35 Burst results for "Goldstein"

Bidens hosts 'Ted Lasso' cast to promote mental health

AP News Radio

00:57 sec | 6 d ago

Bidens hosts 'Ted Lasso' cast to promote mental health

"The Ted Lasso cast as visited The White House for a talk with President Biden about mental health. Coach lasso? The podium is yours. I appreciate it. There you go. Thank you. Jason Sudeikis was in the briefing room next to castmates, including Brett Goldstein, who plays Roy Kent. They're promoting mental health as a part of overall health and the importance of seeking help despite the stigma. Doesn't need to be that way. And simply offering support to those around you. It's a big theme of the show is like to check in. Sudeikis did have some fun. Yes, sir, you're familiar face. Hi. Taking one question from a packed room. Fake journalists. Castmate James Lance was standing among the real ones. Sudeikis answered one more question on his way out. Would he do his Saturday Night Live, Joe Biden impression? They got the real one here now. Sagar Meghani at The White House.

Brett Goldstein James Lance Sudeikis Sagar Meghani Jason Sudeikis Roy Kent Saturday Night Live One Question Joe Biden Ted Lasso One More Question Lasso President Biden Coach The White House
"goldstein" Discussed on Longform Podcast

Longform Podcast

05:38 min | 2 months ago

"goldstein" Discussed on Longform Podcast

"And welcome to the long form podcast. I'm Evan ratliff, co hosting a show along with max linsky and Aaron lammer, who are here with me now to kick it off. Hey guys. Let's kick, let's kick this episode off right. Who is on it? This week, it was a long time coming for me. This episode, the guest is Jonathan Goldstein, the host of the podcast heavyweight. You guys know that I love heavyweight. I think it's one of the most compelling and moving things that anyone puts out in media anywhere. And I actually resisted trying to get Jonathan on for years because I thought delving into how he created the show would somehow spoil the magic for me. But the last season was so good that I could no longer resist. And let me tell you, it did not spoil the magic for me. If anything, it enhanced the magic talking to Jonathan, it was really, really fun. I think there's one other reason Aaron that Evan never had Jonathan on the show. And it was because he wanted to avoid having to say that heavyweight is his favorite podcast, even though you and I have hosted other podcasts. He just didn't want to say that to us, but heavyweight is definitely of his favorite podcast. I assumed as much. I am also a fan of heavyweight. Heavyweight did in episode about my friend Steve marsh's family, which I highly recommend. I don't know the title of that episode, but it's really great. So I look forward to this. We are brought to you in partnership with vox media who help us produce the show. Thanks to everyone over at vox. Now here's Evan with Jonathan Goldstein. Hello. Hi, how are you? I'm all right, now you're visible. Yeah, I am visible and also realizing that I'm dressed like one of these guys who's left alone to man an Arctic research station all by himself and has gone mad. But I was wearing a sweater over this and I thought having to stop to take off a sweater seems more suspect in a way than like stopping to put on a sweater. Like start without a sweater and then build, you know what I mean? That's a narrative arc, right? That storytelling. Yeah, that's experience at work right there. So welcome to the long form podcast. Thank you. You had this American life episode from a while back called plan B, where you talk about working as a telemarketer in Canada. Yeah. And first I want to know how you became obviously the story goes into that. But can you tell us how you ended up as a telemarketer in Canada? I think I didn't have any I didn't have any skills. I didn't have any prospects. I wanted something with flexible hours because I wanted to become a writer. And I was thrilled to be able to make my own hours, work part time, not have to do any manual labor, and work nights so that I could sleep in and write. So that was ideal. I think I had a neighbor who was doing it. Much more successfully than I was, who told me, they were always hiring, was a thing too. And you were selling you were supposed to be selling newspapers. I was selling newspapers, yeah. Selling newspapers, selling dreams, selling myself, and do you think looking back that I'm just thinking about this shows that you do now and the people that you have to call out of the blue. And was there something in there that was trading for what you eventually ended up doing? I wonder, because yeah, I've talked about this with my team and a lot younger than I am, and I wonder if it's a millennial thing, like some of them feel a little nervous about making phone calls. I don't, and I wonder if that's a part of it. Maybe I'm just like a telephone tough guy. There's something about, yeah, there was always something about talking to someone on the telephone that didn't really feel as though it was real. Or it felt pretend in a way. It maybe it just felt like I was safe from harm. They couldn't punch me, I guess. Which emboldened my personality. And these calls were automatically dialed. So they were constantly just pumped into your headset. So it wasn't even something that you can control. It was just an onslaught of people, and maybe maybe it kind of inured me to it, but I also like talking on the telephone. And I have still a couple of friends that I can do that with. But that seems like something that's dying a little bit too. And this is like, this is a little bit of my theory, is that because of that, maybe that's why a lot of these longer, not your podcast, of course, but other, you know, like three, four hour long podcasts where you're just kind of hanging out, have become so popular because people aren't talking on the telephone and making small talk in that way. And it allows them to kind of enjoy that experience from a safe position, you know, like where they're kind of just eavesdropping. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, it is something that we used to do, especially when you had the old one phone in the house and I would occupy the phone. Just chatting with people.

Jonathan Goldstein Evan ratliff max linsky Aaron lammer Jonathan Steve marsh vox media Evan Aaron Canada
Crews rescue 2 from plane caught in power lines in Maryland

AP News Radio

00:57 sec | 4 months ago

Crews rescue 2 from plane caught in power lines in Maryland

"Investigators are looking into why a small plane crashed in Maryland on Sunday. The small plane had left White Plains New York and was near the Montgomery county, Maryland air park in Gaithersburg, when it crashed into live power lines trapping two people inside and knocking out power to thousands in the area. Before first responders could rescue the two, utility contractors had to disconnect the high tension wires. So it would be safe for the rescuers and responders had to stabilize the plane and then the rescue. Montgomery county fire chief Scott Goldstein. Both patients have been transported from the scene to local area trauma centers. With serious injuries. But both are expected to survive. He talked to W JLA TV, state police identify the two as pilot Patrick Merkel of Washington, D.C., and passenger Janet Williams of Louisiana, both in their 60s. I'm Rita foley

Maryland Air Park Montgomery County Gaithersburg Scott Goldstein Maryland New York Patrick Merkel Janet Williams D.C. Washington Louisiana Rita Foley
"goldstein" Discussed on Bitcoin Audible

Bitcoin Audible

04:46 min | 10 months ago

"goldstein" Discussed on Bitcoin Audible

"Let's jump back in. Always a classic. Goldstein, Goldstein really killed it with that one. And also I actually just because I haven't read anything off of this and for anybody who doesn't know, you can get this as well as so many of the other really good works, particularly some of the older works in this space at the nakamoto institute, nakamoto institute dot org. This is a great great resource for some of the cypherpunk history and the both kind of the philosophy, the engineering, the adversarial thinking, everything that went into this. I mean, you can learn about hashcash digital timestamping and all of the iterations through the 90s as these ideas, like how to make reliable digital timestamping. This is where you can find all of Nick zavos really key works, trusted third parties are security holes, shelling out all of this stuff. So if you want to dig into really the history where Bitcoin came from and why Bitcoin is the way it is, there is so much in the 2000 and 12 to 2014 era where a lot of this was kind of a foundation for kind of the culture and the thinking in the space. And of course, obviously the decades leading up to actually creating Bitcoin in the cypherpunk culture that Bitcoin arose from, I really think if you want to look for how Bitcoin became Bitcoin, how a lot of the culture and the antagonism to the shitcoin space and the degeneracy, where all that started, I think that's a really good place to start to get a clean all signal no noise exploration of a lot of the ideas. And reasons for Bitcoin's existence. And what better time to get a little perspective than when the entire crypto and DeFi? System seems to be imploding. So it's really interesting we're a little bit in uncharted waters. You know, every time every time we go through one of these hype cycles, there's the space has changed in some way in some pretty major way. And one of the things that this, even with the 2017 ICOs and everything, the thing that

nakamoto institute Goldstein Nick zavos Bitcoin
Deep Throat Turns 50: The Film That Made Porn Mainstream

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch

00:53 sec | 10 months ago

Deep Throat Turns 50: The Film That Made Porn Mainstream

"That brings me to the golden anniversary of sorts. This week, yesterday, made it 50 years since the porn movie deep throat premiered in New York. The very best porn movie ever made. That was without Goldstein, the publisher of screw magazine said about deep thrill. Basically, this is a film that ushered in mainstream porn, 50 years ago. It's only 61 minutes long. Came out June 2nd, 19 June 12th, 1972, not critical acclaim, but boy, were there lines around the block that was obscenity trials? There was even a brief porno chic movement and let's not forget they called the Watergate guy deep throat. The tipster. So this movie really had a big impression on our

Screw Magazine Goldstein New York
"goldstein" Discussed on I Said No Gifts!

I Said No Gifts!

08:08 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on I Said No Gifts!

