35 Burst results for "Gillespie"

Monitor Show 14:00 09-08-2023 14:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:54 min | 3 weeks ago

Monitor Show 14:00 09-08-2023 14:00

"I honestly don't know what the, you know, why the response was that they need a place presence on a elementary school grounds, but as far as, you know, for recess, but it just shows you how extreme our politics has gotten, and we need to take the temperature down in so many respects, this being one of them. Cool it down, bring the temperature down, simmer down, Maura Gillespie, many thanks to you and Jeannie Shanzano, great conversation, a great panel. I'm Joe Matthew in Washington, hour two of Sound On starts. Sound On, politics, policy and perspective from DC's top names, federal spending combined with two lakhs monetary policy has produced this 40 year high on inflation, China policy is driven basically by domestic politics, American families are finding themselves further behind the eight ball, to get anything done in this Congress, it's going to have to be done in a bipartisan way, Bloomberg Sound On with Joe Matthew and Kaylee lines on Bloomberg radio. Joe Biden arrives at the G20 with a warning. Welcome to hour two of Sound On, as the president lands in India now for the big gathering that will not include presidents, Xi or Putin, to warn of cascading crises that could impact the US and global economies. We're going to look at the goals for the administration this weekend and the possible risks facing President Biden with John Sitalides at Trilogy Advisors, a diplomacy consultant for the State Department. His insights are straight ahead. The Georgia grand jury that first investigated Donald Trump.

Jeannie Shanzano Donald Trump Putin John Sitalides XI Maura Gillespie Joe Matthew Joe Biden Washington India Trilogy Advisors 40 Year Two Lakhs President Trump Congress First Kaylee ONE State Department DC
Monitor Show 12:00 08-18-2023 12:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:47 min | Last month

Monitor Show 12:00 08-18-2023 12:00

"Is because social media has made pretty much everything worse right right, but Parents here according to New York Post parents drop thousands on recruitment coaches to ensure daughters success and start sorority rush According the Wall Street Journal sorority consultants help women dress to impress During rush that's a big Greek life a lot of these big schools southern schools. It is big boy They're spending money on it just sounds pathetic. It sounds kind of weak to me. We'll see this is Bloomberg Broadcasting 24 hours a day at bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg radio This is Bloomberg markets with Paul Sweeney at met Miller We got a lot of green on the screen here, but the volume is light We constantly underestimate the strength of the US consumers This is a market that's much more optimistic or bullish than maybe the central bankers are breaking market news and insight from Bloomberg experts There's still some concern out there in the market that there is room for things to deteriorate a little bit more than what they're indicating As small and medium -sized businesses struggle, they don't present as much competition The supply chain has still got dislocations globally and here in the u .s. This is Bloomberg markets On Bloomberg radio All right coming up in this hour in our c -suite conversation we're gonna talk to Charles Gillespie CEO of gambling got calm Yeah, I wonder what they do We're gonna discuss the company's earnings and maybe that pen entertainment ESPN deal and just kind of what's happening in the sports Gaming business and then boom a new segment. What is Matt Miller driving? Matt talks about the latest car he's driving this week with Kyle stock senior correspondent with Bloomberg Business Week So and you and me, but I'll tell you what guys are driving it.

Matt Miller Matt Charles Gillespie Paul Sweeney Bloomberg Business Act Espn Bloomberg .Com This Week 24 Hours A Day Thousands Bloomberg United States Miller New York Post Bloomberg Broadcasting U .S. CEO Kyle Business Week Wall Street Journal
Monitor Show 14:00 08-08-2023 14:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:44 min | Last month

Monitor Show 14:00 08-08-2023 14:00

"It's gold. Earning 4 .9 % APY on your cash. It grows. Your money can earn more money. It's Robinhood Gold. FDIC insured up to $2 million. That's beautiful, baby. Get 4 .9 % APY and your first 30 days free at Robinhood .com slash radio. $5 a month after the first 30 days. APY is variable and earns on uninvested cash swept into partner banks where FDIC insured. Turn the clock. Robinhood Financial LLC, member SITC is not a bank. Broadcasting 24 hours a day at Bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg Radio. Now, from our nation's capital, this is Bloomberg Sound On. Nixon's Watergate was like a lightning bug. Trump's behavior is like a lightning storm. He is using hardworking Americans' dollars to fund his legal bills. Bloomberg Sound On. Politics, policy and perspective from D .C.'s top names. This is the most serious charge ever brought against a former president. He will be trapped in a courtroom for two, three weeks at a time during the height of primary season. Bloomberg Sound On with Joe Matthew and Kaylee Lyons on Bloomberg Radio. The Georgia prosecutor working to indict Donald Trump has eyes on a law used for mobsters. Welcome to hour two of Sound On. As Fulton County DA Fannie Willis considers indicting Trump on a RICO charge, among others, we'll discuss what many believe to be an inevitable fourth indictment against the former president coming up with Andre Gillespie, professor of political science at Emory College.

Andre Gillespie Donald Trump Kaylee Lyons Sitc Robinhood Financial Llc TWO Bloomberg Business Act Joe Matthew Fdic Fourth Indictment Fannie Willis 24 Hours A Day First 30 Days $5 A Month Three Weeks Georgia Robinhood Gold Up To $2 Million Watergate
"gillespie" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

The Stuttering John Podcast

03:37 min | 1 year ago

"gillespie" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast

"Jill Carter, Diana Olsen, and me to Blake. Mark arley, great speech by Biden in Poland today. Doesn't it? Does it make you happy that we actually have a president that is smart, not a dimwit and actually cares? Let's go. All righty. John from Las Vegas. Gillespie. Lacy Carter jazz maniac..

Jill Carter Diana Olsen Mark arley Blake Biden Poland Lacy Carter Gillespie Las Vegas John
"gillespie" Discussed on Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

05:54 min | 1 year ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

"Trust in that pair if tita is healthy. The big thing is is Thai Thai Washington. I know I think I saw you tweet this morning, should they shut them down? And let them just, was that you the tweet of that? No, but no, but somebody else did. Some other really good insider that I follow. Probably. A better insider. Probably. And he's not better and I'm shocked to follow him. I am too, honestly. Yeah, no, I think the health is the question, but those two guys, Kentucky has been awesome this year. They are, they are built to win at a high level across the board. All those dudes. But yes, I would give them, I agree with you. I do them and I. Who else can anybody else? Kennedy Chandler. 6 and a half. Really? Well, that's so inconsistent for me. Yeah, he is up and down. All right, who do you think I missed? Isaiah Stevens, Colorado state. You'd be the only name I put on there. I like him a lot. I know you haven't seen him. I'm talking about I'm talking about teams that have a chance. Guys, that's fair. That's fair. I don't think Tennessee's got a chance, but that's no no, I guess. I haven't seen him play. So I think we've both come to the conclusion. We take a lesbian number one, would you give Gillespie a ten? No, I don't think anybody is deserving of a ten on that list. Okay, I'm just I'm doing it by saying the highest ranks correct. Right. Yeah, on scale. Gillespie would be the number one ranking in my power rankings with, I think, severe Wheeler and Thai Thai, number two, I like Tiger Campbell. I would have him three nem hard four Frasier 5 can just sit. Yeah, I probably go Gillespie Wheeler than a Ken Joe, then Trent curbelo, then them harder than Tiger, then Isaiah Stevens. The fact that kerbela was even named with these cats is pretty squashed. I'm not giving up. I'm not ready to give up. Which take of yours is worse. Marilyn bench for this point. A lot of avalanche. I mean, they really miss your boy. Is it James? James Graham. Everything would have been different. I mean, charge might still be there. They could be. For anybody that wants James Graham, he is in the portal waiting room. He is a committed anywhere? No, he's waiting. The suitors are coming. Waiting for what? The suitors are coming. He should get you as his agent. You would have him somewhere really good. Really, really good. I'm gonna see if I can get him to Purdue next year. Okay. See what we can do. All right. All right, you have a game, your first conjecture game in person ever and no, no, no, and like four years. I did BYU get zag at the kennel. Sweet. We place. Kennel is great. Yeah, yeah, it's a good spot. So this is my first game of theirs since then. So they've been flying under the radar. I mean, I saw him back when they beat Texas and absolutely smother Texas. Chet was not great in that game. Get two points in that game? Yeah, he just didn't do anything. I mean, he honestly he was like, just another player out there and, you know, we saw him kind of start to get a little better through the non conference schedule, but he has been absolutely dominant in league play. Now a lot of people will say, well, yeah, it's pepper time. It's Portland. It's specific..

Isaiah Stevens Kennedy Chandler Gillespie tita Tiger Campbell Gillespie Wheeler Ken Joe Trent curbelo James Graham kerbela Kentucky Washington Frasier Colorado Tennessee Wheeler Marilyn Purdue James BYU
"gillespie" Discussed on Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

05:57 min | 1 year ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

"So my trust level is the highest and you know what I think your point guard play. For Colin Gillespie. It's everything. It is. It's everything to me. It is. Like, I know. I just laughed because I literally just said it's everything you do. Is everything to me? Yeah. Yeah, yeah. So, all right, so if you're what is your meter like one to ten counter Gillespie is a ten? Or Colin goes to the ten? Yeah, I mean, he's the highest. There is this year. And again, in a weak point guard crew, let's face it. It's not overpowering like it usually is. I would say Colin Gillespie is a ten for me. How about I read off some names and you can give your rating and then I'll follow it up with. Okay. Yep. Tiger Campbell. It's like a 7 to me. He's played in the final four. I know. I know. And I love Tiger. I love them. Not enough. You don't love me. He hits big shots. He runs the team. Maybe a 7. I'll give him a 7 and a half. How's that? 7 big shots runs the team went to the final four last year. I'll give him an 8. I'm gonna give him an 8 now. I'm moving on. I'm going 9 because of the reasons that you said. All right. Andrew neumark. I give him the same 8. Apes. Samey. This is a year for him to prove it. Yeah, no doubt. No doubt. I just because last year was suggs. Nearly have the responsibility. He's playing great. But he's playing the best basketball of his career right now. It's good. James akinjo. 9. I'll give it Ken Joe a 9 because I think he's got that shit to him. Like, I love, I love a Ken Joe. Was he over 11 Phillips? He has been brutal shooting the ball lately. Brutal from three from the perimeter. Yeah. But I don't care. I think he can impact the game by distributing by his toughness by his intangibles by his ability to try to guard. So I just, I trust the kinja. Okay, I'm gonna go 7. I'm not as high. I still think the jury is the jury is out, especially with the mounting injuries. I just think a lot is being put on a flight. Loud is being put on this plate. This is a little bit outside the box. Truck Frazier, Illinois. 8. I actually have the Trent Fraser if you have me ranked point guard situations. I have Trent Fraser Cabello as maybe the third best situation in the country. Now again, I know we don't know what we're getting out of Bello. I am not giving up on them though. I'm not giving up on them. I'm not. I'm not ready. I just don't think you can even say that he's coming off the bench. He plays like 12 minutes. He either turns it over or he is playing Purdue he balls. I can't even believe you're gonna disrespect Frazier and I'm giving respect to Frazier. You're trying to save your all American victims..

