35 Burst results for "Goddard"

AP News Radio
The latest in sports
"AP sports I'm David Schuster to NFL playoff games contested Saturday in Kansas City, Patrick Mahomes played through an ankle injury throwing a pair of touchdown passes as the chiefs down Jacksonville 27 20, Kansas City coach Andy Reid crediting his defense. I thought from the DBs to the defensive line to the linebackers, I just, again, my head goes off to the guys for that. Meanwhile, in Philadelphia, the eagles overwhelmed the Giants 38 to 7 with our Michael luongo in attendance. The eagle jumped to a 14 nothing for his quarterly on touchdown passes by a jail and hurts won the Dallas Goddard. The other devonta Smith first picked up a 5 yard touchdown run with 43 seconds to go in the first half, Boston Scott had a three yard touchdown one, maybe for the second quarter for the birds who were advanced to the NSA championship game for the first time since 2017. Coming up later Sunday, it will be Cincinnati at buffalo and Dallas at San Francisco. Lots of NBA action Saturday, Boston made it 9 straight wins, one O 6 one O four over Toronto, grant Williams scoring 25 points off the bench. As a role player in this league, you have to be prepared for any of those opportunities and you have to step up when the opportunity arises. And I feel like I try my best to do that and tonight shops went down and just continue to be aggressive. Evan mobley was aggressive scoring a career high 38 points as Cleveland defeated Milwaukee one 14 one O two, mobley's coach JB bickerstaff certainly impressed. You know, it's not just a particular quarter, but it's when winning matters the most. And I think he's got that gene when winning Mars is the most to rise to another level. And Minnesota coach Chris Finch had a bird's eye view, watching Anthony Edwards score 44 points as the T wolves defeated Houston one 13 one O four. Yeah, I mean, he was locked in all day. We had talked yesterday about how important this game was for us. And how he needed to set the tone. He certainly did that. He was special today. College hoops, TCU crushed number two Kansas, 83 60. I'm David Shuster, AP sports.

WTOP
"goddard" Discussed on WTOP
"48. Travis and whether on the ace let's get back to Dave dildine in the WTO P traffic center. All right, Sean ray showers moving over green belt in college park and on the wet Baltimore Washington Parkway, a new crash reported southbound your Goddard. I 95 between Belle's Phil and Columbia, no traffic incidents, a shower is moving northbound wipers and headlights will be going on there. Route 50 at the bay bridge, no delays, they got two way traffic in effect, and now with the weather poised to move in over the next 30 minutes or so, they're probably going to have to discontinue it. Two 70 dry and without any traffic disruptions. Travis moving well, even northbound through clarksburg on two 70. In fairfax county, Virginia, chantilly Centreville a roll over crash on westfields boulevard at stonecroft boulevard, SUV on its side. Rescue units cutting the roof off to pull somebody out of the vehicle right now. So clearly much of that intersection will be off limits, westfields, at stonecroft, boulevard, 66, no crashes reported some heavier westbound traffic through Arlington just to burst of it before the 3 o'clock toll time. Northbound George Washington park way beyond one 23, they have cleared the work zone. I think they probably cleared it for the day. Outbound traffic on canal road will be a little bit slower, single file until we get one way and after the reversal at 3 p.m. at Arizona avenue three 95 through D.C., east and westbound traffic on the southeast Southwest freeway is pretty slow now on the wet freeway between the 11th and 14th street bridges. Jiffy lube service centers keep you moving from oil changes and tire rotations to filters and wipers to a full range of services, visit jiffy lube D.C. dot com for a location near you. Dave dildy

AP News Radio
Hurts, Eagles beat Texans 29-17 for their first 8-0 start
"Jalen hurts toss a pair of touchdown passes as the eagles improved to a franchise best 8 O by beating the Texans 29 to 17 Hertz completed 21 of 27 passes for 243 yards and did not throw an interception I've been 80 zero before and lost the national championship I just take it day by day you know what I'm saying Take it day by day We have an accomplished anything yet Today but they think of us controlling things we can Dallas Goddard caught 8 passes for 100 yards and a touchdown for the eagles the Texans offense was led by Damien pierce's a 139 yards on the ground Adam spelling Houston

Convo By Design®
"goddard" Discussed on Convo By Design®
"This looks like a. Chris goddard project. I won't be able to come out while the fluids just like you in this looks. Thoughtful might consideration into it and feel free to tell me to shut up because i will ramble on forever. So i won't because that's what i usually catch onto certain things to say that you would be insulted. If somebody said that it it looked like a like a. Chris garnered room. You know i'll take exception to that a little bit. Only because i do believe that there are certain through lines. There are certain things that certain designers will do certain designers will use. you know. i'm i'm looking at some of your work while we're talking and Eller it is a lot of color i am. I'm a big fan of show. Houses design houses decorator showcases. I'm a. I'm a big fan because i believe that they're they create this opportunity. It's it's to me. The design house. The show house is kind of like the auto show for their automotive industry. You know it's like the consumer electronics show for for for those nursing out on on new tech for it's it's one of these places where you can go and find something inspirational and aspirational at the same time. And so i'm looking at this symphony designer house from twenty eighteen in the hotbed of design. Little rock arkansas. And what's. I don't know that i would look at this space without having known that it was you but having to work enough now there are certain elements to this dad are dead are definitely reflective on the the manner in which as a creative you express yourself so i want to get into the working in a little bit but i kinda wanna touch on something that you said about the advent of social media the the snark and the commentary you know. I don't know what it is. Chris but Prior to the last fifteen sixteen months. I don't recall seeing. I've seen people snark out on designers in the past. But i always expect that because the educated will always throw barbs without thinking friend. But i've seen more from inside the industry on social in the last fifteen sixteen months. And i'm not sure why that is but it feels like the space is getting more combative. Is that just me..

My Seven Chakras
"goddard" Discussed on My Seven Chakras
"Because you say you narrate or books in all his works which i found really useful. Unlike allegra discussed i feel navels. Got a national guards. Techniques and methods would be amplified if we are able to blend with some breath work and music and mantra and guided intentions. And that's how this collaboration came about right. Yeah for sure and i. He's just so his work is just so yes they call him the greatest mystic and when he speaks to you he kind of he elevates you. He makes you. He's not going to water it down for you you know. He speaks in such a way. That it elevates you you have to rise to what he's saying. And so i i find that sometimes that can be a little bit challenging for people and so this is why i do my best to explain what that process is that he's telling you to do and the reason why he was so successful is because he grew up in church and he was always reading the bible. He was always by himself. He was always thinking and communicating with himself. So he's much more advanced in that relationship with self than we are in this day and age. Because we've got so many distractions were as. He didn't so what his technique is to the point. He doesn't beat around the bush. If you practice it'll succeed. That's that's what. I like about his technique. I am very very true. And his method of delivery was workshop right. He's to go someplace. Friday or something needs to meet with people who used to come in easter deluded in a workshop style and i feel that was missing these days because people only have access to books and of his books are in order for He's fifty years now right and audio. Also it's a little bit broken. It's not proper as i felt that this workshop is very opportune occasion where people cannot just come across his work To your teaching and guidance but they're also able to have felt expedients. Live on zoom. And i felt that we need to keep in mind the accessibility as around the world can join an affordability. Because we don't wanna make it too expensive and restrict access to people who need it the most right for sure. Yeah and. I really liked the way in like i said before the way you teach you guide and talk about the work of national guard when it comes to manifestation and i'm sure that attendees were always looking for different ways to manifest and seek out and and and relax And so far. Maybe they've come across some of the law of attraction right the secret diary of teachings. I feel that Never god's work is more authentic and more direct. Yes it is it is and truthfully all you have to do is apply it but i you know what i've i've been fighting though because i do get a lot of emails from people will what about this. What about that. And i'm like if you're going to focus on technique focus on a technique as opposed to jumping around. And i'll try this. Try that. Because i think we're all looking for this magic bullet. This secret sauce. Kinda sorta thing when actuality it is the work right it is the application rate. So if you if you do if you apply what he's teaching you you'll be successful at it so you just stay the course. That's what i've really been noticing a lot lately. Bright because people don't understand that we manifesting all day every day. There's there's no break from station. There is none whether you are this whether you are in this body or your consciousness is elsewhere manifestation happens because it is it is part of the loss of creation. Yeah we have somebody saying hello great to see you live. I follow the law for traction. Now this person is. It shows facebook user because they are watching this from our facebook group and for some reason. Facebook groups has his way off not revealing the name of the person. But if you say saint permission something like that you we should be able to see who you are but let us know the dillas what your name is the comments. So that i'm also able to see. But i know that you're from our facebook group which means you are a special identity so angela. Why do you feel neville goddard's techniques and his approach is different. You sort of alluded to a little bit but for somebody who is maybe new to his work. Why do you feel his works. Out of stands out has work stands out because of who he is as i mentioned before he he did spend a lot of time alone in meditation just in contemplation and so he was always in tune with that part that he calls i am right and so he had a relationship with his consciousness because also what other people don't understand what never understood was he was not as body. You're not your body. I'm not my body. We are the consciousness within our bodies. So you've got to develop a relationship between your consciousness and your body right. And so that is what he has done he because he had so much time to practice right and so that's why he's so unique because he lived the experience on a daily basis and he can only teach you from where he was coming from. So this is why he uses a lot of scripture. You see and a lot of people get lost in the scripture simply because of how we were raised right. This is what god said. And if you don't do it. God's way but nevertheless telling you that scripture is psychological in nature. It's it's an allegory you learn. It's not a this happened. you know. And in some aspects yes he's absolutely correct and in other aspects. Well we'll leave that for another time but for that that's what it is. He had a really great connection with his higher self his consciousness. That's why it was. So that's why technique is so powerful and because you say you talk about the importance of the work. It almost feels like we need to make this cds one workshop and maybe we will action tribe. If we feel that there's a lot of demand and people really enjoyed this experience we are definitely going to make sienese but this is gonna be The initial pivotal workshop do share with you these techniques and methods that have for at least thirty to forty or fifty years been accessible and people all around the world have been doing it except that Most of the people would appreciate some guidance in an expedience other than having to do everything themselves. And terry miller says action drive members day. Great to see you terry. I mean we can't see you but good to see that ding terry so so maybe if you can tell us what are you gonna share during. This workshop gives us a glimpse into your portion of the presentation. Well share the technique that neville is the court technique it branches off into some other things. There's a telephone technique. there's a what if there's the isn't it wonderful but it's all the same core thing. Meaning.

