Even now, you know, I think you get more pumped up with the way games because you're it's like you against the world. I don't know how they're doing it there in the NFC champion. I'm looking at the NFC championship right now, and it's barely anybody in the rain. Is that Z tough? It's called a stadium Jose Area arena. I think it's basketball e guess or hockey thought about that. It's been a while, but it's been a while, but but I know you're really interested in this first story because it takes place in south like text. This, which is a place that you're very familiar with. You lived down the street actually lived in teller for like Like five years. Really? Yeah. How far is that from stuff that might be 10 minutes from south leg And you know what? I have a lot of friends in Texas because I went to Texas Tech, So I have a lot of friends in the Dallas area. One of my best friends is there? Um, Charles Johnson. So, yeah. I mean, I've heard stories about this thies type of things going on. So it would be good to hear from Russell to see what we're gonna hear from it because you just said, you know, uh, Patrick Mahomes went to Texas Tech yet, Uh, you have a connection with the coach in Buffalo. Yeah. Yes, they have a hidden MacDonald, The head coach from the Buffalo Bills was my defense coordinator when I was in a Philadelphia Eagles, So I got like I told you earlier. The the, uh, any reason he has a lot of branches that he just like, Let's fall off two different different teams. And you know, a lot of coaches in the NFL came up under anyway. How do you want the number one pick overall in the draft for you. No, Um, I didn't even get drafted, so we're gonna talk to a former number one pick in the NFL draft That was in 1991 played defensive tackle for 10 seasons, mostly with the Cowboys, but also with the Raiders and the Packers. And I was happy to see the Packers lose today being a Vikings fan. Anyone who plays the Packers his my second favorite team, and I was happy to see Tom Brady win today, so he can you can nix all the Bella check is is more the reason for the dynasty and all that that stuff. So remember players on the field players are playing his coach. I don't think the coach is gonna be happy with that statement. That's okay. So Russell, Maryland won three Super Bowls. He was a pro bowler in 1993. He started 141 154 games. That's pretty good. It's like an iron man. He was the outline trophy winner when he was in college Lineman of the Year Hall of Fame College Football Hall of Fame in 2011. And you know, he had an amazing career in both college and the pros, and now he's involved in a very interesting story. This takes place in Southlake, Texas, which is a very fine school district. It's known for its good schools, and I think Russell will probably tell us that he moved his family there for the schools. And two years ago, there were two videos that surfaced of high school students using racial slurs. And it went viral from this school district. And this group got together. Joined on. Russell joined the diversity Council to try and combat this and you know, in his words, it was disgusting. Get a son who's at Carol Independent School District, and it's really interesting what happens in this story after this Diversity council developed and how there's a lawsuit and You know, we got Russell, Maryland. Welcome. Todos lo. We want to talk about this is really fascinating stuff. Russell. Hey, guys. How you doing? Hey, How's it going, man? Oh, Hope Valley. Oh, so silly. All right here. How you doing, man? Alright. Alright. Texas Tech, huh? Yeah. Texas Tech man. Yeah. Why'd you guys had to beat up on my 40 Niners back in the day so bad and 19 hated that man. Okay, Okay. You got that right now had a good run The 40 Niners..

NFL Texas Tech Russell Ray Ray Garvey Ray McElrath Bay Texas Disney golf Tom Brady Um Packers Raiders football Year Hall of Fame College Foot Rohan Gurvey Jose Leo Elio Hanson NFC
"garvey" Discussed on ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP

ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP

06:39 min | 2 years ago

"garvey" Discussed on ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP

"Is gonna be on the road trip. And so, Sylvia. I said, Let's get Tommy Lasorda. We get time of the sword on. First of all he gets on, he tells us He's not in Chicago. He was in New York. Starts pimping some suit store he was. I think he was like waiting outside to get in. He starts out of we did. The interview came off the rails so quick, But I mean in, like, five minutes in Sylvia, I look across at each other, like, man. We're dying in here like this is not this isn't going the way I thought it would go. It was gonna go. I used to listen to Tom Young with chatting. I'm thinking. Yeah, man will be like shit. Will have Tommy on is gonna be fantastic. You know? So we know our like boiled boy. I'm grabbing my collar. I'm like, I don't know my say goodbye to him. I don't know what else does the guy and he was away and I don't even I can't remember whatever the honor I was talking about with him, but he that he was rebound to receive, but I didn't meet him like two years. Prior. Yeah, that's proof. The Italian American Sports Hall of Fame dinner. That Wednesday Is Prince Spaghetti Day? Yes, Yeah, that's proved that with the Randazzo family and all the great folks at the telly American Sports Hall of Fame over there on Taylor Street, they had a big black tie event. Every year. They They put their new through. New inductees. Into the halls. Her and we were at the grand Ballroom at Navy Pier and I'm in heaven. I met Michael Rosie. Only that night. Great night I met Remember the great middleweight fighter Carmen Basilio. Carmen Basilio, I think Thought, Jake LaMotta a time or two. If you have not familiar with the movie movie Raging Bull, That's true, and I went up to Carmen Basilio. And I introduced myself and I said Mr Basilio, Carmen de Falco. He grabbed my hand Anyone nice name? That's where to God. And I met Who was Who is the one? You're the Italian fighter that Kill Dooku. Kimmitt remember? Oh, yeah. Mazzini booming. I met boom boom Mancini. He was punches. I'll get out my forever. Hey, Boom, Boom, man. He's punchy. E famously had that moment with timing. The sort of Sylvia me glad you re lifted with us Eyes Classic. Can't be a real good. Wait a minute. With the other one when cap was trying to interview him a couple years later on that gun Comcast Yeah. The best, but I got a kick out of this. This was from Rich Eisen show on the NFL network. He was talking to the great Al Michaels and Al Michaels tells a story. That I think needs to be heard that you will appreciate its vintage Tommy Lasorda when I was announcing the Hawaiian on Islanders in the Pacific Coast League, triple A baseball starting in 1968. I was there three years are big rival. With the Spokane Indians, and they were the Dodger Farm Club and the Triple A farm club. And because of travel, the Indians would come over twice a year, and they spend the entire week there, so I got to know Steve Garvey. Bobby Valentine, Bill Russell, Davey Lopes, Ron say That's the team Bill Buckner. All those guys are playing with the team. And the sword is the manager. And then Tommy loves to tell the story is a little bit embellished, but very close to the truth. He always has contended he discovered me because, after every game and Hawaii he would have to call out Cam Panis and the general manager of the Dodgers and reported on how all of the guys had done. Garvey did this, but they're did this looks to this etcetera, etcetera. So one night, he says. He tells Sampanis. He said, Hey, Allie said, You know, I know you got Vin Scully and then he's great. Everything visit guy over here, the sea young guy doing these games on the radio. This guy is really terrific. Al Michaels is his name. You should keep an eye on him. Campaign. It doesn't say anything at first and then at the end of the conversation, according to Tommy can't Panish is Tommy, this this kid you're talking about this Michaels guy. Do you know it's really good, and Tommy says. I've been thrown out of the last four games about the club has listeningto what happened with your one night he gets thrown out in the third inning of the game. Now in Hawaii's the clubhouse wasn't behind the dugout. You have to walk all that we have to center field, 425 ft. Get serenaded by the fans. And then another 100 ft to a ramshackle clubhouse. You could not sneak back in. Truly you'd have to listen to the radio. So that's the third thing, so I know he's listening to me for seven innings one night the next night. He's so angry, he comes out. He gives the lineup card to the umpires. He gets thrown out with the lineup on irony of ironies. You know the matter of the the the umpire at home plate that night was Bruce framing, who would go on to have the longest umpiring career in major league history. He would go to the major. So this is this is crazy stuff. He gets thrown out again. Now he's listening to me the whole game. The next game, he did less. He lasted the game, and then the following game. You got thrown that in like the sixth or seventh inning. Tommy truly was able to hear me. Do you know probably 20 innings of baseball, And so he always loved to tell that story. Of course. I love the fact that Tommy was such a big apartment. He was It's the wonderful man on so many levels so many it is like the perfect It's the perfect story. And when you hear Michael, First of all, I think of young Al Michaels doing Hawaii Triple a baseball out there. Bruce Framing is managing in the minor leagues. Tommy Lasorda is managing the Triple A team for the Dodgers in the late sixties. That would go on to think about those teams in the seventies. That would consist of your coast favorite player, the Great Bill Buckner. Ron, say Steve Garvey. Davey Lopes. Probably Bill Russell, though he didn't get mentioned. No, he did. I think he did mention Bill Russell. I mean, think about that team. And and it's so hilarious to hear. How the heck do you know he's any good? Because well, because I've been thrown out of the last four games, but the best part is that he got thrown out handing in the line of card that is like so quintessential Tommy Lasorda. It is a hilarious story that the power and influence of all the people like named in that story that we're playing in those games. Is absolutely tremendous, and I thought it was worth playing and worth listening to, and al Michaels tells it is only on Michael's continue, but that is classic. You know what strikes me about That story, too, is now a days. I don't know if you'll ever have Like players like that really assemble on a triple A roster anymore, because they if you're a good hitter or a good pitcher, you maybe get 10 games and Triple a maid maybe a half a season. But you're going up to the majors pretty quickly. You know, if you've proven at double a that you could handle it. You don't get Too long. A trip later, right in 50 years ago. It's true. I mean, you know, I think guys just Everything was at a different pace, right? And so yeah, these teams would probably have these ridiculously stacked triple a teams.

