24 Burst results for "Graham Norton"

"graham norton" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

03:57 min | Last month

"graham norton" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Miami dade county city Kendall, where wildlife and police were quickly called out to trap it by scared residents. Police officer Manuel all used a cowboy rope. I was able to last word around. It's a top legs. And it was in the midsection where I was able to just hold it in secure it. So I wouldn't go on into the street. I just, I just made a split second decision saying, I got to hold this gator. I got to contain it. And that's what I went by. No pets or people were heard in the gator was trapped and taken away. Natalie Rodriguez Miami. Actor Pedro Pascal says he's creeped out when fans ask him to do his Mandalorian voice on their kids, speaking on the Graham Norton show Pascal said he thinks it sounds inappropriate because it's a breathy low register bedroom voice. The actor added it just doesn't work out in real life. The third season of The Mandalorian debuts on Disney+ on March 1st. I'm Brian shook. And I'm Brian Curtis in Hong Kong. Let's check this hour's top business stories and the markets. China has called for a ceasefire in Ukraine in a bid to portray itself as a neutral actor. The 12 point plan calls for ending hostilities, protecting nuclear plants, resuming peace talks and eliminating sanctions. Bloomberg reporting suggests the plan appears to have little chance of succeeding. That's because Ukraine has said it would fight until Russia leaves its borders and Moscow has shown no signs of stopping its attacks. The BOJ nominee for governor kazuo ueda says the Central Bank will need to consider normalizing policy. As if the outlook for prices improves. For the moment, he backs continued stimulus. He says inflation above 2% is due to cost push and not strong demand. On prices. The BOJ has insisted that prices will cool below the target and that stronger wage growth is needed to secure a stable inflation. The way to echo that view in today's comments before the parliament net net, ultra easy policy will continue. Meantime today in the United States, markets weighed the prospects for a soft landing. The CEO of JPMorgan Chase, Jamie Dimon, said there's still a chance, even so he said there are a number of obstacles that remain. Here's diamond speaking with CNBC. The U.S. economy right now is doing quite well. Consumers have a lot of money, they're spending it, jobs are plentiful. I think it's fabulous, by the way, the wages are going up the low end. And so here our minimum wage is something like the 40 percentile of all Americans and they get mental, dental and medical and things like that. But it's wonderful. That's today. Out in front of us, there's some scary stuff. And you and I know there's always uncertainty. The obstacle is diamond was referring to include fed rate hikes. The war in Ukraine, energy markets, and the situation between the U.S. and China. Privacy regulators in Canada are launching an investigation into TikTok, more from Bloomberg's David in glace. For regulators have gotten involved from the federal government to three provincial agencies. They're probing TikTok's collection use and disclosure of personal information, regulators are also investigating whether TikTok is complying with lost governing young users access. Now elsewhere, there was more tight scrutiny. The European Commission suspended its staff from using TikTok and employees were ordered to delete the app from their mobile phones and corporate devices. Let's check the markets, the index is trading down one and a half percent. The nikkei is up 1.1%. Stocks in China are trading lower similar to what we're seeing in Hong Kong, the CSI 300 is down more than 1%. In currency news, the Bloomberg dollar spot is essentially flat. Dollar yen, one 34 71 little change for the day. Global news brought to you by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in a 120 countries. In Hong Kong, I'm Brian Curtis. This is Bloomberg. This is the Bloomberg black business

Natalie Rodriguez Pedro Pascal Brian Curtis Brian shook BOJ Ukraine Miami kazuo ueda dade county Graham Norton JPMorgan Chase Kendall Manuel TikTok Bloomberg Pascal United States China Hong Kong
"graham norton" Discussed on Double Tap Canada