Live on Sunday Nights its Bill Cunningham
NASA Confirms Mars Region Had Thousands of Ancient Volcanic Eruptions
"New evidence shows massive ancient volcanoes erupted on Mars The so called super eruptions occurred in a region of northern Mars called Arabia Terra over a period of 500 million years dating back approximately four billion years. The news was published in a paper in the journal Geophysical Research Letters this summer and said researchers who studied the topography of mineral composition of the region made the discovery. The research said each one of these eruptions would have had a significant climate impact. Patrick Wheelie, a geologist at Nasa's Goddard Space Flight Center, led the Arabia Terra Analysis said to release that it's possible release gas made the atmosphere thicker or block the sun and made the atmospheric holder modelers of bars say they still have work to do to try to fully understand the impact of the volcanoes. Ted Lindner

Storytelling with Puck
"goddard" Discussed on Storytelling with Puck
"The possibilities from doing improvisation So wide and varied. Because as you said they teach you something about life but they also were often teach you about particular business situation in a way denton. Nothing else can because when you able to relax and to let let in the conversation while than instantly blocking it's out then you can actually absorb what's going on some empathy and understanding of it but if it's facts being sheltered at you and this is what has to happen because of x. y. And said personally. Anyway i find that i get quite defensive about. Donna would want to fight it but somebody explains it in a nice way and there's a story being total does improvise should be done. Which kind of makes me laugh and feel different emotions. I think it always comes back to that. Always comes back to emotion den suddenly. It's so much more powerful. A we do workshops with clients. They lower workshops where we help them to understand who they are and within those workshops that we often find because we get leadership teams involved than some positive leadership teams who are instantly very hurry interactive very very much wants to take part in everything we do of icebreaker type things too we often because this is what we do we tell stories tell funny stories city stories but it will stories that that make a point and it's incredible how throughout the day some of the people who quieted the beginning but the time against the end of the day that the loudest the people who actually the most intrude to what we're doing the get it on sometimes because they've been listening quietly at the beginning they get even more than the people who were trying to direct because actually they want to absorb the information so it's incredible what we can do. Listening listening is a is a big power as well as and then. I think i think it was rory again because i listen to with rory berry saying that. You know that that kind of when you're listening or when you're improvising you can only be in the present you. Can you have to focus on what it is. You are doing right now. And that's why i would say to people if we're if we're in a room playing doesn't matter who who is weighed it. Don't try to try to be anything else other than in the moment because you will block yourself. He will block everything will. It will just stop the flow. So you the the great thing about anything other is you need to be absolutely present and and a big part that is actually listening rather than than actually doing doing the acting or the talking did now we listening to you for this puskas upside and i am one hundred essential that everybody listening. We'll have enjoyed it because it's been wonderful and but people are going to want to listen to even more because the valuable to learn so much more than you could possibly put into an hour long so if people want to find you because they need support within the businesses as an actor. Whatever it is they want to do but they want to be given permission and they won't be given power to speak. Where can they find you the best place to go because everything is there is the website which is www dot power to speak dot co dot uk and you can find all my blogs and articles. Which are id write a lot about what we've spoken about today. Said that that those are there. And also there's a link to the podcasts at the audio's if you want to watch the podcast and there is one there of me and my dad finna conversation which is lovely. That's at youtube. That's on youtube channel power to speak the podcast and if he wants to contact me through linked tin and obviously find. Jackie gadot power to speak. And i'll be very very happy to connect and you just mentioned that. You've come from this podcast and i will be even happier to connect amazing. I will make sure course to all of those onto the show. Notes that senator. Everybody can see them. We could we could keep going. Because he's been a a wonderful conversation but we will finish the podcast as we always do with a story from puck rations and i will say jackie god. Thank you so much for joining on. Thank you for having me. It's been an absolute pleasure. Locked it a mighty author of my demise. I hide wealth within my mosque is called pride. Do they see me. Do they see my disguise. It's hard to find truth buried in the lies. Maybe they'd prefer what's really inside a mighty will follow of my own demise. How many times have i wanted to cry. Kanobi see to pain with witch or reside. Do they see me. What do they see my disguise..

Storytelling with Puck
"goddard" Discussed on Storytelling with Puck
"Creative in a very scientific way but he came out of that year and he called it his year of wonder because he had to use that time to be creative and so it would so doing a podcast. Me was just really the the opportunity to find out. How are the people saw creativity and how they used it and really just put out into the world that we are all creative. It doesn't matter what we do how we do it. We are born creative in its innate. We can't help it and you can guarantee our year of wonder There will be lots of innovation lots of creativity because we've had to adapt and we've had to find new ways of doing things and for me. It's been a year of wonder. I've started a podcast. I've in my business going in a in a very exciting for me direction on. I'm very happy and now it's been a great year for many many people and we've all been through some really really tough times but i think we will look back in years to come in and think We had the opportunity to be quite creative. There will definitely there. Were definitely some some strong possibilities. Of course not everybody was able to take up as you say there's been some really really a unparalleled moments of in the last year. I say we have been through. It'll before but a long time ago. The these these these things happened. But what you talk about when you say you have. Creativity is so true. And what's often a slight problem for me. In the social media world i guess and in the world of in school sometimes and going onto university As well is the idea that you have creative people and you have people. I don't believe that for a second. I believe exactly what you said a second ago. Which is that. We are people who have creativity and to have logic. We use it at different times in different areas of our lives to do different things to make something to process something to problem solve etc and also as you say. Creativity comes in so many different forms. If you think of your dot was an engineer. Engineering is incredibly creative. It might seem to some people especially if they don't fully understand what engineer does like. It's very practical work. And you just put one thing air moving their such but it's so creative architecture is really creative. Even the people who are actually built in house they might be full in somebody else's designed but they might see something is missing or something works. They inject a bit of creativity into it. And there are also people who do what you might think of as less creative jobs i noticed from start storytelling with puck the amount of messages i get in my nicotine inbox. Who basically just say thank you. I started writing. They haven't shared anything storytime with polk but they just realized that they in some ways. I've stolen for you for a moment. But they have commissioned to write and it's okay it doesn't matter it's not what they do every day because we are all. We have creativity within us on. So thank you for helping people to realize that and helping people to bring out. It's so important when you do radios I truly believe i really do. I think we all need. It's like you know impr- improvising. Everybody needs to improvise. Everyone needs to realize they can. We are all creative Impressing every day and we need to play. Yes we do. Need to play a i love by the way you were talking about the techniques of Breathing techniques as well when you're when you're trying to get people The difference Kind of dayton's that you buy just exercises. I love the idea of into really serious. Business is in serious teams and national reaction to that. I was speaking recently. I you've you've heard the To to another person who loves to bring play into the workforce thing movie berry. And i remember him saying that he kind of just goes for it on defensively people cut up because they have too much fun to have any state. Do you have a similar processing but people did. I did listen to that. Focus and exactly what he was in the one truth one day one truth one lie. I know he did he. Does something similar way. You're trying to just just saw gently. I've been i've got I went into a cooper and got them playing superheroes. And what what would you do. If but yeah it's e- kind of have to stop sending because it does scare people and it does worry me. Sometimes that i'm going to get ten minutes in and they're gonna say no no no stop. This is not what we you know. This is not what we signed doubtful but actually exactly roaring said if you kind of introduce it gently before you before you know it. People are just laughing never lost so much in. I'm doing some training videos at the moment with a lady who comes from. Hr and does cooper training around of hr difficult. Conversations is basic daring. So she said. Could i help her a working together on. Bring these videos together. And so i- organized for some of my foam adult students to come into space and invited her along. And i several with just give us some scenario is and i'll get them to improvise and it was absolutely hysterical. I mean just watching two people at sit down and and pretended to be the boss and the other older employees. He was obviously for the child. And just the conversation. We would literally tears running down a face and so yeah. I mean it's so much fun to be had but actually at the end. I think rory Touched on this as well. Is that by the time you've left that room and you've come out of that space having loved having cried. Maybe but you you realize you've learned something three doing that. You've you've learned something about human nature because you know what i say to my actors a lot of time. Where we're we're improvising is. Don't try to be funny. Nothing worse than trying to be funny because you will block the whole thing. Just speak as it comes into your head as you would in everyday life. Just be as truthful and honest with what it is that you say and you know it. You'll be amazed how hysterically funny some very serious treat situations can be. That's wonderful i. I think the.

Storytelling with Puck
"goddard" Discussed on Storytelling with Puck
"Role which they'd be leading for years. I mean that's a very cliche story but it's suddenly you feed it connect with it and to me. That's what makes stories absolutely agrees with. Oh yeah absolutely. I mean a couple of things that popped into my head where you were talking that one one is relates back to acting. And it's it's telling the trees and you know many people when you say you're not going to they say who you must be really good at logging and he's saying no you can't. You can't actually betray another character to actually be somebody else onstage during the fillmore on tv. Or whatever unless you are telling. The truth must absolutely find the motivation. Find what it is. What's the back. So what made that person do what they did. Why wise imported you're playing this part. What is it. You're trying to say and you can only do that. And again it comes back to. If you don't believe it your audience went believe it is because it comes down to the truth and the truth is authenticity. And the truth is telling your story honestly at whoops but obviously within boundaries because we can all improvise but if we don't have boundaries then Somewhere quite dog sometimes. And but yeah. It's it really is. It comes down to to just honesty and truthfulness anticipate and in stories stories that are relatable and relevant. I think that makes sense. I think the boundaries of relevance words together as well why sometimes boundaries can be a dangerous world because people then can feel a bit restricted. Guess as you said you must take that permission away a little bit when you using him boundaries but when you use boundaries in relation to relevance and it's actually it's not boundaries because you can topol people as much as you want that get a sense for that from a conversation but if it makes no sense if there's nothing tangible dan somebody can hold onto useful to them. When you're telling get that's well personally. I think the boundaries do come into play because as you said earlier it just becomes a i'm paraphrasing accommodating towards but it becomes a diatribe it becomes self-indulgent and accident. It's not useful to the overpass as soon as you bring in reference to that relates ability. Then you can say anything you want. And it's it should work your specific audience to the people that y'all trying to talk to a really like the way you come at this and the way you approach this whole area and i hope that you give people is is phenomenal. People who've been listening to previous episodes of this podcast will know that. Jackie has a half time slot of some of these episodes way. She uses her own wonderful. Podcast called power to speak surprisingly tennyson. A little bit about that. What made you start the podcast. And how does it relate to what you do and we'll go on graduate because that was the other thing that popped into. My head was actually the reason i started. The cost was for the very reason that i said before about coming into to the business world from an acting creative background and feeling a bit alien certainly thought there isn't. Where do i find of creative people that i can talk to. The are running businesses without just going straight to artists and and different traditional artistic creative businesses and festival. I was thinking about setting up my own network but actually what it was it. It goes back to me just loving people just finding out about people i just have. This is need to find out what makes people tick. How did they get to where they are now. And and what is the journey. What's their story. And so the podcast was was the obvious thing and originally mike company when i when i very first at started it was called atticus arts and that was really because i'd come from from an ops background i was working Running arts workshops and outs oh. What's the word projects and outs funded projects community projects. And i thought i could do that as a as a business for myself. Loss carrying on doing the acting training and working with people on the voice and so within atticus site started at kazakhs created conversations and they were literally the theme was creativity. I wanted to find out what creativity meant to business leaders to other people within business how they used it for their business but also they used it for their own wellbeing and for their own sanity kind of thing and what i found actually was apart from the fact that i was just had the opportunity to talk to some amazing people. As i know you have in your podcasts. And just a bit indulging in that way and it really is from for myself a lot of the time. Do what i what i found was and i suppose i wish knee was the rule creative you know. Even the people the buds the i was sat around the networking tables with in the early days. That hand to meet their business cards they are. There is creative is i. they meant might not gaps. Draw all right writer poem or do any of that so traditional creative stuff but to me problem solving is so creative. I love problem solving. And you know i i. I realized again in lockdown. At just reading. I did them some workshops manage to get into a space last august with some of my adult students and we devised a piece cooled. We've been here before and it was basically looking back. All the other past pandemics impulsive plagued again back to the black death and the spanish flu and all of those other things that happened and in doing the research that which is another thing i love is i found out that isaac newton in sixteen sixty six had been sent home from cambridge university where he was a student because it locked down and so he went into lockdown at home with his parents always seem aged wherever he was and during that year that his welded locked down because of the plague he developed count could calculus and obviously just.