Tommy Lasorda Al Michaels Carmen Basilio Bill Russell Sylvia Michael Rosie Bill Buckner Steve Garvey American Sports Hall of Fame baseball Hawaii Davey Lopes Dodgers Bruce Framing Chicago New York Tom Young Comcast Spokane Indians Rich Eisen
"garvey" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

KNBR The Sports Leader

05:13 min | 2 years ago

"garvey" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

"Just here like the year before that somebody had written a story about Cindy Garvey and how she said that Steve was like a cold fish and you're enough. Ralphie. Ralph used to love bringing that up that Garvey was terrible in the sack. His wife even said it member. We've keep terrible, his wife, but that didn't mean something. That was cold idea. Yeah, Yeah, there was stuff going on, and then the team and the cheese. Guys. Some guys hated each other. There was just Crazy guys. Pedro Guerrero was was not all those guys, man. Member. Remember one Pedro? I forget what he went to Court for Guy was it with something really bad and when they moving weight was the supposedly moving drugs and his lawyer said. Not now. Not during explain this. I would have to look that up, right? I don't know what it was, but I do remember is that lawyer I still remember this and I'm gonna say it without checking to make sure it's true. But I'm pretty sure it is. His lawyer was saying he couldn't possibly pull whatever it was offer. He did whatever he did. Because he's not even see him. He doesn't even know how to make his own better. Something like Oh, yeah, That's yeah, That's your defense like saying this guy's so stupid. There's no way you could do that. No, it's in September of 99. He was arrested for trying to buy almost £30 of cocaine agent He was acquitted of drug conspiracy charges because his attorney argued his client's intellect prevented him from understanding the full implications of alleged drug deal. That's Wikipedia cleaning up, his lawyers saying. My man is too dumb to be a drug kingpin said He got a little girl, but it had to be in retirement, right? He was retired by then wasn't I mean, he could make his bed? They don't understand the language. I could make my bed like we'll go away when you're talking about. I still remember that, but I think and I know we gotta run here. But here's my theory in that why we don't get the stories we used to. I still think guys have personalities and guys probably do stuff. Yeah, everyone's a reporter now because there's so much social media out there. It's a lot easier to get caught doing something You'd rather not get caught doing whether it's in the clubhouse in the locker room or in your hotel room or just out of the town, and there's so much more money. To be lost. I think those two factors keep all those stories tight. You know, And you know what else? There is a lot less access. You know, we used to say, if you're a beat writer, you stayed in the same hotels pulling the same planes with the guys. You hang out in bars with Drop the scene in the coffee shops down here with him, wrote Busses to the practice into the games with him. So they're more interaction. You got to actually kind of know the guys and everything They tell you stuff. Yeah. No, Those were good times, boy over. Good. You get this I did for you. It must have been so much so much fun. I mean, covering that Laker team had to be a really fun time because I remember following him. That was my favorite team. Growing up, and it just the dynamics of magic coming in and then Magic and Kareem and Riley was bigger was bigger than life. Back then he was like the face of the human magic were basically the face of the Lakers, and he was as big as it got. In the L. A scene that must have been fun to cover those guys. It was crazy. Every night was great. We just just good as you can imagine, And yeah, I was. I was my first beat. I recovered wasn't the Lakers when Magic was a rookie And he was just lighten it up from the very first day and just the people had Jamal Wilkes and Cooper. Michael Cooper was crazy as hell and Scott, were you in the Were you in the spectrum for Game seven. Oh, yeah. Six games. He was 42 15 and seven or whatever was Yeah, yeah, with cream. That's the game cream of the M V. P that here you missed the campers with a bad ankle, so they're playing without their center. Magic Temps Jump center to start the game and play center for part of the game. And that was just nutty. They completely unrealistic from start to finish. That was a great game and I remember coming home and watching it. Tape delayed at 11 30 so great right six. Lakers magic. 11 30. That's it. Member member's member skies over there. See if you were there. You covered it So you didn't see it, But I still remember. You know Jim Hill. Come on in. You go. If you don't want to know the score, Turn off your TV set. Uh, it was incredible change. People do like what you want. Yes, yes. That happened. Tape DeLay was great. Hey, man of God Still happy you're doing well. It's great to hear your voice. Always fun reading your stuff, and hopefully we could do it again soon because it's always fun talking to you, Scott. Yeah. Any time. Thanks for having me on boy Problems. Thanks. Scott Scott Off bonus for the San Francisco Chronicle Sporting Green. Steve Kerr joining us 5 30 here on the sports leader. She gave e. On KNBR, 1045 and 68 ft towards leader four injury accidents since.

Scott Scott Lakers Guy Cindy Garvey Pedro Guerrero Steve Kerr Ralphie Ralph Michael Cooper San Francisco Chronicle reporter cocaine writer Kareem Jim Hill attorney Jamal Wilkes Riley
"garvey" Discussed on Problematic Premium Feed

Problematic Premium Feed

04:50 min | 2 years ago

"garvey" Discussed on Problematic Premium Feed

"Randolph's near racist rhetoric reflected his assertion that garvey was an alien west indian and not a true american negro national speaking toes. The end of lacey pe- for garvey must go campaign failed in telling move randolph. The supposed socialist and his allies turned to the us empire for help. They openly encouraged repression of the un. I in early january nineteen twenty-three this grouping became alarmed when the chief government witness against gavi and his coming mail fraud. Trial was killed this trader. Ervin j w east of new orleans had been formerly a leader in the way but had been ousted for embezzlement the dying eastern had allegedly identified his assailants as to workers along showman and a painter. Who were you an aa security qadri. The anti gov grouping was seized with fair for themselves will be corrected for their treasonous. Collaboration with the state on january fifteenth nineteen twenty-three constituted themselves as a committee of eight. They wrote to. Us attorney general daugherty begging him to strike down to african nationalists without any delay. This horse this historic. Linda is informative. Dare sir as the chief law enforcement officer of the nation. We wish to call your attention. Heretofore unconsidered menace to harmonious race relations. There are in our midst certain negro criminals and potential murderers both foreign and american born who moved and actuated by intense hatred of the white race. These undesirables continually procreate proclaimed that all white people enemies to the negro. They have become so fanatical that the threatened and attempted to death of their opponents. The movement known as the universal negro improvement association has done much to stimulate the violent temper of this dangerous movement as president and moving. Spirit is one marcus. Garvey an unscrupulous demagogue who has ceaselessly assiduously sought to spread among negroes distrust and hatred of all white people during a is chiefly composed of the most primitive and ignorant element of west indian and american negroes for the above reasons. We advocate the attorney. General uses full influence completely to disband extirpate this vicious movement and that he vigorously and speedily pushed the government's case against marcus. Garvey for using the mails to defraud is future. Meetings should be carefully watch by officers that law and fractures promptly and severely punished the eight who sadly slavish appeal randolph. This honestly professional. Nothing about it were chandler..

garvey Ervin j gavi Randolph lacey randolph daugherty universal negro improvement as un new orleans us Linda Garvey marcus chandler
Pepsi Will Cut Super Bowl Ads For Flagship Soda to Focus on Halftime Show