Double Tap Canada

05:02 min | Last month

"graham norton" Discussed on Double Tap Canada

"Companies for years Mark Zuckerberg at Facebook, of course, famously sat in front of the Congress and America and said, look, this is just a content machine. People create content. We essentially are a shop window for it. But that's not really true. That's not really the case. These companies wield the power through their algorithms through the delivery of the content to the end user. Well, you're right so that these are hugely powerful companies. Mark Zuckerberg refused, I'm sure you remember to turn up to the British Parliament to the culture committee. He sent a few quite senior far more junior than him. People that I remember sitting in that room they were not happy. That committee. But yeah, they've basically they've always denied their publisher, haven't though. This is what's been going on for years. They have always denied they are a publisher. I've always said there are platform. And now, the British Parliament, parliament, the EU is getting interested in this, isn't it? Ireland, I've mentioned our staff into want these companies to be accountable. There was for some context in Britain. There was a really tragic story of a teenager called Molly Russell, who is awful. She committed suicide and one of the reasons attributed to it was some of the content she'd seen on social media. And that really played into a lot of the debate here in the UK. Even the coroner cited as one of the reasons for her taking her own life was some of the stuff she had seen online. And so there are very good reasons to worry about this. But you obviously also have to go back to that legal but harmful issue. You also have to deal with what consult consenting adults see. And be very clear about the differentiation between that and what children say. This is the problem. And that example you give. It is crucial because this is the problem that children are seeing this harmful material is not, I mean, yes, there are also children involved in this harmful material as well, which is even worse. In some regards, because there are children being abused, and that is being put on video, and that is being shared on the Internet. And it's being made available. There's also, frankly, some very harmful content out there just generally, and you do not have to go far to see it. You really don't. You can spend 5 minutes on Facebook. As I've done, I have done this. I've been on Facebook and you're going to this, I call the doom scroll video spiral where you go through these videos that seem to just continually roll from one to the next from one to the next, the other night I came across one in amongst a feed of people who might know the Graham Norton show. And in amongst that, I get a video where a guy slaps a girl. And it's pretty horrendous to see. And I think to myself, hang on, how did that end up in amongst all this? And by me watching or seeing that video and being horrified on it, which means I didn't swipe as quickly as I would have liked.

Mark Zuckerberg British Parliament Molly Russell Facebook Congress America EU Ireland Britain UK Graham Norton
"graham norton" Discussed on Homo Sapiens

Homo Sapiens

05:27 min | 5 months ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Homo Sapiens

"Now I took some of these two Luke and Billie later, which was funny. Second question we asked you. I'm thrilled about this because I'm proud of you all. Are you a romantic data? Hell yes, said something to him percent no thanks to 29%. Well, I love romantic data, so some do a percent of you, thank you. What's the most romantic thing you've experienced or done for someone? This is really sweet. Someone said, my girlfriend leaves me love notes for me to find in my desk draw the cupboard my books, et cetera see, romance costs nothing if you just do lovely touching things like that, listeners. Should you wish to? I'm talking to the 71 percent here, 20 9%. Would be interested. Do you use dating apps? Yes, at 6 5%. Interesting. No, thank you, said 35%. 35% of you are not contactable on dating apps. Tell us your dating app stories, we said. Poorly, I was chatting to a woman on bumble, who was 20 years older whilst I was at uni, okay? When I turned up to beg for a uni SA extension, it turns out she was in fact the course coordinator. She oh my God. And then she blocked me on bumble after that. What the cheek of it? Excuse me. Jane. Now James organized a bumble date and the guy turned up in full cycling spandex. I'm going to say, is that not potentially kind of hot? Sorry, if I'm, you know, makes me strange. But I don't know, kind of cool. Asks if I wanted to eat, I declined. He proceeds to pull out a freshly made egg mayonnaise sandwich from his cycling shorts. Oh my God. And eat it at the table in front of me. Okay, no one needs a sweaty Eggman a sandwich on a first date. I once went on a date with someone who got really hangry. It was all of it intense. I mean, honestly, someone else's anonymous, on a first date, he took me to see Graham Norton live. Wow, that's a great first date. I had to sit with him for three hours watching it, not so great. What I always find going to the cinema a bit odd, this is me sidebar. A bit odd is the first take because you just sit next to someone doing something else that you could be doing at home. It doesn't really make any sense. Anyway, back to the message. When it finished, we party ways, and I never spoke to him again. Good show, though. How funny would you write in and tell us what show it was? Who were the guests when was it? Then we can see if we can spot you in the audience. And then agony uncle dating questions are the ones that I take to Luke and Billy, so we will hear about that question. We've got a great answer. Really fascinating actually. Let's go and have a listen to these two.