"Press tour. Look all of that aside. There is something i wanted to discuss with you. You've sent me your home address. And i thought what a wonderful little sign of trust that jared has kind of just shared this with mary We've never met. And suddenly i have his home address for all he knows. This podcast is kind of set up for you know to bring in victims. You know. I get people's addresses and they go missing that kind of thing but i i sort of wondering why the address. It's it's maybe a six hour drive from my mansion to your mansion thought altitudes a change in altitude alone nosebleeds. I figured i'll drive to his house. And i start heading up the mountain. Suddenly just blood gushing shirt ruined going to have to have the car reupholstered. But i get to your house and you've left some kind of cryptic instructions and it's look in the little black mailbox near the flamingo. And i think okay now okay. so now. We've got a situation. Because jared basically asking me to commit a felony to steal male but you had shown this little bit of trust by giving me your address. I thought i'll trust jared. I'm gonna dig around in his mail now. Did and i found a little package in their jared. This podcast is called. I said no gifts. Everyone knows that everyone loves it. Everyone's begging for more and so the The rule is right there in the title. And so i'm going to just ask you. Is this a gift for me. I know you said no gifts but it would be rude of me to come onto your podcast empty-handed and i also want to know that my personal phone number was accessible through my instagram until about two weeks ago when someone made me aware that is so. I removed burt that that is completely drew. I have never been precious about my personal safety my privacy i mean i'm gonna dime podcast right now wait. How was your phone number available through instagram. I was when i set up instagram in nineteen ninety-three setup. You mean launched the company. When i birthed the idea of facebook with with less words i thought i was just like giving it to the company i was like. They're like what's your phone number. And i was like again like sure blah blah blah blah blah blah blah and. Then never thought of it once ever again like i. i'm really. I'm i am not very internet savvy or like like on the internet. I've never been. I've always been like. I had like an end. Sixty four when everyone had like a ps two always been behind. I still i use apple music. I'm getting vulnerable now. He's apple music. I don't use spotify. There are a few people in my life who use apple music. And i'm it look good service. I imagine i'm not on apple music on spotify so when i create a playlist or something. I'm begging them. Please sign up for spotify. Want to share this with you. It's my little thing but you know it's kind of a it is a Nintendo sony what are some of these great rivalries. You know it tells you a little bit about the person. Look what are we talking about. Shy open the skift you should do. I have a podcast to recommend to you. And i want you to listen very carefully because this isn't a very good podcast. It's called ask rana with rana and brian. It's an advice podcast. And they answer questions like what do you do. When your boyfriend's mother is poisoning you or your airbnb host dies. How do you tell your cousin. Her husband on tinder during the pandemic. These are all things that we could use hard solid answers to and rana and brian are answering them. Every tuesday rana glickman. She's incredible and bryan safi. He's also very good. Bring you a fresh advice. Podcast straight from the carriage house in marblehead massachusetts with all of the answers to life's problems big and small these two. Let's they're expert advice givers. They also have their own coffee. I'm not kidding. And it's very good so i mean even if you're not into podcast you can order their coffee. These two are fantastic. And as good as rana and brian are answering questions. They also bring in a guest every week. People like conan. O'brien lacy moseley. Ellie kemper polly tompkins. Carl tart me bridge weinberger. I was a guest on the show. If i'm not enough of a guess for you maybe we should partways. I don't know what to say at this point and the advice is funny. It's thoughtful sometimes. It's actually useful. Ask ron with ron and brian. is every tuesday. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and enjoy and you're welcome for the recommendation. I'm going to dive in here. It's in this very nice little bag. It's i will say it. i'm going to say. Is this sandwich wrap it. Is i recyclable. Plastic bag plastic. It's i've never had a recycled recyclable. Plastic bag. I guess. I need to get into that. Yeah because you're selfish it is well. It's because i'm the toxic adventure. i'm trying destroy earth. mother nature is my nemesis. And i'm gonna take her down. You're gonna get her get her. Yeah it's a nicer. I've never seen one of these bags and ziplock corp is doing a nice job while they're doing an in grad job. How satisfying is. They didn't comes with stickers. So you could sail came with it. Yes now i'll say the sticker to me looks like you can't recycle it. True or false. Okay absolute savage. Take down a ziplock company. I mean i. I assume that whoever's in charge is putting a sticker in that also is biodegradable or it might be. I don't know otherwise it's like you know one of these things you know. The it's the pride section of target for example. It's like operation doesn't actually care let's open it up. I'm gonna open it right near the mic. Trying to get a little bit of that. That sounds wonderful to me. Name really does is. Isn't it race. That is basically becomes a little purse. Exactly i like to keep my mask in there. That's creepy clean and a half a blank day craft little thing that i can't imagine anyone ever. That's a space for mommy's yeah that's exclusively for mommies and good for them okay. I'm getting in here and wait. What what is this. So i've opened. It is this gum is this. Do you have a jared goldstein. Seen gum yeah. I invented instagram and sugar. Free gum this is like it's a package of gum. But as a picture of jared it's scott all of his information on it just literally. I hope that this nicorette. Hey it's actually birth control. Okay go on i. I'm so is this something that you have created as merch it is march and but it's not all it's not just merged its merge that i really wanted to have. I don't understand how i mean. Obviously there are merchants of all types. But i've never heard of somebody. How do you get to creating your own gum..

jared rana apple brian rana glickman bryan safi brien lacy moseley Ellie kemper polly tompkins Carl tart burt mary marblehead ron ziplock corp Nintendo weinberger facebook sony conan
"goldstein" Discussed on I Said No Gifts!

I Said No Gifts!

05:50 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on I Said No Gifts!

"Welcome to ice. No gifts temperature weinberger having an eventful morning I hope you're doing okay. I got a accidental bill. From my dentist. It's just the dental situation. This year has been just nonstop for me for no reason. And now you're dealing with it and i tried to drag as many people into this as i can and this is kind of my one platform to do that so i appreciate you being here. what else is going on very little and so we're going to get into the podcast to kind of you know. Bring an event into my life and today's guest is so funny. Everyone loves this person. It's jerry goldstein. Jared welcome as no gifts. I'm so happy to be here. And i can talk about dentistry or days so feel for you. You pick the right guest today. What's your dental history. Bats metal history. I don't know if you get a little some armament. But i just removed my top invisible vissali. How long have you had an invisible on for fourteen years fourteen years. I had braces as a child which were savagely and prematurely ripped off by a child acting manager if you can believe i actually can't believe that and the the damage has has been irreparable and honestly just insurmountable so here. We are all these years later. Still braces on the manager. Now you had braces for how long before the manager said this is not working for your career had them about six months and it was the six months before i started being a professional eleven year. Old boy boss. What was that conversation leg to the manager. All your parents aside and say we've got. The braces are ruining him. It was such an unreal conversation. She could not understand for the life of y. I had braces just talking to an eleven year old. Who's this shown up from long island to this talent office on park avenue. I'm standing on the star reading smucker's commercial and she's like great. But why does he have braces. And my parents were like well. He's eleven and that's kind of part of it and then she was like but if you knew you wanted him to be an actor why would you put braces on him and then she was like well. We didn't know that we wanted him to be an actor. This is all kind of pretty bizarre and like kind of just happened and here we are engineer. But but why does he have them on. If he wants to be an actor and we i swear to god we went back and forth with this person four times of being like okay and trying to be nice to because we wanted to help me for like we'd okay. We didn't know that. I wanted this until about a day. I don't even know that. I want this and here we are so i don't issue number wild but then your parents decided this is the person to represent our child. Yes famously evil woman. Who i would. I would tell people that ask. Who is your manager. I would say her name and the faces. I would get home so then you just went back to the orthodontist was said we've got to get these off. Yeah we get them off him off. How bad were your teeth. Well what they were really bad when the braces went on but six months will go far so it got me from like really like shockingly bad teeth to normal looking okay and was the orthodontist. Like i feel like. That's a real moral crossroads for the orthodontist. Yeah no yeah. Yeah i mean nothing about being a child actor is moral and that's kind of the ramifications again insurmountable irreparable. Well you know when you enter a child into the world of acting you know. It's a safe road. You know that mentally the things that they that's going to be perfect everything. It's you know putting your kid on rails to adults success. So i feel like that's what i will say intoxicating then like room hull of adults clapping for you. Well let me ask. Did you book smucker's i never did either one. Gosh darn commercial. You're kidding no commercials for me. Because i didn't i i i didn't know how to do them like they're very simple but i just didn't know how to do them. So that came later in life. But i booked no commercials. I booked not hardly any tv work. I was just doing theater. Because i was very good at singing. And then we were just trying to make me an actor. Because i was good at singing but i was never really like an actor that right. What did you do in theater. Well as much as it is so embarrassing to bring up. But i was. I was on broadway. Please treat me the same. The rest of the next forty five minutes has shifted in a huge way. You've ever heard about broadway. But it's it's a pretty big deal. What were you doing on broadway shining. That was assumed. Jared.

jerry goldstein weinberger smucker Jared long island
Re-using Your Entrepreneurial Skills to Build Amazing New Businesses with Doug Goldstein

Entrepreneur on FIRE

02:10 min | 1 year ago

Re-using Your Entrepreneurial Skills to Build Amazing New Businesses with Doug Goldstein

"One thing that i admire about you as a you do a great job. Leveraging virtual team members to create not old but new income streams so for fire nation. Share some examples of how you've done this most recently. I was thinking about this concept of gratitude. And in fact john i will tell you again. You inspired me. Yes you've been a journal or for many many years you manage spoken about and you got people going. I like a certain. Take on it. That i thought was different. Which was i thought that the concept of constant happiness was something that people should be talking about. My concern was people would write in their journal once a week twice a week when tonight and i wanted i believe that by by writing in a journal about your your the things. You're grateful for that's how you're going to develop happiness so this was my idea and i decided you know i wanna share this with people and i experimented frank bay experiment that i myself a lot and then i said i'm going to make this happen. What resources do i have so having now been an entrepreneur for thirty years. My day job is that i'm an investment advisor but i've done a lot of a lot of other entrepreneurial things let's say frequently around books but but the book is just the platform that i can launch an idea so i said i'm gonna write the constant happiness gratitude journal. But who do. I have to help me and i have a whole list of people. I've got my video guy who was able to make fantastic videos about it. I have all my five or and upward people and of course using and finding new ones. There was fantastic. You know attacked john. When i wanted to do the internal layout for the book i said i'm just gonna hire to interior layout companies and see which one i like best. Ooh just the idea that. I was able to to have people around me. Who would be able to help me do everything that i shouldn't be doing. That's an eye opener. And i mean you've spoken to many entrepreneurs and you know it's so hard for them to give away the work because they think only i can really do the layout because i understand the cover design or the writing the editing and that's just not true every the best entrepreneurs focus on one thing that they do