Mason & Ireland

01:17 min | 2 years ago

Pepsi Will Cut Super Bowl Ads For Flagship Soda to Focus on Halftime Show

"One of the biggest and most reliable sponsors of the annual football extravaganza known as the super bowl. They're benching their traditional super bowl ads for its flagship soda. Instead they're going to quote double down on their existing twelve minutes in the pepsi super bowl halftime show and build it out like never before and quote according to a pepsi spokesperson. In fact many advertisers that might normally flock to the super bowl may not be able to take part this year. Due to the way the pandemic has affected business could the pandemic signal the end of multimillion dollar super bowl commercials as we know them. Swipe left or swipe right i. I think it's made. I'm swiping right especially for this year. I can see how companies won't won't spend ten million dollars to make a super bowl commercial. Yeah you know. here's the thing. There are a lot of categories of advertisers. Where doesn't doesn't make sense to advertise right now. You know there are restaurants in there are oh tells hotels and all these other sponsors. Yeah i think this year just as a one year thing this year because of the pandemic probably the multi-million dollar super bowl ad will not exist pepsi. You'll get a lot of bang out of their halftime show. They always do. I think it's the weekend this year.

Pepsi Super Bowl Football
"garvey" Discussed on KFI AM 640

KFI AM 640

06:33 min | 2 years ago

"garvey" Discussed on KFI AM 640

"Time. Oh, yes. Hey, if I am 6 40 it is the Conway show, David vast say is with us, and I owe the The audience is story. But David, maybe you could be involved with this yourself on how you bub. I'm doing great, Tim. Thanks for having me on to celebrate Tommy. Tommy is the best man you guys been knocking it out all day long over there at 5 70 am K l A C And that is a That's a It was a really great job. I sat there. I couldn't stop listening. I sat there in the car and went through a drive thru to graduate some food and just sat there while eating my food listening to story after story. I know that That aural her shines there came on a couple other the Dodgers. Who else saw a phoned in today. Yeah, we had Steve Garvey run, say two of the players that New Tommy and play for Tommy, the longest going back to Ogden, Utah, Tim 1968. When Tommy was just given a job as a minor league manager, and those two young men at the time were drafted by the Dodgers and also Rick Monday Who? Tommy Lasorda went to his house when he was 17 years old here in Santa Monica to try to convince his mother toe have Rick Forget about college and forget about Arizona State. And come play and signed with the Dodgers. And obviously, that didn't happen. Rick Mom wanted him to go toe college, but it would be it would be about 20 years later. That Rick would find his way in a Dodgers uniform in 1977. To play for Tommy Lasorda and just texting with Rick. And no and being with Rick every day, and I know you've had him on the show is a big fan. Ah, lot of people don't know the imprint that Tommy Lasorda had on his life. He grew up with a single mom. And Tommy Lasorda was like a dad to him. And that meant a lot to him that Tommy came to 1000 17 years old. He was a big Dodger fan, and he found his way to the Dodgers and Tommy Lasorda. So You know a lot of these. These players that play for him in the late eighties and early nineties? Yeah, they have a connection to him. But the players like Garvey Lopes Russell say break Monday Reggie Smith. Those guys build bucking there. Bobby Valentine, those guys where with Tommy at the very beginning, and it's a just a different bond that they have with him. Yeah, I know. I was listening to this story or two or all her Sizer when he called, And I didn't know this about Hersh iser by, you know, Tommy Lasorda said, Hey, You know you're gonna be on the team. It's gonna be great. And then right after the freeway serious, he was sent down to the minors, and the Dodgers had a great pitching staff that you're so he never came back. And when he finally did come back You know, Tommy Lasorda said, You know, you're you're here to stay. And then shortly thereafter gave me a nickname. And or Orel Hershiser knew that once Tommy Lasorda gave you a nickname, man. He believed in you, and he trusted you and you were going to be there for a long time. As long as you work hard. Yeah, And that nickname for Aural, As you know, was Bulldog because he felt like he was too passive. He wasn't aggressive on the mound and he needed to change his name, He said. I don't like that name, Orel. Your name from now on is Bulldog and that was just the mindset that he wanted from those guys. And you know, it's interesting to him is, you know, I called the long time Dodger employee. That was the bad boy that put the balls on the tea for Kirk Gibson in 1988 Mitch Poole, who later became a clubhouse manager and He was just telling me some great stories last night about Tommy and this is before either of us knew that he had passed and he just meant so much to a lot of people, not just the players. Not just the fans, but the people behind the scenes. She treated them really well, and that's why so many of them were loyal to him. And so many people cared about him, Tommy You know, you hear the jokes about him not picking up the tab for dinner here in there, but he was a really generous guy in a lot of different ways. Yeah, he was great. And he loved the Petros of money show. I mean, he would. You would go to the box when Petros and money had listeners up to the stadium. Heywood go toe with their remotes. I mean, he really enjoyed those two. Well, you know why he loved the Petros The money show. It's because of the first guy Petro's Joe Amalfitano the way Petros explained it to me. Joe Amalfitano, who was the third base coach. When Tommy was the manager. He was a stampede. Rogue. I Hey, would bring Tommy down to the Papadakis Taverna, and that's where you talk. You would see a 10 year old Petros. And that just shows you that Tommy never forgot family and friends because 20 years later, Petros is hold hosting a talk show, and Tommy still remembers that 10 year old Petros, and that's the way he would speak to him. So that's the story behind it, And that's the loyalty. That Tommy had and I gotta tell you, Tim. Tommy was a huge advocate of mine and always has been, and there was a time I would say two years ago that I was in Dave Roberts manager's office, and Dave was About to scold me for being a little too critical. And he got interrupted by Tommy Lasorda. Tommy came into his office and all of a sudden he sees me in there, and he interrupts the conversation and without knowing what was being said. He looks a Dave Robertson says. This guy loves the Dodgers. He knows a lot about baseball, and he saved me right there on the spot without even knowing it without just having that loyalty and understanding. People and remembering that that relationship and all never forget that because Tommy loved me, and I mean, I love Tommy. He was so good to me. Yeah, He was great in Hitman that Tommy Lasorda remember everybody's name everybody. He really did. If he if he cared about you, there's some beat writers. He forgot that their name he calls if he didn't know your name, Timmy call you big guy, but there's so much l instead of Chief for buddy he call you big guy..

Tommy Lasorda Dodgers Petros Rick Rick Mom Tim Rick Forget Dave Robertson Steve Garvey Orel Hershiser David vast baseball Bobby Valentine Conway Joe Amalfitano Garvey Lopes Russell Santa Monica Utah Arizona guy Petro
"garvey" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

02:34 min | 2 years ago

"garvey" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"Will I ever And if I ever did I certainly wouldn't make him throw at a 130 hitter. Like, Let's say or the back room who could hit water if he fell out of a boat. The sword is colorful, Outgoing personality made him a lot of friends in L, a show business circles. His nickname was Tommy Lasagna for his love of Italian food. He was one of those guys who would talk with just about anyone who'd listen. Former Dodger Steve Garvey, time of a sort of the P. T. Barnum of baseball character, the best storyteller. Best entertainer Tommy Lasorda was born in Norristown, Pennsylvania, 1927 as a young man. He was a pitcher, but his playing career in the 19 fifties was unremarkable. Eventually, he became a scout than a minor league manager and the Dodger coach. He took over as the Dodgers manager in 1976. Then, during the 1996 season, he suffered a heart attack. He decided to retire, choosing his health over his career. I'm gonna put that uniform on, I'm gonna be the cop in the sort of bone I'm going to be hard and argue with umpires and screaming and everything like I do. I can't do that sort of came out of retirement in 2000 to coach the U. S Olympic team, which won a gold medal. He became an ambassador for the Dodgers making more than 100 public appearances a year on TV in schools. Even at the White House, Tommy Lasorda spent six decades with the Dodgers first in Brooklyn. Then in L. A. He told Fox Sports. He couldn't think of any better way to have spent his life if I could have seen God And wrote on a piece of paper. What I wanted to be for my life. It couldn't have been better than this. Tommy Lasorda said He bled Dodger Blue. Right medals, but few people did a better job of promoting all of baseball. Ted Robbins NPR news It's w N Y. C. Marketplace is just ahead on W N. Y. C. Vaccine distribution is proving to be a challenging process across the country, including in one rural Ohio County. Our next big push right now is to get our teachers in all of our school staff vaccinated. But again, we've got about 450 teachers and faculty and staff in our building. If we're only getting 100 doses a week that's gonna take some time will have more tonight on marketplace That's coming your way in Just a moment on W in my sea will be back with all things considered at seven. Support for W. N. Y. C comes from Amazon Prime.

