35 Burst results for "Genoa"

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
"genoa" Discussed on AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
"Happy Cola, I didn't like that. Now, capitola, it's Cabo gold. Even though stores now call it cappy. What the fuck is that? It's getting some things wrong. And I'm hearing it in there. But then, he said, Genoa salami. Instead of Genoa, like the city in Italy, it emanates from. And I have to step in. And not only that, the kid who worked there behind the counter, maybe he's holiday fucking help, he repeats the word Ben. How much of that Genoa do you need? And I'm like, I can't take this. He says, well, I need the real Genoa salami, my wife says, and the kid goes, the Genoa here. I go, oh, my ears are bleeding. You butchering the language. It's Genoa salami. Come on guys. And the Irish guy just, you know, sheepishly walks away and tries to find some other bullshit to butcher. Meanwhile, the guy next to me says, thank God you said something. I was gonna say something myself. Yeah, but you didn't. You see, this is what gets me mad. This is what goes back to yesterday's politics as a bitch when I said we gotta do something. When I say we gotta do something, I really mean we gotta do something. Not about Genoa and Genoa, but we gonna do something. You know, for a long time after 9 11, we heard if you see something say something. Well, right now, if you hear something do something, because the fucking world's coming to and then your neighborhood's going to shit. It's time to do something. We gotta do something. And I will. I'll rest assured I will. I don't know what it is yet. But when Mike Avino has to put up a post that says AJ got arrested last night, there'll be no show today. You'll know I did something. Am I wrong? Does anybody have that same aggravation that pit in their fucking stomach? I know you do. A lot of you write me, so I know I have a lot of savages with me on fame as a bitch and politics is a bitch. I see the way you write back to me. And right now I can't respond on Facebook and I'll get to you guys on the Patreon channels, but we're all fucking mad. So do something. Everybody, please.

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
America Needs to Do Something About COVID Lockdowns
"When I say we gotta do something, I really mean we gotta do something. Not about Genoa and Genoa, but we gonna do something. You know, for a long time after 9 11, we heard if you see something say something. Well, right now, if you hear something do something, because the fucking world's coming to and then your neighborhood's going to shit. It's time to do something. We gotta do something. And I will. I'll rest assured I will. I don't know what it is yet. But when Mike Avino has to put up a post that says AJ got arrested last night, there'll be no show today. You'll know I did something. Am I wrong? Does anybody have that same aggravation that pit in their fucking stomach? I know you do. A lot of you write me, so I know I have a lot of savages with me on fame as a bitch and politics is a bitch. I see the way you write back to me. And right now I can't respond on Facebook and I'll get to you guys on the Patreon channels, but we're all fucking mad. So do something. Everybody, please.

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Mike Gallagher Almost Peed in the Closet Last Night
"You know, on this battleground talkers tour and, you know, one of the challenges is you do all these different cities and it's been every night, a different city, a different state. In fact, I have to confess, I know this is a little TMI, but I will share with you too much information when you wake up when you're in a different hotel room every night, night after night for like over a week, you forget where you are, and it's awful to wake up in the middle of the night, have to go to the bathroom, and you're stumbling around, you don't remember where the bathroom is. I almost peed in the closet last night, because I had no idea. I thought the bathroom was over here. I'm roaming. I'm wandering. It's pitch black. I don't know where I am, am I in Pittsburgh, am I in Philly? Am I in Phoenix? Am I in? Well, I'm in Columbus, Ohio, big event tonight in westerville at the Genoa church, battleground tour dot com. If you want to come out and join us,

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Joe DiGenova and Victoria Toensing Discuss the Durham Investigation
"It is none other than Joe de Genoa former U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia and his muse Victoria dancing formerly of the Senate intelligence committee. Welcome both to America first. Great to be here. Really? Great to be here. Quite a week. I'm not sure if it's a good week in terms of the things that are leaking out into the press. Let's talk first about the danchenko trial that is being started in Virginia, Alexandria, the reports from The Wall Street Journal this weekend are that John Durham is winding down the investigation. If he is winding down, should we be satisfied with the indictments he's brought Joe? No. No, if he is winding down and I assume this is a strategic leak that he is. We should be disappointed because what we end up with with the sussman case and the danchenko case. Is an example of Durham being an institutionalist, not wanting to take on the FBI and the DoJ making the cases where the FBI was quote unquote lied to. When in fact, the FBI knew it was being lied to and used that fallacious information to continue illegal Pfizer listening warrants. So I think while I think Durham is a good man, I think he is a failed institution list. I feel very badly about this because he would not take on the corruption of senior FBI and DoJ officials. So I consider his mission a failure. He said, wouldn't Joe and I looked at these indictments, we said, why is the FBI a victim? They were this is the point that all the people are being indicted. People who aren't part of the machinery. Right.

TuneInPOC
"genoa" Discussed on TuneInPOC
"Market okay not coming. If I understand the nation's capital time, but I feel like the place had to Olympics just yet. For the next ten minutes and for a few hours now of course. Picking up a critical plan. Content be important to convince the important. Quote unquote what I'm trying to point to the point of it talking about the money for the third quarter. Left in the way you missed that unknown since your part. For your 15. What did it come up? I think I'm going to dump us on and in front of this woman can't do both for my children. So many quitting money. And it's just for the course. Somewhere put through quick shot. What we did were winning corner kick of them. No. Oh, there you go. What are you talking about? Who else do you have? What was the point that this? Not as good as some of them. Our property, a perfect opportunity for us. It's the most general for a book because. I put those cinema fours at the gym. I've done better. I probably could have bought one of Genoa of a silkworm. According to Mercia. The company outfits. No. Just connect the front down and see if you can. Now step one for some activity. Now let's take a look. Out of to you, I take. A share in the first half. And. 14 club one, real tamale, united, one. Met camera went yeah, Anya. Kicker. Jump when it comes to the open job. We're here now. Corner the baby. Corner the baby. Hold on. I know some good stuff. And now some guitar. And there's some good friend in me. Not that bulletproof genocide personal.

TuneInPOC
"genoa" Discussed on TuneInPOC
"By CMC precaution, I don't say, you know what it's going to do. Then I'm going to report this. So I see a final moment. It's still a voodoo guy. I found that. People are ISO. And then it's actually a montagna in a raisin. There's delta Plaza as the light raga there. I will see the list of Genoa needs to look. That was a motor. I soured up. Lots of money on that. And the assignment in particular. A kilometer. Then we put them as soon as they compare it and where do they live? In the cake. I don't know, they think Occidental. It's safe, but it's 100%. So you see that when you know what I said, that's the end of the income for north and they're less than yelling. They transito bank that for them but I guess a compromise or victim as product accident doesn't. 1% the third element. They say you should have saved some of them.

WCPT 820
"genoa" Discussed on WCPT 820
"Com. We are Chicago's progressive chalk, where facts matter. Now, UW CPT 8 20, Chicago traffic update. The Adam's tollway westbound I 90 remains closed from 23 near Riley to Genoa road approaching Belvedere to a major crash involving a semi. We're seeing heavy traffic on south pound on 65, 61st avenue to a 101st avenue with a crash blocking the right delay. Inbound Kennedy delays started Cumberland. Your travel time O'Hare to downtown is 44 minutes, 30 from montrose 20 of the express. In about Eisenhower delays started north avenue, 49 minutes, three 90 to downtown. It's 34 for wolf. With a Stevenson, 41 minutes from the veterans memorial tollway to dissolve a Lake shore drive and ride in 22 minutes from 9 defensive out town. 53 has slow traffic northbound algonquin to kerch off. I'm Japan talamante. Leave new blinds or shades, blinds to dot com offers custom made blind shades and shutter ship directly to you at prices less than big box retailers. Blinder blinds are easy to install. And guaranteed to 5th. And right now, say 45% off any order, just use code radio at checkout. Dot com. Traffic. All right. This wagon commute is killing me. You mind if I turn on Yale radio? Oh, this song again. I swear they played the same three chance on every station. This rate it's gonna take a fortnight to get to work. I'll just be glad you don't need to fill up. I mean, have you seen the price of hay? Mmm um. Throughout history, people have always hated to commute. That's why monster lets you search work from home jobs. Find your job at monster dot com or download the app. You can't always get what you want you can't always get what you