Billie Luke Jane Graham Norton James Billy
"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

03:32 min | 5 months ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

"Was so great. Thank you so much. Thanks for this mini. It's been fun. Graham's fourth novel forever home is out now. And for our friends in the UK, Graham will be on tour to discuss the book through October 23rd, so if you've enjoyed hearing his musings and I know you have. Please do catch him live. Many questions is hosted and written by me, Minnie Driver. Supervising producer, Aaron Kaufman, producer, Morgan levoy, research assistant Marissa Brown, original music, Surrey baby, by many driver. Additional music by Aaron Kaufman. Executive produced by me, many driver. Special thanks to Jim nikolay. Will Pearson Addison O'Day. Lisa castella and a unique oppenheim at wkp. De la pescador Kate driver and Jason Weinberg and for constantly solicited tech support, Henry driver. Hey,

Aaron Kaufman Graham Morgan levoy Marissa Brown Minnie Driver Jim nikolay UK Pearson Addison Lisa castella Surrey wkp Jason Weinberg Kate Henry
"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

07:19 min | 5 months ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

"I would say San Francisco, I was in a hippie commune in San Francisco when I was 20 and 20 sounds quite old, but I was an Irish 20, which is like in a sort of international 14. Let's say. And I didn't know what I wanted to do with my life. I had done two years at university studying French and English, but I wasn't enjoying it. I didn't like being in court. And so I ran away. I ran away to San Francisco. And through various accidents and alchemy and luck, I ended up in this hippie commune. It's still there. It's still there in San Francisco. Oh my God, how amazing? Just off the Panhandle. And I had never met people like this before. People with convictions. Right. Put me right on. Put me off for life. But they treated me. They treated me in an adult. There was the chore wheel and you had to cook one night and I'd have to cook for, you know, 12 people. And I couldn't cook for one. Can I just get 12 pot noodles? And do that for everyone? That's okay, right? I went back, they had a kind of a 25 year anniversary. Ten years ago. And I went back to see them. And this one woman, she said to me, oh, we still make your soup, and I'm like, what? Apparently, I had made some leaked potato soup. Of course, that potatoes in it. And she still makes it, and she calls Graham soup. But weirdly that woman, I remember she was studying to be a nurse, and she was. I think she was 40, maybe 41 42, and she was studying to be a nurse and I remember thinking at the time, like, why would you bother really, really lady? You're training to do something in your 40s. It's too late for you. And I must have said that to her. Hopefully not as boldly as that. But I must have questioned starting a new career or being a student in her 40s. And she went, well, if I am a nurse, for the rest of my life, I'll have been nursing for 25 years. You know, chill her retirement. And I was like, oh, that's longer than I've been alive. I can understand that is a long time. And it gave me, in my little young life, it gave me kind of the gift of time of realizing that in a life, although they go by in a flash. We also have more time than we think we do, and I think that's something that young people should know. Don't be in such a rush. You've got time to fail. You've got time to succeed. You've got time to not succeed or succeed at the thing you don't enjoy and then find the thing you do enjoy. You know, when I turn 50, there is a sense, oh, the bike is at the top of the hill. And the rest of my life is now downhill. But then you realize, oh no, I'm only 50. Yeah. You know, with a bit of luck, there's decades of this shit left. I better find things to do and find challenges and things that I haven't done yet that I want to get done. So I'm not all came from that hippie commute. Don't be scared of failure. It's actually this time. I think it was Victor Hugo, who said 