Colin Gillespie Ken Joe Tiger Campbell Andrew neumark James akinjo Gillespie Colin suggs Trent Fraser Trent Fraser Cabello Phillips basketball Frazier Illinois Bello Purdue
"gillespie" Discussed on Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

04:52 min | 1 year ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

"And you were going for the flash. That's what it was. You were going for the flare, but Colin Gillespie is solid, and he wins, and he does it the highest level. In every way, right in every way. I mean, this kid last night, he's unflappable. Like he makes every big shot every good, the play that stood out to me the most rob, you know, he makes the shots from three, the play that stood out to me the most was he must've got switched on Justin mania. Justin Minaj is 6, 7, strong, tough, play for Frank Martin, place for a coolie kind of an undersized four. More than anything. You know what Gillespie did? He backed his ass down and got an end one on him. That is impressive. He's just won so much. I mean, they've won so much and he's been specific part of it. That I just feel like he is always in control. And he's not the most athletic guy. He's not the most talented guy, but he's tough and he has a knack to make big shots and he's just, he's a winner, man. That's what he is. He is one of the elite point guards in the country. In a year where there's not a ton of guys that you would say are in that list. Back in November, actually, when they played Purdue, I remember asking them, I think, before that game, I said, you're like a robot out there. And there's a dish. Well, that's what I wanted to see. I wanted to see, I said like you don't show any emotion. I can't tell if you're up 20 or down 20, you don't celebrate and there's him and Jermaine Samuels. And I said, you guys are like robots, like don't take that as disrespect. And they said, no, no, no, we don't. We actually take it the other way. Like, we think that's a great thing that you're saying that because we play the game the right way. And they do, they move the basketball, Justin Moore had like 18 or 16 in the first half. Rob, he was not shot hunting at all..

Colin Gillespie Justin mania Justin Minaj Frank Martin Gillespie rob Jermaine Samuels Purdue Justin Moore basketball Rob
"gillespie" Discussed on Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

05:17 min | 1 year ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

"They put me in the other baseline and literally it's almost like duke. They're right on top. They can touch you. Are they all the way around? No. But they're out of their minds out of their frigging minds. And they're hungry. Obviously they got a chance to win their first big east regular season title ever. Sure. I've called them lucky all year as you know. And they don't like that. They don't like being called lucky. Well, how good do you think they are? You saw me personal last night. How good do you think provinces? I think they're good because they play hard as shit and they're connected and they've made enough shots. I don't think they're as good as shooting team as they've showed. And they win a lot of close games. But you're playing against the program that is known for winning close games and the different showed down the stretch. And Kobe was very, very upset because he felt like they missed a lot of assignments defensively at the end. They left Gillespie wide open. A couple times and he made him pay. You can't do that. But getting back so I walk in and this is like a pro move. This was a complete probe move. I walk in, and again, they're all over me. There's like hundreds of students right behind me and I'm like, oh shit, this is gonna be, this could get ugly. You know, I could have a fan like pour a beer on me at some point. That would have been amazing. I know you would have loved this. You got Steve Austin's just right down there. That would have been great. I was ready. There was one fan before the game he was wearing a hat. Shit faced. Shit based. And he was in my face. And I looked over. I can't remember who I said it to. But I said, you might want to, like, I might swing at it. I was so upset. Most of them, you know, they're yelling shit, they're giving me the middle finger, they're yelling, you know, we hate goods. Whatever. Do all this. This dude was like in my face. Like, we hate you good man. Just in my face. I'm like, dude, like, just shut the hell up. Shut the hell up or I'm going to put you on the floor in a minute. And assaulting a student would have been amazing. I would not have been good. It would not have happened. Goodman's in jail. He went to the province game and assaulted a kid. Been great. Would not have been good. So I go over anyway. Go to my seat, I see count of the surroundings in my seat and how close everybody is and I'm like, all right, so I grabbed 5 of them. Grab 5, 5 guys, or whoever I could see could have been girls, but it happened to be 5 guys. I said, all right, come with me, guys. They're like, look at me like, well, what are you doing? I said, all right, come on upstairs. I'm gonna buy you each.

Gillespie Kobe Steve Austin Goodman
"gillespie" Discussed on The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

04:42 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

"Lee written by george benson for his wife on the roots of smooth featuring music from george benson this hour as well as comments and despite then since commercial successes many jazz critics feel benson abandoned the genre on its path to worldwide fame and notoriety does benson feel the need to address his critics. No really. Because when i think about the record sales they don't really jive with people who say that they they love my music back you talking about in the old days Cpi all of the columbia recordings when we were you know making our way through the music world and even achieving the number one jazz guitar status When you think about those record sales were like thirty thousand out. Where all these people that said that they were big fans of is You can't compare that with the ten million albums that reason so you know So i it doesn't really jive with me but i do really believe that we do have a few fans. Wonder stand where i was and where i am today. The different And for them. I wish that I could go back a few years. And let them see. When we were super hot in the late seventies you know mid seventies and And just get back into that group but it's very difficult from this point. People know too well for what we we're doing now pointed comments from george benson on the roots of smooth. Here's a selection from his recording tenderly. It's written by the great cuban composer instrumentalist. Mario also collaborated with the great dizzy. Gillespie to blend jazz with afro-cuban rhythms in the forties a sound that still remains popular to this very day..

george benson benson Lee columbia Mario Gillespie
Terry McAuliffe, Democrats Were the First Questioning the 2020 Election

Mark Levin

01:56 min | 2 years ago

Terry McAuliffe, Democrats Were the First Questioning the 2020 Election

"You know who was questioning the 2020 election before it actually occurred Ladies and gentlemen Terry mcauliffe remember the Democrats Questioning the 2020 election before it was actually taking place They talked about a lack of mailboxes Remember this rich That it was a conspiracy because the head of the postal system was appointed by Trump and there weren't enough mailboxes and they were removing mailboxes Remember that Remember they were the ones questioning the machine Where were they the dominion machines Remember they questioned the machines and the press were questioning the machines Remember all that folks Well Terry McCullough was part of that He was part of that and the young team has been running an ad About mcauliffe saying he was very concerned that 2020 election would be rigged Bill Maher asked him about it cut 7 go Do you think this next election is going to be on the up and up Oh I'm very concerned I mean I can tell you in Virginia when I was governor I had to replace all the machines His governor I got rid of all of our DRE I remember when I first voted when I went to Richmond moved down his governor I went and voted in 14 I just moved to Richmond Just got like the governor I remember I kept vote in the Senate race I voted for the Democrat Republican name kept coming up I hit the machine for Warner Gillespie's name lit up Three times that happened I did it four times So then I had investigation done So I took the machines and I hired hackers Listen to this Listen to this They were able to hack into our machines from off site off site in about 5 or 6 minutes We took them 6 minutes to hack into our atmosphere It would in four minutes they were able to change a vote It went up in two minutes change of our ID certified all the machines I was very disturbed by that It happened to me again the next year

Terry Mccullough Terry Mcauliffe Donald Trump Mcauliffe Bill Maher Richmond Warner Gillespie Virginia Senate
"gillespie" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