ESPN FC
"genoa" Discussed on ESPN FC
"Move. That is something they teach you. I love that this man is pulling them all out. Say, say goodbye. Goodbye to one the metropolitan of his last home game with athletic before the move to Houston, fitting that he didn't start, he did come off the bench. He didn't start, he came off the bench, he's a very loved player, any locker room he's in. He's one of the glue guys. He's one of the all around good guys and listen, man. You get to send off in a club like Atlético. That tells you something and Houston got a good one. So let's see. Whatever you want to say about the move, he does have a La Liga title to his name in Italy Johann Vasquez's Genoa relegated after losing the turko Santos Napoli three nothing. So he didn't play this week. Didn't play last week, only played 45 minutes the game before. His claws is activated, the purchase has to be activated by the amount of minutes he's played. They're going down and said he'll be it's got to be a sale. It's got to be a transfer, where is it going to be? Yeah. Get him out of general. They had like 6 coaches. This season. France, Jonathan David, the Canadian with a brace for Leo, or the 22 year old with his first goals in league play since March 6th. March 6th, man, and that's a goal scorer's goal just kind of puts it out there and how about this one in the box. Again, get up, get up, find yourself be active in the bob will find you. Jonathan David, man, what's going on with knives and cocky cat, but he finds the back of the net again. All right, so 15 goals in 37 league appearances, 31 league starts for Jonathan David 17 goals in 46 games across all competitions. We all still has a game left in the season, but they are tens and tables, so not really going anywhere. His contract took expires in 2025, but everybody already talking about a move. Is it time for David to leave Leo and if so, where are you sending them?.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"genoa" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Needs a legal and stoppage time to play Torino to one I'll draw Natalie knocking off Helena two to one as Alan time Genoa played to a scoreless draw while Roma neuter end in a one all draw In the get one PSG shutting out Bordeaux three nil The shocking news literally that just has come out Tom Brady two months after retiring or announcing his retirement and retirement from the NFL after 22 years says now that well he still believes his place is on the field He is not ready to hang up the cleats He will be back for a 23rd season with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Last season leading the NFL in touchdown passes and also in touchdown or excuse me in yards passing Multiple sources say that the Patriots and safety Devin McCourty agreeing to a one year $9 million contract The 34 year old will be entering his 13th season the league all with the Pats It was selection Sunday in college basketball the brackets are now set for March Madness the top four seeds Gonzaga Arizona defending champion Baylor and Kansas all the number one seeds in the four regions Early round games beginning on Tuesday with the final being played on April 4th A trade in baseball Minnesota Twins acquiring pitcher Sonny gray and minor league pitcher Francis figueroa from the Cincinnati reds for Miley pitching prospect chase petty who was the twins first round draft pick in 2021 Last season in cincy gray going 7 and 9 with the 4.19 ERA in 26 starts And Dan schwarzman met your Bloomberg world sports update Juliet Dan thanks so much Coming up we're going to chat to Marina Marin managing principal at MC square capital to give his views on the market as we face a new wig of course the fed in focus this week too we're seeing the nikkei two two 5 of course not trading yet but to Australia's market is trading.

ESPN FC
"genoa" Discussed on ESPN FC
"I'm ready to go. This is what you want to see 19 minutes weren't the best at times. Got his feet wet, got it going. Let's go to Syria, Johan Vasquez. Starting and playing the full 90s as Genoa kept a clean sheet even though they were man down for the last 25 minutes of the game. Against Roma match that finish in a score. Let's draw a big point for Genoa who are in a tough tough relegation fight, Vasquez playing a left back in a back four in this one, but once again playing for Genoa in Syria, fans in Mexico asking. He's good enough for Syria, but not for Concacaf. So the question to you, is the Tata martino make a mistake not playing Johann Vasquez at all at all. In the last international window. Mistake? I don't know. Expected? Yeah. Your boy told you. No, no, no, no, no, the question was not expected. The question was mistake. Well, let me tell you why I'm not sure if it's a mistake. Let's look at the games. They play against Jamaican a game that they controlled very much. The center backs were not an issue. Moreno and arco played extremely well that game. That game should have been probably won by a lot more. You go to the second game versus Costa Rica and it was montes and I believe out alcohol, right? Montes Moreno, versus Costa Rica. Also not at fault. You know what? That midfield, the combination of vector and once Edson Alvarez came out. I don't care if the forwards or missions came about. Listen, you hear the answer you want to hear. You asked a question. Let me answer it, Seth, okay? Not an issue again this interview. Oh, I know it's brilliant. Yes. Yeah, they were brilliant. Brilliant. The center backs from Mexico were amazing in this last window. Wow, wow, wow, you think they were the problem? Look, 'cause you don't like the decision that was made. Don't go and say, well, the 7th problem here is the main problem and this is why Mexico couldn't get a result. So how do you explain that Johan Vasquez is good enough to play in Syria, but not in a Concacaf World Cup qualifier? By the way, there were three games. There were three games. He didn't get one minute and three games. Hey, you're man. Your man's not played much at the senior national level. And I've been telling you. And that's the problem. And that's the problem. You don't want to hear it. When I told you he's not rated by Tata.

ESPN FC
"genoa" Discussed on ESPN FC
"Transfer window that saw a lot of interest from abroad FA Cup on ESPN+ this weekend, Manchester City, beating. Oh, come on. On Saturday. Should Tim ream have gotten an own goal here? No, when production said this, I was like, okay, I checked it out. There's no way you should get an ongo for this. I mean, it's not on target when it's shot, is it? Oh, come on. It's going towards gold Tim rind trying to make a play on it. Come on. That is harsh. Very harsh. Production here. That is hard. They didn't credit it with an angle to be fair. They gave the goal to mares. Yeah, you should get it. By the way, that's his right foot. And you can tell. Easy. Easy. I mean, he's still scorned. No complaints there. As a city advanced in the FA Cup, by the way, it's a match with Zach Stephan herk started. Curiously, after he missed the last international window with what we were told as a back injury. Okay, don't read too much into it. Don't get on a transatlantic flight with back spasms and unexpected be fine. This also, it's a sitter for the player right there, not much he can do, leaning one way, that's what you're supposed to do. It happens. But Zack Stefan, starting again, I like it. There you go. And how about in the Bundesliga George Bello making his boon to sing a debut with Armenia Bella field? He played 19 minutes in a one one draw against Joe scalias. Munching glad back. Joe scallion. Sorry. He's on the bench. He was on the benches. A few things. George Bello literally got off the flight and went to this game or what? Like what's going on here? You talk about an acclimation period not. I'm ready to go. This is what you want to see 19 minutes weren't the best at times. Got his feet wet, got it going. Let's go to Syria, Johan Vasquez. Starting and playing the full 90s as Genoa kept a clean sheet even though they were man down for the last 25 minutes of the game. Against Roma match that finish in a score..

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
What Is the State of the FBI and DOJ Today?
"Back with the one and only Victoria Townsend and Joe de Genoa. Okay, let us ask the big questions. You know me, not like you, but I have had a long history with the FBI working with their agents, their Intel analysts to help them understand the threat of jihadi terrorism. And I was very proud of all the work I did driving the country going from R 8 to RA field office to field office. Now, if the FBI knocked on my door, I'd say talk to my lawyers. I don't wear those pins. I was given various field offices anymore. My coin collection of FBI coins is in a dusty draw somewhere. Can you give us your reckoning of the state of the bureau and the DoJ today and is it salvageable Joe? Well, I think that the decay started under Comey and it has continued. There has been no ability to apologize to the American people and to its victims. People have to remember this, though. The FBI does not act on its own. It acts at the direction of the Department of Justice. They did that under Obama. They subverted the Justice Department under Trump and worked with Democrats in the Justice Department divisions to the attorney generals at the time. And it has continued under Merrick Garland, so there is unlikely to be any change in the behavior of the FBI and the best example is what they've done to all the recent search warrants which have been issued for conservative organizations and people which are completely unjustified. I mean, it sounds like you're crazy when you say that. But these raids which have been conducted using search warrants instead of subpoenas, especially on news organizations. And lawyers and lawyers is just absolutely outrageous, but the FBI doesn't do that on their own. They do that at the instruction of the Department of