Frank Bay John
Biden Admin Withholds Millions of Aid for Hospitals Treating COVID Patients

Mark Levin

02:02 min | 1 year ago

Biden Admin Withholds Millions of Aid for Hospitals Treating COVID Patients

"Hospitals bulge again with Covid 19 patients. A wide swath of the health care industry is exasperated that federal health officials have not made available anymore of the aid. Since Joe Biden took office Now $44 billion from a provider relief fund, created last year remains unspent, along with 8.5 billion Congress allotted in March for the medical care in rural areas. Right. That's over $50 billion With the coronavirus Delta variant fueling 1/4 pandemic surge, they write healthcare institutions, lobbyists and lawmakers. Have ratcheted up complaints to senior Biden administration health officials, imploring them to decide how the money will be divided and when it will be distributed. Is this not amazing? All the people going on and on about how the federal government knows everything. Fauci, the CDC, the FDA, National Institutes of Health, HHS, They're sitting on the money. And other than Amy Goldstein. I haven't seen this anywhere else. There's just no good reason for the administration to be sitting on these funds, and Mark Parkinson president, chief executive The American Healthcare Association, a trade group that represents nursing homes and assisted living facilities. Many running short on money, he said, because the virus is heavy concentration of long term care centers early in the pandemic, a stop causing potential patients and residents to stay away. Parkinson said he has had four conversations for Since February. The agency and the Department of Health and Human Services. It is in charge of the money. And one last month with senior aides to HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. Each conversation we came up with the feeling would be that month, Parkinson said. And we've been wrong.

Biden Administration Amy Goldstein Joe Biden American Healthcare Associatio HHS Fauci Mark Parkinson Congress National Institutes Of Health CDC Federal Government FDA Parkinson Xavier Becerra
"goldstein" Discussed on Keep It!

Keep It!

01:50 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on Keep It!

"So our guest today has what you would call a lot of multi hyphen. It's an after a comedian. A writer and podcast or who's lucky enough not to be american. You know him from ted lasso. Please welcome afc. Richmond's own roy. Kent brett goldstein. Our thank you for having me. Thank you for being here. I have been a headless. Oh fan i was about to say since season one but only one is dropped so far But i take it you know. I think i watched it all. After new year's eve i needed to do hungover. Wash it all come down. I was definitely. It was and now i'm excited to blow through season two as well. So you're going to get absolutely hammered before he watch it. What's the second season as well. Probably you know so. I can have the same sort of fat sort of curing hangover. You like to make it hard for us As in the west situation okay well it does feel like that's like ninety percent of tv now is like whenever you're in the mood to just give up your entire life to a series for like one and a quarter days like that's how you take it in now is crazy. It is i'd have to. I'd have time to watch when people say if you watched this thing when you have to have news side needs data's anytime you feel about podcast to i guess people drive to work for six hours a day. That's why people where people tell us they listen to ours like chunks in a row they save up episodes and listen to them all at once. I have no idea how But i'm glad they do. I thought you say it makes me no respect them..

ted lasso Kent brett goldstein afc Richmond
"goldstein" Discussed on HowSound

HowSound

05:01 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on HowSound

"Short. It's all good.

"goldstein" Discussed on HowSound

HowSound

08:09 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on HowSound

"As wait. I studied the women walking towards me. Anyone of them could delete a heavy set. Woman with something of deletes slinky tentative gate a businesswoman. Making i contact as she speaks into her bluetooth. Someone eating a honeydew at glebe become that type with each person. I addition a different feeling panic. Regret cowardice and just got a text that she's going to be ten minutes late. Of course my go-to gum chewing pocket. Watch swinging casualness. Masking a bad case of the trots. And then who are you. I recognized your walk. I'm recording is that okay I self conscious. Let's turn it off for now. I thought yes. Yeah yeah yeah. Your gallant boyish. As though any change from jonathon you were at eighteen will mark you as a phony. You are the way you always were. And she is smile earlier than you remember pretty with long straight hair big eyeglasses and entites. That are no longer black but colorful. What do you remember about those crab. Like i remember tons about these trips For the next couple of hours gluten. I toured through the lobby and hallways of the old arlington. Do you remember this. And through the nearby parking lots that housed flea markets where. We went shopping for broken pocket. Watches remember we. We spend hours flickering through people. Now it's just filled with cars. He used to be filled of magic. We catch up but mostly we reminisce. I remember looking for tapes. Remember that yeah. Care wak recordings and ginsburg recordings when you're writing. How often do you stop to review. Do you write a paragraph and then read that paragraph. you write a page. Do you wait until you're at the end of three pages and then go back and look do not even go back and look you. Just keep going. Oh god i mean. I'm just constantly lake Playing with sentences constantly i get. Yeah i get really kind of obsessive. Do you proof. Read out loud. Yes sometimes i definitely want to know how how things sound. We were just recently doing something like that were like there is the repetition of particular word that on paper to seemed like wasn't good writing but in reading. It seemed like it was. Okay do you start with an outline. Yeah we'll we'll talk through general structures and generally. Yeah generally know where were where were starting and where we're going and then it becomes like like framing tape framing it so that it can be appreciated in the way that you appreciate it or the way that you want it to be appreciated without over determining i've spoken with some people who need to know what the end of the story is first before they start writing so that they have a compass heading. They know what direction they're headed in other people are like nope no way. I'll know the ending when i get there. I need to start from the start. Yeah i think it's it's harder to do it that way. I think it's like it's which way to to not know where you're going. I mean i think it's great. And i think like i love to hear people talk about that and talk about how it's journey and what's the point of doing and if you know where you're going and i love it. I think that's great. I think it's like i've learned from experience that Doing this particular kind of radio where you're trying to keep people listening and you're trying to present a riddles and an you know and and questions to be solved. It is hard to to do that unless you know where you're going. I'm hearkening back to the lead story. But it was sort of like i had no idea where i was going for really longtime i resisted the ending. I think Once i kind of admitted to myself with the ending was like it seemed like you know it was there all along There's a moment at the end of that story where my first girlfriend delete had left me a message after our day that we spent in the park where she had a chance of think through some of the things i had been asking her and she left me this message and it felt very raw and it felt like maybe two raw to us you know in the story. But then at a certain point out of conversations with like my producers and editors i realized that like oh that that is here ending it and and you know and i just wasn't willing to accept it after we we head to the subway glebe going uptown and i back brooklyn we say our goodbyes and something about them feels final like maybe this is the last time we'll ever see each other when i get home. The apartments empty emily's out with friends. I sit for a while in the quiet and then pick up a novel. I've been reading for the past six months. But i keep putting it down to look around my living room at the records and paintings both mine and emily's and wonder what my eighteen year old self would have made of my new york existence at close to midnight. I'm awoken by attacks from delete. I had a few thoughts recorded just now on my phone it says. Do you want me to send them to you. I closed the app then. Open it again. Reread the message then. Close it open it. close it check. Twitter open it back up and read it one more time than i write back saying sure. He jonathan. I just wanted to add to our conversation. A i don't think i was able to absorb everything you were saying. But walking away from it and having to attend to think despite up a lot of emotion and sadness. And i just wanted to say If anything i ever it is in our releases her caused you paid and lead you to put up while it's to say i'm sorry and getting bushel but i just thought i'd share this That they i lead back telling her that. There's nothing to apologize for. Then i apologize for making her feel bad and say that in fact considering how young we were she'd been really mature and patient with me. It feels terrible to have made her sad Somehow through the course of our day gluten i-it's which places my heaviness had given way to. What in my life passes for understanding and her nostalgia had become tinged with sadness eventually gleed right-back. We get hurt. She writes and we all build walls to protect ourselves and then spend the rest of our lives trying to take down those walls so hearing you talk about that was just a reminder of my own struggle to take down those walls and open my heart. It also reminded me of the purity of young love. And how the ability to fully give and receive. Love seems to get more complicated as we get older in.

jonathon ginsburg arlington emily brooklyn jonathan new york Twitter
"goldstein" Discussed on HowSound

HowSound

03:06 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on HowSound

"In this clip with steve's mom for forty eight years genus quietly mark. Lisa's birthday by repeating the same silent prayer. I hope she's having a good life. And it's that hope that ironically may gene think twice about ever searching for lisa. She told herself that a flea show was happy. She didn't need to disrupt that. Happiness introducing her to the marshes and their chaos. Our family was so loud. And so you know drug use and not going to school and it seems like there was always so much going on. Did i really want to bring somebody else into that. It was problems that i was bringing her into more problems. Actor it it was more than heck dixie. And i go do my avon door to door and somebody would say. Would you like to come in for a minute. I'd sit down. And i always said was like i was sitting down in their bauge. They had this peaceful house neat. Nothing out of place. And then i'd walk in here and it'd be like jangled. So while steve's motivation for seeking out leash is is pretty simple. He has a sister and he wants to meet her for gene. It's more complicated. Her greatest hope is that leash is happy and well that she did the right thing and giving her up but if leash is good in fall into drugs did do well in school and had a good life in the beige. The trouble wasn't something genetic a fate that runs through the marsh. Blood was two genes thinking something in the parenting her parenting as we talk. Jonathan told me that when he writes personal stories for heavyweight stories that are more. Sas dick those tend to be driven less by tape and more by narration in essence. He writes i then adds tape for color or ambience. There's very little writing to tape. Take this example a clip from heavyweights first season. Back in two thousand sixteen. The episode is called delete. We're jonathan meets up with the girlfriend from his past outside the arlington waiting for glee. Our plan was to meet outside the old hotel where the bus used to drop us. It's where our love affair with. New york began a love. That would eventually bring us both back here in adulthood. It's hard to imagine gleed as a woman in her forties. I'll be dead by thirty two. She would say when we were teenagers. If not physically then spiritually precocious about death. A gothi kind of girl before there was such a thing. Gleed would dress in black cutting off her black tights at the fi- to make them into fashioned stockings. She looked like one of those creepy. Edward gorey children all grown up which he still dressed in black still possess.