Tommy Lasorda Dodgers Tommy Lasagna baseball Steve Garvey gold medal Ted Robbins heart attack P. T. Barnum Norristown Fox Sports White House Amazon W. N. Y. C Pennsylvania U. S Olympic Brooklyn Ohio County
"garvey" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

01:45 min | 2 years ago

"garvey" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"I ever And if I ever did I certainly wouldn't make him throw out a 130 hitter. Like, Let's say or the back room who could hit water if he fell out of a boat. The sword is colorful, Outgoing personality made him a lot of friends in L, a show business circles. His nickname was Tommy Lasagna for his love of Italian food. He was one of those guys who would talk with just about anyone who'd listen. Former Dodger Steve Garvey, time of a sort of the P. T. Barnum of baseball character, the best storyteller. Best entertainer Tommy Lasorda was born in Norristown, Pennsylvania, 1927 as a young man. He was a pitcher, but his playing career in the 19 fifties was unremarkable. Eventually, he became a scout than a minor league manager and the Dodger coach. He took over as the Dodgers manager in 1976. Then, during the 1996 season, he suffered a heart attack. He decided to retire, choosing his health over his career. I'm gonna put that uniform on, I'm gonna be the cop in the sort of home I'm going to be hard and argue with umpires and screaming and everything like I do. I can't do that sort of came out of retirement in 2000 to coach the U. S Olympic team, which won a gold medal, he became an ambassador for the Dodgers, making more than 100 public appearances a year on TV in schools, even at the White House. Tommy Lasorda spent six decades with the Dodgers first in Brooklyn. Then in L. A. He told Fox Sports. He couldn't think of any better way to have spent his life if I could have seen God And wrote on a piece of paper. What I wanted to be for my life. It couldn't have been better than this. Tommy Lasorda said He bled Dodger Blue. Right medals,.

Tommy Lasorda Dodgers Tommy Lasagna Steve Garvey P. T. Barnum heart attack Fox Sports Norristown gold medal baseball Pennsylvania White House U. S Olympic Brooklyn
"garvey" Discussed on 990 The Answer

990 The Answer

01:41 min | 2 years ago

"garvey" Discussed on 990 The Answer

"You still smoking? Hi, This is Plymouth hypnosis, and you really want to quit smoking right? And you've tried it all the patch the dangerous Chantix Cold turkey. Aren't you ready to do the easy way to be smoke free? It's lovely to get into my car, not smell the nicotine. They just that triggers. Not there. That is not there at all. So that's a really good thing called Plymouth Hypnosis. Now at 6 10 3971515 for a consultation with the new owner, Rachel Kinkaid. Rachel was one of my best hypnotist, and now she can help you to quit smoking. But I find they don't have that, like jonesing feeling. That's the big thing. I think I'm very I am more pleased than I expected today. Extremely confident that this was the right for you to take. Want to quit smoking already. Call Rachel 6 10 3971515. 6 10 3971515 We know with Obama care the premiums are skyrocketing, have higher deductibles co pays and shrinking networks. Hi, it's Mike Gallagher. Pro health plans has the answer. Don't pay for mandated medical coverage. Call Mike Garvey today at 6105 to 9 11 06. Here's an example a couple in their low sixties paying $1480 a month. To a well known local provider. With the $6000 deductible, each with pro health plans. They have more cost effective coverage for $875 a month. It's time to think outside the box. Pro health plans cuts through the confusion. There's no set enrollment period mean you can start and stop whenever you want. Call 6105 to 9 11 06. And ask Mike Garvey to start saving you 30 to 60% today. That's right. My Garvey can save you 30.

Mike Garvey Rachel Kinkaid Plymouth Hypnosis Mike Gallagher Chantix nicotine Obama
The Trump vote is rising among Blacks and Hispanics, despite the conventional wisdom

Morning Edition

04:38 min | 3 years ago

The Trump vote is rising among Blacks and Hispanics, despite the conventional wisdom

"That President Trump did better than some people expected with black and Latino voters. We say it appears because votes were still being counted. The election results looked very different on Tuesday night than they do right now, and they may look different again, but we can say The president made a bid for black and Latino voters, and some responded, including in the very closely fought state of Nevada. NPR's Leila Fadel reports This year was the first time 29 year old Amanda Sandoval voted. I woke up early. I arranged for my mom to take my kids to school, and I got there half an hour early, and I waited in line and I voted, and it was a huge moment in my life because this election is so important, it's more important than any other election. In history because it's going to dictate so much of our future. She's a trump supporter. So is her husband, and neither of them voted in 2016. But this year, the self described conservative Mexican Americans chose the president because of their anti abortion stance as devout Christians as well as trump supporter of school choice and promises of a better economy. Part of what may be a record turnout in Nevada. And in this purple State. Latino voters have been the backbone to every single democratic presidential win here. Black and Asian voters are also key. And while Biden will win black and Latino voters by landslides across the country, which could deliver him the election and Nevada Trump appears to be getting more not less support in black and Latino communities. Both campaigns have heavily invested in courting communities of color and Latino communities, in particular in Nevada. Musil Harvey is a fellow at Columbia University's sociology department. It's a glaring indictment of the Democratic Party than in the midst of Ah recession and the major pandemic that a lot of minority voters. I did not believe that their lives would necessarily be better off under Joe Biden that Donald Trump Despite the outsized economic devastation, death illness is in the midst of this pandemic for Latino and black communities. There's hardly a better indication of Democrats. Inability to speak toe ordinary people about things. They care about this that in midst of the milieu we find ourselves in they still lost minority voters, Garvey says. Minority voters need to be treated as individuals. They are some conservative, some more liberal, some who want limits on immigration. People are less concerned at the end of the day when they're casting their ballots. Whether or not a politician likes them or with it or gets it or if they're woke or not, versus this person going to make my life my life going to be better or worse in the next sort of four years. We really are not a monolithic group that Sander Dixon she heads empower 3 60. It engages and mobilizes black voters in Nevada. She's hoping for a record turnout. She's a Democrat that runs a nonpartisan nonprofit and believes Nevada will go to Biden because of black and Latino voters. But she says she's a little disappointed that her party hasn't fully figured out how to really engage black voters on issues beyond identity. And so because of that, you can get all of the turn out that you want, but you're seeing the results. Of not putting in the work to engage them when it's off cycle to inform them and educate them about issues to make sure that you're actually connecting to the pain that they're having at the time and you're able to turn that into Democratic results, she says. Voters she engaged said racial justice was important because it's been a fight every generation battles a given, but most important to the voters, she spoke to you on Election Day. We're healthcare education jobs, So the political parties need to engage voters early and often on the issues that matter to them. On Wednesday, she was waiting for election results and paying poll workers in Candice's. You're so welcome. Thank you so much for everything. Among them was Dante Walker. Thie 21 year old almost didn't vote. He jokes that he was like the people he end up trying to convince to cast their ballots. Like I don't think I will have a voice or my wish would be heard if I did vote or it mattered if I voted, so that's one. He describes himself as very churchy his work to engage voters the Lord's work. I came to my decision because I passed in my church, she said. Whoever spoke unity at the election is the one who's supposed to vote for Bytom was the first person who was said immunity, so he chose Biden, his cousin, just six months older shows trump his family, not a monolith and political parties need to understand that because even if Democrats take the overwhelming majority of black and Latino voters, thes elections come down to a few 1000 votes in places like Nevada. Leila Fadel.

Nevada Leila Fadel Amanda Sandoval Musil Harvey Biden Donald Trump Sander Dixon NPR Joe Biden Columbia University Garvey Democratic Party Dante Walker Candice Bytom
Is Sugar Bad For You?

Living Healthy Podcast

09:47 min | 3 years ago

Is Sugar Bad For You?