Skimm This
"genoa" Discussed on Skimm This
"November is Native American heritage month, and it seems like The White House is taking notice. This week, President Biden held a two day summit with tribal nations, where he committed to a series of executive actions from investing $13 billion in tribal lands to an executive order, promising to help combat violence faced by Native Americans. But it also seems like The White House is committed to unveiling the past. Back in June, secretary of the interior Deb Holland made a promise to investigate the boarding schools that many Native American children were forced to attend during the 19th and 20th centuries. Kids were separated from their parents, banned from speaking their native languages and forcibly converted to Christianity. Dozens of children died in some of these schools. By 1969, a Senate committee published a damning report, calling these schools a quote national tragedy that failed to adequately shelter feed or educate children. But exactly what happened at these schools is still largely unknown. Just this week, researchers helped uncover the names of dozens of children who died at just one school called the Genoa Indian industrial school in Nebraska. To learn more, we called up susannah heliga an assistant Professor of Native American history at the university of Nebraska Omaha and one of the co directors of the project documenting what happened at the Genoa school. Thanks for joining us. Can you explain what happened at the Genoa school and also what we learned this week? The school opened in 1884 and it closed in 1934. So we're looking at a span of about 50 years. It started off as a boarding school for the pawnee tribe and you had tribes from the surrounding areas that were forced to attend that school. We've been in the process since the summer of gathering this information. So it's all coming together slowly. Currently, we have about 87 student deaths that we have found so far. Our students that passed away at Genoa and it's through various reasons from illnesses to train accidents, shootings, drownings. I think a lot of people might be surprised to know that families were forced to send their children to these schools. Could you just talk a little bit about that history? I think by, you know, 1900, about 78% of all native children were sent to boarding schools and people think of schools of boarding schools you might think of it in a good sense, but these are really institutions that were part of in assimilation policy from the government to take children rip children away from their families and place them in these boarding schools, so they wouldn't have an attachment to family. They wouldn't have an attachment to land or to their culture or to their languages. And it was mandatory for students to attend school. If you look at the education that was provided for Native American students, only half the day was to be considered an educational part of the day, the other half of the day. They had to work. Children basically had to grow the food. You know, cook the food. So the clothes, they worked hard, woke up 5 o'clock in the morning, going to bed, 9 or ten o'clock at night. They were really used as hard labor. And you mentioned these schools were set up as part of an assimilation program. Can you explain what that program was meant to do and why the federal government created it? When you look at boarding school history, you see the word the Indian problem. You have set my residence looking at the Indian problem as Native American, their poverty, their dependence on government, but actually really it was the government and the settlers that were impoverishing the Indians. It was considered a problem. So how to get Indian people from complaining about wanting to have their land back or having their sovereignty or wanting to maintain their unique languages and cultures, the government came up with the way of taking the children away from their families and doing it as young as they could, the idea was to kill the Indian and save the men. Why is this part of the United States history unknown to a lot of people? When we talk about so many topics such as boarding schools, students always ask, how come we were never taught this in schools? Native American history is really difficult and it's hard and it's ugly and it's very political. And there's a lot of dark secrets that I guess that it might be easier to bury away than to reconcile and come to terms with. And I'm so thankful that Holland has opened up this investigation because it is. It's time, you.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Attorney Kash Patel Reacts to John Durham's Recent Indictments
"First cash Patel. Welcome back to Salem radio. Savage, great to be with you guys. I'm so happy that you are continuing to hammer on the truth in Russia. That's why we're here every single day for three hours as well as our newsmax show on Sundays. Cash. I'm going to run by you. The reaction I got just a few days ago from Joe di Genoa, a lot of us have lost hope with John Durham. They say, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's two years later. I get that COVID slowed him down. But talk to Joe, who's a former special counsel himself, former U.S. Washington attorney, U.S. attorney for D.C.. He said these indictments, the level of detail in these indictments, especially the most recent one of danchenko, speak to a very serious individual who's going to get to the bottom of it. You've been there. You uncovered the Russia hoax for the house. What's your reaction to the recent developments on Capitol Hill? Yeah, look I think that John Durham is spot on track. As a former federal prosecutor, too, who brought these types of large scale fraud conspiracy cases, I spent three four 5 years sometimes working up a case in John Durham is working on the biggest scandal in the United States presidential history. And in two years, he's got three indictments. And the other thing about these indictments, he's connected the DNC to the corruption at the FBI to the corruption of their lawyers to now directly corrupting or expose enough nature of Christopher steel in the source. And normally these indictments are about two, three, four, 5 pages long. 40 page indictment. Yeah. Issues on the latest go round because John Durham is speaking to the public. It's the only way he's legally allowed to do so. And he's highlighting to take Sullivan's of the world that Charlie Dolan of the world. All these corrupt actors that fusion GPS and Christopher Steele and mccabe abstract and page. It's all coming to life. So I think he's on the right path. I've said it before on my show cash's corner where I did a deep dive into the derm saga and I think he's only just getting

Places I Remember with Lea Lane
"genoa" Discussed on Places I Remember with Lea Lane
"Looking at it from the sea. When you get inside, it's a real place. Do you agree? Yeah, absolutely. I think they're meant to be on the scene too. And yeah, I first went there in the 1970s. They were not undiscovered at the time, but compared to today, they were very quiet. Now they tend to get very, very crowded. My advice will to be would be to go off season, primarily when you go to the cheapest head that you go there to see the men to hike because they have this network of hiking trails. So you don't need to be there at the height of the tourist season. And you know, you'll be happier if you go, say in November, December, January, February, march, April. And then it gets kind of crazy. The designation as a national park, by the way, is very recent. I reported on that when it was being formed. And they've done a very good job in saving a lot of the vineyards that we're falling apart. Is you have to understand it really is like Machu Picchu. You see stone walls countless millions of stones piled up there drystone as there's no cement from basically sea level way up to about 2000 feet or more because it's very steep. And a lot of those terraces were just collapsing once upon a time. And one of the great things the national park has done is it's brought in money from big corporations to help the locals restore the vineyards and bring back the wine industry. That's wonderful. Well, we mentioned a couple of other places. Raphael is one. Is there something specific to that area that you like to talk about? Much of my novel is set in as it is. And it's got a big Marina. There are lots of super yachts that you see those in Genoa too. It has a little castle on the sea. It's very lively. It has absolutely delicious food and fabulous ice cream there's a little ice cream maker right on the seaside castle and the seaside. So a partner is big enough that it's a real town. It's their working all year long. It's not just for seaside resort. People I think like it for the fact that it is a real place, like general a general is a real city. It's not a tourist city at all. A portofino is definitely a tourist city because it's a beauty spot. There's not a lot of except to look at it, shop there, walk around a bit as far as I remember. Is there a beach nearby? I know there's not in portofino. Not really. No, you don't go to put the Pheno to swam, you go there by Gucci bags and sit in a fancy cafe or eaten a restaurant and huge amounts of money. It is a very fancy place. In a book I wrote many years ago, about 25 years ago or more called enchanted. I remember quoting a 16th century traveler. So that's 500 years ago. And he was saying that cleft Athena was so expensive and exclusive that they made you pay for the air you breathed. Oh, my goodness. Well, I know in the 1950s, the Hollywood stars began to spend their time there, Clark Gable and all those guys. And so it has a sort of cachet. It's beautiful. I have to say that, but I would say, you don't have to spend much time. Right. I agree. So let's talk about your mystery thriller red Riviera, just a little bit. The ligurian coast plays a big part. And as a gorgeous setting for your heroin, Daria Vinci, and for all kinds of intrigue on the land in the sea. And as you mentioned, much of it in Apollo area, you're well known for writing fiction and nonfiction of France in Italy. Why did you choose to write a mystery with a setting of the Italian Riviera rather than a travel book? I've written a couple of travel books already about the area. I had this idea on my head way back it took a long time to mature, but I'll tell you let me ask you this. Have you ever slipped on an anchovy? Have I ever slipped? Well, I've slipped on a banana peel, but not on an anchovy. So imagine instead of a banana peel, you're taking a hike. I'm a crazy piker, I hike all over. So I'm hiking up in the mountains above the coast about 20 years ago and I slipped and fall 'cause I snipped on an anchovy. And I'm looking at this anchovy and I'm saying, what the I mean, how did this get? And then I looked out to see and there is one of these canadair firefighting airplanes, the kind that fit down and scoop up the water and then dump the water on fires, right? Because they have lots of wildfires. It's like California. And so then I had this fantasy about the airplane coming down and scooping up a billionaire or a spy and in the end he wound up being not quite a billionaire, but he was a former spy. So it was just a kind of a lark that I wanted to create. And I also had this idea for an Italian female sleuth based on all of these wonderful dynamics, smart and very strong, physically and also its Italian and other women I've known in my life. Mostly more interesting and sharper and more capable than the man I've known in my life. Well, diary has very, very imposing young woman. Yeah, but she's lovable and she's like all of us. As you will see when you read the sequel to yes. Yes, tell me about the sequel. Well, the sequel is called Roman roulette and it's set in Rome and there are lots of scenes in ruins and catacombs that nobody really knows about because in part because they're invented, but I mean your book yeah anyway, the murder in the catacombs it could be called. Oh wow. These are perfect book series at this particular time. I'm looking forward to that one as well. So David, the name of the podcast is places I remember and we share special memories. Could you share one with us about the Italian Riviera? Yeah, a black and white photo of a young couple with a baby in their arms, getting on a freighter in 1950 to leave genera for San Pedro, California, those were my parents and my elder sister. And my mother was Italian and they emigrated to California in 1950. I was born in San Francisco, but we always had that settle the same in the house and then in the mid 60s, my mother decided she would move us back to Italy. So we moved back to Italy and lived in Rome, but I always wanted to see genera. I went there in 1976 and fell in love with the place. And I've lived there on and off ever since. At least part of the year. You're a lucky man. Thank you so much, David Downey, author of the delightful gripping crime mystery red Riviera. You certainly choose fabulous places in the world to live. And thankfully, you write about them and share them with us. In a real pleasure. Thanks for sharing travel memories with us. My book places I remember is available on Amazon and at bookstores in print on Kindle and I read the audio version. Please subscribe to this podcast and consider giving us a review until next time, join us wherever in the world we're going..