Storytelling with Puck
"goddard" Discussed on Storytelling with Puck
"Welcome back to the story of my dad. I think my love of storytelling comes from him because obviously he has a lot of stories to tell and he loves telling them and so the sunday afternoon sunday lunches people would be invited is he just a new audience. He was very happy to to sit and tell stories and so to me it was an is a way to evoke as she say emotion. And if you all putting together a presentation then and i think it maya angelou. That said people won't remember what it is that you said but they will remember how you made them feel. Yeah and and it is exactly that so my space. my mission. Actually in early lockdown certainly was to get people to understand that you all you'll unique selling point you all u. s. eight and the reason for that is your own story and so in lockdown. Certainly having had that time to sit down and write my story from beginning to end up to the present moment. Should i say not end ono really gave me the opportunity to realize why i do what i do and actually coming into to. I started my business for myself Probably nearly who must be three years ago. So relatively young business really and i started going to networking and i couldn't understand why i didn't really seem to fit in. I didn't feel like i was in the right place. And i realized it was because people weren't being themselves. The people are sat around tables with were there to up business cards. They were there to sell me the product they were selling and i wasn't interested in my interest is people. I love to build relationships and i love to collaborate and obviously that comes from from the background. I come from and the reason i got into the background that i come from is because of those things that i love. And actually the business to me was was a difficult place specially networking groups because they didn't seem to be any creativity or authenticity in in what was going on around me. And so that really made me want to to say behold on this this is yes your business. You don't have to be like everybody else. You don't have to talk the way they talk. Use the acronyms usa. It's kind of a language that is great for you and your peers you will. Are you know paul at the same club. But actually your customers won't understand how you talking Using and so you need to be relatable and the way to do that is through your own story then might be thousands out bed of people. Doing voice work doing presentation work. Exactly as i say. But there's only one me any one person that has been through the experiences. I've been through good combat in and some of the bad experiences i've had illnesses and different times in my life where i've lost people. They have they have created me to you know i mean. It says at niche nietzsche What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. And i put out there in a linked team pace once and somebody came back and said well. That's a bit harsh. it will not show. That's right and it's like well. Yeah they don't as experienced. Don't just make you stronger. They make you kinda. They're making more resilient they make more relatable and and if you can use your story to cook your message across whatever that message might be then people will be able to relate to you. You may well validate something in their own life that they've not been able to confront or or prouder and it's not. It's not a case of putting allow there. That's just self-indulgent. Nobody wants to hear your problems. But if you if as part of your life your story that relates to your customers your clients the people that you're trying to help then of course share it because that will make you more more trustworthy more credible all of those things but it will make you relatable personally want to be part of. What is that you doing because they can understand where you've come from and so to me. Stories are really important for for that reason. The so much with everything that we do at creations we we often talk about because not just as an individual but also as a as a brand i think stories are really important to tell and to explain who you are as brandon as a company as as a as a big company and the reason we talk about them is because we always talkin about the message that you'll put them we don't mean just the individual blow goal the letter that you're writing the podcast that you do. We mean every single day in everything that you're doing the message that you'll send it to people and that comes from having sort if you if you want to do that. Well you need to be clear you need to be consistent you need to be relevant which is what you talking about in a lot of detail just end the relates not and you also need to stand out and be different now. One of the best ways to possibly duda isn't to try and be different but it's to be yourself at. I think that's what you just explained. So perfectly then and that's what stories you'll story is so important but also be able to finco of news even over people's stories to connect with what it is that y'all doing a memorial doing it to talk about the stories of the people that you've helped or even completely away from your together to talk about stories of something that maybe happened in a fits but how that relates back to somebody building confidence. Somebody who may be was a stagehand but always wanted to be inactive was never given permission and something happens to allow them that permission. That might be a great story that the relevance for your audience and is not directly something that you did to help but it shows what can be done with the right supporting place be saying it like this it sounds a bit cold and it sounds a bit factual but when you tell the story of that person when you described the atmosphere when you talk about them feed and fed-up satan on side of the stage and one day. They the lights came. The lights came on and they saw the glitter but one of the main actors egypt iran and nobody was there in the background replaced. Maneka play the lead.

Storytelling with Puck
"goddard" Discussed on Storytelling with Puck
"Speakers. Just almost taken away stripping away all your own age and yourself so that you can then take on what it is that message that you're trying to to deliver and that's the same with an actor. An actor has to get rid of their personal quirks that the way that they stand the way that they say certain was imitation and motivation is a big part of everything that everybody does motivation. Certainly something that comes up a lot when actors learning to take one other characters. What's the motivation. Why is that person doing that. But it's the same in a given presentation. What's the motivation. What's the point. Why is it important. Why are you doing that and again for teams is bringing everybody together. It's working together. It's collaborating and that was the one thing i loved about. The ball became the one thing. I loved about seattle and love working in the and in everything that i've done since is it's all about collaboration. There is no. There's no stars when i was working with judi dench. She didn't have top billing. He was a d so if anybody she was defendant so if anybody had a name that was further up the alphabet. They got billing about that so they could have been the third spear carrier on the left so that you know everybody worked together as an ensemble. So yeah there's lots in the actors background that totally resonates right the way three line that's wonderful. I think it shows the numerous skills which is really what you teach them. It's not about teaching competencies. Necessarily the competencies are going to come. But it's about teaching The skills such as about ability which as you say becomes from the improvisisation such as Teamwork and collaboration Which comes from bringing people together the skill one show he discovered of confidence that enough to express yourself in in front of people and say that makes perfect sense then that it doesn't matter who teaching because we all need these things really what you're teaching life skills and life skills can be adopted to business into acting to teamwork to leadership to whatever it is your helping with at the time so i think what is now lodged in my head. Because i'm talking to you today but it's powerful. It's extremely extremely powerful. You did touch on their in your answer to my question you touchstone on stories and i want to dig further into dance and i think we can do it by starting to talk a bit about the first story that he brought to us. Today i love love. Love the reaction of hearing meghan as she said the man. i can. Just imagine the audio for probably everybody in the room had to shock as you say baby credulity as well but for you thinking. Discomfiture no-publicity outs eleven. Only passing in the world of jealousy is who i know. I agree i'd ever remember that beaten. Tingey down us so excited to meet. Somebody will who all you must know. I must know your father because such is such a wild the avenue tongue. I did know him through other other people. That's wonderful food. What i wanted to talk about the was that story. It brought me for so many different stages of emotion. I think at one point. I was excited with you. Would you talk about that initial fact. That's another another stunt stunt man as a as a parent and then. I was scared As we will go in for the emotions of what was going on we could add and how he got injured and at the same time. It's still being a little scared. I was feeling the almost like jealousy and also excitement. Okay to be a probably to your copy your job at at sea your bed at the same time that i was feeding for the fact that he did that in the first place because he cared about the people who was working with the reason. I'm talking about. This is because all of these emotions. Some of them of potable presents. Some of them connected by menace to feel old of them at the same all very close proximity of time because you shed story in such a way. Di was gripped. I was compelled to keep listening the whole way through. It's a great story in itself but it's also partly about the way you tell it so i have two questions one is. Can you dig a bit deeper into the importance of storytelling eaten. All of the world's that you deal with and all of the wells that you're hoping with the second question is how does the way that you tell their stories on the tone that she used if we go back to the old saying it's the what she said it's how you said it. How does that make a difference to bow story unto speaking in general. It's only fed. We give jackie a few seconds to answer that they're all two questions while she's thinking reminder that you're listening to the magnificent jackie had that was a stunt man and she is widely proud but the son much to be proud of in her own. My what morton an attitude towards life. What an incredible lady. We've got so much more talk about. As one of the finals. Three form puck creations. So went keep you waiting for too much longer. But before cianci's autism questions. Let's he her talk about so very young cost to speak at its best. It's a real exploring. It's surprising journey and creativity is just the antidote to insanity and it's productive original surprising answers inspiring stories motivational educational inspirational. Wise words with power to speak the podcast. Find us on your favorite pok. 'cause platform all watch on youtube at power to speak the podcast with me. Jackie out.

Storytelling with Puck
"goddard" Discussed on Storytelling with Puck
"Careers officer but he. Yeah i think we go through school especially once you get into secondary school and it's all about the exams. It's about what you learn what you can take out into the outside world. What career you'd you'll you're going to be doing is that we're told what time to arrive. What time to have lunch when to go on a break sit down. Listen you kind of restrained completely bound up completely with all of these these rules that we have to adhere to said that by the time you get out into the world kim wilde if you actually even end up doing anything that you really want today because we kind of heavily. His expectations put opponents. You just sometimes get to the point where you think. I'm not allowed to do that. I'm not allowed to speak up. I'm not allowed to show people who i am. And what. I believe because people are so frightened of being judged all being told off actually just to be in a room with someone. That says a give you permission to do that you you of course you can do that. I have one lady who was a former teacher. Come to me. She'd retired so she'd done a whole lot. Thirty forty years of her career and she came to one of my finding your voice workshops where of obsequious with people on giving them that power and a lot of it is around. Play a lot of what i do comes from my acting background. My acting training so it is around a just giving people the opportunity to create an express themselves with that voice. And i have a rehearsal piecyk if people to the practice pace and it's kinda about using the different levels of your voice little deep authority voice. So this like benny voice which is very passionate token from the heart or took him from the head which is very inspirational. When in a storytelling voice that we use and i said to this this woman had given the practice patient she started reading in. You know there's elements that we use the different elements of your body can use that really deep authoritative voice. And she said no. Just give it a go. Just you know deep down. We're talking about this neanderthal man kind of authority and she said no. I can't do that. what why why. Can't you do that. And she said well. When i was a child any time i used as a deep voice like that. My mom told me to stop because it was. I was using my peggy mount voice. Now hewlett let your thought to remember who picked him out was vaguely. Remember her for a an actress in the forties and the fifties and she had this really deep eastern voice and obviously her mom had kind of associated or or made. This poor woman thinks that anytime. She used a authoritative voice berryman. She was a teacher that she was somehow a horrible battleaxe of a woman so she never used it and i. It's not kind of thing that we have so many constraints as children growing up that we take with us into adulthood and we just. We don't need them anymore. We don't need that baggage anymore. So so yes. I think it's it's about giving people that permission as well and in giving them the permission their confidence naturally grows because they suddenly go know i am valid. What i have to say is valid. Who i am is valid. The ideas and the messages i want to share is valid. So i think commission is a is a big thing. That's wonderful. i think it seems as well to lead on to them than being able to give permission to themselves significant permission at one moment which then allows them to build up the confidence as you explained to them be able to give them permission themselves permission when they are then in front of a classroom again always. They are speaking public in a public arena. All in business or whatever it is. they're doing. Actually that train of fort leads me quite nicely onto another question. I wanted to ask you about so. You've explained what you're doing for people and allowing them to to speak and giving them the power to speak. But i know you work with quite a variance of people so currently fumbled but she work with actors. You work with business people you what with teams and then is it also with professional speakers or have i missed. So how does it vary when you're working with these people in terms of how you approach the situation and how you approach help all does it. Vary i i. I don't think it varies a great deal. Because as i said earlier is the acting training at any actor and go you go to. I think the chinese is basically decide but it it something i feel and i've certainly found since working with adults and I've had a real chance in in the last few months to think about it is the acting. Training is something that is of benefit to everybody so in that training you you play. So they're all those games that will so think ooh Actually stuff actually like. I've just explained this. There's a law imply as some research went on to say that it's very important products to continue playing into adulthood. There's older techniques around voice. How you use your pitch. You'll tone how you use pauses and obviously alongside that comes breath so breathing exercises. Obviously when we breathe normally sweet we use vegetative breath. We only use the top fat lungs at. But when you're when you're breathing for performance you have to learn how to use your diaphragm which is a whole other set of Of of breathing and then onto improvisisation is. I mean it's been proven. Improvisation is just lights up the brain in in all sorts of ways and we improvise everyday people. You you say to somebody. We're going to improvisation they will go code. But actually it's every time we open my mouth. I'm improvising right. Now you're improvising in your answers to me. So i think everything along those lines weather. I'm working with Geena speaks or any kind of speeches if they've gotta talk that they're doing a presentation to make again. My job is to get them to performance. And so i will touch on all of those things from playing to improvise ation to voice to breath to actually honing what it is their message that they have to say and it goes back again to what the actor said to me in that dressing room. That if you don't believe what you're saying your audience went believe that either. So that's that's why sometimes people in the business world. They saw two d. presentations but they don't know what it is. They're talking about really there. They somebody else's asked them. It's not their talk. It's not it's not personal to them. It's what they do is job and said that's when excuse me those kind of presentations can get quite dull. Because people don't they don't understand what they're saying themselves so the audience don't understand what they're saying they're not leaping back to stories and how you relate any kind of presentation back to your own story and then three doing that. You engage more. You make it more personal more interesting for yourself. Therefore you make it more personal more interesting for the audience and that goes right the way through so even with with actors actors or obviously more specific they have script to learn or they have a piece that they need to perform at than it is a bit again. It's all the same basics of seekers back to actor's training obviously but they still need to be given permission in lots of ways to just let go because a lot of the actors trading which again works across teams works across leaders. it works across.