06:46 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

"Primarily racial because also consider one of the leaders of black lives matter after came out that she had purchased a wide variety of homes of expensive homes and elite neighborhoods. Step down. she stepped away from the organization. So this type of stuff comes you know comes for everybody and as i point out too good point as i point out in the story i mean one of the kind of you know it's it's somewhat comical but also hopefully shows that this stuff has a certain shelf life but where a podcast that gimblett media which was designed to kind of do a deep dive on how awful it was to work at conde. Nast bond apetite two episodes into that podcasts. The the people producers of the podcast cancelled themselves because people who worked with them said. You're just as bad as the people at conde nast. So it's like you get into this thing where the revolution needs. Its own and all of that kind of stuff. But i think what we're witnessing also is what feeds into cancel culture apart from this kind of free floating sense of you know of people feeling injured and aggressed by a random stray thoughts that in the past might not have risen to the level of of anger. Public public shouting. There's also a generational dimension going on you know that. This is a way of clearing out the top of the pyramid again. The millennials are the older. Older millennials are now in their early forties them in gen z. Dwarf baby boomers and jax and they want to move up and out into the world so that when you see people like you know senator al franken is a good example. Senator democratic senator liberal progress of. I mean this guy worked at air america and made his biggest bestselling books were attacking rush limbaugh for being a big fat idiot. You know wire and things like that. He got cancelled. And i think you know looking back now. It's kind of hard to believe. It's not even clear what exactly he was cancelled forbid he got squeezed out And it's kind of generational you know and it's like you're looking at. Who are the people in power positions. How do you get rid of them. And that way you know it frees up some space to move up. So i think that's a big part of this and it kind of weds with that sense of kind of what what. We're talking about people feeling uncomfortable with conflict feeling very tender to the world and you know if you grew up believing that the world was kind of simultaneously. The world is your oyster. Because you know if you're a millennial gen z. You're growing up in a world where you're constantly being told here all of the things that are in front of you hear all of the things that are available but then you have parents or society which is also trying to make sure that you encounter some kind of reality that tells you you're not that special etc think when you combine that the sensibility that grows out of that kind of childproofing generational childproofing plus a real desire in a sense that like old people. Baby boomers aren't going anywhere. You know at least the greatest generation by the time they were sixty. They were dying to retire president. Who's one hundred years old. Any beat a guy who was like ninety five years old who beat a woman who is ninety years. i like. it's you know there's a weird kind of gerontocracy at work culturally economically politically in america. Which i think is also fuelling cancelled culture in a very real wet. Yeah i'm gonna to. I'm going to sort of end on another quote of yours that i like. I liked a lot of these things like a lot of things you said in. This article said contemporary cancel. Culture can take on left and right flavorings and it can be enforced by governments corporations or individuals that all works to reduce our ability. Not just to talk freely to live freely. And that is reason enough to contest it at every level. That's a very compelling argument if you believe in free speech if you believe in in human freedom of the spirit of autonomy self actualization it seems like it's hard to argue with that Regardless of where the political lines at falls so For reading that article. Nick and thank you for being on the podcast and for Dare i say being my friend. It's been great getting to know you personally as a human. Yeah yeah same here. I appreciate it and you know. This is one of the things. I i think that we definitely kind of overlap. Intersect on in a meaningful way is thinking about the human potential movement and kind of positive psychology. I guess you would call it more And you know this is like an incredible moment. it's there are so many possibilities and we can do so many things and it's You know. I worry that it's kind of like we've you know we've we've reached escape. Velocity from so much of the crap of the past that is you know about racial gender sexual discrimination and things like that and where we can do whatever we want and a lot of us. I think are shrinking from that freedom and kind of going back to older forms of identity and regulating other people's lives that it would just be horrible to miss this opportunity to kind of actually create a twenty first century. Which is just fantastically better than anything that we know that our parents or grandparents might have imagined as exciting thing is the potential there. If we want it you know the the post traumatic growth. That i think is going to come about from this pandemic. I think we at least i could say their potential. There's huge you know whether or not we sees it. Sees it or not or get get drawn into the muck of arguments over who should wear masks or not is up to us. But your thank you nick. Thank you thank you. Thanks for listening to this episode of the psychology. Podcast if you'd like to react in some way to something you heard. I encourage you to join in the discussion at psychology. Podcast dot com. That's thus apology. Podcast dot com. Thanks for being such a great supporter of the show and tune in next time for more on the mind brain behavior and creativity..

gimblett Nast bond conde nast senator al franken conde rush limbaugh america Nick nick
"gillespie" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

08:03 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

"Today it's great tap. Nicholas be on the podcast. Nickel libertarian journalist. Who is currently the editor at large at reason. A two time finalist for digital national magazine awards. Sp work has appeared in the new york times. The washington post the wall street journal the los angeles times. The new york post sleet salon time dotcom marketplace and basically any other publication. That you ever gonna read the daily beast named nick one of the rights top twenty five journalists calling him quote. Clear-headed brainy among the foremost libertarians. In america nick. It's so great to have you on the show today. Thanks for having me scott. It's a real pleasure to be here. The motto of reason magazine which you've really spearheaded and been parcel of for for many years is called free minds and free markets. I was worried if we could start with you kind of explaining what that means and you know even just our listeners. Who aren't even familiar with libertarianism. At all yeah. So reason was founded in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight by a guy who was a student at boston university and then it kind of migrated from him and from boston to santa barbara on the west coast. La where it's still technically headquartered. And now we have a big office in washington dc as well as people scattered all over the country. And we're you know. We started out as a month play politics and culture magazine kind of similar to the new republic or national review along those lines and like a lot of other publications. We branch out into the web. We were early adopters we have. We've had a website since i think. Nineteen ninety four and then we created a video platform in two thousand seven. Which i spearheaded. I was the editor in chief of the print magazine. two thousand and two thousand eight Video platform the website at various points but the free minds and free markets concept comes as you mentioned where limited our libertarian publication which means we believe in kind of limited government individual is and the idea that kind of civil liberties and economic liberties are really kind of twin different sides of the same coin. So you need to be freethinking in and tolerant and interested in empathy employer eliza as well as also kind of exercising autonomy and everything you do and the way that plays out. It used to be that we could say to people you know. We're kind of socially liberal and fiscally conservative. But that made sense in like nineteen seventy-five and maybe even nine hundred ninety five in twenty twenty. one. I don't know what that means because most a lot liberals and progressives are not very tolerant You know they're trying to shut down all kinds of speech and they're trying to regulate all sorts of lifestyles that they don't like and conservatives used to be people who would say you know what the government should be small and it shouldn't be it should pay for itself and of course that went out the window a long time ago so really good point and everything seems topsy-turvy right now and in every imaginable dimension. Now you know it's interesting because the daily beast named you one of the rights top twenty five journalists putting you putting you on the right seems is interesting thing. I don't know if you would agree with that characterization. It seems like return libertarian. Left right you can be absolutely. Yeah yeah i. I've known number of friends. And actually contributing editors the raisin who were libertarian small l. and we're members of the democratic party or the republican party or the libertarian party or you know noam. Chomsky called himself a libertarian socialist at various points bill. Buckley called himself a libertarian. Conservative you know so. Depending on what day of the week it is or what time of the year you know. Sometimes people like using the adjective libertarian. Because i think it connotes in its in its best form a kind of interested in innovation and lese faire in the best way possible not not do what do unto others than split but rather a kind of relaxed tolerant open approach to thinking about things like philosophy speech lifestyle as well as also economic innovation. And things like that so it's not surprising that a lot of business leaders at various points of call themselves libertarian or have been plausibly accused of that somebody like jeff bezos of amazon Is an example of that but yeah the daily beast. Put me on the right Which i kind of chafe hat. Because i'm not socially conservative and i'm not i guess i'm fiscally conservative in the idea that i think government should we should pay for the government that we want but i also was a columnist at the daily beast for a few years after that. So you know. I like to think of libertarian. Is obviously on the political spectrum somewhere but it's a little bit different and at its best. It takes what's best about being liberal and the best about what's being conservative and kind of mixes it into a nice blended ice cream cone or something i always viewed it as analogous to the behi- religious faith. Okay i think the only people i know who were behi- were seals and crofts the singers summer breeze. So can tell me what behind faith is and they like to take the kind of talk about how they're every religion they they're not into divisiveness but they're into believed their peaceful and they believe in picking the best of of everything and it's a universal faith. They consider themselves a universal faith. Anyway i it seems like i like the idea of being attractive. And you know i think libertarian sometimes hearken back to Kind of what's called classical liberalism or you know liberal liberal political ideology which which which includes people on the right and the left in america but it came out of the end of the age of monarchs and aristocracy and it was the idea that individuals are capable of making decisions for themselves and we should create social political cultural economic institutions that allow individuals more freedom to make choices about the things that matter most to them and i think that includes things like you know who. Who do you get to marry or whether you wanna marry at all do you. Do you have to ask permission from some kind of lord or some kind of authority before you get on with your life or not Those types of things that government should be representative and it should be limited. I do believe. And i guess this is part and parcel of the liberal project properly understood that there are certain rights that the majority doesn't get to minimize simply because it's the majority of you know. Nobody should be forced to worship god that they find falls. Nobody should be forced to be a slave. Nobody should be forced into the army. Things like that. Unless there are really particular and short-lived circumstances that require stepping on people's Freedom to to basically live how they want. So there's probably not too many libertarians in afghan. Stand right now. Yeah it's a real. This is a A real problem the libertarian movement. And i would say has been one of the most vocal inconsistent critics of american foreign policy in terms of interventionism into places like like afghanistan.

digital national magazine the los angeles times The new york post print magazine nick The washington post the wall street journal boston university Nicholas the new york times santa barbara west coast eliza america scott dc libertarian party boston La Chomsky
"gillespie" Discussed on True Crime Garage

True Crime Garage

05:55 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on True Crime Garage

"Paul fresh our was not the letter writer does not then make him innocent of the attempted murder. Yeah but it's also. I mean the the reason why karen make sense as because she would have opportunity to get his gun. All they did was Basically shave off like part of the number but that would have to mean. There'd be some reason why mary gillespie sister wanted her dead. If in fact it was actually rigged up in a way that it would work brain. You know that's where this story gets really complicated. The case does get very complicated. Because there's about eight thousand different rabbit holes that you could go down and the problem with this case is the people again. I keep going back to who is central to the story and it's the fresh ours. It's the gillespie's it's gordon massie. And it's the school board where it all kind of starts and the victims. If there are real victims are wrong. Gillespie mary gillespie. And at this point. Karen gillespie you can say whatever you wanna say about caring. Gillespie and people can think whatever they wanna think. I'm telling you her husband beat her up. We know that to be a fact because we have a police report it's presented in court proceedings and through his own attorney admits to it. Yes so what you're saying. Is karen as telling us this Paul right correct. Paul with this shitty mustache and the half malla. He beat her so again. If may look maybe she was the letter writer and it was just shoes. Getting kicks telling people. Hey you're not supposed to be doing this doing this. Maybe she loved her sister but said hey. You're doing wrong. Because i love my brother-in-law so good guy and cheated on him bad for you right but then your husband beats you up. Maybe an this happened once or up in one thousand nine hundred eighty to write the letter. Start in in seventy six early seventy seven. I understand that. Does i know i'm just pointing it out for all involved okay again. I'm not an expert. I just that's what i'm saying. I'm trying to keep up you when you get your certification on the wall. Then we'll let you speak okay. Follow me on this though. You pointed something out really interesting. Was this booby-trap.

mary gillespie gordon massie Gillespie mary gillespie Karen gillespie Paul karen gillespie Gillespie
3 share Big East Player of the Year honors for 1st time

Nightcap with Ryan Gates

00:14 sec | 2 years ago

3 share Big East Player of the Year honors for 1st time

"A first in the Big East. Three players will share the player of the Year Award, Villanova's Jeremiah Robinson Earl and Colin Gillespie. Along with Seton Hall's Sandra Mama Kalish Vili tied in the voting of league coaches