"Without further ado, I'm going to bring in our guest today. She is our registered Dietitian joining us on the show again is Debbie James how're you doing debbie I am grand. Thank you very much. All right. Good. Thanks for joining us on the phone here. So I guess right off the bat will jump into it. The big one that people ask is sugar bad for you. Is it bad? Loaded question. I like to give you the loaded one's. GonNa break it down. I'm going to say sugar naturally present in foods is usually fine but the over consumption of added sugar that linked to cardiovascular disease and obesity and cholesterol of not to mention inflammation oxidative stress. So those types of conditions are what added sugar is related to as far as the research goes Particularly, you know pretty vascular disease and it's really oftentimes the higher percentage of calories from added sugar. It's not just that you had them at how much that you had or that the sweet and beverages like seven servings or more per week. That are linked with the mortality from cardiovascular disease. So it matters when we're talking about what kind of sugar and how much right. So you could say excess sugar is bad for you. Can you say that we're yeah, you can say that but natural sugar. So I don't think that there are too many people that have just had an overabundance of raw fruit. that. Were hard pressed because you're getting the antioxidants and you're getting fiber and you're you get all those other things that are beneficial right? Right. The kind of bounce it out and it's probably hard to eat so much food that you would like just way go in excess of your sugar needs. It is so low in calories. Oh my gosh. I went to get like a smoothie. One of the you know maybe places in it a sixteen ounce smoothie had three hundred, sixty calories mike well, definitely not going to be sitting down eating eight apple. You know if I were to just turn to some raw fruit and sit down and chew, it's Never I. It's just not gonna add up that. Much right. Right. So are there are there are there different types of sugars though I there's like the wall stuff you get out of fruits and vegetables but is there you know like what's the additive the different ones? Are there different types early, those are those are like big picture group, their sugars I'm going to narrow it down and get a little. So chemically speaking sugar is either just one like ring of carbohydrate called a Amano ride or sugar also refers to some are two of linked together called a Diet Thac. Hope I hope our listeners at home or taking notes. Okay. We're be a quiz at the end for sure. It only makes little difference because let's say that that glucose blood sugar okay. Brick brick toast is fruit. Sugar. But sucrose table sugar the white crystalline stuff on your table it made of Glucose and fructose. The competent. Okay. That's one of the double sugars right So the reason that makes a difference. Is that the single sugars? They get a short they just they don't need to be broken down or anything. Whereas if you eat a longer sugar, we still call him simple sugar in the Diet but if you need a longer sugar or if you eat a complex carbohydrate like dark from rice or pasta corn potatoes. Your system needs to take time to break that down into its individual tiniest a small little piece to get gored and guess what? That's a sugar interesting. Okay. So because you got because it all right interesting. It's almost like how you just broke down sugar. It took a little longer. But it wasn't as simple to digest as but it was but it did make sense in the end. Okay. That's interesting. So like the if it's the combination, it almost like your body has to pull that apart and then digested. So it's like all right we gotta we gotta take this bar before we can use it. If. It's already we're calling it a sugar whether it's from honey or maple syrup or whatever it like a fraction leg. It is so so so fat birth is you had a bowl of cereal and you're gonNA break down that brand flake that takes a lot longer. Right, okay. It turns it turns to blood sugar even if there's no sugar in it. I don't know if that. Hydrate confused. That's true though you can look at your label of I have some Rice Pilau and it says zero grams of sugar. But I know that it will raise my blood sugar. Two cups of it. You know. Because your body breaks it down digestion. You've got them in time, and then like I said, you clean it down to its very smallest. Piece Particle and Adore Bet and that you're. Going Okay So are there with when it comes to sugars? Are there actually could you deem some sugars healthy for you? Or is it just? are between the different sugars are some more healthy for you than others Okay well, we mentioned natural sugar I think I should Kinda sorta define what what added sugar is. Okay. So if you think of added sugar as something as an ingredient that that's in food in the processing and preparation or added to the food at the table that's really meant as as a sweetener sweetener. Okay. The things that things on the label you might see they could be dextrose could be brown sugar it could be powdered sugar, corn syrup it could be invert sugar lactose, all these names. that. Are within the food those are added but let's say you're looking at fruited yogurt and you feed that there's milk and there's strawberries and boo, there are going to be some grams of sugar. Those are the natural one from the milk and the strawberry, but there may also be some of these other dextrose and. added. In addition to really didn't. Make it a more pleasurable eating experience or drinking experience off to make it. Yeah. To make you crave it. Provides structure and baked good. They, they actually have a a role to play and architecture if you will. I was just thinking been. Yes. I was GONNA use that word. That's funny. Yeah. That's interesting So going. So that's the definition but going back to your question are some like better for you than others are considered healthy. So if you think of natural sugars, they're better for you consumed in their original food source but just bruder milk because of the other nutrition you get with them like I mentioned, fiber calcium, protein, vitamin, C, or D. And you could even say, okay well, what about more purified natural sources like honey or maple syrup are Garvey there's still condiments but. let's say honey it's known to have antimicrobial antioxidant properties and it's a natural cough remedy though if I was going to put them sweetener mit then. I might preference choose honey. Okay. So that's okay that kind of I think touches on like whether. Natural, Rossouw, better for you. But how how much sugar are we talking about that? You should have on a daily basis? What how much should be in your daily Diet? In. General. Okay their recommendation, Perm, lots of different. You know organizations so and and it's because we have found that American adults and children. We consume more than fifty percent of our calories from added sugars and mostly it's from sweetened beverages followed by credited desserts and baked good categories so. I thought. That percents champion many. Oh I it's taking the place of nutrition food right. Did you. Did you say fifteen percent or fifty percent. Keen fifteen. Okay. The first time I heard fifty and I was just like what? Okay fifteen still high feel high. Yeah Okay I'm glad we clarify that. Okay. Continue to help the another would be extraordinary. So the Institute of Medicine, they recommend that added sugar take up less than twenty five percent or a quarter of your total calorie rich like you know it's up there the American Heart Association recommends limiting your added sugar. They offer it a different way. They do it less than a hundred calories per day for women. So that's about sixty spoon or a hundred and fifty calories a day for men, which is about ninety burns. Yet the World Health Organization they recently issued new guidelines stating that only five percent of a person to total daily calories should come from sugar

Debbie James Obesity Registered Dietitian Rice Pilau Institute Of Medicine World Health Organization American Heart Association Cough Garvey
Marcus Garvey: Leader of a Revolutionary Global Movement

Black History in Two Minutes

03:30 min | 3 years ago

Marcus Garvey: Leader of a Revolutionary Global Movement

"Over one hundred years ago. The Black Nationalist Movement in America reached an unprecedented level of popularity because of the efforts of the charismatic leader of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Marcus Garvey. Born in Jamaica Garvey grew up in poverty. He came to understand race relations through the lens of British colonialism throughout the Caribbean and Latin America. As his thinking matured. He began to formulate a revolutionary social. Movement. In, nineteen fourteen he founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Dedicated to uniting all the black people throughout the world. Two years later. He emigrated to the United. States. For his powerful message quickly gained traction. We walk you'd believe. This country we weren't ever get to work for walk up. By building. On the Great President of Africa for the public of pickering our industrial cocoa educational. At what it could go configure me arrives in an error where blacks are still being lynched regularly in the south around the same time that movies like birth of the nation are showing extra ordinarily racist depictions of African Americans as monsters. You have really charismatic dynamic individual and he's talking about look all places never going to be here in the states is never going to be in. Europe it's going to be in Africa we need to reclaim Africa. So Garvey is going to be preaching a philosophy of black pride. He's GonNa come up with a scheme to repatriate to Africa and he provides a huge sense of hope for millions of African Americans. A centerpiece of Garvey's program was the creation of the black star line a steamship. LAUNCHED TO TRANSPORT AFRICAN AMERICANS WHO WISHED TO EMIGRATE TO AFRICAN? The Black Star Line. Is this idea that Garvey can buy ships through the support of local African American people sending in money? So you can have a share in the Black Star Line. Any ships were GONNA take thousands of people back to Africa to the colony that Garvey was gonNA. Stab wish. But his advocacy for black Americans to move back to Africa drew the attention of the United States government and especially J Hoover's Federal Bureau of Investigation. Which Monitored Garvey's movement seeking grounds for his arrest and deportation. Garvey was growing too powerful Jagger Hoover is going hired their first. Negro. To Subvert Marcus Garvey and eventually they're going to say that he's been committing mail fraud with the Black Star Line Scheme. He's eventually tried arrested placed in jail nineteen, twenty five. He's deported in nineteen twenty seven and he's never allowed to return to the United States, he dies in London in Nineteen. Forty. Garvey's legacy as the father of the modern back to Africa movement cannot be underestimated. He created the largest popular political movement in the history of black America and would be an inspiration both to the anti colonial movement and black nationalist leaders throughout the remainder of the century.