steve Sas dick Lisa lisa Jonathan arlington jonathan Gleed New york Edward gorey
"goldstein" Discussed on HowSound

HowSound

07:36 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on HowSound

"And this is why. Steve has come to me. He needs a spur to action. Someone who isn't a marsh to make sure the letter gets written. We could use some help. It's almost like when you go to the gym or something just like have somebody else. Who's going with you like some kind of accountability. 'cause we when we talk about it as a family and we do whenever we get together like my parents are all game for but then it just doesn't happen and it hasn't happened do do you need to really kind of Show up with a pad of paper and pen and place it on the table right in front of her right. Let's do this now. And so in a bid to do this now. I tell steve to phone his mom and tell her to clear her schedule because his wedding friend. Jonathan is boarding a plane to minnesota and heading straight to their house to make sure she writes that letter. I just think we need a little help. You know is your mother to get off now. Who is this guy. just me again. After the break this guy pays a visit to the marshes. So when you're putting together a story there's story planning field reporting there's tracking narration. There's mixing an editing. There's writing There's so many steps to put together a story. Do you have a favorite part I think it changes. And i like that. That i'm able to toggle between them. Which is real plus of the job. I think I say this but then like there's highs and lows. It's a little bit of a roller coaster. But once you have all the tape in it's such a feeling of relief that I guess i like the edits. Like i love being able to perform the story play through the tape in late. Like yeah like just do the the whole story as an edit and present it for people Whose taste you respect or that. You want to impress or make laugh or move or whatever. You're just excited to hear what they think. I think that's that's pretty fun. 'cause it's sort of like you're auditioning the story without the stakes entirely of like actually presenting finished product. But you want to try to get it as good as you can. So you're not wasting people's time and you're ready to be edited you know at one point in jonathan's life. He had a spoken word band. He wrote poetry actually wrote it with special pens and paper also collected old-fashioned typewriters. Jonathan's also written books. My favorite title is sh melville's in search of elvis presley's jewish roots cracks me up every time i read that jonathan produce stories for the cbc. He hosted a strange and quirky show called wiretap. The toronto star described wiretap as quote a weekly half hour of conversation. Storytelling an introspection culled from equal parts. Real world experience and the warp of goldstein's imagination. He also worked at this american life for quite a few years in two thousand sixteen. He launched heavyweight now with all that writing for audio stories. I figure jonathan would have developed some writing habits like a certain time of day. Nope a special place. Nope maybe a unique drink. Nope just coffee. I mean it's really like whatever takes there is one practice that seems unique. Jonathan's choice of font i favor a currier new font at the end. It's something that like. I don't do until the very end. And when my producers see that far they feel good they feel like We finally reached the end. Is that true. Yeah yeah what. What font you typing in prior to the courier Whatever the default is. I think here. I'm looking at script working on right now. It's the aerial like we usually have three at. It's basically i mean. there's you know. Continual many edits with the purdue with whoever the producers that i'm working on the story with but then and then we do like a first internal draft. Which is You know just me. And my two producers now we have a third. Ap so just be us. And then we've got into the habit in the past couple seasons where the second edit will be with alex bloomberg and then the third edit will do Will bring in like a couple. Additional people from may be the other gimblett shows after that. Third edit then all select the whole thing and then Throw it into courier new and then it's like Now we're ready to track too big moment. Yeah it just looks kinda like a typewriter fund. I don't i don't think my producers like it. I think they i don't think it's their favorite fond Colella one of my producers clean whole to did a a story of her own That she you know that. She hosted an episode last season. And she didn't do they. She was not In any way. I'd enforcer to use career or anything like that. She was allowed to To use whatever she wanted which is You know what one of the joys of working on heavyweight you get to choose your own font to speaks to the creative freedom that we should all feel there's a there's a maneuver that you're really good at. I've heard other people do it. But i feel like you've perfected it and i don't know what the name of it is. I bet it does have a name. But i'm just going to call it a callback. You can call it the goldstein. If you'd like come in if it helps you all right. I liked until the goldstein. It is it's this really satisfying echo. Were character will say something in the tape and then jonathan will bring it forward into his narration. We heard an example earlier. Where jonathan goldstein's the rowdiness of the family. Yes goldstein is now verb lisa. Who was raised in a totally separate environment. I just wonder what she's like. You know our house was so loud. Who wouldn't want wanna growing up and Like i always thought my family's kind of weird like they drink Windsor seven up like it's gonna be movie vanishing from the face of the earth. So what is a windsor seven up. That's a that's the marsh family drink. Man i pardon my ignorance. Seven and seven man could be seagram's to canadian whisky and lemon lime soda. But finding out whether leash is like a marsh steeped in windsor and chaos isn't so simple. He says he learned to do this when he produced for this american life because it's part of the syntax of the show. I'm still going to call it the goldstein. Though and jonathan likes to goldstein when he feels something bears insistence as he put it. It's a way to underline appoint. Here's another example. let's now. Jonathan puts the word beige to us.

Jonathan jonathan sh melville goldstein alex bloomberg gimblett Steve minnesota Colella elvis presley steve cbc toronto purdue jonathan goldstein lisa seagram windsor
"goldstein" Discussed on HowSound

HowSound

07:34 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on HowSound

"Because this is how sound the backstory to great audio story. tired i'm rob rosenthal. How sound is a co production of px and transom. The other day. I was thin out my collection of books and i stumbled across an old favourite one that i kept the new journalism. Newest published in nineteen seventy three and it featured a collection of stories by tom wolfe stories that he felt were excellent examples of what was called at the time new journalism. Sometimes it's referred to as creative nonfiction or narrative nonfiction or narrative journalism. There's a bunch of different names regardless it's an approach to nonfiction storytelling. That uses the tools of fiction plot character development scenes conflict and resolution and so on. I highly recommend the book. Even though it's nearly fifty years old if each or some of the best seminal work in the genre like truman capote's in cold blood as well as stories from john d. n. and hunter s. thompson and others. It's really great then. I came across this other book as i was standing things out another keeper. It's a problem. I have find it hard to get rid of books anyway. This book was the new journalism. It's an obvious nod to the new journalism. Robert poynton wrote this book. Rob teaches journalism at nyu. It was published in two thousand five and the subtitle is conversations with america's best nonfiction writers on their craft. He spoke to jon. Krakauer and ted conover adrian cola blank. Jane kramer really the best of the best at that time and they talk about all aspects of writing everything from when and where they right to. What typewriters they used yes. Some of them still use typewriters. In early two thousands they talked about interviewing and character development and how to handle writer's block all manner of topics on writing. Even though the new new journalism features print reporters how they approach the craft applies to audio storytelling. As well in fact the book was required reading in my radio classes for many years. We'll finding these books. Got me thinking if i was to publish a book called the new audio storytelling or something like that. Who would i include. Of course it occurred to me. That's how sound so maybe in a way the book already exists but more to the point which writers would include as exemplars at the best writing for audio. will stephanie. Food comes to mind cherie marsov. Mirage is a favourite david weinberg. Kelly mcevers crushes anything. She writes about scott carrier. Nancy updike saieed t john. Thomas these are some of my favorites and they're great writers. And there's this guy i i met steve marsh at my brother-in-law's wedding. In conversation that night steve was given to making soulful observations punctuated by the word man. Steve is a big guy shaggy-haired and comfortable in his own skin. He's a little like the dude no matter where he is or what the occasion he gives off. The impression of wearing a comfy bathrobe flung open wide to the world. It's perhaps also worth mentioning the wall. Steve wasn't invited to the wedding per se. All the guests were both happy and unsurprised to see him. Of course steve would be there and his entrance felt like a lovable. Saint bernard had just wandered into the reception hall. Would you send a wedding. Invitation to a saint bernard of course not. Would you be darned pleased to see one. Show up absolutely. That's jonathan goldstein. His voice writing are so unique. You may have immediately recognized it from heavyweight as the podcast. Jonathan produces for gimblett. Jonathan solves problems for people in the podcast including himself and in doing so he touches on what it means to be human. The stories on heavyweight are endearing and their profound and their surprising and jonathan's writing. You can hear all the things you're supposed to do in telling a story in sound short sentences visuals active verbs. It's all there but he also has wit. Jonathan can turn a phrase with an ease. That's kind of maddening. Actually jealous and it's the kind of writing the pos you in. It's like he's just telling a story when he might tell you at dinner. And when i hear him i think okay. We're going somewhere. Let's take a ride. The next time stephen i crossed paths was at another wedding. Well everyone was inside drinking and eating. I found steve outside standing by the hudson river looking preoccupied. It was their smoking from his pack of menthols that steve told me about his mom and a secret she'd been carrying around in shame for almost forty years. Steve said the only reason he even knew about it was because it had slipped out by accident and now that it had he didn't know what to do about it so after the wedding we set aside some time to talk house. father had gone man. It's great it's really great before getting into it. stephen. I catch up with omer. He's just gotten engaged in because he steve their proposal he made was an elaborate production involving a ring baked into a cake and an entire restaurant of people cheering. His fiancee. crying makes regular guys. Like me look real bad. I know man. Her brothers are pissed at me to like great job dude with the pleasantries out of the way we get to the unpleasant trie his mom secret. See what i mean. The writing is breezy and he sets the table really well. It's the story of bigger than life guy and the problem is facing and again the way jonathan turns of phrase with the pleasantries out of the way we get to the unpleasantly. I really like that. It's a light touch. He doesn't drop a line like that. Every paragraph they're just sort of judiciously sprinkled throughout story. And i find it really pleasing. So in the spirit of the book. The new journalism. I recently had a chat with jonathan that ranged far and wide about writing and for part of our chat. We focused on the episode of heavyweight. That i've been playing clips from it's called the marshes with the marshes. One of the things that i did labor over was how i wanted to frame steve marsh at the beginning of the story when i describe him as being something like a saint bernard it isn't necessarily The most flattering. Wait just to describe someone. I meant it affectionately and i wanted that to come across but i felt like you know you could. You could enjoy the story but to enjoy the story. In the way that i enjoyed it was too. I understand steve marsh a little bit so that was tricky to get quite right and i and it was actually the only time i've ever done this. I think Where i think. I might have shown him what i was gonna say because such a personal story and this was sort of like an eccentric way to kind of bring him on stage that i didn't want to put him in a situation where you know like us having family gather around the radio or however it is that people listen to podcasts altogether these days and you know the first thing out of my mouth was like talking about how it was. A saint bernard showing up to this wedding. You know so. I wanted to make sure that he was okay with that Which i don't usually do. Do you take color notes. So in in order to describe someone in a story Sometimes a reporter will take color notes though you know say things into a microphone or write it down in a notebook and i'm wondering if you do that and if perhaps you did that for that moment with steve when you're.