Jeremiah Robinson Earl Big East Colin Gillespie Villanova Seton Hall Sandra Mama Kalish Vili
"gillespie" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

05:58 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

"Is possible. New rotisserie style. Chicken bites are now a decoy. You happy taste good. Thanks for tuning into classic radio theater on your favorite station now. The conclusion of the story of doctor kildare march first nineteen fifty. I'll do my best to see that everyone is clear about then. Thank you of course under those circumstances. Dr gillespie can't be blamed if he's mistaken but now i have no business saying anything. Suppose he isn't mistaken only he is. I'm sure that i have.

march first nineteen fifty kildare gillespie doctor
"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

Shut Up I Love It

05:11 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

"Number two <Speech_Male> is <Speech_Male> A gangster <Speech_Male> movie <Speech_Male> like <Speech_Male> it's a <Speech_Male> underworld gangster <Speech_Male> type movie number. <Speech_Male> Three is <Speech_Male> almost <Speech_Male> the same. Two <Speech_Male> and four <Speech_Male> is also in the gangster <Speech_Male> territory fifth <Speech_Male> was a true heist <Speech_Male> movie. The rest were not <Speech_Male> heist and even from <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I could talk forever about <Speech_Male> the period series <Speech_Male> clearly but even <Speech_Male> he movies after <Speech_Male> five <Speech_Male> they go. <Speech_Male> They don't go into <Speech_Male> highs territorial. They <Speech_Male> change john right. <Speech_Male> So that's what. I really like about <Speech_Male> that <Speech_Male> series. Anyways <Speech_Male> they don't stick to <Speech_Male> one type of <Speech_Male> Movie <Speech_Male> but <SpeakerChange> i think <Speech_Male> it is similar because <Speech_Male> you had all these stars <Speech_Male> coming together. There were <Speech_Male> big stars <Speech_Male> some of them. <Speech_Male> Maybe not <Speech_Male> big in the united states <Speech_Male> at the time <Speech_Male> but <Speech_Male> big stars nonetheless. <Speech_Male> And i'd say that's <Speech_Male> a ten <Speech_Male> big ten <Speech_Male> for fast five <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> This is an eight <Speech_Male> ocean's twelve <Speech_Music_Male> eight. I think <Speech_Music_Male> it's still. I <Speech_Male> love it. <Speech_Male> It's really good. <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> I <Speech_Female> don't wanna leave carlton. i'm <Speech_Female> pleased because he's gonna text <Speech_Female> me. He's <Speech_Female> gonna make fun <Speech_Male> of me. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> It's good <Speech_Male> it <Speech_Male> isn't bad. I don't think <Speech_Male> there's much <Speech_Male> to pick apart about <Speech_Male> this movie. It's very <Speech_Male> fun. i'd even watch <Speech_Male> it again. I think if <Speech_Male> anything it's just <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> may maybe <Speech_Male> the <Speech_Male> I don't know there's <Speech_Male> really nothing bad to <Speech_Male> say about it. I just don't think <Speech_Male> it's hard <Speech_Female> to me <Speech_Male> the number one. <Speech_Female> yeah <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Well that leaves <Speech_Female> us with the most important <Speech_Female> person of <Speech_Female> today's <Speech_Female> date. <Speech_Female> Because i don't want to name <Speech_Female> today's date and then <Speech_Female> this podcast is not evergreen. <Speech_Female> Why would i <Speech_Female> ever do that. <Speech_Female> Carlton gillespie <Speech_Female> where. <Speech_Female> Whatever <Speech_Female> i just said. <Speech_Female> Let it go and tell me <Speech_Female> what <Speech_Female> is your deal <Speech_Male> with the <Speech_Male> scale. And how <Speech_Male> do you want to <SpeakerChange> deal with <Speech_Female> the <Speech_Female> likes <Speech_Female> well because nobody really <Speech_Female> likes the scale. Excuse <Speech_Female> people usually <Speech_Female> don't like the scale but <Speech_Female> we love the scale. And <Speech_Female> i let you <Speech_Female> do your scale the way <Speech_Male> you wanted <SpeakerChange> to your scale. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Well <Speech_Male> i'm definitely. I'm <Speech_Male> going to rate this. Because <Speech_Male> this is <Speech_Male> ocean's <Speech_Male> twelve <Speech_Male> i'm going to rate this <Speech_Male> on a scale <Speech_Male> of twelve <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> for obvious reasons. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I like <SpeakerChange> that. <Speech_Female> And <Speech_Female> that <Speech_Male> i <SpeakerChange> let you do <Speech_Male> whatever you want. I compose. <Speech_Male> I don't <Speech_Male> understand it all <Speech_Male> about the movies you <Speech_Male> guys compared to two. <Speech_Male> It makes zero sense <Speech_Male> to me <Speech_Male> if anything <Speech_Male> i would use <Speech_Male> to me personally <Speech_Male> like the director. <Speech_Male> The most direct <Speech_Male> comparison is <Speech_Male> which movie is similar. <Speech_Male> Tone <Speech_Male> has ocean has <Speech_Male> similar cast <Speech_Male> into <Speech_Male> the story. <Speech_Male> Ocean's eleven <Speech_Male> so i'm gonna <Speech_Male> use that so i'm <Speech_Male> gonna say oceans <Speech_Male> some of the <Speech_Male> ocean's eleven <Speech_Male> to me <Speech_Male> is a nine <Speech_Male> because <Speech_Male> it twelve. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> No <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> no we are. Are <Speech_Male> we already know where this <Speech_Male> is going to go. Because he teased <Speech_Male> it out. But continue. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> ocean's eleven <Speech_Male> true to me is <Speech_Male> nine just in the way <Speech_Male> ching like <Speech_Male> it chains <Speech_Male> genre. <Speech_Male> It played <Speech_Male> with played <Speech_Male> around with the reality. <Speech_Male> So i'm <Speech_Male> going to give ocean's <Speech_Male> twelve <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> thirteen <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> on <Speech_Male> a twelve point scale <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> all who <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> not to say <Speech_Male> that it's ocean's <Speech_Male> thirteen <Speech_Male> because ocean's thirteen <Speech_Male> is a two <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> on that twelve point <Speech_Male> scale <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> trial <Speech_Male> tried to <Speech_Male> you try and understand <Speech_Male> all that <Speech_Male> listener. <Speech_Male> Yeah <Speech_Male> go digest <Speech_Music_Female> that.

thirteen twelve eleven Carlton gillespie twelve point ten nine Three today Two fifth two five united carlton eight ocean four zero
"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

Shut Up I Love It

05:15 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

"That's that's seven different. It's it's a very before we've seen it's a different movie. And i don't think i need that. I don't need it to be that but the movie does not give us anything but the bare minimum to be like okay. He loves her and she loves sam and it's good that he reunited her with her father dave poker together in the end. All have fun. If that doesn't spell out true love you. i don't know what does joe it doesn't earn it. It's so paper thin but again. I think if it added more to it would lose so much of the stuff we do. Enjoy the movie. Yeah cast of twelve stars which is tough. Yeah it's kind of like when people criticize and game and the other vendors one for certain things. It's like well again. This is a movie with eighteen characters even allowed to criticize with films. I heard like you. You won't get thirty sense to like the dungeons if you increase is and scientology almost never do it on this. Podcast almost never criticized. That's another podcast. You guys. that's right. Well it's it's worse than episode but Okay great. I think we've covered like but what i want but i want to hear more from sony. Everything being rushed out of here. Is there another. You have another guess after me. Is that is going to ocean's thirteen after this. Is that once you all night with us. talking about. Ocean's twelve sasha's just pain indexes slowly rising. So i do start slowly few losing feeling in my leg but i. It has nothing to do with me environment. I e yeah you just said. I'll take what can look look recovering from surgery. I grace and i want to talk about this film. So carlton please. Sasha is in Not in the hospital but she's pretty much hospital downstairs in her house. She's not allowed to see her beloved dogs because dogs jump on broken legs. It's the whole thing. It's very sad. It's a sad sad world. Hey the world is suffering way. More than i am right now but nobody is suffering more than carlton wants to talk. Some more by favorite movie called ten. What do you want to know. Just want to talk more about george. Plenty brad is is that so much. There's not enough people talking about them. We all okay. So i but i wanna know from sasha like what questions. Yeah out the mood. There's no but no this. Generally this isn't to be like or like. Why am i watching this any of it. Because somebody didn't see eleven. I know why you're watching it because you value my opinion and i said just watch and true. Yeah how do we is doing this. Podcast i wanted to get a little in your brain. So like azure watching it. I'm just curious what what are the main things that you're like where you like..

Sasha twelve stars carlton seven sasha eighteen characters ten sam george thirteen Ocean's twelve sasha thirty sense joe one sony eleven
"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

Shut Up I Love It

04:00 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

"The which is what they did in number one which is the whole. The whole reason clooney goes through robbing benedict is too. So here's the thing. Okay so everyone loves ocean's eleven right but ultimately george clooney rob's terry benedict still hundred sixty million dollars. Yes to convince his ex his ex-wife to come back and and meet up to. That is one little camera that catches terry benedict giving up his money or excuse me giving up test to get his money back. Which number one. It is ridiculous for her. Just realize that in that moment that oh my god. I can't believe i can't believe the owner of three casinos care. This much about is money over me is just ridiculous and is a bad so people are like. Wow i can't believe in this one brad pitt. Whole ruse so he can get catherine zeta jones back. But that's exactly what happens in ocean's eleven and they even say you know when they're in the jail jail cell he like was it worth it and he says was pets and so they're basically saying like these are always about something else. It's whenever about female right exact. Well it is interesting because of course somebody trying to get rich. Some dushi guy trying to buy another yacht. It's such a like it's not something that we all can relate to but all he wants to win. A girl is a classic. Storytelling you know. goal goal for protagonist. So the thing with this movie those you don't even really know that for one until the end and then to for me. You don't really get the feeling that their relationship is strong. Because your first introduction to the character does brad pitt. Leaving them the like. I understand why he's leaving them. But the optics are bad right like she's about to this about the buzzer he's dna. Yeah yeah and i. I never get the i never see a scene where they like really love each other and i believe this kisses her in the morning. So that's something. It's very thin to me. I don't necessarily mind it. Because i think the movie. I don't give a shit about that part. I just wanna see all these characters be fun and they do but it is like pretty thin. Where am i wait. Did they even belong together. Like you've shown me nothing in all these characters last vaccine show that they're in love but it's because he's a thief just like her father. That's why it doesn't. He was running down the street from the cops. And she's like i like that. That's like it's been there that it's incredibly thin to where at the end there is no there is no catharsis for me of like oh good. They're they're together. And you don't give a shit. I also don't give a shit about her long-lost bother looking that she's hanging out with the father like with this fucking asshole. No but the thing is that's really sweet on the surface. The movie doesn't earn any of that. Because you don't necessarily care about the father you don't even meet the actor until ten minutes bill ten minutes it but that's the thing that just the movie tells you all these things but it doesn't really earn the weight of that low milquet so let me ask you this though. If the movie was the movie was reframed in the beginning which is this is about a woman whose father was the greatest deep of all time and it setup where she's going to try and track him down and she's going to try she's going to try and re- reunite reunite herself with her father and they're gonna get out all the excess baggage. You can't tell me that both of you would have tuned out immediately and been like yeah..