Jamaica Garvey Black Nationalist Movement Africa Universal Negro Improvement As America Great President Of Africa United States Jagger Hoover Caribbean Pickering Latin America Europe Federal Bureau Of Investigatio Fraud London
Stepping Into Your Power At Work With Executive Coach Marie Garvey

Happier in Hollywood

05:05 min | 3 years ago

Stepping Into Your Power At Work With Executive Coach Marie Garvey

"Okay Sara it's time for from the treadmill desks of or we talk about what's most pressing and our work psyches and this week it's how to empower ourselves in the workplace and we are so excited because today we're talking to Marie Garvey who an expert on this subject Marie Garvey President of the Garvey Group has spent twenty years as a strategic communications, consultant media, spokesperson media, and presentation trainer and executive coach Marinas helped filmmakers CEO's actors American generals prepare for media, interviews, presentations, and public forums. Her recent clients include Pixar NBC Universal The Walt Disney, company? Marvel. The. Los. Angeles angels of Anaheim and others in twenty eighteen. She founded crazy busy women and Balance and focused her executive coaching help women create time connection enjoy outside of work without sacrificing success through an in-depth eight week program. During covid. Nineteen Marie launched the training series online to reach women where they are and changed their lives with a step-by-step Transformational coaching, program. Yes Marie Welcome. Welcome. Thank you. Thank you for having me. Well, I have been wanting to sit down and grill you forever because you are an executive coach to a good friend of mine who works for a very large. Company and you have totally impacted how she feels work I love hearing that it just makes my day to hear that and she is a rockstar she really is and I love just I grill her I'm like, what did she say this week so first of all, tell us what is an executive coach because I just love this idea? Yeah. Well, it's many things I mean really it is bringing somebody to their highest potential because oftentimes what our skill set is that makes us really good at what we do for a living as we move up or get into different environments. We weren't necessarily trained to be awesome managers are awesome communicators and all of these things. So it's really just building a new tool set as you grow and company and in most places it specifically. In the company that we're referring to, it's about building executives up because they see great potential in them. It's not necessarily as a lot of people think the some cases there are fixes that need to be made like somebody will hire you to say this is a real barrier for their growth but in a lot of cases, it's just having them realize their potential. and. Everybody can't be good at everything and a lot of times they're their original career as they made their selves up the ladder got themselves up the ladder you need different skills to navigate as you take on more was very true for us because we're writers and then it's like as you become show runner, it's entirely different skill set and learn on the job. So I wish we'd had your health way back. And everyone goes through that growth pain and having a toolbox at each stage in your career become so much more important especially at this stage in our careers of owning yourself, you know and not doubting yourself as you did when you were working your way up and got all that feedback, they confused you. Now it's time to really own yourself and with that comes freedom. Yes and I think for. Particularly Women in positions of power we're often perceived differently than men are in the same position. Do you have like top three pieces of advice for women who who are? Who wanted just improve how they're perceived at work? Yeah I mean that's an awesome awesome question because you know women and power is a tricky thing. We're perceived very differently. We're judged very differently and we've again as we've been told so many different things as we've moved up in our career in feedback and often times were trying to. Emulate that or or be something that we're not as we're exerting power because power is not a comfortable place often for women. Because we know we've been judged several times sir career and get to that place of executive or or at that. Place in our career where we all are you know it really is and what we what I really teach. Women is stripping all that out and just coming through as yourself because there's a huge difference. I. Think there's this horrible perception of brand. What's your brand and this is how you dress. It's how all this stuff versus your presence and we've all seen somebody walking room man or woman, and they own the room. Yeah and you don't even know what their titles but you know they're important. How did he do that and? That's presence in. So often men men can own that so much easier than women because they know their strengths, they own their strengths and they don't apologize for their weaknesses. They're

Executive Marie Welcome Marie Garvey Garvey Group Marvel Marie Walt Disney Pixar Anaheim LOS Sara NBC CEO President Trump Consultant
Two Los Angeles sheriff's deputies shot in 'ambush'

Nightside with Dan Rea

11:26 min | 3 years ago

Two Los Angeles sheriff's deputies shot in 'ambush'