50 is the youth of old age. Yes. I really like that. And by the way, when you're in your 20s, I remember thinking, I had to get it all done. I didn't even know what that meant. But the amount of time I spent worrying that I wasn't doing enough. It's so interesting. If one does think about it, not that time is running out, but rather there is a lot of time. I know it's exact obverse of the meters ticking. Yes. But also, that thing that no time is wasted in a way. No, exactly. That if you find out that you hate doing something, it's going to help define what you do want to do. Yeah. I think that's brilliant for all of us actually to go. You've got a bit more time. You've got a bit more time than you think. Because how old were you when you kind of thought I've made it? It was for about 15 minutes. But you thought it. It didn't happen in the moment. It happened when I looked back. I must say that I thought the zenith of like being on the red carpet with my mom and dad at the Oscars when I was nominated for an Oscar. They made it real, like seeing them right there and my dad squeezing my hand and not being flustered by any of it. Just seeing him sort of daddy in that insane environment. There was a lot going on that night, but looking back the next couple of weeks, I did go. Actually, it's kind of what you said from the Snoopy cartoon. I was like, I'm not sure. It's ever going to get better than that. I think I peaked. I think I succeeded. You don't feel that anymore. No, God no, because that was this barometer that I'd set of what success looked like. And once you get rid of that barometer or beautifully or wonderfully, if you're lucky, that life will teach you that success and failure are lovers intertwined. One is not bad and one is not good. You have to name them differently. And you really start living. Once I started letting other things into my life that were great and amazing. I remember we had a reunion for drama school. I think it was a 25 or 30 year reunion. And of course, when your kids at drama school, we were all teenagers early 20s. And we only measured success in one way, success was being a star or having your name up or working in theater or working in film and television. We all, there's a whole group of people 28 of something, and we all had one vision of what success was. And so to meet up 30 years later and realize how diverse successes. Some people were still acting, and that was their success. Some people were now artists, some people had families. Some people had started businesses. There was one woman and she had an illness and she was in remission, so just being there was her success. Because I kind of thought, oh, it'll be a weird day because some of these people will be, you know, quotes failures now. And I will be the only true star. They're all going to hate me, Minnie. They're going to hate me. And I felt so stupid because when I got there, I realized, oh, we've moved on. If we got in a little telo transportation device when we were in drama school and went to the future and found out that a couple of us were still in the industry and doing well. Then it would have been a very bitter, horrible day. But the fact that you didn't. And the fact that we lived all that life and dream, and you got there, and I was so struck by it. The people and it goes back to time, doesn't it? As you navigate life, you find your joy and you find your successes in all different sorts of ways, as you now know. Yes. And I think we're brutal with our ideas of really adhering to a notion of what is success and what is failure and being traumatized by this prescribed idea of failing. Failure is so I can't remember the quote. Oh, it's Winston Churchill. I'm totally paraphrasing and botching it, but success is enjoying the failures in between failures. Like that it's all failing and trying not to and enjoying that process. I thought you were going to say success is enjoying the failure of others. But wait, that would be something that would be something that Churchill could also have said. Yeah. He probably did. He probably did. It