george clooney hundred sixty million dollars catherine zeta jones ten minutes both benedict clooney terry benedict three casinos ocean one little camera first brad pitt one ocean's eleven number one eleven
"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

Shut Up I Love It

04:22 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

"Fargo you caught that right there again. Making fun of like this. Twist this twist movie culture where you have to have this big twist at the end but everyone sees it coming but in this film. There's absolutely no way you. It's just like this stupidest twist really. It's stupid. You wouldn't think of it. I don't think it's stupid because what they're saying is this dude broke rule number one and if you are a thief like us you break that rule then all bets are off. So we're not gonna not gonna play fair. And i think as an audience member for you to go. Well they really have to do this challenge. It's kind of like well come on. That's ridiculous yeah it's it's not stupid it's stupid for a heist. Movie is what. I'm in too stupid. Choice as the ending for heist movie. Not a stupid choice for a heist movie. That's making fun of heist movies or does it fits the logic but i think most people who were expecting a traditional high. It's like the stupidest thing ever. It's like oh we were never doing movie in like they're basically saying like oh we were never even doing what we the whole movie was telling you we were doing no stakes even if you thought. They are any state they ever any. Yeah and i'm not saying this is i actually. That's why i liked the movie. But i think that's like they were trying to almost be stupid like like this isn't we didn't do anything caught in the high though i know that. But that's the thing. I agree like when when the amazing yen is trying to be behind that family to get into. It's like come on. This is crazy. This is ridiculous. Like why why are we gonna play real to act like these guys are ever endanger when everyone in that audience knows. No one here is going to die. There's no way so let's have fun with the genre itself which is people trying to one up each other or bringing in this character like the night fox like..

Fargo rule number one each
"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

Shut Up I Love It

04:41 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

"Thing right yeah. So let's talk a cartoon which you describe this to louis to look at it okay. So in the end of the film or towards the end A bunch of the gang gets busted matt damon don cheadle and scott caan Are kind of the last. Three to kind of keep this russo. So basically they're trying to keep up this ruse that they're trying to get this faberge egg they need to get inside. They figure maybe we can get danny. Ocean's wife who is played by julia roberts to be a lookalike for julia roberts and the closest faberge egg so they can steal it and this is i know a lot of people get upset about as well but in a world where in ocean's eleven where brad pitt is teaching young hollywood stars how to play poker for no reason where he's running hotels and he's friends with tofa. Grace like this type of stuff i think is to your point ballsy but i also think it's just to me it's it's making fun of itself You know what i mean and like the ridiculousness of that scene is so crazy like if they had played it straight than i think it would have been awful for me to watch but instead like no. This is ridiculous but then again isn't every heist movie ridiculous. Sure so. I know it's a it's a tone question and directing question probably me like soderbergh was one of the few people who pull it off but what to you. Carlton viewer makes this Like would makes you feel like they're making fun of it. Like what are those elements that you like the the clearly being meta about it. Like i definitely have dancer for that. And i don't think it's necessarily the directing so what is the cast. This is a movie that again. you can't separate it from its cast. And the fact that it is like a bunch of stars. It's like it's grotesque. In how many stars there are in this movie and they know by the second one they know that. Like that to have george clooney and brad pitt alone in a movie together is like thank you. That's what i'm saying. That's the ridiculous senate right. These are these are not real. Theme watch was the leaves. Do not look like this. Yeah and so basically when you have cast habit this is the next step of that. Cast as being like and we fucking know they're stars. We know this is julia roberts. You know it's julia roberts. You came to see this movie. Because it's julia roberts so we're gonna literally make her julia roberts exactly so. I think that's where it's like. The whole the tone comes from the cast existing in the form that they do so. That's why it like it does work. I think if you didn't know who any of those people were the stars like you you know in as watched it or something. That joke wouldn't work. There wouldn't be very interesting. And i think if like julia roberts was the only star in it and the rest were like people. You didn't really know. Or thomas jane or like you know that we're just hit friend of the show but not quite now thomas. Jane might be a bad show. He's he's back but Then that joke wouldn't work either. The joke works. Because it's george. Clooney bruce willis is not in it in is in it after that. But you also have to- for grace playing till for grace like you'd mentioned before it's like it's a movie that is saying we recognize that you're looking at movie stars. You have someone. Like matt damon. Who like that's jason bourne right there. And he's playing this almost nervous anxious guy. I'm trying to be the leader..

george clooney julia roberts brad pitt matt damon jason bourne thomas jane thomas second one Three scott caan louis one matt damon don cheadle george Grace hollywood Clooney bruce willis Jane Carlton Ocean
"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

Shut Up I Love It

04:50 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

"Because at the end of the day we know. They're not endanger notions win. We know they're going to win. George clooney and brad pitt are not gonna die. We all know this isn't going to happen. So why don't we just make fun of the fact that that's award doing here and so for me like i appreciate them doing that. Which is interesting because like in movies. Now that's done so often and people love it like twenty two. Jump street when they made the sequel. They made fun of the fact that they're making the sequel. The others at running joke from nick offerman. He's like nope. You do the same case the same way because you know and so there's something about i think them doing that back in two thousand four or five. Which really intrigued me. Because you can zone out on a heist movie so easily. When you're like here they come here. Come the cops hope. They opened the door. No one's there. There's none of that in this movie. And so i think i appreciated that more than you just being like. Let's let's up the score in ocean's twelve and make it even more money and see if they can get themselves out of it because come on like we know they are. Yeah and i guess the thing is like it's not my cup of tea but you know that's a terrible explanation. But i see what they're doing. And i think steven soderbergh is a really interesting director. Like he's super described him understated but like i think. That's not how most people describe him. But i do think of him as like he takes like the world and he like really in the grounded understated way explores it and i totally believe everything that's happening in the sense of like the grounding of it so like i really enjoy the direct the do his of grounding genre to something less glitzy and like more of just like you have a feel good but without the hollywood. You know like it's morally started work spice not like the hollywood spice it. No no it like. It definitely reminds me more of out of sight than like ocean's eleven feels like you know soderbergh's directing and he's being told like this is kind of what you have to do in some of the movie but in ocean's twelve like it just felt like he did. He just had mortally way and did a lot more stuff that you just couldn't get away with Had it been like you know we need to find a director to do this..

George clooney steven soderbergh nick offerman brad pitt ocean's eleven hollywood five ocean's twelve soderbergh two thousand four twelve two twenty
"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

Shut Up I Love It

04:46 min | 2 years ago

"gillespie" Discussed on Shut Up I Love It

"That was a helicopter dropping me in to tell you shut up i love it. I am joe. Cabrillo here with sasha filer. Welcome everybody to our podcast. Thank you for listening. This is a podcast where we invite a very special guest to talk about something. I'm degraded underappreciated. Maybe something that people forgotten bogged because it hasn't been around on their minds for like sixteen years. I don't know could be a movie. That's kind of well known. I don't know. I'm revealing the topic of today's podcast. What are you doing that. Could we have today in the room. We have a writer producer. I mean he's just such a great dude. I can talk about him all day. He's kind of a genius and many direct like renaissance kind of guy. I don't know he's he's like already not pleased with me. So he's going to yell at me at some point going to yell back at him. Welcome carlton gillespie. Hello.

carlton gillespie sixteen years today sasha joe. Cabrillo
What It Means To Unblock