Storytelling with Puck
"goddard" Discussed on Storytelling with Puck
"And actress under sheet pretending to be very intimate and offset making these noises. And i just felt sorry for the only god you can do and he came off and i as i was getting him dressed for the next thing. Let's it how do you how can you do that without just either. Totally or laughing and he said if you don't believe what it is that you are doing then you audience white. Believe that either and for me that was. That was a light bulb moment. I suddenly went own. mind god. that's that's it. That is the secret to acting. If it is a secret told but for me it was just the penny dropped and from that moment on our own nicer course i can. I can act. i can do that. And so i then went to A drama college in oakland county and coast with them and from there when into fringe the editor. We took the plate to Edinburgh and i loved it. I just love the rehearsal. You know everything about playing and creating and we put the whole thing together ourselves. You know we did the sets. We did the costumes. We'd found the money we we did that and so i really really wanted to go into acting. Actually the the fee professional acting jobs. I did do. I realized that. Actually i mean at the acting is very creative. Obviously but for me the creativity was bringing the hoesch together. So i kind of. I got into teaching from there. Because it subsidized my getting additions but actually i loved the process of getting people to performance so getting them to a point where they were on stage before me so it wasn't me onstage performing the i i was kind of almost like the puppeteer directing things wrecking producing in directing. So that's kind of what's led me to where i am today and i. I love when i started. Teaching am working with With adults rather the children's i spent many is doing so few siestas and spent eight nine years ago. I started working with adults. Because that's what i thought was adults need to play. They need to be given permission to play as the children did. And do and i just wanted to give adults the opportunity to play those warm up games to do the improvisation and actually i was absolutely right because every class i go into with adults and i work with them with improvisation and voice anxious kitson permission to play in create. It's it's incredible. I've had people come up to me off to his inside. That was like a therapy session yet. They just get the get the chance to to. Yeah trouble the back edge and just play. It's what the food the way the way you'll story has evolved because you original story a about your thoughts and having almost touch connection to the hollywood life but not fully realized not the hollywood world or even the fatal to get because it wasn't way you brought up. It wasn't the typical entity. Which then i guess. Maybe a bit of an excitement. Fool the acting world and folded directed. But what's really interesting. Is that even up the beginning even as a kid you kind of doing the directed you clint because nobody else was interested but you will forcing them to cover without to to do it. He i'd so close came full circle. But it's all you got to having being an actor worked innovator in scott's a professional jobs and then you realize that actually what you do as a kid which somebody sake discouraged you from doing what you love to know pasta all it's wonderful outlets And it wasn't ice. It wasn't until i'm now in the last year so certainly jerry locked down. I had a chance to really think about how those life experiences. I'm what we do as children. We seem to come back to it. I was able to sit down. And really think about. And i. And i remembered that i'd actually used on plays and charge people entrepreneurs whereas it was a charity a charity. I remember having about five or six friends. Come and sit and watch this. Play that i'd i'd made up with with some other friends and charging them at a ten p or something and taking very proudly my sixty pence side made to the local charity. Hutton was like. I think it was a children's high and knocking on the door and say his sixty page. That's very that's very good of you especially for somebody. Who's the eight jeff embrace people if they had sixty payment be going out and buying sweets chocolate things and you are you it to charities you had you had a social conscience alone time you go into the business world but your your whole journey. Your whole story fascinates me for the age of a child to what your that was doing to way. You are now. I think i'm going to try touch on. Somebody's pinch out the podcast. But it won't to actually bring us to the more modern times what it is that your actually doing so. I introduced june by saying that. You give your clients you give people that you work with the power to speak. What does that mean. I was in a. I was in a breakout room in a in a networking session. And and i think we were trying to about three the three of us in this room and we will expand into the others to each other. What it was that we did as a business just to workout really with other people understood from our titles from our tagline. What it was that we actually did and i kind of explained what it was. I i did And one woman in the room said and i said what. Do i do that to you from what i've said what what is it i do and one woman said you help people mock it themselves effectively and the other woman said you help people show up powerfully in the world. Wow i mean how amazing is that just from from explaining what i did. I didn't space even up for myself. Up to that point realized the benefit that i could provide to people to give them the you know to be able to market themselves effectively using voice in that presentation but also just to have that power to put their ideas to share their ideas to change the world. If that's what they want to do if their ideas that strong Strong belief and they want to share it then. My job is to to give them the power and the energy to do that way. Does that come from is it. Is it about confidence is about technique is about both of those things off. Things that i'm completely missing are important to and confidence. Technique are certainly. yeah absolutely. i mean an permission is the other is another big word because people we go through school and may be lucky. Because i i did. I had teaches that. Were quite happy for me to put that play on every friday afternoon. You know. so i was encouraged in that way. You don't forget the.

Storytelling with Puck
"goddard" Discussed on Storytelling with Puck
"The paper had two pages of situations vacant advertising jobs. All over the world he could weld he could go anywhere. He decided to close his eyes and put his fingers down determined that wherever whatever was beneath his fingertips when he opened his eyes he would go for it. It was a box containing the words. London school of charm requires muddles. Not exactly what he was expecting but in order to be true to himself he made the call. He assumed that they would hear his cockney accent and say no. They didn't atco lettuce. Several years of modelling and onto crowd work for film and television eventually to the world of stump performing a stunt performing as if that was the department assisted back then. It didn't the guys that were falling downstairs. Fighting with generally ex-army p. Teen structures are real life heavies. They did what they were told. They didn't know the techniques. Filmmaking but which put the camera for the best short there was no stump full mistaken. Thanks to my dad there is today. He started stunt cost in nineteen sixty eight a magazine bringing stump performance together and informing them of their rights contracts at the time cloths them as outside contractors which meant they weren't short foot by the film company they had to sign what was known as a blood chit where they waved their common law rights. That has worked with that. Critique the actors union over the years to fight for the safer practices and they wouldn't be a stumped registered that register today. if it wasn't for him i recently attended the stump man's bowl. Yes that is. The thing held a native charity. It's an opportunity to celebrate the achievement of the british community this year for the first time life achievement awards for presented to the elder statesman and women of the don't world. They were pioneers. That show reels. Showcase work on the greatest tv and film over the last seventy years looked around the ballroom and felt the warm fuzzy glow of a family with dad. It's patriarch now that he's the only one sitting within the room. Godfather and godmother like are the heads of several stump dynasties parents followed into the business by their children and grandchildren one generation following another joining them scores of young and exciting newcomers eager to be part of the world and start their own. Dynasties like megan's dad. If i sound like a proud to. Of course i am but i have to admit to some reflected glory shining back on me as it does of all of his family and friends as much as i don't offer the information due to people thinking i'm lying showing off. I love to be asked. What my dust i revel in telling his stories recounting his claims to fame. He wants dance with charlie chaplin and sang with the beatles yuna although not at the same time. And it's the same for everyone knows him so when the call comes for him to coordinate fights between the angels will. I look back with regret. And say i wish my dad was a milkman. Now because my dad is a stunt. Sounds like your daddy's superman. Jackie wonderful wonderful story and we will talk more about that very soon and would also find out more about you but before we do. Let's have a quick introduction to the podcast you're listening to storytelling with pock. The podcast designed to shoot the par stories in life and business stories. Connect us on a deeper level. Which is why we'll be sharing chatting. Avoid and feeling the impact they have on every one of us. Your host steph note. He's the founder of creations. And we work with your business to define a clear consistent. Relevant brand which stands light from the crowd. We use that brand to create content. That makes your audience. Think feel until action visit putt creations dot com to find more before you do dat hook you as a folks like you have a lot to say but he died of domitian the confidence or the forty to say it not to worry a wonderful guest for today. Jackie code and you just heard will give you the power to speak. Jackie the stages. Y'all's tell us about yourself. Well that's a big question. Oh i started back in. When i left school in fact i wanted to be an actor when i was when i was young i. I spent a lot of my time as a child in the playground. With my friends making up stories making plays and then we would perform at the end of the week on friday. But nobody else did this. It was just me it was you know all i would cajole of my friends into coming along this journey with me and so when i got to about sixteen and went to the careers officer and said i wanted to be an actor. I that's why i want today. And the career. I was gobsmacked Careers teacher just went really do you do you. Do you. belong to drama groups. Do you touch the theater. No i'd grown up on a council estate in north london. It wasn't a of what was around me and she said no. You don't want to be an actress. She said if he wanted to be an actor you lived. I am breathe the theater. What else can you do. And i kind of went. Oh not bad art and that was. I ended up at our school. Which i love had no regrets. I went onto deep fashion and textile design and worked as a fashion designer for about five years in the in the west end but really it was kind of the rag trade end. I was kind of sent off to copy other people's designs design designs and then reproduce them So very very bored with that. But somebody that i had been college ways And we did. Fashion together was working for the royal shakespeare company at the barbican in london and she was western wardrobe department and got me some part time work as a dresser so i was quite happily then as soon as i walked through the doors i thought. Wow this is. This is where i belong this. You know to be in a in a rehearsal room with actors and directors and not just any actors and directors. Why p to hold on and trevor non and just an amazing actors. Judi dench address. Judi dench Just was incredible but he was standing there in the wings. Listening to the actors on stage. I just saw this. This is i can do that can do that. And i one interaction with an active. I was dressing and he had.