San Francisco Panhandle Victor Hugo Graham Oscars Oscar Minnie Winston Churchill Churchill
"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

06:51 min | 5 months ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

"What question would you most like answered? I remember, and I'm sure all kids do this where you lie on the grass and look up. And, you know, the clouds move, but you think that's the earth going. And then you look beyond that into the blue. That, even as an adult, you stop thinking about it, but as a child, that is such a kind of mind fuck. There must be a there there, but there is no there there. It goes on forever, and you can't go on forever. There has to be, you know, I still don't understand it. But do I want that question answered? I mean, no, because I think it would bore the bejesus out of me. I think I'm just like someone would start explaining to me our place in the cosmos or the concept of infinity and I would find myself slowly looking away. Oh, there's someone I know. I wonder what's for dinner. Was that my phone? And that is the origin of the universe. Oh, cheese toasty. Do you know what? I'm just thinking, the one thing I would quite like to be able to do, I would quite like to be able to read dogs minds. I know they're probably quite easy to read, you know, can I fuck it? Can I eat it? But I couldn't scratch my tummy. What is that? Yes. And can I eat that hand or pocket? I think there's some subtlety going on in there. There's something else going on. So I would quite like someone to tell me what my dog is thinking at all times. I really like that. And that is really true. Wait, can I tell you? Yes. My dog ran away from me. At this fair we were at, and I ran through the crowd, and I found him with his paws on the shoulders of this woman, and she was like, oh, yeah. Oh. Oh, goodness. And I was like, oh my God, oh my God, my dog. And she was like, hi. Your dog was just telling me a few things. Like, would you like me to tell you? And I was looking around and what is happening. Anyway, turn that, she was just really famous pet psychic and my dog told her. She said, you have to get his bed back from the garage. And I'd literally got him a new bed the day before and thrown out. His old one. And it was upstairs in the garage where I lived waiting to be taken away. And he told her that, and then the other thing he told her was that my sister used to take him to work, and my dog had most of his tail missing from a terrible accident with the door. And my sister's boss used to call him stubborn, his name was bubba, and he used to call him stumpy stubborn, and he didn't like that, and he told the pet psychic to tell me to tell him to fucking stop calling him that. Wow. It was heaven. They couldn't have known. She couldn't have known that. How could you have known that? We had a pet psychic on the TV show years ago, and this woman, she was literally from the audience and actually had a dog and the dog told the psychic that the woman needs to put carpet back in the bedroom because he can't jump on the bed anymore because he can't get purchase on the wooden floor, and the woman, I mean, you saw the moon's face. She was just like, honestly, I think she thought we'd broken into her house. And taking pictures or something. Because she had just taken up the carpet and put in laminate. Oh, my God. My God. And I also love the fact that dogs aren't like, you know, I want you to teach me the secrets of the universe and take me on Concord. No. Have you seen that woman on Instagram who thinks her dog can talk to her? Wait, when it hits the buttons. Yeah. Yes. I've seen her a lot. It's fantastic. I like the way if it just hits table and sleep. You dreamt about the table? You dreamt about a table? You were so smart. Well, a major UK supermarket now sells a set of four of those little things. Does it say fuck eat? You're honestly, no, you can record whatever you like. Oh my God, that's amazing. Yeah, we got them for Douglas the dog. And what's Douglas done with them? Nothing. Of course not. Occasionally he'll walk on one by accident, and then we have to give him a treat or something. One of them does say treat, even that one, he hasn't figured out that hitting it will get him a treat. But he's an older dog, so, you know, there is a saying about that. Also, it's like, you know, not all dogs are like really smart. Like I've had very smart dogs and I've had really thick dogs. Like really thick dogs. Some dogs probably aren't chatty. Some dogs don't want to talk to you. And they're like, look, love. There's a whole reason I can't talk. Stop trying to talk to me. That's what this life is about. It was about silence of our silence. Look, just a feed me twice a day. That was the arrangement. I said, what's the buttons? Stuck with the buttons. What's the button? Hey, it's mini driver. What if you had insights into your genetics that could help you live healthier? How would you use that knowledge to change your life? You can hear me talk with 23andMe CEO Anne wojcicki about how insights from our DNA can affect our health journeys and the new season of the podcast spit from iHeartRadio and 23andMe. This season host baratunde Thurston explores how more and more people are finding out that DNA is more than ancestry. It's a key to understanding your health, your genetic profile can tell you if you are at an increased likelihood for developing a particular condition. Its knowledge that can help you make smarter choices about your health and your lifestyle. And the new season you'll hear me and 22 other podcasters and influencers discuss what genetics taught us about ourselves and how that knowledge can impact the way we live our lives. Listen to my episode out now on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts. CVS Health is here for women. We know that women's physical, mental, and sexual health matters. That's why we're offering new women's health services available 7 days a week. Here, period health matters. So we're reducing prices on CVS Health brand period products by 25% and core CVS Pharmacy locations, and our goal is to eliminate the tax on period products nationwide. Learn more at CVS dot com slash women. Fall is here, which means it's time to refresh your closet and sacks off 5th is the perfect place to do just that. Let your style take off this fall in chic, faux leather jackets, cool chunky boots, trendy totes, and more. Update your wardrobe now with designer names like Stella McCartney, Chloe, Stuart weitzman, Vince, and more. So you can get everything you want at sacks off 5th. All at a price you'll love. Discover all of the fall fashion essentials at up to 70% off that sacks off 5th dot com or at a sax office store near you. Now, what person place or experience most altered your life?