rob rosenthal steve marsh Robert poynton ted conover adrian cola Jane kramer steve cherie marsov david weinberg Kelly mcevers scott carrier Nancy updike tom wolfe Jonathan john d truman capote jonathan goldstein Steve gimblett Krakauer
A New Player in the Transatlantic Market

Aviation Week's Check 6 Podcast

01:54 min | 1 year ago

A New Player in the Transatlantic Market

"So it's an exciting day today for one of america's most liked airlines jetblue flight w seven and airbus a-3 three twenty one l. Narrow body landed at london heathrow this morning after departing from jet blues new york. Jfk base last night that flight launched jet blue's entry into the transatlantic market beginning with daily service from jfk to heathrow and then adding daily service to london gatwick ultimately following with Boston to london. Ceo robin hayes. A former executive at british airways has promised to create a permanent and disruptive effect in the transatlantic market. So joining me today to discuss. What that could mean are two of my aviation week network colleagues north american air transport editor but ben goldstein and kepler senior analyst for the americas laurie ransom. Hey ben laurie great to have you on this. Thank you so to start off by just looking at that whole history that we know all too well of Long haul low cost carriers Starting up especially in the transatlantic market and more often than not failing What do you think might make this a different prospect with a jet blue and will this like jetblue like robin says be transatlantic disruptor. What are your thoughts laurie. Well i think as you said. Jetblue is one of america's most light brands and they have strongholds in new york and boston so they have strong point of sale here in the us. And i think that's a little bit different than some of the point to point carriers that had tried to do this in the past where if by bodies

Jetblue Ceo Robin Hayes Ben Goldstein London Heathrow Americas Laurie Ransom Ben Laurie Airbus London JFK Gatwick Heathrow British Airways New York United States Kepler Boston Robin Laurie
Meredith Goldstein on Being Monumentally Single

Love Letters

01:59 min | 1 year ago

Meredith Goldstein on Being Monumentally Single

"Don't think intended on becoming monumentally single. When i was younger in my twenties early thirties i had a lot of friends who really knew what they wanted and they wanted to get married or they wanted to partner in some way and a lot of them wanted kids and because i knew that wasn't the case for me. It never felt urgent. Like i was like. Oh i want to get everybody taken care of. And then i'll then. I'll see and i wasn't lonely in a romantic sense. I just saw something i thought about. I like a great community of people. And i never felt like something was missing. So i think when you don't feel like something's missing especially by mid thirties there. No drive to be like. I really want to do this. And you know our momma second. She died and i'm very multitasking rate. So i'd be like well. I can't really right now because moms sicker purely because my mom died or like i can't really date because i'm working on a book you know any. I'm taking out the garbage possibly date. I remember going into the boston public market with you and you being like. Oh that guy's looking at you and my being like what guy even see a guy like i just wasn't looking at humans in that way so it became the sort of rom com like dreadful ironic character thing. Oh she's the advice columnist. Who just doesn't date. I'll say that. I had a bunch of blind dates. We have an episode. About how i recommend people setting each other up and i do and that's why anytime somebody had somebody to set me up with. I would go. I never said no. Was i truly open to the experience. I don't know you would also call me before any of these dates and kind of go into like an epic monologue about what the reasons why it wouldn't work usually before you've met the person like you only had three reasons lined up well. I don't think. I wanted to work right like i just couldn't imagine space by that point. I was at the age where people really partnered. And they have to consider each other and they have to each other's families like there's all the things that did not look

Boston
Katherine Goldstein, Host of 'The Double Shift', on Building Audience Relationships

Podcast Movement 2021

02:41 min | 1 year ago

Katherine Goldstein, Host of 'The Double Shift', on Building Audience Relationships

"Podcast thing is in many ways still treated effectively as a broadcast medium. that's like this one directional pipe yet. that the listenership feels exceptionally I think involved with the hosts like the day. They may be feel more like a. They have the relationship even though there. It's not bidirectional all the time from communications out of. I'm kind of curious like given kind of the ways in which podcasting works like. What are those relationships. Look like with your audience like how do you have. You have that relationship with them beyond the financial. Certainly there's the financial membership side of things but like what what does a relationship look like with your audience catherine so this year. I feel like we've had some great breakthrough. We've had a membership program. Since we we started as an experiment in our first season in people signed up which is amazing. But we didn't really offer we're just like can you help us like we didn't really offer much by way of benefits but so one of the ways risk deepening relationship this year. Which has been really cool. Is that actually. We've had Listeners become guests and that has been really cool because We're always looking for a Surprising unconventional stories and for example we did a whole series on the true cost of the pandemic for moms in we It was a partnership with the guardian. We did a bunch of reporting and we did a lot of call outs to. Are you know audience and Two of the five people we ended up featuring wor listeners of the show one was a waitress in mississippi who had written me a number of times with different story ideas and i thought But then you know. She told me a bit about her life. And i was like actually. I think you're right for this story that we're working on and she. We ended up doing the whole episode about her experience with losing her job and her mental health struggles in getting addicted all these things that like but she very much came to us because she was already in our listener community in the other one was a young mom who was a new orleans nightclub worker and we talked about her career panic struggles and you know what what happened. We ended up featuring on the show as well so also when people hear that listeners are coming from the show. I feel like that they hear that a guest that they have curtis thirty minute episode within their emotionally vested in were listener who reached out that makes them feel like it's more of a two way street and that there is more potential for

Catherine Mississippi New Orleans Curtis
"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

02:42 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

"By of cake. I can't even do it. It turns out pull. Hollywood hates flange was banned from the show after he made his second flange silent loving the whole time. So you haven't seen it but you know that there's this sort of like pretty serious. This is my favorite comedy is. I've never seen and i guess cake wasn't up to the task. It fell apart under the scrutiny of hollywood. Like it's really different in tone from the rest of the show and they describe it it goes. Tomes cake is a bouillabaisse. Cherry meringgi within the tele spread of zimbabwe. He's mixed marjorie with the butter too. Horrific effect. I actually have a great british bake bit which i can't even remember. It's been so long but it was like they're always making bread. They're always trying to make kasha and then pull always eats it and he goes it's Fuck what is the other brand. Just had it o- small shibata they're all gonna make it. You try to make a fa- caution fuck up you wake shibata. Thank you thank you. I love this. Thank you for your time. Thank you for having me on your show. I love san highlight of my day by day. I appreciate it and good luck with. I don't have to say it. What fun you're helping me to love sweet stream. Thank you for helping our podcast more people. It's it's nice take you. People are already gonna watch ted last so they can help. Yeah well i mean. I really like it. I understand what you're saying. But i can say you can't say i'll say we sort of have to watch you telling me. Tiger king puts out a whole new season. And as that guy again. And it's we found all the footage from the seventies and we're not gonna want we have to watch it and it comes out and it's like bad news. It's like a busy week. And you're like fuck. That's how it is with head. Lhasa jay's chief what do you say keep it crispy keeping crispy son or bob. Roy larry i you're after avai- raceway thank you thank human store..

Cherry meringgi flange kasha marjorie Hollywood zimbabwe hollywood Tiger king ted Lhasa jay Roy larry bob
"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