Storytelling with Puck
"goddard" Discussed on Storytelling with Puck
"Hello and welcome to the storytelling with pulled cost. We will as always start with a story a couple of years ago. I was starting a new term. It's a drama tutor in local center. My new recruit for around seven years old and as usual. I began the session by asking each child. Tailgate grew a little bit about themselves. Tell me about your family. Brothers sisters pets. What does that do for living. That kind of thing out came the normal stories. Younger brother very annoying cat with three legs. Could jake that is a milkman. Then i got to make an my dad's the stomped man. She said it was the most normal thing in the world. My stomach jumped is not normal at all. I looked at her incredulously. Hardly able to form the words. But but my dad's stump man. I said maniacally pointing to myself and suddenly also feeling seven years old. It was the first time i'd ever heard anyone else say that i was so accelerated. Make an and the other children looked at me as mad on news at seven years old. He had no idea what that really meant weeks. Maybe months without a father around and then not being able to tell friends what he was doing because they think he will either lying showing off as what is the fact that his job was to get beaten up by strangers and full of very high things. My father had been a stump ham for as long as i can remember but i don't think i really understood what that entailed until i was at least nine or ten. It's not the kind of job that encourages a take your daughter to work day. Although hd two i had visited the set of the sixties tv series saint until romo's knee. I wish i could remember that. I knew dad was on the telly but generally the show he did to iran too late for me to watch and if i was allowed he was newly doubling for an actress. Oh disguised lush was very normal for me and my youngest sister. We lived in a tower block on an estate in north london. Which back in the sixties and seventies was very safe and enjoyable place to be. We went to school and nobody was bothered by what out dad. Debriefing why would they. We looked normal. Wasn't normal however for superman to travel up in the left now. He couldn't really fly to the top floor of our block. Christopher reeve a little known american actor had been chosen to play superman in one of the very first superhero movies superman. The movie being shot a crime. Which judy as the reason for his visit was that just days previously. My dad had had an accident whilst rehearsing a flying scene for the film it was january. The seven nineteen seventy eight. And i was thirteen. I remember the day because it was my dad's birthday. I came in from playing out and was met and my aunt which was very which was unusual because my mom was always that was fine but in hospital and my mom was with him. He was the second unit director on the film in charge of the flying unit. He'd been rehearsing a scene. Where burglar confronted by superman falls from the side of a skyscraper any seen plummeting towards the street below illusion created by the act of being pulled. Horizontally a wires towards the screen behind showing the street. The police system of wires were around twenty feet above the ground. A runway of kabul boxes stacked three boxes high placed below for safety. Apparently cocoa boxes offer safe landing the crush matz. Who knew that was in the harness for the who am when asked if he needed box all the way to the screen. It said no as he would stop fifteen feet from this big mistake. He was pulled t fall and too fast and a bit like when a zip wire reaches the end of the run with a bump in the swing and then swings out violently. He hit the screen and snap the wire. He hit the ground missing lebron of boxes he spent two days in hospital once they had established heat not broken his neck justice cheekbone. He was discharged and hence the visit from the big man. My mom says oh you could see through the opaque glass window in the front door when he arrived with was the silhouette of a giant. Chris was six foot four. He stayed for a cup of tea and then his driver took him back to london. Unfortunately i was at school. And so mr visit. I wonder what he made little flat. Not exactly hollywood two worlds collide looking back. I don't remember being really worried about what my dad. My dad did on a day to day basis. He had an accident up to this point and breaking a leg on star wars movie. A years later hasn't had another. The reason for that is he is safe. Stunt ran a paradox. I know he works the stunts out meticulously so as not to put himself or any other person in danger for the sake of shot. My mom is often asked if she worries while he's working apparently. She says he doesn't tell her what he's doing until he's done it. Which helps to me. He was is invincible. And so the accident was a bit of a shock but despite a swollen face and black is back on his feet onto the next. The film escaped within within days. We occasionally got to spend time away on location with escaped fina filmed in greece. One of those rare occasions. It was the time away from home. That felt more of an issue. He started traveling for work around. Nineteen seventy and. Even though. I was very young. I remember missing him terribly. I think nilsson's without you to myself as a played out. And i will always remember the christmas morning. He arrived back unexpectedly from abroad. And my mom obviously with prior knowledge. Got me to open the door to him. I was so happy and excited to happen. You obscene missed us just as much. It wasn't an easy choice. He had always been a dedicated family man so either returned to engineering in the factory. He started at old continue to build on a career. He enjoyed afforded a certain luxuries. I was the first in my circle of friends to fly broad for holiday. It was the sacrifice he he had to make. I know it was hard for my mom. She hadn't signed up for this. She was fourteen sixteen when they started courting and she had two children to bring up while he could be away for months at a time. My sister-in-law grew up and formed relationships outside about tight family unit but she had take and very successfully did keep the half pug fis burning while awaiting his return in one thousand nine hundred ninety three when he was in australia. Stunt coordinator coordinating the three musketeers. She organize my wedding. It was touching with heat. Make it back in time to give me away. And i remember saying that i wouldn't get married without him. I was insistent having that. I've been on sets within. He works hard. And when you're in that creative bubble with people relying on you. It's hard to leave. He set himself. The show must go on. However in certain circumstances theory's always someone that can step in and save thankfully. My show went on despite the precarious nature of a film career data. Become one of the top stunt coordinators in the world is being coordinator for doppler sevens living daylights and and robin hood prince of thieves among many others. It's bad for latigo up sharing room with eight siblings. His bed with the windowsill camacho for the time. Being a great fan of school he left a fifteen got a job in a local factory where he became a fine limited engineer stood around the wood burner drinking tea from a tin mug one day and an eight in the pit of his stomach. He made the decision to quit. That must be more to life than this. At night. He went home and armed with a copy of the evening standard decided to change his life..

Unreserved Wine Talk
"goddard" Discussed on Unreserved Wine Talk
"Love. It mickey this has been fabulous. Is there anything that we haven't covered that you'd like to mention as we wrap up. Yeah i guess. I just wanted to say like you know like i was talking earlier about intimidated by whine by you. Know if anyone takes anything away from my writing and what. I have to say about wine. It's that really should be fun. And if you're intimidated by it experience as much as you can and try and find ways to explore in a comfortable setting. Find a wine bar or weinstock that you trust. Get to know the person who's selling you wine. And if i give them feedback on what. You've enjoyed that they recommended for you. Then they're gonna be able to do a much better job recommending You next time. So it's really good to have one place always while you're of starting out good to have one place or one person that you trust to make recommendations and don't be afraid of being wrong. I actually i love being wrong because it's an opportunity to learn something new so that might come from a getting a fact wrong or might come from me saying oh i hate veon. Yea i've never liked a line moved from van and someone gives me That's delicious and i'm like okay. Cool like some good unia there. I i get it you know. It's always an opportunity to learn and to grow. Yeah great attitude really well done. And where can we find you online nikki. You can find me on instagram at instinctive drinking okay. Great nice handle instictive drinking all right. Thank you so much. Nikki out so appreciative of the time you spent here chatting with us just a great conversation. Lots of great stories and tips. So thank you so much and look forward to chatting with you again in the future. Take care bye outside. Well there you have it. I hope you enjoyed our second. Chat with nikki goddard. Here are my top. Take number one. Nikki gave us an excellent overview on why fruit wines are becoming so popular now and how they differ from grape based wines. She's made me really thirsty to seek out these wines. More often to elsa thought she did a great job explaining the pet nat style of bubbly. And why it's so trendy. I'm adding those to my list as well and three. Finally she sparked my interest in slovenian wines in even though i've tried several of them and liked him immensely and looking forward to drinking more of them and experimenting with some different food pairings in the show notes. You'll find a full transcript of our conversation how you can join me in a free online wine and food pairing class links to both of my books and where you can find me on zoom instagram facebook and youtube video every wednesday at seven pm. That's all in the show notes at natalie maclean dot com forward slash one. Four one you won't want to miss next week. When we chat about luxury wine marketing and which wines really are worth the splurge with robert veer nick and peter young co hosts of the x. chateau podcast that features insights analysis and perspectives on news and trends in the wine industry beyond winemaking. They join us from their homes in san francisco. In the meantime go back. Take a listen. I chat about orange natural winds with an sperling. I'll share a short clip with you now to wet your appetite. That's really what i'd like to happen with. Orange lines as lots of small batches and lots of engagement at a really foodie level. Rate there with your plate of whatever you know your local fresh vegetables ends locally raised meats inc like and to really start thinking about winemakers as farmers and as people that are making their meals more interesting absolutely and you refer to yourself as a winegrower. They exactly yeah engagement with consumer. I think that we have some barriers to that with a big organization like the cbo distributing our wines and making it more distance on consumers insurance more convenient for everyone but at the same time we want to engage in realize that our wine and our food are coming from our.

Unreserved Wine Talk
"goddard" Discussed on Unreserved Wine Talk
"When you say oh well. People are making wine with the same kind of intention and flavor profile of the beer. That i like and i think that's a much better way to bring people into the category. That's true. my partner miles usually gets a craft beer. I gave him a glass of orange wine. He really liked it. I was smelling the beer and the orange wine and they had similarities. You've got to wines that you want to taste with us. Yeah the to wines. That i have actually tied into topics we were just discussing. The first line is a cd. Pino just griego from guy in greece. Gobert us leukaemia. The winery that. I've stayed at times. I was there and they have antastic food. While they pair with ryan's it's an orange line beautiful color. This is really i. The other one is a fruit wine. This is this is wine. Blend of apples. Npr from subject to change binary right here in california thirst to learn about wine. D love stories about wonderfully obsessive people. Ponting lee beautiful places and amusingly awkward social situations. Oh that's the blend here on the unreserved. Wine talk podcast. i'm your host. Natalie maclean and each week i share with you unfiltered conversations with celebrities in the world as well as confessions from my own tipsy journey as i write my third book on this subject. I'm so glad you're here now. Pass that bottle please. and let's get started. Welcome to episode one hundred forty one. Why are fruit wines. Becoming more popular. And how do they differ from grape based wines what is a pet nat style of wine and which ones should you dry and what our wines from slovenia like and which foods pair best with them. You're going to get all of those answers. Plus more wine tips in the second part of our chat with nikki. God art a wine writer and educator based in oakland california. You don't need to have listened part one from last week. i. I hope you'll go back if you missed it after you finish this one. In the show notes you'll find a full transcript of our conversation links to both of my books. How you can join me in a free online wine and food pairing class and where you can find me on zoom instagram. Facebook and youtube live video every wednesday at seven pm. That's all in the show notes at natalie maclean dot com forward slash one four one now on a personal note before we dive into the show. I've listened to audio books for years. As i prefer it to reading physical book. I've always felt guilty. Like i really wasn't reading and like what. Is that audio book shane. However i've just heard or i heard did not read about this. That audiobooks stimulate the brain equally with that of reading physical books and for me. Audiobooks have some advantages over those physical relics the intimacy and emotion. The human voice often the authors that lights up the theater of my mind and while we're on this subject a mentioned that my first book red white and drunk all over is available as an audio book from audible. I tunes and apple books. My second book unquenchable isn't yet. But i think the book will speak to you. If you drink enough wine. Okay on with the show. Now you also write about fruit wines or you've written a really great article for jancis robinson on fruit wines and those would be winds that are made from fruit other than grapes like you mentioned apples pear. So why are fruit wines. Gaining in popularity do think focus. Article was actually lended fruit with grapes. So why and other fruit there are a lot in. It's holster mantilla. Yeah so you're not all knows one of the things that i struggled with Aiding article because there's not one cohesive term that covers the whole category of the terms that people are using refer to production methods. That don't fit every wine. It's like this and you can't even really say why not line. So i started seeing his category here about three years ago and i thought it was kind of like a one off. I think the first one i tried was from art and science in oregon. And it was gruner. Valdenor grapes and apples and it was just unlike anything i'd ever tasted before so we'll oh i wanna find more of these and then i didn't see any and just like the early part of this year. I started seeing that everywhere and the big natural line seen here in the bay area and some winemakers that i really like were starting to release these co ferments in his interesting. Where is this coming from. And i dug into it. And i realized okay. This is a pretty new thing like most of the time when you see like a new wine tran like or you back. And you're like oh the seems new but it's not doing it for thousands of years but it doesn't seem like anyone who's really doing these commercial level until about ten years ago and it hasn't really become more common until the last three years and really the last one year and so. I was writing an article for different prosecution about trends in wine and i started researching the fruit wines for that and the more i research into the morning. I think story here. So i started talking to producers in. Were found out. Was that the inspiration for this. Was across the board like very optimistic and hopeful attitude where everyone had different reasons. But they're all making these wines to kind of make. Lemonade out of lemons. So we had a winemaker in the valley who lost a lot of his crop to frost inhale and to face. Supplemented is grapes with apple's hairs. Because they're more hardy resistant to frost disease figure skins than you're actually out and then in california so during that they're also more resistant to smoke team so we had winemakers who lost a lot of their crop and they decided to use other types of fruit to suffer What little grapes. They did have in there. Were some other producers. Who were doing out of spirit of collaboration with their friends like. Hey i'm making y. My friend is making cider. Let's get together and see what we can come up with. Which i think is just a really cool thing about the natural line movement that it is so collaborative and it's such a community. I think a lot more than you see in mainstream wine with bigger brands. and.