Douglas bubba andMe Anne wojcicki Concord CVS Thurston UK CVS Pharmacy Stuart weitzman Stella McCartney Chloe Vince
"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

07:04 min | 5 months ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

"Boyfriend's heart lit up. I'd be like, oh God, keep that going. I can turn my phone off. I'll just turn this way down and hold on, yeah. Oh, that's lovely. So like a campfire. Oh, also, you know what's beautiful about Elliot and ET's relationship as well, is that Elliot, his love doesn't wave when he knows ET's gotta go. Yeah. He doesn't sort of stop helping him. And it doesn't diminish the love that notion that one person is going to really lose out, because I don't think ET would really think twice about Elliot after he's gone back home. Frankly, his home is obviously his passion and what defines love for him. It's all he talks about when he does anything. But also, isn't there something about that because ET nearly dies? Yeah. So Elliot thinks he's lost ET and then he goes back to life and then I think that allows Elliot to let him go because it's so lovely that he's alive. I don't care if you're alive and not living with me, but I'm so happy you're alive. You're absolutely right. It's a really beautiful, pure expression of unconditional love. That relationship. Yeah, I think you should stop asking this question now because I think I've given the proper answer. I think I've solved that question for you. Solved for that across it off. Yeah, it's Elliot and ET. Thank you. Thank you. Good night. Hey, it's mini driver. What if you had insights into your genetics that could help you live healthier? How would you use that knowledge to change your life? You can hear me talk with 23andMe CEO Anne wojcicki about how insights from our DNA can affect our health journeys and the new season of the podcast spit from iHeartRadio and 23andMe. This season host baratunde Thurston explores how more and more people are finding out that DNA is more than ancestry. It's a key to understanding your health, your genetic profile can tell you if you are at an increased likelihood for developing a particular condition. Its knowledge that can help you make smarter choices about your health and your lifestyle. And the new season you'll hear me and 22 other podcasters and influencers discuss what genetics taught us about ourselves and how that knowledge can impact the way we live our lives. Listen to my episode out now on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts. CVS health is here for women. We know that women's physical, mental, and sexual health matters. That's why we're offering new women's health services available 7 days a week. Here, period health matters. So we're reducing prices on CVS Health brand period products by 20 5% and core CVS Pharmacy locations, and our goal is to eliminate the tax on period products nationwide. Learn more at CVS dot com slash women. Fall is here, which means it's time to refresh your closet and sacks off 5th is the perfect place to do just that. Let your style take off this fall in chic faux leather jackets, cool chunky boots, trendy totes, and more. Update your wardrobe now with designer names like Stella McCartney, Chloe, Stuart weitzman, Vince, moschino, and more. So you can get everything you want at saxe off earth. All at a price you'll love. Discover all of the fall fashion essentials at up to 70% off at sacks off 5th dot com or at a sax off 5th store near you. Okay, so what is the quality that you like least about yourself? Oh. Compromise is a good thing, but I feel I'm a pushover. I feel like I never really stand up for anything. I kind of just go, well, I just roll over. There's a lot of rolling over. I feel like that's the thing the young me would judge me the most harshly about. I think the young me would be pleased that I was a success. But I think the young me would stare at me going, what? You're going to do that. Or that's okay. Isn't that like, you know, path of least resistance, isn't that like a whole kind of philosophy in itself? Isn't that a really amazing thing that you do that? No, I don't think it's admirable at all. I look at people with conviction and I am in awe of them. They are annoying, but I am in awe of them. That's really interesting. It happens in my personal life where there's a lot of inner monologue about that shouldn't happen or that, but I just don't say anything because it's easier, but it's not easier. But I think it is easier. It's easy because it's like the thing is that once you've done it once and you realize the whole world didn't stop and this guy didn't fall in and it was actually fine. I think it must then become quite a delicious thing to do, which is to maybe not take a position. It takes a lot of energy to have connection. It does. And I'm in all of those people. You know, I feel like, you know that thing kind of like, oh, that was quite good. Oh, that's fine. That's all right? And you got to think, oh, why can't something be exceptional? Why can't something be really good? And I feel like I should aim a bit higher in all parts of my life. But I don't. I don't count. Just trying to know this about you. Oh, no, no. He's my doing well. Yeah, he's my peak achievement. My husband is my Pikachu. I think that's lovely. I do know what you mean, but I'm just the complete opposite I need to stop trying to fight for everything and just getting exhausted and disappointed as opposed to being pleasantly surprised when a few things work out. There must be something in between where you know what battles are worth fighting. My boyfriend's really good at that. He's like, I'm not going to die on that hill. I am going to die on that one, except I'm not going to die. I'm going to succeed. I'm going to plant my flag in the top of that mountain. And then he'll do it. It's quite annoying. So maybe actually my worst quality is that I'm just sort of resentful of his good quality. My friend just moved into a new apartment, and they're having trouble with the neighbor. There's an upstairs neighbor. Oh, no. All these angry emails going around. And my friend ended one email with do not fight me. I will win. Oh my God. That's fantastic. I love that. Way to win over your neighbors. Do not fight me. I will win. Also, that is a rookie error. Never move in anywhere with upstairs neighbors. It's hard. I mean, what a nightmare, of course. But downstairs neighbors are terrible too. Neighbors essentially. Basically, being in a neighbor sandwich is fucking dreadful. Yeah. I don't know, I would take that into the extreme consideration. But yeah, the whole neighbor thing, nightmare. I used to do an agony uncle column in a paper here, and I did it for about 8 years, and those are the problems I dreaded when people wrote in about that neighbors. Because there is no solution. That's their solution except move. Yeah, move and even then it's hard because if they're noisy or whatever you taught us other house, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Yeah, you have to disclose all of that stuff. Yeah, it's monstrous. As if it weren't hard enough, trying to find a place to rent or buy in this life.