On The Verge

06:32 min | 3 years ago

What It Means To Unblock

"Hey, hey, hey, good morning to you. I have a an exciting week in store for us. Well, at least for me, I hope it is for you and that is regarding the tag line for virtual data that has been in the center of my heart for Seventeen years now unblock and fold unleash am going to get to that in a moment. But first i'm just telling you that I am not moved in to my six month rental yet. My husband and I are still sort of unbounded untethered we move in tomorrow actually and have been floating around northern Maine for the last week with us being that we are still in the middle of this covid-19 as people like to call it now. We wanted to stay away from the crowd and safe and Ed. As we moved around stay away from human beings as much as we could so we are landing tomorrow in our 6-month rental and I look forward to be having at least some of my stuff in one place. It has been it has been quite a ride, but the ride continues. So without further Ado, let me get to them what we are going to be talking about this week the tag line for Verge. Yoga came about in 2004 before I even opened good friend of mine. Johnny. Gillespie asked me well what your tagline Cara and I'm like, what do you mean tagline? I need a tagline. You said? Yeah, you need a tagline like oh crap. So I allowed the question as I often encourage you to do play with questions drop questions into your Consciousness because guess what you're extraordinarily intelligent and you will come up with them. Answer somehow someway you can just trust it. So I remember laying down and taking a short nap one day and after I had been mulling around what time the tag line forever giaga, and I opened my eyes from the nap and I set out loud unblock unfold and Leash what the heck and I started playing with it and I thought okay, you know what we'll start with this and we'll see how it evolves over time. Well, it has stuck at least for me and I'm going to explain to you off the course of this week what the meaning of Unblock unfold unleash means to me and has meant to thousands of students at virgi Olga. Unblock will just start with that today. It really is the basis of mental Fitness. And you know, I've been talking about mental Fitness and I am all mental Fitness. Now my fridge and mental Fitness is is really the three domains of body brain and biome and how to get to the root causes the root of our imbalances the root of our struggles the root of our aliveness and intelligence and I don't want to play up at the surface. There's enough surface-level self-help out there. What I hope to bring you everyday in 6 minutes or less is route route remedies route practices route protocol protocols. So unblock is this outer level of breaking patterns, which we spent a whole week on a few weeks ago go back and listen. And I and and those patterns are physical mental and emotional. We can unblock patterns through practice through inquiry through looking at through being curious about and I think that the easiest patterns to unblock are generally the physical ones if you think about a yoga practice, we are unblocking tension. We are unblocking tightness. We are discovering where we are where we are stuck physically my hips my hip flexor my back my neck. I'm talking personally here. So unblock is really about identifying and then starting to chip away at obstacles that hold our energy back. In in the in the root definition of yoga. It is about on releasing obstacles that impede Richie or Pro NE Chi energy from flowing through our lives. And so this unblocking is this first level and I gotta tell you we're never really finished with unblocking. I mean, we will always Circle back cuz we will always buy new levels of mental physical emotional tightness and tension that's ready to be released. So my question for you today is is what can you start unblocking? What is ready to start releasing or dissolving? What patterns would start with the physical? Look at your yoga practice. Look at your your your workouts. Where am I stuck? Where am I weak? And then we move into mental and emotional through our brain practices through the meditation practices the inquiry the Stillness the silence the Solitude off for today. We're going to just play with those those layers peeling away the layers where we are stuck where we are tight and tense home and that is how we start to unblock the energy that brilliant Prana G life force energy. Just so waiting to run through you and me through me.

Virgi Olga Gillespie Maine ED Johnny Richie
Obama to visit Atlanta Monday for last-minute election rally

Handel on the Law

00:36 sec | 3 years ago

Obama to visit Atlanta Monday for last-minute election rally

"To the flurry of last minute campaign stops in Georgia before Tuesday's election. Gillespie's Jennifer Perry with detail former President Barack Obama plans an election Eve rally in Atlanta on behalf of Joe Biden and Democratic Senate candidates John all soft and Reverend Raphael Warnock. The Biden camp hasn't released details yet, but his appearance may come during a previously scheduled flip Georgia Blue Rally for war, knocking us off Monday night at the Old Turner Field parking lot and President President Ramp Ramp Ramp will will will will be be be be in in in in Rome Rome Rome Rome tonight tonight tonight tonight for for for for an an an an 8:30 8:30 8:30 8:30 p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. rally rally rally rally You You You You can can can can here here here here live live live live on on on on WSB WSB WSB WSB radio radio radio radio and and and and the the the the WSB WSB WSB WSB radio radio radio radio app app app app WSB WSB WSB WSB

President President Ramp Ramp Rome Rome Rome Rome Joe Biden Georgia Barack Obama President Trump Raphael Warnock Senate Old Turner Field Gillespie Atlanta Jennifer Perry John
Feminists: Ella Fitzgerald

Encyclopedia Womannica

05:36 min | 3 years ago

Feminists: Ella Fitzgerald

"Shining. Oh hello from wonder media network. I'm Jenny Kaplan. And this is encyclopedia. Manica deemed the first lady of Song. Today's Dreamer was the most popular female jazz singer in the United States. For more than half a century. She went thirteen grammy awards and sold over forty million albums. Her voice was flexible. Wide-ranging accurate and ageless. Let's talk about Ella Fitzgerald Ella. Jane Fitzgerald was born on April twenty fifth nineteen seventeen in Newport News. Virginia to William Fitzgerald and Tempe Henry Ellis parents separated shortly after Ella's birth and she and her mother moved to Yonkers New York where they eventually moved in with Tempe longtime boyfriend. Joseph Dasilva three soon became four LS half-sister Francis was born in Nineteen twenty-three. The family struggled to make ends meet. Both parents worked multiple jobs. L. Occasionally took on work to their apartment was a mixed neighborhood. Where Ella made friends easily? She considered herself more of a Tomboy and often join neighborhood baseball games. Sports Aside Ella enjoy dancing and singing with friends and would perform at lunch and on her way to school in Nineteen. Thirty two ELLAS. Mom Tempe died from serious injury. She received in a car accident. Ella was devastated. She eventually moved in with her aunt Virginia and when her stepfather Joe died shortly thereafter. Ala stepsister. Francis came to live with them. To Ella was in a dark place. She started skipping school and her grades dropped. She got in trouble with the police and was sent to a reform school where she was subject to beatings by her caretakers. Eventually Ella escaped from the reformatory. She was fifteen years old broke and alone during the Great Depression. In nineteen thirty four Islas name was pulled in a weekly drawing the Apollo Theater for a chance to perform and compete an amateur night. Two sisters who the dance in the sisters in the world call the edgewood sisters and they closed the show about I when I saw those ladies. Dan I says no way. I'm going out there and try to dance. Because they stop the show. She was planning to dance but when the Edwards sisters closed the main show. She changed her mind fearing she couldn't compete with their moves. And when I got out there somebody follow up nobody else. What is she going to do? She made a last minute decision to sing and ask the band to play. Hoagy Carmichael Judy. Heavens hurt to me. By the end of the song the crowd demanded an encore and Ella had found her calling one of the people in the band. That night with saxophonist and Arranger Benny Carter wowed by her natural talent. Benny introduced a lot of people. Who could help launch your career? The era of big swing bands was coming to a close in favor of bebop. Ls successfully made the transition using her voice to sound like another horn in the band. She began to experiment with scat singing. Eventually turning it into an art in nineteen thirty eight Ella recorded a version of the nursery. Rhyme a-tisket a task it. A million copies of the album were sold it. Hit number one on the charts and it stayed on the pop charts for seventeen weeks. Ella was suddenly famous her wife. Changed Professionally and personally while on tour with Dizzy Gillespie's band in nineteen forty. Six Ella fell in love with bassist. Ray Brown the two got married and adopted a son Ray. Junior through the two later got divorced. They remained lifelong friends L. O. Worked with all the jazz greats including Frank Sinatra Duke Ellington Nat King Cole Dizzy. Gillespie and Benny Goodman from nineteen fifty six to nineteen sixty. Four Ella recorded eight songbooks in which she covered other musicians songs. Including those by Cole Porter Duke. Ellington the Gershwin's Johnny Mercer Irving Berlin and Rodgers and Hart Ella continued to work throughout her life by the nineteen nineties. She had recorded more than two hundred albums she received the Kennedy Center honors the US National Medal of Arts and Francis Commander of Arts and letters award. Thank you and I'm so proud to be in class with all these younger ones coming up. Ain't gonNA leave me behind. I'm learning out a wrap in her later. Life Ella suffer from diabetes. She was hospitalized. Congestive heart failure in nineteen eighty six and for exhaustion in nineteen ninety. Nine hundred ninety three. She had to have both of her legs amputated below the knee due to complications from diabetes. She never fully recovered from the surgery. And on June fifteenth. Nineteen Ninety six at the age of seventy-nine Ella Fitzgerald died at her Beverly Hills. Home fans all over. The world mourned her death. A wreath of white flowers was placed next to her star on the Hollywood walk of fame and the Marquee outside the Hollywood bowl read. Lmu will miss you

Ella Fitzgerald Ella Ella Fitzgerald Ella Hart Ella Dizzy Gillespie Virginia Grammy United States Carmichael Judy Frank Sinatra Duke Ellington Francis Jane Fitzgerald Jenny Kaplan Benny Carter Mom Tempe Manica Diabetes Benny Baseball Cole Porter Duke
Gillespie leads No. 15 Villanova past Temple

AP News Radio

00:30 sec | 3 years ago

Gillespie leads No. 15 Villanova past Temple

"Fifteen drying Villanova defeated city rival temple seventy six fifty six the house to go four point lead into the locker room at halftime but the Wildcats turned the game around in the second half of the start of the half of the twenty six to to run and I swore temple in the second half fifty to twenty six Jay writes what also got thirteen three pointers in the second half Villanova finished seventeen for thirty six from three point range calling the less we had twenty nine leave the Wildcats will put Rosa twenty to lead the owls head bank in Philadelphia

Villanova Wildcats JAY Rosa Philadelphia
Trump plows ahead despite fresh signs of trouble in 2020

AP Media News

00:42 sec | 4 years ago

Trump plows ahead despite fresh signs of trouble in 2020

"In his second political rally this week for Republican running for governor in the southern state president trump told the Louisiana crowd that one reason Democrats flip the U. S. house in twenty eighteen was because he wasn't on the ballot I said a lot of go out of a but a lot of people said I'm not gonna vote until trump runs on Tuesday Democrats won control of both houses in the Virginia legislature Emory University associate professor of political science Andrew Gillespie districts that Democrats one were clustered around major urban centers more than fifteen years Richmond canton road voter turnout in both Virginia and Kentucky was twice as high as the elections four years ago I'm Tim acquire

Donald Trump Virginia President Trump Louisiana Emory University Associate Professor Of Politic Andrew Gillespie Richmond Canton Road Kentucky Fifteen Years Four Years
On This Day in History: Bud Powell Was Born