Unreserved Wine Talk
"goddard" Discussed on Unreserved Wine Talk
"That could be a good thing sometimes. Yeah oxidation that happens when wine is exposed to air so i can happen during the winemaking process. If you use open fermenters or your aging barrels which are porous winemakers have the ability to control. How much oxygen gets into the wine during winemaking and it can also happen if linus stored incorrectly. If you have a bad cork and air gets into the wine wallets stored wine can end up being oxidized. When that's not a style wine. It was supposed to be so oxidation and gives this really like nutty Savory amami character to wines. And i drink a lot of intentionally oxidized wines. I absolutely love them on the white wines from the jura transcripts and certain styles of sherry. I just think ads like this really savory satisfying character. When it's done correctly yes are orange wines kind of like that. Are they a little bit more. Oxidized can be but it's not a heart of the yeah. Yeah okay. that's interesting. Yeah it's definitely a taste even like aid champagne as it ages it becomes sort of nutty and all wines sort of slowly oxidized as they age so again. It's a matter of taste in a lot of these things. Yeah so let's talk about just a couple of wine regions that we should know about that are lesser known that we should either be trying the winds or visiting the region's maybe you can talk about one or two of those that come to mind. My absolute favorite is greece go berta in slovenia which is nearly italian border by freely similar. Actually when you go to either of those regions in your driving around visiting wineries if you're going from one winery in selena to another winery in selena you might drive through italy for a bit on the way okay. So i've been to slovenia twice and both times. I went to greece berta. Because when i first started learning about eastern european wine act in i would say maybe two thousand ten thousand eleven. I got really excited about all the slovenian wine that is trying and it really had all of the characteristics that i look for in wines. There's a lot of orange lines which i drink. Probably more orrin white wine on his. I find it really refreshing it has it's like salinity it has an earthy nece it's more substantial and white wine but it's refreshing and just for those who might not be familiar orange kind of i should have defined this earlier but skin fermented like they leave the skins on longer than you would for white wine so it gets that tint but also some of the savory characteristics from the skin contact yeah and it gets them tannin as well because let's routine Whine doesn't usually ten in because there's nothing contact so yeah i feel like orange lines are great for food especially if you're having a meal that you have a lot of different dishes it kind of goes with everything it's substantial enough to pair with heavier food and it's got enough acidity brightness lighter food so i was really drawn in by the orange lines. And by some of the interesting native varieties they have mayor like And free lonzo. And the more i learned about selena lines the more i just like dying to go region and then in twenty thirteen. I was going on a trip to italy as a map and i was like. Oh unions right. There should stop by and check the place out and he just blew my mind. Everything about it was just perfect. It was very unspoiled. It's an absolutely beautiful country and there's not really visible impact of tourism especially from americans. I think in the navy two weeks spent their talk to maybe reach the tourists from neighboring countries. So you don't really see like a chain restaurants. Everyone has their own gardens. Where they grow like will the produce and they have their own cow. They make their own cheese. And everything is just like the freshest best ingredients you've ever had last time. I got home from slovenia. You're like my god. We need to like learn how to cook slovenian food. Rehome we were like lenient footage is like really good ingredients like we need to get a cow get cow. It's like a settled recreate. Because it's not really the recipes that are unique. It's more just everything being so ration by brennan full of life in the winds are that way to the lines here so beautifully with food so a few years later when i was going back to your up i was like okay. I need to spend more time in this country. And i don't think i've ever had a bad lying or a dish from slovenia. I think everyone should know there and message me if you want to have all of them. Excellent thanks that sounds great. I gotta put that one on my list. I actually have been there. Is there one more region you would like to highlight sure. So i haven't been to this one yet. A workshop rainy in the law rally is a pretty unknown region. They make white wine from a single grape called on j believe is a descendant of and minds are just like everything. I like about white wine. It's very similar to shannon block in that it's kind of textural and wadey but with really vibrant acidity and and slight apple dipped in honey flavour and a lot of mentality and it's really affordable but great wine because nobody knows about it so if you like to drink louvre arsov in the air or even white burgundy wine you can get a really good one for twenty bucks and how do you spell that grape r. o. m. o. r. a. n. d. i n. I think okay great. It didn't realize this would be a spelling interview right down sixty points because people just even if it's close at assurance find people will wonder what that great west the look for it for sure. Yeah greenwich you haven't it. I hope you enjoy my chap. Nikki got here my top takeaways number one i love nikki's fresh take on how some wine faults may actually be desirable and can even improve the taste of wine or at least part of its character rather than a flaw to l. selector story about tasting domain dhlamini county as a way of showing just how much our expectations and knowledge of wine influences our taste perception of it and three. I have to thank nikki. Finally debunking those super annoying studies that say wine. Experts are easily fooled when the methodology behind the studies as misleading as the click bait headlines yet. I'm not biased. At all in that kind of conclusion in the show notes you'll find a full transcript of our conversation how you can join me a free online food and wine pairing class links to both of my books where you can find me on zoom insta- facebook and youtube video every wednesday seven pm including tonight. That's all in the show notes at natalie maclean dot com forward slash one four zero. You won't want to miss next week when we continue our conversation with nikki and in the meantime if you missed episode seventy go back and take a listen. I chat with winemaker. John williams from california's frog's leap winery about dry farming and dry humor..

Unreserved Wine Talk
"goddard" Discussed on Unreserved Wine Talk
"He puts the glass in front of me. I i pick it up. I smell it. Stop talking and i take it fully crap. This is the best one. I've ever tasted in my entire life and our undergoes built. Drink that too fast. It's drc lettuce drc for those who might know demand Kanzi is considered by many to be a great line in the world. It's burgundy producer hundreds of dollars a bottle or more pinot noir. Yeah thousands of dollars and then sierra knows that it's drc at that point and she takes set and she said. I mean it's good but it's not like life changing. That's what a great way to illustrate it. Yeah our pilots were identical. I know that if she had had seem experience that i did of trying it without knowing what it was she would have felt the same way i did. Do you have a thirst to learn about wine. Love stories about wonderfully obsessive people. Ponting lee beautiful places and amusingly awkward social situations. Oh that's the blend here on the unreserved wine. Talk podcast i'm your host natalie maclean and each week i share with you unfiltered conversations with celebrities in the wine world as well as confessions from my own tipsy journey as i write my third book on this subject. I'm so glad you're here now. Pass me that bottle please. and let's get started. Welcome to episode one hundred forty. When can wine faults actually improve the taste of wine as learning about wine decrease your enjoyment of it and can wine experts really distinguish between different types of wine. You'll get those answers and more wine tips. My chat with nikki guttered a wine writer and educator based in oakland california in the show notes you'll find a full transcript of our conversation links to both of my books how you can join me a free online wine and food pairing class and where you can find me on zoom into facebook and youtube. Live video every wednesday at seven. Pm that's all in the show notes at natalie maclean dot com forward slash one four zero now on a personal note before we dive into the show so a friend sent me an article about a woman who is as obsessed as i am with. The canadian designed flu vogue shoes. Each one is an art piece of whimsey. I love them. I have more pairs than willing to admit to in the piece. The woman says that she's worn flat slippers for the past year due to the pandemic so she was really excited to put on her shoes as things started to open up again but horrors. Her shoes no longer fit. Either feet had grown or become so used to the flats so now her beloved flu logs were too tight on. Oh as her soulmate mate. I felt her pain and her hanoch immediately. I put on a pair of my own and wore them around the house until my breathing. Slow down a lot of things have changed during the lockdown and while this may be yet another story of bourgeois stress. I do think it's the little pockets of pleasure that make getting back to normal. I just used air quotes there exciting and ask that woman. I need to find her because her shoe size is the same as mine. I am here to help you my dear okay on with the show. Our guest nikki. Good is a wine writer. And educator based in oakland california. She's written for jancis robinson dot com delectable wine folly spruce heats liquor dot com edible east bay and many more she holds a w set diploma and previously co owned the barrel room a wine bar in san francisco and she fell in love with wine while studying textiles and apparel at cornell university and particularly those winds of the finger lakes were her introduction to everything. Wine so nicky. Welcome so pleased that you're here with us thank you. It's great to be here also so Let's start with a couple of stories. You were sharing with me before we got going here you previously had lots of different interesting jobs in positions related to wine but one time you are giving a recommendation. I think it was in a wine store that turned out to be a little too perfect in terms of which one you recommend what was that. Yes so i had a customer command. And she was describing the types of wine that she liked to drink and her pilot was really similar to mine. I drink a lot of natural line. I drink a lot of lightning. In a juicy chile reds. And so she comes in and she's describing. You know exactly that really excited. I'm like oh my god you have to try this wine. It's like a super low alcohol zinfandel from brock sellers. Like my favorite producer in california. And i'm just going on and on about the wine and she's like yeah. The white meager my boyfriend's. I've had that great. What are the odds. Oh my goodness but guess it makes sense that that winemakers girlfriend would like that kind of wine. Yeah well they are certainly a match at least pallet wise. Dicenta buying the wider. Did you point to another one. I would think she's got enough stock at home that way. Yeah i don't remember what you instead but it was probably something pretty similar. That's great now. You were also working with wine dot com online and answering customer questions and help you got another unusual requests there. What was that. Those are very entertaining job on time because we get all sorts of questions from customers. A lot of them were you. Can you help me choose line. Sometimes they would be a little more unusual and so one day. I was chatting with a college student. Who he said that he'd been learning about ancient mummification processes and was learning about how they used home line to embalm corpses and he online commerce. Tom why onto up like with the ceo. Palm tree got battering. And so as a do you have anything that is somewhat similar to that so i could processes closely as possible and we ended up. Having this to our conversation was almost like sometimes like being a bartender. You know you end up. Being more narrow was really long conversation with this kid about his interest in saudi yang death and like host best practices. And you know it's like well we don't have any palm-lined but maybe read retsina would be a good option. Yeah it's like. The greek wine made with pine resin. And i think he ended up buying it. But then we have this discussion about how he was feeling insecure because he had this obsession with death judging him for it and i just walked away from the chattanooga. I really hope that was for a school assignment. And not. Not as leery of yeah. That is amazing. I'm sure you've got all types of calls and questions at the one more that you'd mentioned you were tasting wine with friends or you're giving them a blind tasting. What happened with that. And if you're familiar with this study. That often gets circulated around the internet to the university. Of gordo by frederick rochet and there's always articles that say oh like wine. Experts can't even tell the difference between red and white wine if you put food coloring in the white wine so it bothered me because that would pop up every couple of years in really popular publications and i felt like it was really doing everyone a disservice because it's trying to get people to say like a wine tasting is not.