Places I Remember with Lea Lane
"genoa" Discussed on Places I Remember with Lea Lane
"And this podcast, we share conversations with travelers about fascinating destinations and memorable experiences around the world. On this episode, we'll be focusing on that sumptuous crest sense of the Italian Riviera, also known as the ligurian coast. Specifically, the eastern half, the Riviera de Levante with rugged cliffs, Turquoise coves, the colorful Cinque Terre, fishing villages, and stylish resorts, such as portofino and Santa margarita ligure. Our guest today is David Downey a distinguished writer who lives on the Italian Riviera from where he's talking with us today. I met David a few years ago in Paris where he also lives. In his new mystery thriller red Riviera, he describes the Italian Riviera as quote that Crescent of coast with Tuscany balanced on one end and the Cote d'azur teetering on the other in France. Welcome, David, so good to speak with you again. Yeah, it's great for equity and to see you. We're going to be talking about your new mystery novel red Riviera later in the episode. But first, tell me there's so many gorgeous areas of Italy for an expat to live in. What made you choose one of Italy's smallest regions, liguria? Chose me. I had some vague family ties to it. My mother was Italian as you may know. And my wife lived in Italy for years as a child and her family bought a house down there and so we kind of moved in at one point because we both loved that region above almost all others in the world. And it's just a fabulous place. Well, agoria was originally home to fishermen and singers, poets, explorers. But it's now been discovered by the tourist world. I wrote about the Amalfi Coast for photos. I know that area very well. It's often compared to that coast that Italian coast down the med a bit. How would you compare the two? Well, the Amalfi Coast is stunning and amazing. I remember walking way back probably 1979 or 80 and being struck by how beautiful it was. It's slightly different in that a lot of the action, if you will on the Amalfi Coast is up above up high, whereas in liguria, you have a lot of villages up high on the hills, but you also have the kind of beach world down on the coast right on the water's edge. And I love the green and food, the Riviera's food. Everybody knows Genoese pesto. The green sauce. And so forth, a lot of people don't know that I've come from there too. Very, very far back in the Middle Ages. And so it's a pretty amazing place for food and stunning scenery and beautiful weather, especially for me off season. We're thinking about that area as sort of spring like most of the time. So it's moderate. I would say. Yeah. Yeah, and the truth is that it became a resort area over a hundred years ago, aristocrats of Europe, especially the Russians and people from the Nordic countries would go down to the Riviera. They wouldn't be there in the summer they'd arrive in October November, December and stay through the winter because it's generally mild. Well, I would think up in the mountains that border that are right above it. It would be very cold. Do you get to know oh yeah, yeah, yeah, lots of snow. Before we get into the delicious details, tell us what you suggest about transportation and lodging in the area for maximum pleasure and time management. The Italian Riviera is 200 miles. And it stretches from Tuscany all the way to France. So if you want to explore both sides, the eastern and the western Riviera, then you logically, you could stay at one end or the other and then move around or you could stay in the middle at Genoa, general as the capital city at the very northern tip of the Mediterranean. And China has lots of nice hotels. And it's a fascinating place to stay. It's very little known by Americans and it's a real discovery, but you have to like the kind of medieval configuration of an Italian city with really tall old stone buildings. Some of them are a thousand years old. And narrow alleyways. And it can kind of stare some people, although it's really a very safe city. On the other hand, they're plenty of places right on the coast, beautiful hotels. You mentioned Santa marguerite, Santa margherita has fabulous hotels, many, many of them. Apollo has wonderful hotels, portofino has one of the finest hotels in Italy, the splendid, but it's an extraordinary place in a convent that's been reconverted. And you will find no lack of wonderful competitions on the Italian media. I can tell you. Yeah, Jenna, of course, was one of the great republics in the 11th century along with Venice. So I know it has tremendous history. And we know it, of course, as the birthplace of Christopher Columbus, when most of us think of Janna, that's what we think of. But I have been there. And I think it has a very vibrant feeling. It's a rough edge, kind of style. It's eclectic. And it's a really great transportation hub. It has a good airport. It has a central train station where you can take trains through all the rest of the area. There's ferries out of there. So it's a good hub. But let's go on to some of the beauty spots. I think everybody first thinks of Cinque Terre. It was discovered a few years ago. And now it's become tremendously popular. Tell us a little bit about it. Are famous for being completely isolated on the coast, but because I don't like to mislead people and because I've written a number of books about the area, I have to tell you that almost every one of the secretary has a train station in it. And it served by ferryboats. And most of them now have little winding roads, granted. It takes you a very long time to drive there, and I would never encourage anyone to drive that. It's a bit of a myth that they're isolated. However, when you approach in a ferryboat and you look at them perched on the coast there, they're sort of the archetypal Italian fishing villages. They also happen to be wine growing villages. That is, they make a lot of cheaper wines, white wine, primarily, almost entirely. And a kind of sweet wine, you drink with almond cookies and so forth called, which is very good. They used to have very important agricultural industry. It was like Machu Picchu growing everything on terraces and fishing industry, the anchovies, salted anchovies of the two quater were famous. There is still one cooperative that makes them and they're very good, but the truth again is that there are fewer and fewer anchovies in the Mediterranean as everybody. You know, because they're very, very popular destinations. These 5 little villages, the hiking is wonderful. The swimming can be wonderful too. Very rocky plan on the sandy beaches of Los Angeles very coves and everything very beautiful in dramatic. That's the word I would choose. Well, it isn't just a collection of villages. It's designated as a national park, which helps protect and preserve the area. And it's a Unesco World Heritage Site. When you see it from the sea, it looks like a rainbow exploded. It's just full of color. It's the archetypal idea of an ancient dishing village. And I remember as a child, I went to this little Italian restaurant and on the wall was a picture of Cinque Terre, one of the villages. That's always what I thought of as Italy. The most beautiful part to me is.

Marketing Today with Alan Hart
"genoa" Discussed on Marketing Today with Alan Hart
"I would give us a -sarily change a whole lot. I think in genoa. I tend to look forward and i feel like a successful day for me is is where i learned something and if i have to do that same thing again i would do it a little bit differently so i think from a broad perspective. It's it's the things that people would always say. It's just keep your eyes open. Don't let anyone else tell you what you should do. And follow to some extent what you're really interested in. I grew up in an immigrant family. And you know. I was supposed to be a doctor or an engineer and went to college and Did not tell my parents with my major was until about three years then. And they're like. Are you going to get a job. But you know it's it's worked okay. We'll know a couple more marketing related questions. Are there any topics you think. Marketers should be learning more about or your your frankly trying to learn more about right now marketers and chat line and i kind of f- faulted as we think about. Who is the audience. That has the most money right now. So it's millennials the best part but i think what's even more important is to think through. What is your thirteen year. Old thinking about doing whence interesting to them and really starting to dig into that next generation look like in five or ten years. You know they're going to be the the twentysomethings.

Cork's 96fm Opinion Line
"genoa" Discussed on Cork's 96fm Opinion Line
"They are very early talking to your your mom. Your brothers We the best thing i looked at. I heard this morning on radio talking. About how the last mile is always the loneliest on. It was your older brother. Who'd come purpose and he was not. I was christopher looking. And that's what he had said that me. Now in the qualifiers sold back in the qualifying tournament. I think the forty four four fights in four or five fights account member in over five days later he was like it was to make way everyday like block realize like they actually have the way in. Every morning i six kilos. Which wouldn't be like. I mean that's not me me. Normal body has to hold that over. The course of the five days in the qualifiers was coming towards like a qualify. I had qualified. And then i was in the middle stages i think i was going for gold stage and lake. I was saying to peacefully lake. Feel really lonely. Oh hey no linkage. Especially recall. Couldn't leave the hotel or anything. It was literally anywhere caged. If you left they were going to disqualify from the tournament you know and he was. He was like to know what he says the last mile. It's never crowded. And i'm like oh my god later. That's so true lick. It isn't overcrowded. Lincoln and in my case. I've like i've always kind of been on me own enough at the coach state now with calls it. It's really not crowded late. You're you're literally on your own. You don't even share a room anymore. Would wear a roommate. You know like normally can bounce off each at what lake yet. It was none of that lake. It was it was on your own. Make go to with. Genoa was grind leykis grinding. We had had the teammates there. They were in the next room and still it was.