06:28 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

"To give you twin peaks. Yeah united twin peaks. We forgotten is. You didn't twin pace. And that's why he left to impeach right. So i'm gonna fuck with your head. That's twin peaks right. We do get you. And i love it and it. Did anyone like the return twin peaks. Yeah yeah i love you but it's how in it's not it is is fan surveys. Same show it isn't like more of the thing you like is like right. I'm gonna blow your fucking mind. Like i did when i look at my hair. I'm going to do that to your mind. This is a good but in a way season to the aim was at least i hope achieved it. One reason people like season one was surprised them. Yeah so we keep surprising. Yeah that's what do we can't be guy in that diner that thing. We'll just keep doing more of that is not really think. So if i could have bet. I was going to be like. They're going to do exactly what they did again. I mean i would have. I'm shocked. i mean the vibes. Sure but that you're even saying that there's an attempt you're making me think of the second season of the british office when they when they really went like it was hard now. It's my favorite season. Yeah but it went real goofy left and it wasn't just more of the same. Oh i think jason jokes about it but moser means it. This is the empire strikes back. This is like this is their best price. but i'd states funnier. but it's docker steeper and it's upset you because what made me keep watching. It was the pilot we were talking about the pilot and like every show. It gets better katie. And i before you got here. And i liked that at t's the his wife issue and that's why i kept watching it so it's always those are the things that that hooked me. The jokes are brilliant and the heart is great. Sure no it's true but there needs to be some sort of substance. Did you ever talk to. You're in the room with jamie lee. Yes and she was a writer on crashing and became one of the stars of crashing. And you know my experience jamie. And i tell you this is when i joined his rights in my first time. Doing meghan writes rooms on. And i had researched as much as i could who these rights are going to be and the only writer who was in the team. Jason and brendan was jamie. That were that. I'd known from crash. Crashes so we got star run. Not she's going to be a nightmare. That's what i'm assuming. I'm like oh she's going to be difficult. But yes yeah being the star of and she was and she was fucking nightmare now. She was so delightful. Brilliant lovey. And i said you i had. This is tightly on me. I seem to you. it's going to be of your your from crashes villian amazing you. Bill ended that so much as the best and she was a great writer. as why. don't you kept writing on the show. Even when she was on the says she knew what it was like to be on a show and writing for the show. Boy that's great. I love that. I really enjoyed that. That story is gonna give me the chills while i'm paying bills as they say the dream. What gives us before you go okay. Sorry i'm just like. I don't wanna wrap up. Give me your top five favorite films. Just do it. Just shut the fuck up. They'll give me to know what it is. Just do it. Don't be tired of it. we're talking. Look i can. I can give you too easy. Yeah singing in the right okay. Don't look now watchdog. Now at fucking loved and i think the real objectively. It's no necessarily my favorite. But i think as a piece of film it's really good. It's the deal nestle about time in fucking tool bunch this yeah weird. It was hard to watch. Because i have kids hit. I think it must be yeah map. A christmas carol number one christmas carol. Welcome to my show. The most underrated. Christmas movie to the best of all time the best film of it's dark. It's funny it's smart. It's true ridiculous. Treated the best best best. Clara live with all the christmases. It's the best care of all the christmases. Yeah we watch it. Sometimes twice in the christmas season scary goes to prison. I discuss. Can i tell you something. He's one of the greatest compliments. I've ever been given the go soo christmas. Present redhead val goes. That's how you are. That's how i see. You marry her. Yeah if someone sees you marry look at you and they see a seven foot muppet. Ghost of abundance ghost is. He's not a ghost he's just fun he's president. He signed president. He's present he can only last two days it fly he only today that fucking oh but light came into your life and told you you were the guys christmas present from up aggressive and you put a ring on it. I did quite right. That's right dynamic a guy but also be free. I don't own her. I only want happiness for her and they've happiness involved not be with you then you fucking guy who that's right. And if she comes back she comes back. I'm surprised because he was kinda jedi is surprising. Say quick so good. Hit chris where i love i. Where did i get to sing the right kind of magnolia. I love magnolia very dark movie. Sure meaning it leaves me with like sort of a sad feeling Kid the kid with the kids interested in for all the stories. That's the one that hits you the kid. Yeah and yeah. I don't like the kid and his dad father one. You need to be nice to kills me every time. Great movie my favorite fun fact about that movie eaten when p. anderson sat down to write it. He said not knowing what was going to be he said. I want to write a great movie so to me. It speaks to have the goal. Like maybe about my spoiler. If you haven't seen it skipped forward a bit. Yeah but it ends with this guy. mpv zammit etc. When things it means is he said. Pt anderson that.

jamie moser jamie lee meghan katie jason brendan Jason Bill Clara carol chris anderson mpv zammit
"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

05:08 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

"Was the bell and and went playing footsie. I can't believe you got that joke. I'm sorry interrupt ben ballet and the funniest thing ever happened to me. I'm sorry to leave friends with you. God love you wish people come. They go into cussing criticism meetings. And they go. I'm in this show. In britain and they talk like this and they say it's a and it's called sunset beach but but because they're british and the doesn't that show that's right think they're in fucking that right shakespeare. I think they're in the british wire and all of those people have acting careers in la. I'm telling you when you see you fucking kidding me. It would be shitty show. How all of them successful. And i say good luck to him. That is brilliant. Because you didn't you figured it out if there was a lie exactly if i could go to. It doesn't go the other way. I can't go to great britain and be like hello. Yeah what you guys have nacho cheese. But he goes like look at that age shuttle night people guy dragging around the back. That's right and to death commando. It's not very nice. We they don't like well. Is that true. Yeah not certainly not charmed very weird charmed worry about it remember in love. Actually of course you do you watch it every morning to remember yourself. That's my mantra is actually titled all around a live in my fingers you remember. Yeah that guy has to stop and you know what i didn't even feel stop hop. I have a thing with accents. i mirror. Whoever i'm talking to you and i do like british cultures. I'm very tempted to not. I'm not going to do the accent. But i'm really. I know i wanted to call yourself on a mobile. I just wanted to really januarius. Is it united in some places if you go to spain and you can do like five words. They go like he's making an effort. He's making it effort. Yes okay and contact and cantaldo chiluba. That's not spain address. The searchers searchers. He's making an effort. Let's allah we work. Lamar is now real. Suing them with day at the lotto. You're gonna kill my toilet. I think that means. I'm death standing behind you which is really the spanish okay. So i'm i'm going to give you a few situations we're in a we're in a restaurant i didn't say pob. I'm not a basic interest as well as drink. That's right. I eat and drink and we're in a restaurant and people hear me. I'm like i'll have the steak. What are we thinking. I hear you order steak. I'll have the steak i go. Is that what what what would you. What what the average honestly honestly honestly this candidates that that's what we want. I'm standing in for is what happens. Yeah british people in restaurant you and as an american going to be much louder than anyone else in the very of course we have a quiet so repressed bridge. We don't fucking till we don't express it my shit. We're having outdated angry but quietly angry. I'm angry by the way. I feel like i can pick up on it because i'm because i'm christian. Yes and i'm waspy white anglo saxon protestant and k. I can just in case cases is inclusive. Chat guys probably made up wasp. What am i saying we are. That's yours you're the wasps didn't come here and guy. Yeah this is how you behave now. That's right for well. I'm embarrassed i. I'm saying when i watch british people home having a chin wag i go. I feel the tension. Because that's that's how we communicate attention. We're not a bunch of bill birds in my family. They shut up. We're going like. Oh you're ted lasso. Good for you yes. You know underneath as you need a cook. You can't sorry preface that i understand. I don't not a big deal. No big and you say you mean is not you can't you can't you can't count you can't is not you can. Let's say that'd be because here we are. I'm enjoying the bubble of safety of britain. Yeah and i just had. And if i said come on any other episode that'd be like and here we are just a couple of counts. Just kinda counts. Is i chose to play this episode in your coffee shop over the loudspeaker. Yeah you're welcome to the spiritual shows highest. I'll maybe this is what happens. And the reason. I'm so we get it.

ben ballet britain januarius cantaldo chiluba sunset beach spain shakespeare la Lamar ted lasso
"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

04:29 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

"Of year. Wikipedia page has no personal life section. I'm very very private. Oh why should anyone anything and lance mccullers. I'll tell you everything is see. i thought i was like. Let's fix it. no i'm gonna give you nothing. Can nothing nothing coups. We've got you. I'll get. I'll just get the right amount to keep people listening to tell me how it is you. Are you getting through the ringer of press. Because it's the worst right. Is there a black car waiting for you right now. His is your manny talks about gratitude. A lot up in doing this for a while. I've been in this game right but this is far and away. This is a miracle. It's ted lhasa is. It's a miracle. Feels like a christmas miracle to sweetie sweetcake miracle but it's a hit in time with no hits you come kiss. There's no head what's ahead. i don't even consider. Game of thrones ahead. I consider it like a weird like gigolo community. There's some people that really love it. But i didn't watch it not a lot of people say things like i've not what's game at fries. They know what it is. that's right. that's what everyone seems to say. I've seen lhasa. And i love ted lasso. Here's the new sociopath protest. Did you not like ted lasts. And if you circle yes you're circling in your own blood or the blood of a i don't wanna say say say small dog and that's okay horrible. Horrible can i say for the listener. Yeah i'm a fan of podcast and we all know he struggles with the dog and he blamed you on trauma and shouted things. That's right having met the dog. Isn't that his past the dogs at dick dogs hard work. I love dogs and this dog. I realize fates been spending too much therapy just admit that dogs are shit and they say okay. We're done that's it and it'll be the one that i always recommend. Which one should. I listen to brad. State keep grigsby get outta here unbelievable. Thank you. It's important to see that from an outside because i do walk around with a lot of guilt going like i'm a bad person bad. That dog was he can be lovely but like you saw how. He is five six times a day fit. Don't me so good looking pa- needs to develop a personality. Looks ninety side that's right. Let's work on that person. yeah. I'd rather the personality of a really fat dog with one missing foot. Oh really loves and he knows how to liquid kind of a dry lick he's gonna hug you land with s. He's watching videos of cats to learn how to snuggle. He's he's side was up to you guys. Shall we give of francis. Try people keep talking about it right here. Like a breath taker. You take the breath. I don't laugh. I just go like look at it. Go matt you thing then. You're harnessing i go look at golden bridge thing that is quoted as saying your skill is a british thing you know. What a bit is that. I've always wanted to try. 'em western I guess we'll just say western people. But i mean america north american people are so wowed by british people and i'm like in britain. This is just a basic pitch right like somebody's like daft and really you. Don't give a shit about this guy thinks some of your basic bitches. Yeah come here to be like. Are you having a go. And we're like. I want wanna suck this guy's dom he calls it a i don't know let me tell you seek his now. Bend our name the show meaning that that is as bad as no disrespect. Delon sunset beach. Okay right yeah. bad show. The balance from british came to hollywood. That was the bell and and went playing footsie. I can't believe you got that joke. I'm sorry interrupt ben ballet and the funniest thing ever happened to me. I'm.

lance mccullers ted lhasa ted lasso manny Wikipedia lhasa grigsby ted brad golden bridge pa francis matt Delon sunset beach britain america hollywood ben ballet
"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