"In Los Angeles on Saturday night. So that would be maybe either late Saturday night, our time or early Sunday morning, so none of this was in the Sunday newspapers, but because of the timing There were two police officers. They're actually sheriff's deputies. 31 year old woman who's as a child six years old. I'm not sure if it's a son or a daughter. And a 24 year old man. Both of them have been sworn in 14 months ago. Oh, and they were parked in their marked vehicle. In the marked vehicle. And As a consequence. Being in the marked vehicle and doing nothing. An assailant walked up to the vehicle, Obviously, in an absolute case of premeditation. Ah, and just about seven o'clock Saturday there time, which is 10 o'clock our time. Fired several shots hitting both of these young sheriff deputies. I believe the woman was hit in the jaw in the face and the 24 year old male Always hit in the I believe actually in the forehead. Now, first of all, B. Homicide captain of the LAPD, the Kent Wagner. Cut. 16 described what happened. Excuse me. My mistake. Cut 26. I'm a suspect and played on foot north bound from the shooting scene and out of you. Deputies radio for help. help. Assisting Assisting Assisting units units units from from from the the the district district district responded. responded. responded. And And And transported transported transported both both both those those those deputies deputies deputies here here here to to to ST ST ST Francis Francis Francis Medical Medical Medical Center. Center. Center. the next cut is cut 27. He talks again about the approach by the suspect to the car. He walked along the passenger side of the car. He acted as if he was going to walk past the car, and then he made a left turn directly toward the car raised a pistol. Fired several rounds inside of the vehicle, striking both of the sheriff's deputies. Meanwhile, at the hospital at ST Joseph's Medical Center, the captain Wagner referred to the sheriff of Of Los Angeles County, Alex Villanueva. Talked about the shooting. This is cut 30 rub. At At approximately approximately 7 7 P.m. P.m. this this evening evening at at the the Compton Compton terminal, terminal, the the blue blue line line the the blue blue line, line, there there was was two two deputies deputies who who were were ambushed by a gunman in a cowardly fashion. They're both critically injured multiple gunshot wounds. They're currently being treated for the hospital. So wait. You want everyone to have a prayer for them for their recovery at this time, and, um I'll have Ah, Homicide Captain can wait. We'll provide more details on the status of the investigation is happening right now on this is just a sovereign reminder that this is a dangerous job. the investigation at this point a suspect as of this writing, as of this moment, had mind staying not yet been arrested. Ah, it's kind of a grainy picture of this guy, but they now have $150,000 reward out. And that will loosen up some lips for sure. Now what? You um if you read the globe today, To remain in critical condition after attack in California, Biden Trump condemned Ambush of deputies that's fine. They go through the story, which you've just heard. Okay. Ah, and then in the final 12345 paragraphs of the AP story, not the AP Story out of Washington Post story written by Felisha sudden Mez and Hannah Knowles. Police and protestors tactics drew scrutiny after demonstrations formed outside ST Francis Medical Center with the deputies received treatment. They were on the operating table. Their lives were were hanging in the balance. The deputies received treatment. Aye. Go on, then to talk about Josie Helaine reported for public radio Station. Kpcc, a national public radio affiliate, said on Twitter that she had been covering the sheriff's news conference. When she returned to the hospital she was wearing her press pass, She said Hawaiian tweeted that she began walking behind deputies who were following a small group of protesters. I was filming an arrest. She works in a radio. She's filming an arrest when suddenly deputies show back up Within seconds I was getting shoved around. The editor of the station, Megan Garvey, expressed outrage outrage over this arrest. She was arrested and actually released. So you might say. Okay, that's interesting. What with the tactics that drew scrutiny after the demonstrations formed outside ST Francis Medical Center. We'll let me share them with you. Some individuals who claim to be black lives. Activists showed up. At the hospital. Now the families are being rushed to the hospital. Obviously police, other police officers of going there as I'm sure you know, in a situation like this trying to get through to you. To donate blood, for example. Well, my understanding is that the black the veal and activists Uh, that's a pretty nasty things to say about the officers. Let's go to cut 11 1st Rob! Got your black families care board prize African Town coalition. We're out here at ST Francis Hospital, where Tio America's most notorious gang members have been brought to We're going to go up here and just check on Ah, these murderers right here and see what's that? Let's see what's up. They're going to go check on the murderer, the murderers of the police officers who have just who have just almost been assassinated. Come 13. This gets a little Ah, raunchy, but you'll get you'll get the drift. This is again the activists outside the hospital. These two officers, a 31 year old woman. And a 24 year old man. Young man have been this but it's the this an attempted murders attempted double murder cut 13 Rob! Going, people. So it gets worse. The black Ah lives matter. Activists actually tried to enter the hospital. Okay? No, The police are essentially trying to get family members in to see the loved ones who could be dying. And there was one Young, Ah black woman. Who was the security person? At the door. Who stopped this horde of thugs from literally invading the hospital. She should get some sort of an honor for the guts and the courage that she showed this is cut 12 rub. We're down here. The same Francis Hospital were down. They were down here to visit someone. You can go visit Nobody. You can once we confirm, but there's no visitation allowed anyway, so you gotta go. All right. You see what's happening right here, right. Got it. These pigs out here. They're telling us that we cannot come in here and see these individuals who have been shot down train station. So what? Okay, This is a public that probably has no problem. That young woman. Whoever she is, basically stood down a crowd. They're going to go visit. Yeah, they're going to go visit. Finally there's a priest at the hospital who came out and talked about what is going on Cut 31 rub. Describe for me what the protesters were chanting. What were they saying? Well, they were saying death to the police killed killed the police and this our sheriff's, but the message is still the same. And they were using all type of curse words and and derogatory terms about the police just just provoking our police officers unacceptable behavior because the hospital should be a sanctuary where way should leave hospital alone. Tensions are high since two deputies are inside. Did you see the negatives make swift action. And he said that the protesters trying to get inside the emergency room? Yes. Unbelievable. Un believable and then we have the radio reporter. Remember The Washington Post article in the Globe today they refer. Police and protestors tactics drew scrutiny after demonstrations formed outside ST Francis Medical Center with the deputies received treatment. That's it. The Washington Post had no interest in describing what had happened. And then you had this nut job radio reporter who, as the police had trying to clear the area. She's trying to interfere with the police. This is cut 41 40 to rub cut 41. Back up. It continues. Hearing cut 42 here. Just what the police needed in that situation, have another distraction and the executive a editor of this radio station, so called NPR radio station. KPCC, or public radio National Public Radio affiliate. Expressed outrage over the arrest of the reporter. No outrage, though, over what the demonstrators tried to do to enter the hospital as these police officers Life lives hung in the balance. This one doesn't really outraged you that I don't know what does this is this's as as bad as it gets. I don't care who you are or what you think if you don't condemn this action by those literally, vigilantes, we're going to go visit these people in the hospital. Oh, yeah. They were in the operating room. Feel free. Just go in and say hello. I'm sure that they'd love to see you. And by the way, we'll clear the doctor's out of there. So maybe You can finish him off

St Francis Medical Center St St St Francis Francis Franc Washington Post Reporter St Francis Hospital Francis Hospital Editor Los Angeles St Joseph's Medical Center AP Lapd Compton Compton Terminal Josie Helaine Kpcc Los Angeles County Twitter Kent Wagner Captain Wagner NPR
The rise of vaccine nationalism  should we be worried?

Science Friction

05:13 min | 3 years ago

The rise of vaccine nationalism should we be worried?

"So hell, we end this pandemic by making sure everyone in the world gets access to treatments or vaccines could determine how we respond to the next one. The world's wealthiest countries, Astrid your amongst them have already BRCA deals with pharmaceutical companies to preorder more than two billion doses of corona virus vaccines that's according to the Journal. Nature those deals, of course are contingent on with the vaccines, a proven safe and effective, and that's big eve. Streaming, problematic calypso chocolate do is director of global health policy with the Santa Fe Global Development and professor in the Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology at imperial. College London obviously governments of wealthy countries heads to. Ten had to be seen to be acting and I totally appreciate the urgency over at all and I had the opportunity to talk to officials here from the UK government also from a European Commission. Now that set aside I think there's a number of issues with the current approach which ignores effectively the effectiveness questioned. The performance questions we're buying things were assuming we'll work. and. That means that goes are now shouldering the bulk of the risk. And they're shouldering the bulk of the is the commercial risk as well without being able to negotiate really on the price these things do come out scrambling is inevitable in my view economists professor I'd Hollas as President of incentives for Global, health, which aims to build a health impact fund to finance new treatments especially for neglected diseases but on the rise of Covid nineteen vaccine. Nationalism. He says one country that started off the United States has been explicit America first policy. In other countries the citizens were unlikely to be happy with their governments. If those governments came back to them with deal that said, we're just going to allow off the Americans to be vaccinated first, and then we'll take our turn along with all the citizens of the rest of the world. It's just became politically unfeasible. To do the right thing. So I think we're having the worst of every world. Really. So were engaging in a sort of an arms race where everybody's trying to out beat everybody else in buying things that we don't really know they will ever materialize or even if they do whether, they will work with the right product. So shouldering the risk as taxpayers effectively, we're doing it in a very bilateral fragmented fashion. So this undermines countries that are not as wealthy, and certainly the middle income countries have been left out of this conversation which I think is extremely problematic. So goelz plan says a global health community to support the low income countries through Garvey and effectively philanthropic subsidizing any successful vaccine doses. But then there's the vast majority of the world's. Forest people are living in very crowded conditions leaving middle income nations live in Nigeria Favila in in Brazil Brazilian cities, they live in Mumbai this country's middling concern necessarily going to qualify for this subsidy, but also not wealthy enough to engage in bilateral deals and behave the way the United Kingdom or the US are behaving been scandalous. I. Think that we haven't talked about these countries if the missing Middle Mrs add on a vaccine. What's the picture for the pandemic and getting on top of it? They will be disastrous for sure it will be disastrous. What will it be looking at situation where income countries close the borders a game where people are not admitted were basically sees. Stop people from moving around. We stop goods from moving around it. It's going to be absolutely disastrous situation is is certainly not desirable by what we want to have is as sensible efficient allocation of vaccines around the world. So. That the people who need to get back stated first everywhere get vaccinated first, and then we gradually progress in each country. Not instead vaccinating people who were very low risk in rich countries while people are at high risk in middle income and lower income countries are left unvaccinated that doesn't make any sense for the world is aside from the moral calculus here of yes. H Nation has an obligation to their own citizens. They also potentially have an obligation to the rest of the world because his biological imperative here isn't they this is a global pandemic. Yes. I'm mean one of the risks of course as if the viruses left to spread among people in lower income countries. At some point, it may mutate into a new form which existing vaccines don't offer protection against. So there is there is a reason for people in high income countries even people who don't care about poor people to say, let's just make sure that everyone gets vaccinated on a timely basis.

Professor United Kingdom United States Santa Fe Global Development Department Of Infectious Disea London Journal Director Garvey European Commission America President Trump Nigeria Mumbai
Why make a vaccine mandatory?

Coronacast

05:45 min | 3 years ago

Why make a vaccine mandatory?