Cruise Radio News Briefs
MSC Cruises Marks One Year Back Cruising
"On monday. Mse cruises celebrated one year since it resumed. Voyages after the industry shut down on august sixteenth. Twenty twenty grandiose became the first ship to restart cruises when it embarked on a seven night cruise from genoa italy. A year later the company

Hanging With The Homies
"genoa" Discussed on Hanging With The Homies
"To use code leaked for some. It's all three hands ever had a thank. You find what you did game that we bet on the winning team. So you know that's when you'll see football has feelings. You know what my friends did the deal list of first year. The era as some bad when wayne genoa's abroad is right so what they did a few tournaments the quota bungee to listen to what the denver they listen to listen person would have to forfeit their phone to the win and the women would have to tag the pistons lead. The person person's clash so let's see warm. I give you my food. Go to the you got to treat after the mirror up. The made a post on twitter of ood oblivious. They put it rain in fa- mason things we've just so fun with indie game or being a fan of the football with with the is such things that bent and all of that it. It really does making a game by myself. What if you've no this game. I want to bet were pleased with what was like if us one this game if us no one. I'm going. I'm going to post my crush. Post them so little. Did you know a customer disappointed for now about this. Point is my last yours because the the rules way. It didn't if if it warn them i would pose but it lost but it lost issue that hey look if we'd want. You'll have post if you'd want. I post lost nausea man sorta to all those awaiting biscay glow for buzz. I want your your view on this This team columbia. This football team called columbia. Elect this now ilyin but it does. But the one that was their bacon they during that era of news about a weakness pablo escobar. He love so like he loves football with everything so he would buy. The best play asked competitively with which was not actually allowed at the because the man was so back to the football team columbia as the number of the game. The world cup in for god's informed rolling it into the world cup then. This is where you and i see. This is what the feeling input bushel. Apparently with a lot of high profile people descended betting they put a bed on columbia that they look really mean millions and all of that but the it was insecurity yes saw what happened was when they went to compete but the financed with poke up with I think will be with right so apparently somewhere in that whole missed public poobah plus he died. There was not going old. The game had to go on to you know because like the the columbia could team was supported by a lot obviously was fighting in making the whim who has making donations. Frankly stole yeah. Yeah so what happened is jordan. Big game The people which playing against you is though as day. He's a player his name. He was a he was esplanade his same ezples. And so this guy's player espera you as one of the best player. So what happened this guy. I don't know what was happening. But columbia couldn't score a goal that the net. So yes.

I Said No Gifts!
"genoa" Discussed on I Said No Gifts!
"You're you're in the sixteenth century genoa his just giant rats and dockworkers hacking up lungs and people walking around with boo blow Just absolutely wretched seem. Yeah you have to be careful about you know if you run into. Somebody started talking to them. In this part of los angeles it may just end up being a rat. King just a bunch of rats tied that resemble a person it's grow because which is good because my kids love nutcracker so we'll be on awesome. I'll likud all that aside. So i could give some very good advice here which i fully disagree with number one. I think you don't get this other person a gift. You don't only know her first name. If that's all the information they're giving for this joint. Look separate baby showers. I don't we're not combining baby showers. Maybe birthdays. I feel like not even that this person. I think you've completely ignore act. Like she's invisible. You show up to the party and just shower your friend with the attention and gifts. This other person is person non grata. You've got nothing to say. You are truly gotta be honest showing your non gift bias. Your ow interesting that you could look at this on a just look at things on a case by case basis and not bring in your preconceived notions of what pow fucking society should be. Maybe and and you might be stern her in the wrong direction. Because you bridgier hate gifts. I why don't you just save it for your next book and next podcast. You don't come on here. And tell me what i do or where i'm coming from this. I'm taking this as a case by case basis. Not only case by case. But i'm looking at number one question. I'm answering with a nice piece of advice. Then i'm looking at number two. Do i bring mother-in-law gift. And i say no. You gave her a bottle of wine five years ago and she's already gone through that she's got a problem so she should still have at least half a bottle of wine after five years. I'll say this right now and this is breaking news i m. I'm gonna have another kid and i would. I have the shower. You're gonna be invited and you are gonna fuck bring a gift to not only my wife's sister who will also now get pregnant but to my mother in law who will hosting it and this is not something. I'm taking lightly. I have had a second my friend. I'm gonna get that shoot reversed and have another child. Just to see the look on your. You're putting a lot on the line here. I mean we'll just see what happens when i show up with simply a gift for your baby. You're going to be cutting that gift. And half sister half of this goes to sister-in-law actually are going to be cutting it in thirds because mom and laws of one in on that and there's going to be a lot of egg on all of your faces. Yeah well there's gonna be giant. Black sores on your face. 'cause you're gonna have the mcdonagh clay gary asked coming. That's coming fall. Twenty and twenty. Two my friend

Everything Everywhere Daily
A History of Blue Jeans
"There's a good chance that most of you listening to this right now regardless of where you live on earth own a pair of blue jeans. That's because bluejeans have become one of the most ubiquitous types of clothing in the world. The story of blue jeans doesn't actually start in the united states. It starts with. The cloth used to make jeans denim in the fifteenth century. A heavy cloth that came from genoa. Italy was known as jean cloth. Gene cloth was cotton. Heavy fabric sometimes woven with wool. In addition as well it was developed for sailors to wear wet or dry and it was also used for sales. The where gene comes from the french word for genoa. Jen's the genoese would import a blue dye in the form of indigo from india and used it to die their cloth. The french called it blue jeans. So yeah bluejeans actually refers to a particular cloth even before it was ever used as a name for the pants on a related note. The genoese may have gotten the idea for gene cloth from india. The indians had a heavy cloth known as delivery which was a hindi word. Dungarees was traded with europe britain and was used for heavy pants today. Dungarees used to describe an overall made of blue denim denim was developed in the city of france. The development was nothing more than an attempt to copy. The popular content will cloth that was created in genoa. Denham gets its name from deneen which just means from name in french. Gene and denham cloth was a popular cheap cloth for working people in europe and there are seventeenth eighteenth century paintings of people wearing what looks like bluejeans in reality. They were wearing pants of a similar color and a similar cloth. Bluejeans as we know them today aren't just blue pants made out of denim. However there's something more specific this is where we introduce the pivotal person in the story of bluejeans levi. Strauss strauss was born in germany in eighteen twenty nine and migrated to the united states in eighteen forty seven at the age of eighteen.

NEWS 88.7
"genoa" Discussed on NEWS 88.7
"That's the one you want to avoid. Right now. North bound 45 at Alameda Genoa Road, all mainland Shut down for a big red fire there and you're gonna be solid all the way back to four South San Getting an overcast right now and 10 50. This is the Texas Standard. I'm Laura Rice in for David Brown. Homelessness. Encampments could soon be banned statewide if a measure passed out of the Texas Senate is signed by Governor Greg Abbott. The bill is considered a response to the city of Austin's lifting of a camping band two years ago, an action that was recently overturned by the city's voters. Andrew Webber covers homelessness in Austin and Travis County for our home station. Kut. Austin, Andrew. Thanks for being here. Of course, thanks for having me. The Senate recently passed this measure. What would it do exactly? It would ban shelters or encampments in public obviously said that a top but it includes a lot of behavior like you know if someone's cooking or if someone has set up a sort of structure or a tent. Or even just has a blanket and they're sleeping on public land without consent. So, like you said, it is largely seen as as something that targets awesome because most major cities in Texas already have these ordinances in place, Austin decided 2019 To roll back and as they would say, to criminalize homelessness, and it led to a proliferation of encampments. And so this is this is a state law from a North Texas lawmaker. That says No, it's not targeting Austin, but It's kind of seemingly targeting Austin. Does this bill provide any solutions? Any funding or strategy for housing or anything that could get someone you know, possibly experiencing homelessness back into housing, maybe even the workforce. Not expressly within the bill. No, it does. It does require law enforcement officers to direct folks toward any shelter or places where they can legally camp or places where they can get services. But it doesn't explicitly lay out any sort of relief in that sense, but state Senator Don Buckingham who who shepherded this bill through the Senate. She's also in Senate finance. She's filed a writer within the proposed budget to set aside $12.5 million over the next two years for programs that help homeless Texans get housed. So this has been back and forth it from the house to the Senate. And now is, I think it's headed back to the house. What were some amendments that the Senate lawmakers added or changed from this house Bill? So there there were two amendments that were adopted, one of which was from state Senator Buckingham, who is a likely Republican just in the Austin area, and it explicitly says Okay, Cool. If cities want to set up temporary encampments, they can't do it on Park Land, which is something that the Austin City Council had discussed literally fewer than 24 hours before this Senate floor. So that is also another sort of, you know, kind of way that it does target Austin Because the city voters just resoundingly approved a reinstatement of camping bands. The city's trying to get folks off the streets out of public encampments. And they put forth a plan that listed 45 sites, some of which were on park land that did not go over well in the city of Boston. Folks didn't necessarily want encampments on park land That's been actively used s O. This sort of took that off the table. There was also another amendment from state Senator Jose Menendez from San Antonio. That made this a sight only a fence so folks can't Well, if it if it is signed by Governor habit, folks wouldn't be able to get arrested for violating this is it likely to be signed by Governor Abbott. Honestly be weird if he didn't. This is something that he's you know, He's been very, very opposed to Austin's camping policies. Policies, I guess larger policy surrounding homelessness as well. Hey, called for this At the beginning of the session. He's his campaign financially supported the effort. The local effort here that got those bands back, you know, back into city law through through referendum here. S so at this point, it would be odd if he didn't s O. I think it's kind of more or less a foregone conclusion that he's probably going to send it to the law. Is it clear? What's next for the city of Boston and in figuring out you know how it makes space for people experiencing homelessness? Not immediately. It's It's one of those sort of Phyllis like larger philosophical discussions that the city is trying to have right now, because people clearly don't think they're doing what needs to be done as far as this housing folks, and they're a lot of reasons for that. They're less systemic reasons. Real estate here in Austin is insane, so the city can't necessarily acquire Properties at market value. That's why they're looking at public land, but now they can't necessarily use that public land. If this if this bill were toe get signed into law, so it's kind of a wait and see approach the cities. Rolling out its reinforcement of those camping bands. It won't give tickets for the next month or so. But after that folks could get tickets camps could get cleared and people could be arrested for it. Andrew Webber covers homelessness in Austin and Travis County for our home station. Kut. Austin, Andrew. Thanks again, of course. Thank you, and you're listening to the Texas standard. Time.