Elliot CVS andMe Anne wojcicki CVS Pharmacy Thurston Stuart weitzman ET Stella McCartney Chloe Vince
"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

07:22 min | 5 months ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

"You felt. Yes, actually, you're absolutely right. It is a correlation. All the things that could have gone wrong didn't. Yeah. Yeah, I wonder if there are people who when they die feel that. They should have went all the stuff is done. It's like, oh, phew. You know, I'm 98, and God, I don't have to do another Christmas. On a different level, I see that with people on my chat show all the time. What do you mean? At the very end, they're really happy. Well, they're kind of very happy, but also disappointed because they were worried for the whole show. Sometimes I'll have a Newbie someone who's just in their first movie or their first single or whatever. Yeah. And because I'm such an old lag, I've been sat there for donkeys years. And I suddenly realized, oh, oh, you're really nervous. You know, you just want to hug them and kind of go, oh, really? You shouldn't be nervous about this. Trust my so many worst things are going to happen to you. This is not one of them. This is one of the good things. Trust me, Newbie. The highlight. Oh my God. And I feel they were worried for the whole show that was going to go wrong. Are they going to say something stupid? Or I was going to ask them a weird question, or I was going to make them look foolish. And then you see them at the end, kind of going, oh, I could have just enjoyed that. I could have just let go and enjoyed that. And I wonder if people think that on their deathbed. Like, oh, I was such a fool while I worried about stains on my carpet when I could have just been enjoying the coffee that I spilt on it. You know, that kind of approach to life. When someone who you've loved has died, has that thing become really, really present for you of, oh my God, I'm really am going to let go of worrying about all of that stuff because I've just seen how quickly this is over. Yeah. There's a clarifying moment. I felt that when mom died so extraordinarily. Holy shit, I am never thinking about that thing again. That probably lasted for a minute. Yes. I agree with you. I think grief and loss gives you exactly that word, the clarity. It gives you perspective. It goes again. I'm a years ago in my 20s. I got mugged and stabbed and lost over half my blood and ended up in the hospital. But I remember when I was in hospital and maybe it was just the drugs I was on or something. I don't know. But I just remembered feeling like I knew everything. I felt like in that moment having survived that. I felt like I could have, you know, Palestine, Israel, come sit by my bed. I'll solve this because I have this kind of huge wisdom. Like I said, it was probably the drugs. But equally, I do think there's something about extreme things like that, like grief, like loss. For a moment, as you say, the window shuts again. In that moment, you know everything. Do you remember this is so showbiz, but do you remember when Kim Cattrall and Sarah Jessica Parker had the fuck yeah, I remember that, burned into my memory. So just walker said something to compile about the brother. Yep, about her brother. And Kim Kardashian, you were not my friend, and everyone was like, oh, that's a bit harsh. And I just thought, no, that's a woman in grief. That's a woman in grief going, oh, you know what? You fuck right out of this. Yes, it's the clarifier. You chop out the people that try to co opt your brother's death for a tweet or whatever it was. You respond with that clarity of emotion of like, I have no time for this extraneous social contract bullshit nonsense. Yeah. But I also feel like that does maybe just what we said about the anxiety qualifying the happiness. Those moments, and that kind of intensity, when I remember it, I feel the happiness on the other side of it. I