02:26 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

"The restaurants and millie's is not like an empty place. So i'm using. This is one of the ways. I so funny you kill me tv. The word betas at italic. You've made tv. I fall for incredulous. it's true. I it all the time. You know how you wanna get me. That's a set like here's a tad is is the obviously. The locker room is a set. Yeah and i was wrong. Apparently what is richmond place where they work around outside. That's of course that's real. But the outside by the way have watched the whole show twice so is richmond. Richmond is the field now. Richmond is everywhere. But we've been talking about outside. I understand israel in the interior is a fake set. That is exactly a replica of the real. We did that on. Hbo's crashers all the time we we would shoot the pilot and are these apartment was an actual apartment in new york and then it's money. It's cheaper to build a replica of the apartment. Then to pay the people who own that apartment i have to imagine. What is a huge fee. And by the way well-earned have you ever. I'm sure you have many times on a practical location. No matter how much stuff they lay on the floor. Something's going to get dinged or winged. It's just like a crazy way. You can't stop at any point. Jerry seinfeld might show up with a comedian. So let's stop here for a bit. You like comedy planning ahead. We're feel so funny okay. You're on comedians in cars. Yeah i'm and you are stand up. Comedian i didn't know that i should have done research but i i i watched all of ted lasts twice as you did my bed more. I've had wonderful chats with less prep meaning. I wouldn't have even seen your show but at the end of your show twice you be no surprise of year. Wikipedia page has no personal life section. I'm very very private. Oh why should anyone anything and lance mccullers. I'll tell you everything is see. i thought i was like..

richmond Richmond millie Hbo israel Jerry seinfeld new york ted Wikipedia lance mccullers
"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

03:02 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes

"As if you weren't watching it already. Here is the incomparable. The hilarious brett goldstein. Get into it. But i yeah. He listened to the podcast. I sort of you listen to his. I love it. What's it called. Films will be buried with your sinophile. Oh boy i could use some new ones. Everyone could everyone loves movies. We'll welcome this. Is the couch. Feel free to just because you've heard the show feel free to comment on how many Empty bottles are in the bottom of the sauna or this year. Already film ink recording escorting. But this is your episode. It's not like a gotcha thing we can. We can start now if you'd prefer. I mean i. It was pretty bad. I said lights k. Really bad you didn't like i seem to fred. I seem to accessible. I think so too. Well yeah looking smiley. You are contact. My of course look at how i'm sitting. We're sitting sorority sisters. We i'm going to raise your hand every time. You're gonna wind me up. Braise braid braid that you said brazen. I thought it was british for like another way of saying wind. You up for take the piss. I'm ready to go make funny. Okay i thought you. I thought you're going to because here i am. I'm pointing out. What's different about you. very who cares. Let's not even talk about ted lasso. Nobody cares a lot of people are but they can listen to you on any other show. Let's have a real finding chat. You love but i will say that. You're you're much you're so smiley smile get outta here. I'll tell you what we will do. That is i tell my mind because otherwise is gonna be. I understand and are you in the middle of it. Are you just getting carded around. I'll be on his view this thing. Let me just sort this out because you only son this out gonna show. I like this this of comedians in cars. They always added out what they order. That's all i wanna know. How do they order. What do they order. Why are the wait is looking at the camera the whole time. Why is everyone ready to be on tv. Thank you brad okay. So sometimes i don't. I don't i don't know why. Why did i go hit it. Why don't we still here. And then it's like oh set up their cameras everywhere. I think it is real. You don't think it's real. I think the cameras run in. What's they guy. Let's go here and they stand still for twenty minutes while. I don't think it's katie. Has an opinion. What is your empty. The restaurants and millie's is not like an empty place. So i'm using. This is one of the ways. I so.

brett goldstein ted lasso smiley fred brad okay katie millie
"goldstein" Discussed on 10% Happier with Dan Harris

10% Happier with Dan Harris

02:50 min | 1 year ago

"goldstein" Discussed on 10% Happier with Dan Harris

"I had the pleasure of watching some talks that you had given recently where you were talking about. What are known as the three proliferating factors. I think i have that right. Am i using the terminology correctly proliferating tendencies. What do you mean by that. And then what are they. Okay so i just out of general interest. I just want to mention the pali word for that. For liberating tendency polly's the language you know of the ancient buddhist tax because it's it's one of those terms that comes up frequently even in our modern discourse on the teachings so just to familiarize. I'll listen to that term. It's puncher and i like the pilot because it sort of as onomatopoeia sort of sounds like what it is. I'm it's just the mind for liberating elaborating from the bear elements of our experienced from the building blocks of our experience. We then build hold worlds and then get meshed in one way or another in those worlds and so there are three main tendencies which lead us in that direction. It's very helpful to become aware of them to distinguish between them and to learn how to free from them if not completely at least to have more wisdom in relating to them when we see them rising to let's basically what poncho these proliferating tendencies of mind it expands in quite a powerful way just the complexity of all lives particularly with regard to how sufferings created and how we can Become a little more free. When i've used the word historically. I must be using the sanskrit version. Because i have often said pro-panchayat it sounds like that. Difference between pauline since group which are very close. I love the term pro poncho or puncher. We're however you want to pronounce it or spell it and i've heard a translated as the imperialistic tendency of mind in. And that you hugh you take a data point from the present moment like you stub your toe and you colonize the future with his holy. Why am i always the guy who's stubs toe you know. This is gonna hurt forever and what you're talking about here. Are these three sort of runaway trains of punch that are really three of the main contributors to how we suffer as humans.

Joseph goldstein Joseph Meditation society sharon salzberg jack cornfield Hello joseph massachusetts joseph barre beatles Titans polly rahula hugh papon
Getting Over Yourself With Insight Meditation Society Co-Founder Joseph Goldstein

10% Happier with Dan Harris

02:50 min | 1 year ago

Getting Over Yourself With Insight Meditation Society Co-Founder Joseph Goldstein

"I had the pleasure of watching some talks that you had given recently where you were talking about. What are known as the three proliferating factors. I think i have that right. Am i using the terminology correctly proliferating tendencies. What do you mean by that. And then what are they. Okay so i just out of general interest. I just want to mention the pali word for that. For liberating tendency polly's the language you know of the ancient buddhist tax because it's it's one of those terms that comes up frequently even in our modern discourse on the teachings so just to familiarize. I'll listen to that term. It's puncher and i like the pilot because it sort of as onomatopoeia sort of sounds like what it is. I'm it's just the mind for liberating elaborating from the bear elements of our experienced from the building blocks of our experience. We then build hold worlds and then get meshed in one way or another in those worlds and so there are three main tendencies which lead us in that direction. It's very helpful to become aware of them to distinguish between them and to learn how to free from them if not completely at least to have more wisdom in relating to them when we see them rising to let's basically what poncho these proliferating tendencies of mind it expands in quite a powerful way just the complexity of all lives particularly with regard to how sufferings created and how we can Become a little more free. When i've used the word historically. I must be using the sanskrit version. Because i have often said pro-panchayat it sounds like that. Difference between pauline since group which are very close. I love the term pro poncho or puncher. We're however you want to pronounce it or spell it and i've heard a translated as the imperialistic tendency of mind in. And that you hugh you take a data point from the present moment like you stub your toe and you colonize the future with his holy. Why am i always the guy who's stubs toe you know. This is gonna hurt forever and what you're talking about here. Are these three sort of runaway trains of punch that are really three of the main contributors to how we suffer as humans.

Polly Hugh
Winners and Losers in Uniteds Big Aircraft Order

Aviation Week's Check 6 Podcast

01:51 min | 1 year ago

Winners and Losers in Uniteds Big Aircraft Order

"United airlines gave the aircraft industry of big shot in the arm last week with an order for two hundred seventy new airplanes. United will buy two hundred boeing max family airplanes as well as seventy airbus a three twenty one. Nieto's the new. Airplanes are part of a plan by united to gross domestic capacity by thirty percent over the next five years. But not everyone in aviation came out a winner. United glance stopped flying fifty seat regional jets at. It's major hubs arche another blow to that struggling sector of the industry joining me to make sense of all this. Our aviation weekenders yen's flow tout and fan goldstein ben. Let's start with you. Tell us about this united order yet. Joe so the order was united's largest ever it was also one of the biggest orders We've seen in the past decade Particularly in in recent years You know it's for one hundred fifty seven three seven max aircraft Breaking it down. It's a hundred max. Tens and fifty. Max eighths as well as the seventy eight three twenty. One nieto's united already had an order placed for one hundred max tense so this ups their commitment to two hundred and fifty. Max tends making it by far the largest operator of of the type which is of course the the largest max variant these. These planes are all due to arrive. between twenty twenty two most of them between twenty twenty two and twenty twenty six and is really going to ramp up pretty quickly in twenty twenty three. They're going to be taking a one hundred thirty eight aircraft so that some really about one plane every three days so a lot of capacity coming in and at the same time as they're taking these these new jets they're going to be retiring more than two hundred fifty seaters. This is going to amount to a really big increase in capacity at united

Goldstein Ben Nieto United Airlines United Max Eighths Airbus Boeing JOE MAX Jets
Getting Vulnerable With Psychologist Laura Goldstein

Beyond Picket Fences

02:26 min | 1 year ago

Getting Vulnerable With Psychologist Laura Goldstein

"I think we are going to dive right into the discomfort of the subject of being vulnerable sheila. Let's just notice that as we just stay that word being feeling being vulnerable just pause notice. What does that. Where does that show up in your body. Feel that in your body. We're going to be vulnerable. What's the first the first place you feel that in stomach stomach. What about you mandy. Radio feel that when you save owner ability it like this picture. I have is like being alone in a corner so to me. It just like the feeling of loneliness as where it took me well. That's a perfect place to to to just start with that conversation because his word vulnerability. I think it's used a lot these days than i credit that to bring brown who has just given this show the world this platform to be able to talk about vulnerability and the first place. We have to look inside of ourselves and just notice and just as justice in. How long did that take. It took you. I don't know fifteen seconds to pause to realize what naomi your went right to your stomach i to have that shared stomach place as a place of that talks to me and tells me that. Oh here comes something. That's hard and many. You went right to a visual of being alone in a corner and that vulnerability that message to your system. Means i have to be alone and so i would save right there like those are just beautiful places to just to recognize with inside of yourself and the conversation about what it means to be vulnerable and really you know being alone or uncomfortable. It doesn't have to be that way that we can really and that's what. I just adore about brown. She's really just turned this concept of vulnerability upside down to what the original meaning or definition was in the contract of own ability to really educate and she so so many so much data and that's why we love her in the therapy world because she does have research data and numbers to support these concepts that vulnerability really brings connected brings connected energy and brings us united.