John Bachelor
NASA Returns Hubble Space Telescope to Science Operations
"Your generosity towards Bob's behind the Black during fundraising July is extremely appreciated. However, we go to one of Bob's four books, his biography of the Universe and Amir Hubble. Because Bob can help us understand the latest. We know of the patch or fix or remedy offered for hubba. Bob, Can you offer us a moment to believe that Hubble can be well again? Uh, no. I can tell you what's happening right now. But until it's done, we have no idea. NASA as now. This is actually engineers Goddard Space Flight Center in a Space Telescope Science institute that operate Hubble. They have now think they have determined exactly what caused the computer problem that shut the telescope down on June 13th more than a month ago, and they think it's a component in what in their science, instrument command and data handling unit that's computer, essentially And it's what they call the power control unit. Basically, think of the power supply unit and your desktop computer, which you can normally just take out and replace. But in this case, they can't do that. They have a backup for it, but it's part of a backup for the whole computer. Essentially, at least this whole command and data handling unit. And so they need to switch more than just the power control unit. Things may need to switch several units at once, and that's a complicated procedure. They've done a complete simulated test of that switch. On the ground successfully. They actually did a similar switch on Hubble back in, Oh, eight, and so whoever they and they have now begun began on Thursday, the 15th of July. They began that switch on the telescope. It's going to take several days to complete it, and then they once they completed they will do some additional tests, hopefully to make sure everything's working. And then put the telescope back an operation Now one will the test this switch work? We don't know until they've got it, too. Even if this does work, be prepared, be recognized that the telescope will no longer have backups to this computer computer data handling unit. So that

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
NASA Reports Trouble With Hubble Space Telescope
"Hubble space telescope has been hit with computer trouble with all astronomical viewing halted did the russians hacking maybe put the orbiting observatory has been idle since sunday when the nineteen eighties era computer that controls the science instruments shutdown possibly because of a bad memory board flight controllers at nasa goddard. Space flight center in maryland tried to restart the computer on monday. But the same thing happened. Oh there now to switch to a backup memory unit. If that works the telescope will be tested for a day before the science instruments are turned back on. observations can resume for now. The cameras and other instruments are in a so-called safe mode.

Innovation Now
NASA Uses 3D Printing to Advance Nanotechnology
"Sultana and her team at nasa's goddard space flight center or working on advancing technology capable of sensing minute concentrations of gases and vapour as well as measuring pressure and temperature and transmitting that data via a wireless antenna. Nanno sensors are known to be highly sensitive and laurie source. However the fabrication process is very complex and lebron intensive we try to address these issues by using an automated Three d. printing process it offset printing process developed by our collaborator at northeastern university. The printing process applies nanomaterials layer by layer to create tiny sensors. A suite of sensors could be printed on one platform and scientists could then use these devices smaller than a cell phone to create sensors that monitor astronaut or give us information about the environment on planetary bodies

Red, Blue, and Brady
Fighting for Expanded Brady Background Checks
"Everybody to another episode of red blue and brady now brought to you on fridays as always. I'm your host dj. And i'm a co host kelly. We may have released a unfortunately we are still working from home. I for one am greeting you from increasingly cluttered corner my apartment. I refuse to show on camera. Kelly where are you exactly. It looks fancy. it looks nice I'm recording from the illustrious. Dining room cable recording studios. It's very exclusive. I was going to say. I haven't gotten an invite so. Yeah you know. It's pretty elite recording studio. We buy got a couple of grammy's nobody'll dr fauci is the only one who's allowed to approve gas to tant basically. Yeah while i am very excited to talk. Today's gas Unfortunately also not in person who wants upon a time. I actually got to do a four hour in person interview it if you can imagine a time where such a thing was actually physically possible. If i try really hard. I think i can but it is pretty unmasked more right now right. It feels like a completely different life but luckily at least digitally we get to talk with colin goddard christian heine chris brown and stephanie abrams. All of whom are these great gun. Violence prevention advocates and in particular colin christian and stephan have something in common but i think our listeners may not expect. And you're not gonna tell us. I am absolutely not gonna tell you they have to listen. How dare i jerk. Yes we're going to their butt together. Just some hands were discussing the passage of hr eight and fourteen forty six in the us house of representatives. And we're gonna tackle questions like what are these bills. What do they do. And what is even the point of a background check anyway. Yeah and i know. Some of our listeners are with from day one and so they may be like. Oh i totally know about all these bills and background checks which is awesome. But i think with this episode even if you know all the background checks needs bills it's still going to be really eliminating compensation so definitely station. Hi everyone on. Chris brown on the president's of brady. Hey everyone my name. is stephanie. Abrams i am the executive council member of team enough as well as a a worker debris offices the team fellow when i'm also the national chapter coordinator years well so i wear a lot hats team enough but i love the voice of the youth and i think it's very important especially right now under current political climate ear. I'm christian heine vice-president policy your brady and then call in our loan on brady person on this podcast but you. You were once brady. He's brady at heart. You can say. I know once your winter you're never out island is calling goddard. I'm a survivor. Two thousand seven shootings. Virginia tech former team brady member and a gun of prevention advocate. Thank you so much for all. You've done any work. Amazing job now to and water access right so it's cool really cool job. I feel like in a lot of ways. Similar to engaging a constituency in america that feels like. They've been ignored that their voices aren't being heard. And you know working alongside them to fight to make change. So it's in a of ways very similar to the work at brady and take a lot of the learnings and experiences in carrying it forward and look at the whole workout station in there. Is that a peleton. You gotta pelivan peleton brutal used a mirror now mayor much come see me. I got the. Let's get peleton. Let's go man. You're you're peddling these things. Let's all right. We gotta we can look at each other track record and motivating each other awesome about your pilots on obsession christian concerns me a little bit. You're peleton pusher and it's concerning ballots today so. Let's talking about biking talking about bills. Chris just to start us off. Can you even break down at a very basic level would brady background. Check is sure so the radi background check system was put into effect about twenty seven years ago and a few days and change and when it was i adopted it was in response to actually the nineteen sixty eight gun control act which required background checks to be conducted so this is something that already was part of the federal law that there is no mechanism to ensure that there was real recordkeeping or even technology to make sure that could happen in the brady law. Put into effect this apparatus or sought to to ensure that every federally licensed firearms dealer or f. f. l. was required by law to conduct a background check and use technology that was adopted by the government to conduct that check and not just requires a look at a database that includes records criminal history at cetera about prohibited

Pray the Word with David Platt
A God Who Hears Our Cries (Exodus 2:24-25)
"Exodus chapter two versus twenty four and twenty five and god heard their groaning in god remembered his covenant with abraham with isaac and with jacob god saw the people of israel and god knew what a beautiful passage of scripture at the end of exodus chapter one and to end the horrible picture of oppression and slavery that we prayed through in exodus chapter one even in light of those realities in the world around us today but to see these words as the people of god are crying out to god for the bible to say god heard their groaning and god remembered his covenant. Now obviously that doesn't mean that god had forgotten his covenant with them. god doesn't forget he's omniscient. he's all knowing it is not in his capacity. He does not forget anything but the picture here is god saying to his people. I know the promise i've made to you. And i will be faithful to that. Promise to mike covenant. With abraham with isaac and with jacob goddard saw the people of israel even that phrase like in their suffering god was not distant from them. God was intimately aware of what they were walking through. These are the last three words an extra chapter two. And god knew so as you read these words as you hear them. I want you to just let them soak into your heart. As part of the people of god and a world where groening and crying out to god is a reality. I think specifically about one family that i know who has been through such a hard time family member after fan after number who has been in the hospital with covid and some who have died and its spin such a hard road and so to read these words and to realize god. Here's our groaning and god is faithful to his promises to preserve stood up. Hold us to love us to come for us to give us peace to bring us through ultimately god sees us and god knows what a picture i just you to feel that. I don't know what you're walking through in your life right now. I'm guessing some many of you. Who are listening to this or walking through hard times. And i just want to remind you for all who have trusted in jesus for all who know god god. Here's your groaning hears your cries to him. I think about yesterday in my time with the lord just crying out in some different ways to god and just knowing he years me knowing that he's listening to and i can cast my cares on god knowing that he cares for me. We're talking about god. Not just anybody. God i can cast my cares on god to know that. He the on nisar sovereign ruler of the universe. Here's me and is faithful to me. And has made promises to me that he will keep the god sees me and god knows me and he knows what i'm walking through. He knows you knows what you're walking through hears your cries and he will be faithful to every single one of his promises to you. So i prayed this. Oh god i pray. Excess to twenty four and twenty five over every single person listening right now. Who knows you who has been reconciled to you. The blood of jesus who is your son or your daughter. Who's in your family. Who knows you as father god. We praise for hearing are groaning for hearing our cries to you

Innovation Now
Glenn Jackson on Optical Communications
"Today. Sending a map of mars to earth might take nine years with current radio systems but as little as nine weeks with laser. Communications here's glen. Jackson payload manager for the laser communications relay demo had nasr's goddard space flight center to explain why optical communication systems are more efficient. The wavelength of light is much smaller than the wavelength of radio frequencies and the small the wavelengths the more information you can condense in a small period of time so we get greater bandwidth with optical communication as the wavelength get smaller. This technology would allow us to move. Large amounts of data and high definition video in shorter amounts of time we could communicate with rovers or astronauts on mars. Actually seeing and hearing more of their adventures on the red planet and laser communication systems on earth could provide high bandwidth in remote areas bridging the digital divide and bringing high speed communications to the world for innovation. Now i'm jennifer pulling

WTMJ 620
"goddard" Discussed on WTMJ 620
"The middle through the a gaps and the pressure of the middle changes what you want to do both in the passing game of the running game. Our coverage of Packers playoff football begins at noon on Saturday with opening drive. Five day forecast rain snow Mix continues overnight but a half inch of slush and they're walking along the lakefront 1 to 2 of me. Mr Nicely. Three inch moans Well, inland Road should be wet in the morning as temperatures around freezing will stay cloudy with drizzle and flurries through today. On Friday, a high of around 36 flurries on Saturday temperature of 35 30 on Sunday with some light snow. Maybe a dusting in Monday some sunshine and 31. I mean, you're all just Brian Goddard, With Storm forecasting WTMJ. In sports. Two NFL head coaching vacancies filled the jack wires have hired Urban Meyer The New York Jets have hired former 40 Niners defensive coordinator Robert Sala in Bucks News. They'll be back in action tonight against Luca Don Church and the Mavericks. Our coverage begins at six o'clock tip off from Pfizer Forum set 1st 6 30. I'm Kevin Wells, NewsRadio wtmj. Hi there. Good evening. Welcome to the Jim Bohannon Show from Westwood one radio. We wouldn't want a 6650, Jimbo when 86650546 to 6. Online you're fighting Jimbo hadn't showed dot com. You.