This Day in History Class

04:18 min | 4 years ago

On This Day in History: Bud Powell Was Born

"The Day was September twenty seventh nineteen twenty four URL Rudolph it off. Powell better known as Powell was born in New York City Powell was instrumental in the development of modern jazz music though he died when he was just forty one years old his accomplishments as a jazz soloist greatly contributed to the growth of bebop musical talent ran in Powell's family. His grandfather father and siblings were all musicians. His father was a stride pianist. Stride was a jazz piano style that developed developed as the popularity of ragtime was dying down stride pianist play the melody with the right hand while the left hand alternates between a single. I note and a quarter played an active or more higher. The left hand had to go greater distances on the keyboard often very quickly and improvisation. It was more important than it had previously been when Powell was a child. His father began teaching him classical music at age fifteen he dropped out of Dewitt wit Clinton High School to pursue his passion playing the piano he began playing at clubs in Coney Island and Harlem in the Mid Nineteen Forties Powell met the loneliest monk jazz pianist and composer at Minton's playhouse in Harlem and monk became a mentor to him. Powell became a regular feature at Minton's playhouse known for its role in the development of modern jazz and jam sessions with people like Charlie Parker Dizzy Gillespie and Kenny Clarke how also toward and record it with trumpeter Kuni Williams's orchestra he recorded with Tenor Saxophonist Dexter Gordon and he played on Charlie Parker's Savoy sessions he recorded the five volume the amazing Bud Powell in the nineteen forties and nineteen fifties influenced by art tatum Charlie Parker Billie Kyle and thelonious monk how emerged as a leading figure and bebop he found a lot of success as a pianist though black audiences were not initially completely receptive to modern jazz in the nineteen forties still how how faced physical and mental struggles he spent time in a psychiatric hospital from nineteen forty seven to nineteen forty eight after getting in a fight at a Bar at a state hospital. He received electroconvulsive therapy after he was released from the hospital. He was placed in convalescent care. which was it's basically parole how return to music but he spent a lot of time from nineteen fifty one to nineteen fifty-three institutionalized after he was arrested stood on a drug charge in February of Nineteen fifty three the state of New York declared him incompetent and incapable of handling his own money Oscar Goodstein Powell's manager and owner of Berlin nightclub became his committee and began managing money? Good esteem got POW steady steady work but how was still struggling with his mental health. His relationships with his colleagues were deteriorating in the late nineteen fifties after spending more time in the hospital how moved to Paris with al-tv Edwards and he soon began playing in France and touring throughout Europe Edwards and a Fran Dan Frantz these padre looked out for POW while in Europe but he was deeply affected by his alcoholism mental illness and medication in nineteen in sixty three he contracted Berko says back in New York musicians put together a benefit concert to help him with medical expenses in nineteen sixty four or he moved back to the US he continued to play the piano and his return was celebrated though his performances did not get rave reviews so his music suffered as his health declined and he missed some of his performances on July thirty first nineteen sixty six he died died of health complications his pioneering work in bebop continued to influence later musicians like Bill Evans see so Taylor and Horace Silver Silver.

Powell Mid Nineteen Forties Oscar Goodstein Powell Bud Powell Charlie Parker Minton Berko Harlem Europe Coney Island New York Paris Edwards Fran Dan Frantz Dexter Gordon United States Dewitt Clinton High School Billie Kyle Berlin
Game of Thrones spinoff shows in the works

Studio 360 with Kurt Andersen

06:17 min | 4 years ago

Game of Thrones spinoff shows in the works

"Two. This episode of studio. Three sixty is brought to you by the relentless, which is a new podcast from slate studios and century twenty one real estate. The relentless is about extrordinary people and mindsets. And behaviors that drive them to achieve inspiring things. Join host and doctor of clinical psychology, Julie Gerner she talks to business leaders across industries about what sets them apart and how they view success differently. You'll hear about what they've learned from their successes and failures and how they're continuing to evolve. Listen and subscribe to the relentless today wherever you get your podcasts. This is new three sixteen. I'm courteous. I'm Josh Allen Gonzalez from studio. Three sixty. We're back with another installment of this woman's work. A series of stories from classic Elba, Sundays and studio. Three. Sixty classic album. Sundays is a program of community listening events, founded by Coline, Cosmo Murphy, where fans listened to essential albums uninterrupted on state of the art sound systems for this woman's work were highlighting classic albums by female artists women who have made a lasting impact on music and pop culture. This time lady sings the blues by jazz singer, Billie holiday. It was released in nineteen fifty six to coincide with her autobiography of the same name by this point in her career when she was just in her early forties. Holiday's voice was sounding fragile and warn the toll of a life marked by hardship and addiction. Although the more energetic sound of her earlier records is muted here, holiday still delivers wise and moving performances in this collection of emotional, jazz tunes, many of the songs here became synonymous with her unique sound and persona. Here's colleen. Billie holiday remains one of the greatest jazz, voices of all time and is still easily recognizable to music fans from all generations. She's got them. The musicians and clubs of New York City were integral to the development of jazz in the nineteen forties. Bebop was born in the Big Apple with artists like Charlie Parker bologna, smoke and Dizzy, Gillespie. The nineteen fifties saw the development of hard bop with Sonny Rollins and our Blakey the cool jazz of miles Davis and later, the free jazz of Ornette Coleman, and later John Coltrane explored in downtown, Manhattan venues, like the five spot. But vocal innovator and world-famous Billie holiday with unable to perform these notable. Jaaz clubs in the nineteen fifties as her cabaret card had been revoked due to narcotics charges. So instead, she brought jazz to the mainstream by performing it a major concert venue Carnegie Hall in nineteen fifty six. Nothing. On nothing. She wants said of her style. If I'm going to sing like someone else, then I don't need to sing at all in nineteen fifty eight Frank Sinatra told ebony magazine with few exceptions, every major pop singer in the US during her generation has been touched in some way by her genius. It is Billie holiday who was and still remains the greatest single musical influence on me. She also had a profound impact on contemporary artists, including Jose James, a singer, who is beautifully bridge, the world of jazz, and hip hop for over a decade since the release of his debut album, the dreamer. Ver- dream. Series. In two thousand fifteen chamber quarter tribute album to Billie holiday covering his favorite songs on the album yesterday. I had the blues the music of Billie holiday for the legendary blue note records. When I phoned Billie holiday, it really matched. My teenage angst in a deep way, not in a superficial way. You know, not in like, I'm a loner and against the world. But she showed me that there was a way to feel pain and to transform it into art. You don't have to know anything about our life to feel the kind of pain and tragedy that embodies her music. Holy likewise, British singer. Actress and former cabaret act. Paloma faith rates lady day as one of the most influential artists in her own upbringing on always dry bridge, and this will work out, but lately Acton, just no go. Maybe we'll Noel. Maybe we're not. We got us to relate. How Billy was a unifying force at one of my classic album. Sunday's events might mother and father is taste was always really convicting just the hell relationship, but. But. But this is the one person I listen to in both households. I would say that for me that she was the holy grail of how I wanted to be able to sing. I didn't realize as the young person so of trying to copies the econ- thing that entail sim batches happy. The show mother spray. Track to love. Nah.

Billie Holiday Blakey Slate Studios Julie Gerner Josh Allen Gonzalez New York City Carnegie Hall Elba Frank Sinatra Jose James Ebony Magazine Sonny Rollins Cosmo Murphy Coline Pain United States Ornette Coleman
New Zealand gun law changes to be announced within 10 days: PM

BBC World Service

04:15 min | 4 years ago

New Zealand gun law changes to be announced within 10 days: PM

"Week in New Zealand and the country is still stuck are struggling to make sense of the mass shooting at the end of last week in Christchurch two mosques, which fifty people were killed counter-terror. Police have searched two homes in north West Australia where the main suspect grew up as that investigation continues. New Zealand's Prime minister just into Dern says her cabinets has agreed in principle. She says to toughen the country's gun laws. She said reforms would be announced within a matter of days. I think an incredible that we've been able to bring together the information needed for the principal decision. That's already been made. Now, it's about making sure some of the details and implementation work is prepared. We are of one mind we are absolutely United as a cabinet. So what kind of changes coming? I asked Alexander Gillespie professor of international law at Waikato university in New Zealand. I think it's likely what you're going to have is a ban on semi automatic firearms. And the reason we will do this is because most of the countries indicate similar atrocities like in Britain or like, an Australia. The magnitude of the mass shooting means that the parliament has to act, and it's likely that will now follow that path. I wonder why it hasn't been done before. I mean, I think Australia did it. Well, a couple of decades ago. Didn't they know the close ties between Australia and New Zealand was they're not public pressure for something similar before this attack on Friday. I think it's a combination of a number of things Kiwis tend to believe that most of the bad in the worldwide happened to them we live in a very beautiful part of the on the earth, but also gun laws tend to be very really precautionary. Like, even though you can see the risk. You have to wait for an atrocity or a massacre before you will actually be prepared to wait. And in the light of the atrocity more willing to parliament will be to actually do what's needed to be done. It's made slightly easier and the Commonwealth countries because we don't have a right to firearms people have illegal privilege, but when the risks are so great and the body count, so large. It means that there's a lot of momentum to finally achieve the change. That's needed. We have heard already from people sell guns, essentially, the gun industry gun lobby in New Zealand opposing reform. How far will their voices carries? You think in this debate? Voice won't be loud. And it's been loud previously. But historically, the debate is being and the nine hundred ninety s in the early part of the twenty first century was about criminals having firearms, and the debate could always be deflected because the the legal person had the firearm and the answer the for was to control the criminal, and the modern taking more separate after Christ's church. This was lawfully purchased by Manu had license who was an entry level license. Go on and by the five how did the complete change of context means that because he could do what he did lawfully people now want to restrict that platform and the support for the restriction appears to be across party. So both liberals and conservatives are coming together on those. There must also be serious questions being asked about the country's security services who perhaps fell prey to some of that optimism about New Zealand's relative, safety and security. So you're talking about miss being present among citizens. New Zealand had a before this incident. We we was second most peaceful country on the planet. According to global peace index we had a low tier rating and we had a homicide rate by fire about teen per year. And so we were despite being quite quite high. That's right. And so we were quite complacent that nothing was a real risk to us. We followed the international trend and we've been part of the war on terror. So we spent a lot of our effort and teens of millions of dollars training jihadis and New Zealand we've been focused on gangs, and we've even be looking at Mary separatism as a route to terrorism, but the real problem when it finally hit us was the fire. Right. And even though. People had voiced concern about this and the security services. Head not noted it. It was never a priority was always at the end of the list. Now, I think that will be completely turned

New Zealand Dern Australia West Australia Christchurch Prime Minister Waikato University Principal Alexander Gillespie Manu Britain Professor
Christchurch shootings: NZ cabinet backs tighter gun laws