AI Today Podcast: Artificial Intelligence Insights, Experts, and Opinion
Interview With Kfir Yeshayahu
"Our guest. Today is kafir yahoo. Who's the senior vice president of products. Advair atone so high kefir on. Thanks so much for joining us today. One it's gonna be with you today the We'd like to start by having you introduce yourself to our listeners. Tell them a little bit about your background and your current role at their tone of course so under the product invade on of busy building. I will which is the alternative system for high as well as accompanying tools to really solve some of the toughest problems in adoption today. In general one of those challenges that were focused on is open holder tising. Ai which is a fascinating topic for me. Having started with data science many many years ago. I've seen how data science was done in some of the most sophisticated data organizations in the world back in the israeli intelligence community. And i've been living the sort of evolution mini revolutions fe. I ever since in loud companies like microsoft and has of groups in the and others before joining the verizon i managed devops oriented boorda in. Aws the amazon cloud so my perspective on 'em at all is coming from both sides from day iside and Devops and now. I'm saying that the dan's in the space who both the perspective of on itself. And i don't own business units as well as Without many customers of the iowa who are in various stages of the junk. That's really very insightful. Because we've been definitely spending a lot of time talking about machine learning operations. Emily obstinate model management. And all these things that have you have to deal with once. The model is as building. People tend to think of of sort of all the work that has to go into training a model making the model happen which is definitely a lot of work. No doubt about it especially even the data preparation even before even build the model right. That's a lot of work but now that you know these models are out there in the wild in in production people are realizing the challenges of keeping these models relevant and high performance. And just doing what they're supposed to be doing. So maybe you could talk to us about what you see. Some organizational challenges as they tried to bring machine models into production of course so different studies and surveys though talking about some little between fifty to ninety two why blamed but fifty two nine hundred projects. Don't actually make it phone. Put that to production regardless of where you fall in the way. It's a pretty sad ratio. Now what makes it even wolves. Is that a project. Take a long time to demand often six months to a year. And you know they'll be walked by Most expensive in the organization we invade have experienced the same thing in the past the first day i projects and applications developed by our business units to literally month to complete. Now we're looking at fox and the stakes were sometimes too high to even start. The border. don't going directly a question about challenges until recently. A lot of the buzz in the industry was about talent shouted. I think this issue is is going away. The market is is balancing itself and good talent is coming from all sorts of different defections into the will. it did not cheap way more accessible than before. The challenges didn't have shifted in my opinion from talent gaps to both insistent cups. And i'll try to gonna show that in four different buckets. So one of them is is portions. How do i estimate the ally often. Ai project how do i define the budget endgame. That's very different than than traditional software projects. Why d- projects the second bucket is integration applications and and solutions in genoa. Now this may sound of sideways from from but it's out of the whole challenge of production izing. How with to play with the application. This is interesting for me especially from extent point because naive. Boches don't always walk because of the nature of the modern. They'll give you one of many examples. Ai models often produce results with degrees eleven of confidence.

News, Traffic and Weather
Hundreds of coffins fall into the sea following collapse of an Italian cemetery
"A cemetery collapse in Italy sends coffins on landslide Part of the cemetery cascaded into the sea off the coast of Italy near Genoa, with 200 coffins plunging into the water before bobbing to the surface. Recovery effort is still underway, though, will be slow as parts of the cliffs surrounding the landslide are still unstable. Work to stabilize the area was underway, but not yet complete. Cemetery has been closed off to the public, and no one was injured. Several coastal storms have hit the area over the past few years. Accelerating erosion of the cliff Meghan Williams, ABC NEWS Rome

UN News
Escape from Warsaws Ghetto: Memories of a Child Witness
"Halina wallow and her parents. I've safely on the shores of south america in nineteen forty eight as jewish refugees from their native poland. The month long voyage by boat from italy's port of genoa was but one stretch of a lengthy journey from surviving. The warsaw ghetto to eventual immigration to peru just a toddler when the nazis stormed her. Family's confining living quarters in the warsaw ghetto halina says the smell of fabric left lingering reminder of the lifesaving moment. Her grandfather hid her between textile goods as women and children were piled into german trucks and taken to death camps following her grandparents deportation. Her father organized a successful escape from the ghetto. One of many times their fate would be defined in an instant speaking to us from her home in capital city. Lima halina explains how her family's escape from persecution. To safety was helped by demonstrations of humanity by the unsung heroes of the holocaust non-jewish europeans and other rescuers who risk their lives to protect juice eighty four years. Old halina says fulfilling. Her purpose of survivor means telling her story. This interview was conducted in spanish and has been translated seeing but saw via. I was born in warsaw poland in the year. Nineteen thirty six. My full name is kalina stein and then all once. I was mary it. If you could briefly describe your first years in poland. What was your childhood. Like your comment you. Well i practically didn't have a childhood. Unfortunately because we was for years old the second world war started the nicest took my parents apartment. Ally grandparents bernie. I'm buddha's in the. Because i was on. I was four or five years. What i can tell you is what my pardons told me on allie. He's have eat the ones who saved my life winds. There was a moment when your grandfather hid you correct. Could you tell us about that moment. They won't sign us. My grandfather produced jackets and coats beginning several years before arriving to the ghetto. And that's had a lot of five hundred in addict so the day. The nasty came in their tracks. You realize day came to take all the world bank and children that will work with sewing machines so my grandfather grabbed me shall between the fabric material. Seen these were how he saved me so the german square taken these life. Mama one do you remember. You felt in that moment. Lord i remember by this mellow no. That is most often make us remember. Even now at age eighty four and just short eighty four. Every time i go into a fiery shop. I remembered the mommy it's part of my life say i will never forget. Of course life in the ghetto was very hard. They had asked without food without medicine and they were know how to work for a very very har life in nineteen forty two businesses. Took my grandparents on my uncle rev linka after the after my father decided to organize escape from the ghetto. And we did so. He taught us to pray. The lord's prayer in portage is big perfect polish until today. We keeping to deny as christians. Luckily my father had a lot of non june's france in the area and part of our so. He arranged to have each of fast leaving in three seventy one jewish homes while for my mom. Another for my father another for me. I was taking get off by a friend of my father's a good woman who told me read that right. I was with her until nineteen forty five when the war ended in neon depose. Where order to tourney eighty jew. There was so my party squid and visit me much. They bissett me the one able to mind. This is how we save ourselves.

PodcastDetroit.com
"genoa" Discussed on PodcastDetroit.com
"He he did not have a beard. He's not have facial hair at the time so he was like. I can totally do this. I can do this so he gets in the equivalent of a taxicab and in rome and makes me just. They saw like the nice light skinned roman guy picked him up. North in roman guy totally did not pick him up so he He gets in the cab with all of his stuff. Right is ready to go and he goes to. He gets to genoa and he makes a stop and then he's on his way and he leaves genuine and realizes that he left his french maid outfit in the cab that he got off at in genoa. Leaving your cell phone and uber axe man. I left my french.

The Vegas Take
Former Houston Officer Investigating ‘Fraudulent’ Ballots Is Charged With Assault
"Houston police captain Mark A. Gary, charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon arrested and booked at the jail today his case linked to the Liberty Center, a privately funded conservative group that investigated voter fraud claims during the election. In a news release, District attorney Kim Ogg said a Gerry Cross the line from dirty politics. The commission of a violent crime. According to court documents. A Gary suspected the victim had 750,000 fraudulent ballots signed by quote Hispanic Children. He had been watching him for days, A Gary told police and on October 19th he followed. The man crashed into his truck in the 1300 block of Alameda, Genoa and held him at gunpoint. But the Da's office says the victim was not a voter fraud mastermind. Rather, an air conditioner repairman. His truck Gary thought held the ballots had only a C parts and tools.