Innovation Now
Synergy effect of science and technology policies on innovation
"The relationship between science and technology is one of synergy. Collaboration that helps our understanding of science. Change this is innovation now bringing you stories behind the ideas that shape our future really osama is a research astrophysicist at nasa goddard space flight center. She depends on technologies to help her understand the process that creates the auroras or northern lights are ways that vasquez specifically to the siamese as science is also discovered that i can meet some other. For example cds that are devices recieving reinvented for astronomers to be able to look saw. Dallas is much much better ways they wish in is inside me. Is that the images. We use are also basic knowledge but they've also The way they hire world communicates exchange information as technology evolves. So does the way we do science and former really a- that only makes new discoveries. Even better i remember i somehow every time i kind of excited again like a little kid reminds us all that reduce looted art one sex origin. And that's a good thing

Get Up!
Metcalf, Wilson lead Seahawks over Eagles 23-17
"Hall of fame coach of michigan state among our guests today and our football crew is ready to go grouse. Jeff and greg ready to talk about last night's monday night meeting between seattle and philadelphia as we get thing rolling here right now seahawks on the road carson wentz and the eagles the center of so much discussion opening drive of the game. Could they silence some of the critics No they could not this. When i throw richard. Rogers that's incomplete. Next point went looking for greg ward. Eagles would go three and out to start this game without seattle. Having to make a tackle next eagle drive third nate wentz jalen rager went for four phillies first to drive. Second quarter no score. Second and fourteen went on the sideline jalen hurts in the game hurts. I snap complete sean. Jeffrey and then wednesday is coming back in and hurts his going to the bench. Someone will have to explain what that was about next. Play third nate whence back to throw wentz going down hard whence hit repeatedly in this game. That's a loss of six eagles. No first downs on their first five drives later in the second still most scored but russell wilson is doing something about that. They came back cab. Fifty two yards down to the one yard. Line metcalfe playing with a chip on his shoulder against the team that passed on him in the draft a couple of years ago. And then setup vis wilson david moore for the touchdown on the corner and the seahawks take a seven. Nothing lead next seattle drive. Its second goal and they can do it on the ground. Chris carson is back and better than ever bullying way into the end zone for a score and seattle a fourteen. Nothing lead with five minutes left in the hand now. Eagles trying to get something going in the red zone. Second and goal final seconds. Wentz dallas guttered. Yes there. On the board three yard touchdown fourteen six extra point. No good to that discord halftime fourth quarter. Now it's seventeen. Nine eagles going forward on a fourth into williams has broken up. Aj right not sit down. Eagles turnover on downs. So seattle gets it. And what do they do with it. You know what they do. Russell de que de que. Oh what a catch up and bringing it down. Ten grabs off hundred seventy seven yards for decay meant catholic field goal twenty two nine ensuing philly drive three chances at score forest down from the twenty one wentz. Goddard nobody home. Second down wentz rager incomplete. They gained six on third down. They go for it on fourth power again. Bear in mind there. Darren by eleven in the game. I don't know what that is picked off. Course in wayne's two hundred fifteen yards six sacks seattle wins twenty three seventeen and they do the black eagle fly

Innovation Now
Meteorite Tea Provides Scientists Information on Solar System
"The golf ball sized rock that appeared coal black against the white antarctic snow would prove to be one of the best preserved media rights of its kind. This is innovation now bringing you stories behind the ideas that shaped our future in the lab at nasr's goddard space flight center. Astrobiologists like danny glavin worked to decode the mysteries. Meteorites might hold we call it making meteorite t so we actually we crush a samples up. There are a little tiny chips about a centimeter. So that we crush into a powder using a mortar and pestle something like the consistency of flour and then we put it in water and steel tube and we heat it to one hundred degrees c. At that point. We take the liquid From the pertinent and we extract it and we analyze it using gas chromatography liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry to try to separate all the individual organic components that are in that meteorite. T four glavin. Meteorites are like history books that fall from the sky and deliver chemical information about the early solar system seems like every meteorite sample that we started we find something unique and different

Innovation Now
Optical communication systems make information available faster
"This is innovation. Now bringing you stories behind the ideas that shape our future today sending a map of Mars to Earth might take nine years with current radio systems, but as little as nine weeks with laser communications. Here's Glen Jackson Payload Manager for the laser communications. Relay Demo had Nasr's Goddard space flight, center to explain why optical communication systems are more efficient. The wavelength of light is much smaller than the wavelength of radio frequencies and the small the wavelengths, the more information you can condense in a small period of time. So we get. Greater Bandwidth with optical communication as the wavelength get smaller this technology would allow us to move large amounts of data and high definition video in shorter amounts of time, we could communicate with rovers or astronauts on Mars actually seeing and hearing more of their adventures on the Red Planet and laser communication systems on earth could provide high bandwidth in remote areas,

Innovation Now
Understanding the Auroras
"Is a research astrophysicist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. She depends on technologies to help her understand the process that creates the Auroras or northern lights are ways that chronology advances specifically to the Siamese. As, science is. Also discovered that I can meet some other for example CDs that are devices recieving reinvented for astronomers to be able to look saw Dallas is much much better ways they wish in is inside me I've been is the Laura the images we use are also basic knowledge, but they've also the way they hire world communicates exchange information as technology evolves. So does the way we do science and former really a- that only makes new discoveries even better I, remember i. Somehow every time I kind of excited again like a little kid. Reminds us all that reduce looted art when sex origin and that's a good thing for innovation. Now, I'm Jennifer Pulley inovation

Innovation Now
NASA Selects Missions to Study Our Sun, Its Effects on Space
"These satellites may come in small packages, but they're going to do big science. This is innovation. Now bringing you stories behind the ideas that shape our future. The Sun generates a vast outpouring of solar particles known as the solar wind, which creates a dynamic system of space radiation. So NASA has selected a new mission to focus directly on the Sun's outer atmosphere, the corona and how it generates solar wind. Here's Nick. Lean vile a research astrophysicist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center to explain the punch mission, the punch mission instead of being one giant mission that launched all at once we're GONNA. have four smaller satellites in you pull apart the different measurements that you're gonNA make him put each one on a different satellite in you paste them back together essentially when you pull the data down on your computer with its four suitcase sized satellites, punch will image and track the solar wind as it leaves the Sun. Because the more we understand space weather and its interaction with earth the more we can mitigate its effects on life and technology

Innovation Now
Pristine Space Rock Offers NASA Scientists Peek at Evolution of Life’s Building Blocks
"The lab at Nasr's Goddard. Space Flight Center Astro. Biologists like Danny Glavin worked to decode the mysteries meteorites might hold we call it making meteorite T. so we actually we crush a samples up there are a little tiny chips about a centimeter so that we crush into a powder using a mortar and pestle something like the consistency of flour and then we put It in water and seal tube, and we heat it to one hundred degrees C at that point we take the liquid from the pertinent and we extract it and we analyze it using gas chromatography liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry to try to separate all the individual organic components that are in that meteorite. T four glavin meteorites are like history books that fall from the sky and deliver chemical information about the early solar system seems like every meteorite sample that we started we find something unique and different and I think that's what I like most about

Innovation Now
Laser Communication: How Shorter Wavelengths Means Greater Bandwidth
"Now bringing you stories behind the ideas that shape our future today sending a map of Mars to Earth might take nine years with current radio systems but as little as nine weeks with laser communications. Here's Glen Jackson Payload Manager. For the laser communications relay demo had Nasr's Goddard Space, Flight Center to explain why optical communication systems are more efficient. The wavelength of light is much smaller than the wavelength of radio frequencies and the small the wavelengths, the more information you can condense in a small period of time. So we get. Greater Bandwidth with optical communication as the wavelength get smaller, this technology would allow us to move large amounts of data and high definition video. In shorter amounts of time, we could communicate with rovers or astronauts on Mars, actually seeing and hearing more of their adventures on the Red Planet and laser communication systems on earth could provide high bandwidth in remote areas,

The Atheist Experience
Atheist Experience with Matt Dillahunty, Nick Fish
"Know if anyone's been following the news But there's been some public health concerns around and You know when we first started looking at this I gotTA GUESS. It's been about a month ago now when. Debbie Kinda came in and said you know we were talking about Corona virus and you know seeing some of the numbers that are coming out of places like Seattle and we're starting to see some events cancelled and you know if we got any questions for people and almost as soon as she brought up we started fielding questions from members people who are planning on attending the conference saying you know. What's the plan is anything changed and So we really started talking seriously about contingencies. In what we were going to do Number one to protect the interests of are in the health and safety of all the people attending our conference rang. But also just I if things were out of our control or there were stay at home. Orders or large gathering vans as we're seeing now You know what we were going to do in the event that something like that happened and so we wanted to plan for every possible outcome. Wanted to make sure that we had something. We could do. Preemptively if we needed to But also that you know if things were taken out of our hands that we could respond appropriately you know. We made a recommendation to the board of directors which mad member in full disclosure. And we said we think this is going to turn into something really big and that it's going to be really hard for us to put on the type of conference type convention that the People in Phoenix expect in that are members should expect that we frankly promised them and that we want to have. We don't want to just have A. We had lots of contingency options we said if we could just do a one day event maybe we could just do everything online or most things online or you know. Let's figure something out but the more we talked about it. The less that seemed like a feasible option For the people that we wanted to put on display kind of you know the local activism that's going on Phoenix In all the hard work that all those activists don over the course of the last few years we think it's really important to highlight that and not being able to have a conference. You know gutted us but at the same time. We don't want people to have to choose between attending our conference putting their lives on the line And so you know we made what was when we made it difficult decision but as the days progressive we tried to kind of nail down details to make sure that we had a a plan. Moving forward Rescheduling for the next year to make the hotel was available for that By the time we spent maybe two or three days just trying to finalize those details things that escalated so far that it was the only decision we could've made and we were fortunate that we were able to make that decision. And you know I think it was the right one. So you're really saying is it was a damn good idea to bring deceiver email. Say that every day actually de idea but you know that's it's it's part of her job in part of what we do here is try to anticipate where things can go. Sideways Alison are other Vice President. Who Works in the legal in policy side? You know she does the same thing. Except it's Congress so I don't know what's harder to predict what's going to happen Fifty one state and territorial legislatures plus Congress or a brainless lifeless virus Kind of hard to determine sorry ahead cheap headed throwing a cheap trump. Joke there so debbie. How did you develop your psychic powers to determine what it was in our that? We were bound to have contact with people who are going to be wondering about what was going to happen. I just say like this was so stressful. It was really the most stressful weekend I experienced in. Weil was the first week of March. Went in saying like you know something's happening but by that. I think it was Wednesday of that first week of March is when I realized ship. This might be a big freaking deal and before we finish booking all of the flights and before we finish lining up all these other things and you know there were expenses coming up that we would have to commit to the AB contracts things like that. We were like we might not be able to have a conference. You guys what do we do? And we decided to give ourselves five days or something to see how things developed and yeah over that weekend. Things certainly escalated a lot. We were and that was the first. I followed the news closely and so all those earliest stories about what was coming down the pike where I was reading every single one. I could find by Monday. We were like well. This seems like a thing like I've gotten to the point where I feel kind of I. I wasn't paying enough attention because literally marched I. I was in New York City with my girlfriend. Having a discussion with the Nesta Sousa and she had actually been paying attention to the news. And I had not been doing nothing but like We're going to have this conversation. We're going to go to New York. We're going to have fun and so we're walking around New York City and she's like you know here's some hand sanitizer wash your hands. I'm really worried about this really and I was like You know it's it's not here and there's nothing and then we get back home and immediately after getting back to Austin. The news starts coming in about New York City being essentially ground zero for for Kovic introduction into the United States so we basically quarantined ourselves at my place for two weeks Just to make sure that we were a symptomatic and everything else and that was all happening around the same time the ACA was making decisions about DEFCON levels and ultimately getting to the point where there's nobody in the building although there's one person in the building right now and that's when the email came in to the American Atheist Board saying you know. Hey here's here's what we've been talking about. Here's what we're thinking. What do we think we should do? And I'm really proud of the fact Not only the deputy were watching this and brought it up at the. The full team evaluated all the possibilities and and came up with a plan that I think While it's incredibly frustrating for those people are like. Oh we really wanted to go to Phoenix I. I'm glad I'm not in Phoenix right now. I'm I'd much rather be at home And fairly safe but the plan was to not cancelled convention but postponed it for one year so instead of doing phoenix. In twenty twenty we will be in Phoenix in two thousand twenty one because that city and those volunteers and those activist deserve a good convention. And we've got a whole extra year to make sure Which means I guess you guys. Work just increased a little bit. Because now you've gotTA show up in Phoenix next year with like a two years worth of convention planning