BBC World Service

04:15 min | 4 years ago

Christchurch shootings: NZ cabinet backs tighter gun laws

"Week in New Zealand and the country is still stuck are struggling to make sense of the mass shooting at the end of last week in Christchurch two mosques, which fifty people were killed counter-terror. Police have searched two homes in north West Australia where the main suspect grew up as that investigation continues. New Zealand's Prime minister just into Dern says her cabinets has agreed in principle. She says to toughen the country's gun laws. She said reforms would be announced within a matter of days. I think an incredible that we've been able to bring together the information needed for the principal decision. That's already been made. Now, it's about making sure some of the details and implementation work is prepared. We are of one mind we are absolutely United as a cabinet. So what kind of changes coming? I asked Alexander Gillespie professor of international law at Waikato university in New Zealand. I think it's likely what you're going to have is a ban on semi automatic firearms. And the reason we will do this is because most of the countries indicate similar atrocities like in Britain or like, an Australia. The magnitude of the mass shooting means that the parliament has to act, and it's likely that will now follow that path. I wonder why it hasn't been done before. I mean, I think Australia did it. Well, a couple of decades ago. Didn't they know the close ties between Australia and New Zealand was they're not public pressure for something similar before this attack on Friday. I think it's a combination of a number of things Kiwis tend to believe that most of the bad in the worldwide happened to them we live in a very beautiful part of the on the earth, but also gun laws tend to be very really precautionary. Like, even though you can see the risk. You have to wait for an atrocity or a massacre before you will actually be prepared to wait. And in the light of the atrocity more willing to parliament will be to actually do what's needed to be done. It's made slightly easier and the Commonwealth countries because we don't have a right to firearms people have illegal privilege, but when the risks are so great and the body count, so large. It means that there's a lot of momentum to finally achieve the change. That's needed. We have heard already from people sell guns, essentially, the gun industry gun lobby in New Zealand opposing reform. How far will their voices carries? You think in this debate? Voice won't be loud. And it's been loud previously. But historically, the debate is being and the nine hundred ninety s in the early part of the twenty first century was about criminals having firearms, and the debate could always be deflected because the the legal person had the firearm and the answer the for was to control the criminal, and the modern taking more separate after Christ's church. This was lawfully purchased by Manu had license who was an entry level license. Go on and by the five how did the complete change of context means that because he could do what he did lawfully people now want to restrict that platform and the support for the restriction appears to be across party. So both liberals and conservatives are coming together on those. There must also be serious questions being asked about the country's security services who perhaps fell prey to some of that optimism about New Zealand's relative, safety and security. So you're talking about miss being present among citizens. New Zealand had a before this incident. We we was second most peaceful country on the planet. According to global peace index we had a low tier rating and we had a homicide rate by fire about teen per year. And so we were despite being quite quite high. That's right. And so we were quite complacent that nothing was a real risk to us. We followed the international trend and we've been part of the war on terror. So we spent a lot of our effort and teens of millions of dollars training jihadis and New Zealand we've been focused on gangs, and we've even be looking at Mary separatism as a route to terrorism, but the real problem when it finally hit us was the fire. Right. And even though. People had voiced concern about this and the security services. Head not noted it. It was never a priority was always at the end of the list. Now, I think that will be completely turned

New Zealand Dern Australia West Australia Christchurch Prime Minister Waikato University Principal Alexander Gillespie Manu Britain Professor
Appeals Court Strikes Down Part Of 2016 Indiana Anti-Abortion Law

Programming

01:26 min | 5 years ago

Appeals Court Strikes Down Part Of 2016 Indiana Anti-Abortion Law

"Mostly clear overnight Friday. Will be partly. Sunny cooler and less humid. I'm staying Lear here's what's trending this hour an appeals court, ruling on a twenty sixteen Indian abortion law Mark seven straight defeats. For attempts to restrict abortion in the state Eric Berman reports supporters and opponents of abortion rights are looking at Brad Kavanagh. Supreme court nomination as. A potential game, changer ACLU, Indiana legal director Ken Faulk says he's concerned but argues after nearly half a century Roe v Wade should be settled off when you. Look at the history of supreme court jurisprudence, and when the supreme court chooses will cases one of the things that looks at. Is how firmly accepted the right has become I would hope that we recognize that this is a right that we all have come. To talk and Planned Parenthood CEO Christie Gillespie say they hope, legislators we get sick of losing. In court Eric Berman Ninety-three WIBC mobile news nobody wins in, a. Trade war with China says Purdue Aggie communist Wally Tyner Is that, the economic wellbeing of the United States goes down economic wellbeing of China goes down. As well if the tariff stay in place he predicts the loss of twenty nine percent of America's global soybean market to Brazilian producers. After a day in camp coach head coach Frank Reich is, liking what he sees from quarterback. Andrew luck good day solid day in windy conditions thought he, looked. Strong consistent Good first day form. I'm staying Lear on the level, on the.

Supreme Court Eric Berman Lear Frank Reich Brad Kavanagh Ken Faulk Andrew Aclu China Christie Gillespie Wibc Indiana CEO Purdue Aggie Wally Tyner America ROE United States Director Wade
Federal Judge Strikes Down Kentucky's Medicaid Work Rules

BBC Newshour

03:53 min | 5 years ago

Federal Judge Strikes Down Kentucky's Medicaid Work Rules

"President trump has posted a couple of tweets this morning defending the government's chief immigration enforcement agency against calls from some democrats at ice be abolished also a statement from saudi arabia confirms a phone call between the king and president trump but does not mention a trump tweet saying that saudi arabia had agreed to raise oil production to perhaps two million barrels a day a federal judge struck down kentucky's plan for medicaid changes would have required work volunteering or training for some exchange for healthcare coverage plan was set to go into effect next week lisa gillespie from w f p l in louisville reports at kentucky medicaid recipients won't face any changes to their insurance for now the court said the changes the state maids it kentucky's medicaid program don't meet the intent of the program which is to support the healthcare needs of low income people this state projected that ninety five thousand people would lose access to medicaid under the changes kentucky state official adam meyer our wrote in a statement that the state plans on working with the federal government to resolve the issue he added that without prompt implementation the state will be forced to make benefit cuts the decision also has far reaching implications for several other states that are considering medicaid work requirements for npr news i'm lisa gillespie in louisville general motors says president trump's threatened tariffs on imported cars and car parts could harm american automakers michigan radio sarah swick gm's warning comes and comments submitted to the us commerce department the department is investigating imported cars and car parts as possible national security threat under direction from president trump but gm cautions that today's auto industry relies on global operations and global supply chains the company says import tariffs will eventually drive up prices for us consumers and retaliatory measures could hurt global sales gm says those tariffs could lead to a smaller gm and risk less not more american jobs for npr news i'm sarah swick in detroit and you're listening to npr news this is wnyc in new york i'm david i new jersey is inching closer to a government shutdown legislators ended negotiations yesterday afternoon without reaching a budget deal with governor phil murphy much of the disagreement comes from murphy's plan to raise taxes on people making more than one million dollars a year legislators proposed raising taxes on people making more than five million instead at press conference murphy said that didn't cut it and he suggested citizens call their legislators to tell them if folks out there watching think that attacks on folks who make five million dollars a year or more is a sufficient answer to what else i hope they've got their numbers as well if a budget deal is not reached state beaches and parks would be closed tomorrow and non essential services would be closed monday teachers throughout new york are receiving emails telling them to leave their union the emails went out just hours after wednesday's supreme court decision that ruled against public sector unions like the american federation of teachers the justices struck down a law requiring non union members to pay union fees the emails came from the conservative think tank mackinac center and provided public school teachers with instructions on how to leave their union colleen wilson a reporter for low hud spoke to white plains teachers who received the emails teachers were kind of they were outraged i think especially those that are really involved in their union you know they just kind of sell it as you know fueling fire the mackinac center advocates conservative economic causes such as deregulation and right to work laws it has received hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations from the foundation started by us education secretary betsy devos extremely hot weather in.

President Trump Five Million Dollars One Million Dollars Two Million Barrels
White House Correspondents' Dinner 2018

Handel on the Law

02:39 min | 5 years ago

White House Correspondents' Dinner 2018

"To shortly after that they fired only after i using a taser and a foam impact round the officers are administrative leave the gbi is investigating wbz news time one oh one wbz meteorologist kirk mellish calling for clear now on a sunny day coming up atlanta's most accurate and dependable forecast is straight ahead police in powder springs are working to keep prescription drugs out of the wrong hands officers took part saturday in the national prescription drug take back event people dropped off expired meds and fills they no longer use officers label it away to stop the opioid epidemic breaking news i i this is w sp twenty four hour continuing news president trump is stepping up his criticism of democratic senator jon tester for his role in the failed nomination of ronnie jackson for va secretary trump is calling for tester to resign or at least lose his bid for for reelection wbz's top national story is also president trump mr trump for the second time told white house correspondents he wouldn't attend their annual dinner holding a rally last night instead with supporters in michigan abc's andy field has the latest the president's saying he'd rather be with people who'd like him in washington michigan and with those e claims don't washington dc is this better that phony washington white house correspondent the president's press secretary and top aides did not share mr trump's feelings they are at the correspondents dinner back home andy field abc news the white house atlanta police say a man committed suicide friday night by hanging himself from a bridge over mlk boulevard near the atlanta university center police spokesman carlos campos says there are no indications of foul play he had a chain around his neck and one person reported hearing somebody say don't do it definitely gillespie sports the braves beat the phillies four to one wsb news time one plus links grills piles of leaves and limbs and grass and rocks and dead shrubs enticed expanding pools call one eight hundred.

Phillies WSB Atlanta University Center White House ABC Washington Michigan Secretary VA Atlanta Kirk Mellish GBI Braves Carlos Campos Press Secretary White House Correspondent President Trump Andy Field
Where on Earth is the Oldest Bridge?

The Past and the Curious

05:14 min | 5 years ago

Where on Earth is the Oldest Bridge?

Sonny Rollins Williamsburg Bridge Sonny Sony East River New York Jazz Writers Magazine LEE America Chuck Lang Gillespie Berle Davis Chicago Los Angeles Forty Years Two Years