The Vegas Take
Ex-police captain held man at gunpoint in bogus fraud claim
"Talking about. You know this supposed election fraud in ladies and gentlemen, it's all noise because Donald Trump Is not going to be our next president For the next four years. It's gonna be Joe Biden. But here's just one example of what this fraud election lunacy has led to this story involves a former Houston police department captain. And he's not the good guy. By the way. This is a report from ABC Channel 13. Eyewitness News in Houston. Have a listen to this. Former Houston police captain Mark A. Gary, charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon arrested and booked at the jail today his case linked to the Liberty Center, a privately funded conservative group that investigated voter fraud claims during the election. In a news release, District attorney Kim Ogg said a Gerry Cross the line from dirty politics. The commission of a violent crime. According to court documents. A Gary suspected the victim had 750,000 fraudulent ballots signed by quote Hispanic Children. He had been watching him for days, A Gary told police and on October 19th he followed. The man crashed into his truck in the 1300 block of Alameda, Genoa and held him at gunpoint. But the Da's office says the victim was not a voter fraud mastermind. Rather, an air conditioner repairman. His truck a Gary thought held the ballots had only a C parts and tools. He follow the air conditioner repairman who he thought was somebody that was holding fraudulent votes followed him crashed into his car. Sounds like a very reasonable human being.

AI Today Podcast: Artificial Intelligence Insights, Experts, and Opinion
Interview with Carlos Rivero, Chief Data Officer for the Commonwealth of Virginia
"Hello and welcome to the AI Today podcast. I'm your host Kathleen Mulch. And I'm your host Ronald schmelzer Our Guest today is Carlos Rivera. Who is the chief data officer for the Commonwealth of Virginia off Carlos. Thank you so much for joining us on AI today Hey Ron. Thanks for having me. Yeah, welcome Carlos and thanks so much for joining us. We'd like to start by having you introduce yourself to our listeners. Tell them a little bit about your background. Check your current role as Chief data officer. Fantastic Kathleen. So yes in my current role on the chief data officer for the Commonwealth of Virginia before that. I've been in that role since August of 2018. And before that I was a chief data officer and chief Enterprise architect or the Federal Transit Administration at the US Department of Transportation that was there for a little over two years as well. And then prior to that I was physical scientist with Genoa Fisheries down at the southeast Fisheries Science Center for about fifteen years. So I've been in public service right now going over nineteen years in both federal and state experience. Well, that's great. I think that provides a lot of real Nice diverse set of experience, you know from Fisheries to the federal government to state government. And I think that's part of reason why we love to have your participation that we had your participation at the data for a-week confirmation that ran from September 14th thru 18th 2020 was of course a virtual conferences everything as these days and we were focusing on the data side of AI and for our listeners who may be interested that content is actually still available so you can come and you can hear the panel that Carlos was on when we were focusing on some of the state and the local challenges for AI and data management. If you go to data, that's spelled like data package i c o n f. It's free so you can go on there and you can check all that content will be made available for many months. So you definitely should check it out and Carlos was on a panel really sharing some of the unique insights of applying a machine learning and also some of the interesting challenges of wrangling data at the state level. So maybe Carlos you for those who weren't Intense or maybe even to motivate folks to listen to the family. What are some of them? Sites that you have seen in terms of just the challenge of managing data and getting it to do some magical things like machine learning at the state level. Well, I mean really one of the most basic things is getting people involved in the process. And in fact has plays a key role in that obviously more, you know, as we kind of evolved in once a leveraged data as of CJ Cassat within the Commonwealth, we realize that the participation of individuals not just horizontal across the organization, but also a vertically through different levels of state government is critical for our ability to integrate those data assets in a meaningful way and when I talk about the vertical, how are the patients I'm talking about, you know data storage data custodians data owners executive sponsors being able to participate in the overall governance discussion because everyone has a role to play in our ability to leverage data as a CJ asset to be able to incorporate that into our data analytics to write better intelligence and within that, you know, a comes in machine learning and artificial intelligence briefing. Jane as much value and insight from the data assets than we currently have. Yes indeed. Go ahead Kelly. Yeah, definitely and kind of to follow up with that on this podcast. We talked a lot about Ai and data at the national level, but maybe you can dig a little bit deeper into what are some of the unique challenges around data at this point level because I know that you know in general there's a general data challenges, but then we can also talk about you know, there's differences between State versus local versus Federal. So the fun thing about state is that you get to play with all the businesses at one time, you know in the federal space like when I was no Fisheries, we're very focused on fisheries and Fisheries applications. Mind you, you know as a physical scientist. I really worked with a lot of different data sets. As I was really more in a fraction of those individual populations and their environments right and anthropogenic impact on those environments and how does that change the behavior of individuals within a species right? And so you have to look at the bigger picture and yep. Integrate data from a variety of different sources other Noah Services resolved as live in North Fisheries, but we also have satellite service. We have the ocean service. We have the weather service. So being able to bring in data assets from a variety of different Services different lines of business. If you will to give you a better picture of what's happening in an environment that's very unique like more often than not individuals within that particular industry. We only focus on the data that they collect they work with on a regular basis and not really look at the bigger picture of what other data assets they can bring in same thing for in Federal Transit right in Federal Transit. It was very limited in their you know, what their perspective was with regards to you know, what data asked us what we going to bring in to really understand what's happening out in the world. They're really focused on providing, you know grants of Transit agencies and authorities to make sure that people are able to get to use public transportation in the most effective way. So it's very very silent. But then when you talk about a state government, can you talk about you know being able to leverage data as an asset at that level you really talking about across all of the different page? Business whether it's education Transportation criminal justice, you know environment what-have-you Health, you know, all of those lines of business now come under your purview and you really have to start to understand. What are they unique perspectives and how can you engage those individuals within each of those lines of businesses to be able to see the value in integrating their data assets and making better data-driven decisions home from that integration. So from a state perspective you really start to get a better handle on the overall picture of what's happening out in the real world versus a very I don't want to use this term negative in my topic view of you know, what your assembly looks like and only that which Falls but then you're suddenly are you paying attention to but at the same time, I've also realize that you know data governance and use of data as an ass is really a fractal type of problem where it doesn't matter. What kind of scale you look at it. It's going to have the same patterns associated with some of the same issues that we dealt with at the federal level we deal with birth. Level we deal with at the local level because it's not a matter of our these issues different. It's just a scale at which we operate in that just kind of gives you a little bit of a difference in wage issue is but the reality is that it's very poor the majority of the issues we do with with regards to data governance and data sharing and leveraging data and analytics a machine learning really comes back to the process and the people aspect of the peace process technology interaction.

All Things Considered
'Cuties' Calls Out The Hypersexualization Of Young Girls - And Gets Criticized
"Film cuties premieres on Netflix later this week. It's being praised for its critique of the hyper sexual ization of young girls and the consequences of that. As they grow up in the age of social media. It would've awarded the Sundance Film Festival, but it's also being criticized for the very thing it examines. Rebecca Rossman has this report from Paris. Several years ago. My moon a Duke of a was that a neighborhood gathering when her jaw dropped a group of young girls in revealing outfits came out on a stage and performed a choreographed routine. Google says they couldn't have been more than 11 years old. They were dancing very, essentially very sexually, and I was very disturbed about what I was seeing. But instead of passing judgment, the self taught writer and filmmaker says she wanted to understand what she was seeing. She dove into research interviewing more than 100, adolescent girls over the course of a year and a half. It's a period very specific where you are not anymore. So tell your child and you are not an adult You are looking for yourself in everything is changing very fast. Duke away combined. Her findings with elements of her own upbringing in her first feature length film Cuties is about what it means to be an adolescent girl in the age of Tic Tac and instagram, where likes have become the currency of self esteem. And keeping kids away from anything on the Internet is near impossible. Someone in their new film is told from the perspective of 11 year old Amy, who like Duke Away, is the daughter of Muslim Senegalese immigrants growing up in North East Paris. Amy is unimpressed by the traditional path for women laid out by the matriarchs in her family, the divorce, they fasted. They got up to develop a sauce. I looked as her strict grand and tries to groom her to become a wife and mother. Amy watches her own. Mom struggled to hide tears when she gets a call from her husband in Senegal. As is tradition for many men there, he's taken a second wife. To escape the drama Playing out at home, Amy befriends a group of popular girls at school who have formed a dance troupe called Lame Unknown or the Cuties. Amy spends hours nailing down choreography, too provocative music videos so she could impress her new friends. Filmmaker. My Mona Ducal says social media adds a layer of complexity to what it means to be an adolescent in 2020. Today, you have that exposition off your body on social media, and you also have thiss big competition. Off finding likes and follow us, and that is for me a new kind of finding love. The film provokes many questions, but doesn't provide many answers. And that's the intention, says film critic Jennifer Progeny. Who says it's also important that cuties was made by a woman who comes from the same background and culture as her characters is really important to have more coming of age movies in France in Genoa, and not we've only white cast because I think cotton to represent Children off every backgrounds because Even if we leave the same way we don't have the same control stuff, And it's really important to see the specific age between childhood and teenage moods. And I hope my Munna open the door for other movies like this. That door almost didn't open even though Cuties has received widespread acclaim in France and Wanna Sundance Award Ah publicity Gaff from its U. S distributor, Netflix almost cost the movie its reputation. After Netflix published a marketing poster showing the cuties twerking and revealing cheerleading outfits without any context. An online petition calling for the cancellation of the US release received more than 140,000 signatures. Do. Callie was accused on social media of being a pedophile and even received death threats. She says she hopes those who signed the petition will watch the film, and after that, they will see that we have the same fights and we all together. About that issue off hype, six realization off our Children and protect our Children. In the end my moon a Duke says her film is about a choice, a choice that who we want to become. Who we want to really become in as a child. Take the time to be assigned. And keep that innocence to grow up in our society for NPR news. I'm Rebecca Rossman in Paris.