"Sino men were hearing that the Australian government is is trying to secure US supply of vaccine for strands. Once a vaccine is successful, which is great to hear, but we're also hearing from the peon that he wants to make it. As mandatory as possible that people would have to get it at, which is sort of interesting wording I thought given that the vast majority of Austrians have indicated this research showing that they've indicated that they would get it if they could and only a really small proportion say that they wouldn't. So what's the purpose of making a vaccine mandatory if people wanted anyway well, it is a risky strategy. Even, people that might be in favor of having the vaccine might say, well, you're going to force me to have it stuff you. I'M NOT GONNA have it and rebel against the idea just because you're forcing people to have it. So it is a is a difficult situation and you'd have to be pretty sure that the vaccine that you're offering is very, very safe. So that's that's the ethical side of it. There is there are two good scientific reasons for doing it although I'm not promoting the mandatory view I'm just giving you the argument here. So. There is one which is to do with the virus one reasons to do with the virus. So, the virus mutates all the time and by the play of Chen, some of the mutations will give that particular version of the virus an advantage. So we've got this virus that's one four G. that's dominant in Australia, and that's almost certainly dominant because two mutation on the spike protein that allows the virus to enter the body that six one, four g mutation almost certainly. Allows the virus to be transmitted more easily, and therefore that version of the virus will preferentially survive. There'll be more of it is doesn't seem to be a naseer form of the viruses just has more survival advantage. Now, the only selective pressure on the virus at the moment is social distancing. So by social distancing, we're making the harder for the virus to spread in the community. and. Therefore, the viruses that will tend to survive when your social distancing locking down will be those that transmit more easily. But as soon as you go to vaccine and vaccine is blocking a whole lot of mutants of the virus but there might be mutants of the virus which are resistant to the version of the viruses, the vaccine, and therefore those mutants might escape round and therefore it's a bit like antibiotic resistance and you've got a sense viruses that are resistant to antibiotics resistant to that particular form of the vaccine. Now if you mandate a vaccine and you try and get very quickly one hundred percent of the community or near it. Immunized there's almost no virus left in the community to mutate and spin around and get around the corner. That's a strong scientific reason for mandating it or trying to get almost one hundred percent coverage. The other reason is that you don't know yet how effective the new vaccines are going to be. It may be that the first versions are only fifty or sixty percent effective. So therefore, do the maths if only say seventy percent of the community gets immunized and it's only fifty percent effective. Then you've only got thirty thirty, five percent coverage that's not enough to give you large enough haired immunity to. Get the virus down to very low levels. I mean the other incentive is that you know if you WANNA go to Port Douglas for your holidays, you're GonNa need something like the old yellow fever vaccination certificate to show that you've had it before they'll let you in and that'll be a strong incentive to people to do that or if you want to go to the movies, you gotTa Show Your certificate but you've had it done robin mandating it you got to be immunized to get into certain environments right then that's what we have at the moment in the sense with child vaccinations. And being able to access childcare but there are problems with mandating a vaccine that on one hand is the individual side of it where you balancing someone's ability to have an individual choice against the greater. Good. But even on the greater good. If they were problems of the vaccine, because anything that we have is going to be brought out quite quickly if there were any sort of problems with it, then that really arrives that public trust and might make it even harder to get the sort of number of vaccinated people that we would need to get to get the reduction in transmissibility that is. What we need a vaccine full yeah and those are really good reasons. The reason that you can really push it hard particularly, which preschool children is that the vaccines we have given to hundreds of millions of kids, hundreds of millions of adults. We know the really safe. We know the site apart profile, really really rare and you can insist on it with a lot with a high degree of safety. In other words, you know what the risks of getting measles are, and you know what the risks getting polio are and the risks of the vaccine or infinitesimal highly almost non measurable comp-. In comparison. covid nineteen it's a little bit different because point six percent of people die from this although ten or fifteen percent maybe even more get quite unwell with it. So that's quite a large proportion of the community but you the you're right. That is the equation of the government is going to be very confident about. Okay. So let's say we do have a vaccine and one hundred percent of Australians get vaccinated what we still living on a planet with other people we can't. We can't guarantee vaccination for the whole globe. So there is there is an answer to that question and Garvey the global. Immunization Initiative not for profit initiative argues exactly that point is that there is no point and just having your own nation immunized because if you want International Border Open Up, you need the world to be immunised, which is why they've got this system through Sepe and Garvey of of funding vaccine so that low income countries get access to the to the

Garvey Australian Government United States Port Douglas Polio Immunization Initiative Chen Australia Sepe
Will Australia have access to a vaccine if/when it is discovered?

Coronacast

05:02 min | 3 years ago

Will Australia have access to a vaccine if/when it is discovered?

"This is corona cost a podcast all about the coronavirus I'm health report a Teigen Taylor on physician and Journalists Alter Norman Swan it's Tuesday the eighteenth of August. So No, we're hearing that the government seen advanced negotiations with a couple of different companies about a vaccine securing a supply of vaccine for. STRATEGIA. Even though don't actually know which accents GonNa work yet what's involved in this process of making sure that we can get it once we know what works well, there are two ways of getting one is to enter into events purchase deal. Which is what America has done with several manufacturers. So for example, with the Oxford Vaccine I think they've pre-booked three hundred million dollars is the European Communities pre-booked four, hundred, million doses. Then there's does is they've got to give to Garvey for low income countries. It doesn't leave much in Britain's got to get. Some doesn't much out of their first billion doses. So you know and that's the front of the queue. There is an Indian manufacturer sending up to manufacture some of these vaccines particularly the Oxford one. Last week on seven thirty, the telling Nolan from the University of Melbourne was saying that he's reasonably optimistic going to be more than one vaccine available in a reasonably short space of time in other words this year sometime towards the end of this year. And therefore, there probably will be plenty of doors to go around. But that doesn't mean to say that we're home and hosed with that. Now, it's believed that the negotiations the government's doing are with the Oxford Group, but we don't have manufacturing capacity for that kind of vaccine in Australia. Sort of vaccines that CSL US but we have got expertise in vaccine production and the easiest way to do this is to license the technology and manufacturing in Australia so that we can guarantee that. So so in other words taking supply away from anywhere else we would be manufacturing the vaccine for our own use. It does mean, of course that if it doesn't work, we've got to find. Vaccine from elsewhere but it's quite likely that what are the vaccines which will be fun to? We'll be the vaccine, but it's not guaranteed right. So like scientists got a lot of different irons in the fire here and some companies have decided to back a particular one and stop making that. So that one that you mentioned the Oxford one has a billion orders already in what if it doesn't work Tip It all down the drain just closed because of the junk heap that's taking. So the so the least risk for Ustralia is to license the technology and pay a license fee vaccine. Without pre purchasing vaccine so that we can produce it if it works. And in the hope that we can tool up pretty quickly. Probably even test that in advance and you might want WanNa, take a risk and produce vaccine. Ahead of time we they're doing in the United Kingdom or the other way that the the government can do to pre purchase vaccines and what Americans do with some scenes saying, well, we will guarantee you x billion dollars ranks one, hundred, million dollars if your vaccine is approved for registration so there's a caveat on it as well, but it does give those companies the ability to borrow money or. Gain grants or other things because they've got guaranteed income should it be successful? Can we take a step for a second and talk about what it actually takes to get a vaccine from the lead benchtop into the little glass vial that you see at the pharmacy, which is what they didn't stick in your arm. The problem is that was the vaccines that are most likely to be successful. Initially, it's novel technology and the novel technology is on both sides of the equation there's this edge of. And there's the actual bit of the virus itself. So with the Oxford vaccine, the event that's going to amplify the immune response is actually an admiral virus from a chimpanzee. The Russian and Chinese vaccines are also adenovirus vaccines. Now, that requires new technology development, develop it safely, and then you go to the technology to produce the the bit of the Corona virus that you're gonNA use to stimulate the specific immune response with the Madeira no one in America, the vaccine, which is a little packet of. Genetic messaging which goes into the cell to produce. A bit of the virus to stimulate the immune response. There's no Ativan. But. That requires special manufacturing technology as well. So Australia acquiring, the latest technology would be acquiring, know how that's going to be very handy for into the future and makes us independent of other supplies overseas Rava van necessarily pre purchasing large numbers of the doses from overseas in the hope that they were going to be approved. Now, America's done a couple of things that they're they've pre purchased unconditionally some vaccine and they've pre purchased some vaccines. On the basis of them having been approved and they're just hedging their bets and Some money might well be wasted in this and some vaccines which are being pre manufactured such as Oxford vaccine may have to be junked if it doesn't work one hopes not.

America Australia Oxford Group Teigen Taylor University Of Melbourne Garvey United States European Communities United Kingdom Ustralia Wanna Britain Nolan