Sheila Mandy Brown Naomi United
Temporal Product: Managing State With Ryland Goldstein

Software Engineering Daily

01:25 min | 2 years ago

Temporal Product: Managing State With Ryland Goldstein

"Done a show about temporal before and workflow engines in general. But i think it's a pretty deep subject and i like to start off by just exploring. The distributed systems related problems that a typical infrastructure team might encounter. That are still not solved by all these nice tools that we have today like. Aws and cooper netease and so on what are the outstanding problems. Yeah it's a great question from my point of view. It's actually sort of the same problems that people have been. Having even before distributed systems were like in vogue and they were the way to build applications. I think you know the same problems around. You know transaction optimistic basically guaranteeing that things like transferring. Money works out. Well those were problems that existed far before you know. Most systems were distributed world. These web scale companies. I think what ended up happening. Is that those problems they lingered you know. Those are still challenges that companies that are really important like banks and other financial institutions. even just like ecommerce. They still have to solve those problems. But now it's under the context of having to do it in a distributed environment and so it's essentially having to solve the same problems that were already challenging but now the pieces that you're actually building your application on top of in the things you're sort of relying on our shifting under you because their these distributed systems with all these edge cases

Cooper Netease
Temporal Product: Managing State with Ryland Goldstein

Software Engineering Daily

01:25 min | 2 years ago

Temporal Product: Managing State with Ryland Goldstein

"We've done a show about temporal before and workflow engines in general. But i think it's a pretty deep subject and i like to start off by just exploring. The distributed systems related problems that a typical infrastructure team might encounter. That are still not solved by all these nice tools that we have today like. Aws and cooper netease and so on what are the outstanding problems. Yeah it's a great question from my point of view. It's actually sort of the same problems that people have been. Having even before distributed systems were like in vogue and they were the way to build applications. I think you know the same problems around. You know transaction optimistic basically guaranteeing that things like transferring. Money works out. Well those were problems that existed far before you know. Most systems were distributed world. These web scale companies. I think what ended up happening. Is that those problems they lingered you know. Those are still challenges that companies that are really important like banks and other financial institutions. even just like ecommerce. They still have to solve those problems. But now it's under the context of having to do it in a distributed environment and so it's essentially having to solve the same problems that were already challenging but now the pieces that you're actually building your application on top of in the things you're sort of relying on our shifting under you because their these distributed systems with all these edge cases

Cooper Netease
Dina Goldstein  Creating a living and having a voice as an art based photographer

PhotoBiz Xposed

02:15 min | 2 years ago

Dina Goldstein Creating a living and having a voice as an art based photographer

"Guest has been described as canada's visual wizard photo. Journalism was i love and the reason that she became a photographer. She followed her passion and became a photo journalist and editorial photographer from nineteen ninety. Two to two thousand six before moving to large scale narrative at tableau tackles common imagination and beliefs and create images to promote critical thinking. And she's most nine for her series fallen princesses which was created in two thousand and seven and two picks humanize disney princesses placed in realistic modern scenarios yet to see these to truly understand how amazing they are. The idea behind the series was to challenge the happily ever after themes perpetrated by disney. and recently. She's released her thirty year photography archive by the name of triple x. I'm about the incredibly talented dana goldstein rat to have with us now. They not welcome. Thank you so much for having me. It's my pleasure. It's my pleasure thirty years. Has it gone fast or is it just you just into the grind feels like thirty years. Yes i mean. Time does go fast. Absolutely but i feel like i've done so much within these years and of course i've spent the last year the covid year collecting all of my work to my archive. So i've had a chance to recollect and think about things that i haven't thought about for years. So it was covered the reason for putting together the archival. Was this something that you planning to do. Not from ten or twenty years out. Actually i started doing this before cove. Ed i bought myself a very good explainer. Because of my photos are negatives. So i got binders and binders binders of negatives. And the first thing i had to do was go through everything and i started this process before cove it. I went to montreal to show my work and it was abruptly cancelled at. I came back here thinking out. What's next

Nineteen Ninety Dana Goldstein Disney Canada ED Montreal
Relational Mindfulness With Bart Van Melik

10% Happier with Dan Harris

02:24 min | 2 years ago

Relational Mindfulness With Bart Van Melik

"Here we go now with bart van. Milk bart great to see you. Thanks for coming on the show. Thank you down likewise god. Every time i see you. I think about the first time i saw you. Which was my first. Meditation retreat in two thousand ten. I wrote about it. It was like the key seen the key chapter from the first book. I wrote where. I go in my first meditation retreat. And i'm having all these interactions with joseph goldstein in the moments when. I'm allowed to talk to the teacher and in all of those moments. I don't think. I mentioned it but you were in the room because you were practising with him and he was giving me all this advice and you're sitting there nodding sagely so it's always a pleasure to see and you know. The pleasure is very mutual. Dan and funny story is. I had no idea what you do right for your livelihood. Because i had just come to america from the netherlands so i remember i think joseph said something to affect you notice person will know no and then he didn't say anything else but later on i found out. Oh it's yeah it's you. Well you were there for one of the most important moments in my life that retreat really change the trajectory of my life. So i always associate you with that home so many areas. I want to touch on with you. But let's start with relational mindfulness. Can you just give me a very basic description of what that is. Yeah i can. It's let me start just a little bit about that. We as human beings are relational by nature and a lot of meditation practices are done in a way where we bring attention to something. That's going on in early. And yet if you look at how life unfolds it. Unfolds very relational and so in relational meditation practices informa- ways. You learn not only to be aware of what's going on with a new but you'll also get instructions to be very mindful of. Let's say another person who's sitting in front of you

Bart Van Joseph Goldstein Netherlands DAN Joseph America
You Asked For Shots, Tuna, Metal, and Money

Planet Money

01:46 min | 2 years ago

You Asked For Shots, Tuna, Metal, and Money

"High planet money. This is haley calling from boston. I went to my local whole foods. Recently and splurged on what i thought was sustainably caught tuna and then i see when i get home in tiny print that it is wild caught in the usa. Great but it's packed in thailand. And i started thinking about all the miles that might tuna had traveled to get to me and my whole foods in boston and my question is. Is it worth buying this. Supposedly sustainably caught tuna even though it has travelled. Who knows how far around the globe to get to me. What is the environmental impact of this tuna. Yes that question means that. It is time once again to answer questions from our listeners. Hello and welcome to planet money. I'm jacob goldstein. First question of the day comes from haley. It's about tuna a delicious fish and emma. Peasley you're here to answer this question. Hello yes so. I talked to fish economist to get to the bottom of this one. I'm chris anderson. I'm a professor fishery economics in school of aquatic and fishery sciences at the university of washington. So the first thing chris says is that it is cheaper to pack the tuna in land then in the us and it's worth mentioning here that there have been labor issues at tie fish packing plants in the past. Also chris says it just doesn't cost as much as you'd think to ship things across the ocean and back ocean shipping is really cheap really cheap and it's really cheap because the boats that do it are really efficient because they move so much

Haley Boston Jacob Goldstein Peasley Thailand United States Chris Anderson University Of Washington Chris
Vets groups demand Wilkie's dismissal after scathing audit

John Landecker

00:43 sec | 2 years ago

Vets groups demand Wilkie's dismissal after scathing audit

"Veterans groups, the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. Disabled American Veterans and Amvets are calling for the immediate dismissal of Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie. Following a scathing government audit on Thursday, a report from the Veterans Affairs inspector general concluded Wilkie acted unprofessionally, if not unethical. And handling a congressional aides allegation of sexual assault at a V. A hospital. The investigation concluded. Wilkie repeatedly sought to discredit Andrea Goldstein. She alleged a man physically assaulted her at the V, A Medical center in Washington, D C and September of last year. Goldsteins, a Navy veteran and senior policy adviser to Democratic representative Mark Takano. He chairs the House Veterans Affairs Committee.

Afghanistan Veterans Of Americ Veterans Affairs Secretary Rob Wilkie Andrea Goldstein Veterans Affairs Iraq Goldsteins Medical Center Washington Mark Takano House Veterans Affairs Committ
Vet groups call for Wilkie's dismissal after scathing audit

AP News Radio

00:49 sec | 2 years ago

Vet groups call for Wilkie's dismissal after scathing audit

"Hi Mike Rossi a reporting that groups are calling for the dismissal of the Veterans Affairs secretary three veterans groups the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans of America disabled American veterans and amvets are calling for the immediate dismissal of Veterans Affairs secretary Robert Wilkie following a scathing government audit on Thursday a report from the Veterans Affairs inspector general concluded Wilkie acted unprofessionally if not an ethically and handling a congressional aides allegation of sexual assault at a VA hospital the investigation concluded Wilkie repeatedly sought to discredit Andrea Goldstein who alleged a man physically assaulted her at the VA Medical Center in Washington DC in September twenty nineteen Goldstine is a navy veteran and senior policy adviser to democratic representative mark Takano who chairs the house Veterans Affairs committee might cross CO Washington

Mike Rossi Veterans Affairs Veterans Affairs Secretary Rob Wilkie Andrea Goldstein Afghanistan Iraq America Goldstine VA Va Medical Center Washington Dc Mark Takano Navy House Veterans Affairs Committ Washington