AP 24 Hour News
1st Mediterranean cruise sets sail after virus tests
"Out there. The cruise ship company MSC check temperatures and administered covert 19 tests to crew and passengers in the Italian port of Genoa Sunday before the MSC grandiose a set off on what is being billed as the first Mediterranean cruise after Italy's pandemic locked down. And

AP 24 Hour News
1st Mediterranean cruise sets sail after virus tests
"Out there. The cruise ship company MSC check temperatures and administered covert 19 tests to crew and passengers in the Italian port of Genoa Sunday before the MSC grandiose a set off on what is being billed as the first Mediterranean cruise after Italy's pandemic locked down. And another

Kim Komando
Coronavirus journey: The 'last cruise ship on Earth' finally comes home
"News it's a return to port this week for an Italian cruise ship that's been enough virus free bubble since it set sail in January carnivals costed at least see also will make its first port of call in thirty five days when the docks in Barcelona Spain Monday for having to its final destination Genoa Italy the ship had embarked on and around the world cruise well before the corona virus outbreak became

Pants On Fire
Denim and Jeans
"What are we talking about today? Deborah we are lying about jeans a type of pants or trousers made from denim fabric. These do you know much about jeans. I love jeans because they're durable enough to keep up with my active lifestyle here. What yes I need a trouser. That can keep up with all the up in downloading of my day. Okay sure I can see that. Can you download some information about today's contestant I did it? Our human child contestant is a ten year old who's favorite subject is math and who wants to be a teacher when she grows up. Olivia McQueen you walk into pants on fire. Tell us about being a teacher. Is there a certain teacher who inspired you to become a teacher? Well my aunt gets her so much off. So that's one of the things. Oh it's about the good hours and you get a lot of money and you get a lot of money for being the teacher. Oh Yeh we gotta talk about. Maybe they could make even more. That's what I think don't you think? Yeah Yeah is there a certain age of kid? You would wanNA teach maybe first grade so I don't have to a lot about award English right so you should teach and then all you don't have to know a lot about anything but I have to deal with that kids. Oh and they they. Stopping bad after preschool. Right a liberal. So I WANNA learn some more things about you. I think Lisa wants to learn more thing all my gosh I was just saying. Is there anything else about her? Lots of things so many things in fact we're going to play to truth and a lie. Olivia's GonNa tell us three facts about herself. Two of those facts will be true. One will be ally. We will figure out which one is the lie A- Libya. What are your three facts? I've been a competitive dancer for four years now. My grandfather is a famous Irish folks here in Ireland and I love marshmallows. Feels LIKE SETTING US? Up for trick. Doesn't like marshmallows. Exposes excuse trying to play Games with those? She thinks she can come in here and just pull. The wool over is our sensors. That's it. Marshmallows is ally Nice. Try Okay okay. You're trying to outsmart her gameplay Libya. Which one of those facts is ally? I Love Mushrooms Campbell today. Show you do not like marshmallows. I've a story though the story so I strap and I had a loud marshmallows to soothe my throat. And I had so much that I didn't like the money more. Oh so you overdid it on the marshmallow once upon a time you like them. Yes so not even in hot chocolate now. Would you like them on a train? I would like them nowhere. Our first expert is Lara. Night please introduce to Libya. Let me out my name is Lauren. White. And I'm actually in jeans designer. Which means I work on developing and designing sheets. Thank you very much Laura. Let's meet our second expert. Simon fastener Simon. Please introduce yourself to Libya Libya. I'm Simon Baz ner and I'm a denim influencers. We'll have to learn more about that. I'm not sure what that is or how you can influence your denim. But we're going to find out. Hey Lisa is that a bootleg copy of those sounds sounds originally sourced by me. It's actually time right. That's when we put our experts on the hot seat while they enter Olivia's questions Lisa. Who should we put on the hot seat? I Simon because I want to be an influence there and maybe if I picked him he'll tell me how to be an influence. Okay that's fair all right. Well I are you influenced. I'm an insulin. So you're influenced. Let's see how that works? Okay Olivia what question do you have for Simon to start? Simon? What's a gene influencer? Gene or Denim influence is an expert in all things denim or genes so When people are interested in What type of accessories would go with a certain type of Denham or a certain type of gene? That's where I come in and I let them know a what would go with that and be where they can get the best and most fashion forward version of that. I run a blog entitled GET THEM DENIM DOT Com. That's why keep everyone up to date with the latest denim fashion designer. So if the denim you want exists. I'll show you where to get them. Okay Laura. What is your favorite style of jeans? My favorite style of jeans is a High Rise Jack Gang. They're super soft and they're super stretchy and they're my favorite. I wear them every day. They're called high-rise. Because they go the way from your feet over your head and then the Zipper is where it opens for your face. You might be onto something. I think you're influencing LISA. I've questions for Simon. Where were the first pair of jeans? Made by WHO in the first pair of jeans were made in Italy in the town of Genoa and by and by WHO will they're made for genetic for for Genoese sailors so They were made by emend named named Lawrence Influenza. Okay Laura what made you want to become an expert on jeans while I got my first job in jeans in Los Angeles about twenty years ago and my favorite part about getting into the denim business is denim is a very specific fabric. If you don't wash it and you wear over and over and over for many years it starts taking on the characteristics of the person that's wearing that garment which is really really cool so my job is actually to recreate some of these really awesome old vintage garments. Make it new make it really modern out of new fabrics. It's so much fun in really creative sue. You're saying it's best not to wash your jeans and you are correct. Actually have a well. That depends so if you're if you're buying a really stretchy gene that means it's going to have some spandex something in it to make it really stretchy. That goes with cotton. You're going to want to be careful not to wash those james but every two or three times you wear it because that heat and a lot of water will actually give a little wear and tear on that gene so you can do some spot cleaning. Sometimes if you have a really rare pair of jeans you might want to do a couple of fun. Things like put them in the freezer. Put them on the snow hanging out to dry. You just want to be careful not to hit them with too much hot water into wash them too. Often were other than giving them a fun trip while them in the freezer well some people think it might be a wise tell but I have personally found that sometimes bacteria can grow on anything actually so when you WanNa wash something most of the time. You're not only just getting out the hot chocolate that spilled on your garment but you're actually just washing something to be cleaner when you put that in a really cold environment just like putting a rug outside in the snow in the wintertime it can actually kill bacteria that might be on that garment cool. Denver's that y your backyard is covered in rugs. I think you're at the wrong house. Lisa Oh wait Do you live in a rug store. I do not oh I was at the wrong. Okay go ahead okay. This is for both of you. What are most teams made of? Who wants to take? That sure. I'll take its motions are all denim is really is a is mostly made from cotton So I'd say cotton and then for the for the more stretchy jeans lasting or you know Three percents SPANDEX so most of the older jeans before we would say probably about Nineteen ninety-five nineteen ninety. Eight were one hundred percent cotton. Since then we've added more and more stretchy stuff that goes with the cotton which we call spandex or like war lasting that being said some jeans actually like the ones that way right now go up two hundred percent stretch so those numbers of the new fibres that you have to add to get the genes. Really Stretchy has gone up and stretch. Jeans are actually the most popular jeans right now in the market cool. Hey stretch jeans. If you're listening good for YOU CONGRATS. You did it. Or she may be stretching the Truth Laura. What are the most current trends and jeans so one of the number one trends in jeans right now? It's actually two polar opposite idea so one is getting back to a no stretch jeans or what. We call a rigid gene for women. In addition to that really stretchy high wasted jeans is also a big trend on the women's sign on the men's side. We have a couple of things coming back so we have a skinny slouch gene. Plus a little bit of puddle at the bottom. That's a cool word for a really long gene. That shows off your sneakers. In addition to that we also have the Dad Jean coming back which President Obama rocked all the