feel how it helped throw into relief. What real happiness looked like, but sitting on that beach in Cornwall in The Rain when we all complained about the barbecue not lighting and my mom laughed because she had vulkan tonics in funny enough, a Snoopy, you know, small child's drink holder. All that happiness is just more clearly defined by all that worry or anxiety or angst around certain things. And I'm kind of fascinated by that, but that is part of I suppose the fundamental duality of being alive. It is, but also, I think, an extreme thing like that. You know, all that Wang y'all are living in the moment. Wagging on. But you know what I mean? 'cause it's like, well that ranging on and living in the moment, I totally do. So yes, we know we all ought to live in the moment. Yeah, yeah, well, you know what? I've got a diary and there's things in it and I'm planning. You know, you just can't. But in that moment, in that profound moment of loss, you are entirely in that moment, I think, where nothing else is going on. It's just that. Yeah, every book that I'd read on any kind of personal growth or philosophy or religion or whatever I'd read in my whole life, it was so extraordinary in those moments, and by moments I mean months after mom died. It's like I knew I knew just as you said weirdly. I knew everything. I knew all of the things all of the things that mattered all of the things that actually held meaning all of the things that I wanted to let go of. It was so incredibly clear. There's an extraordinary gift in that. There's not much that's good about when your mom dies. And I would only say that just in terms of observing stuff that happens, but I do believe in the clarifying power of grief and the definition of happiness. I want to see Gary Barlow from take that who if people are in America, they may not know take that, but he was a young kid and a boy band and then they disappeared. He had a horrible time and they came back and were you successful. And he's doing this one man show kind of a life. And in the second I actually tells us really heartbreaking story about him and his wife losing a baby. The baby is stillborn. And it's so heartbreaking to very sad, everyone in the audience sobbing. But he turns it into this positive. The gift that that child gave him was perspective, and the gift that child gave him was being able to say no to things, not needing to please people all the time. And that what you're talking about, the happiness on the other side of something. I just think that's what's that phrase collateral beauty around awful things. There is collateral beauty. Willie tell me what relationship real or fictionalised defines love for you. Oh now. It's fictional, but it was profound when I watched it and it's still kind of profound because I think there's a kind of a pure itty to the love in this. And it's Elliott and ET. The love between those two, because so much of it is on spoken so much of it isn't thought about or expressed or figured out or you know the way in relationships, there's a kind of not a game, but a kind of a dance, a sort of choreograph thing between you before you get to love and staying in love. And there's something so pure about the love between that little boy and the alien. And the fact that, you know, one of them is an alien. Makes it really lovely. And his heart lights up like a bedside lamp. You can't get better than that. I mean, I love John O but if his heart lit up like a bedside lamp, but I

Wang y Kim Cattrall Sarah Jessica Parker Kim Kardashian Palestine walker Israel Cornwall Gary Barlow America Willie Elliott John O
"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

07:35 min | 5 months ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Minnie Questions with Minnie Driver

"Barometer is watching for pressure shifts indicative of an airbag going off, so it can detect a car crash, then offer to call for emergency help, and all I have to do is drive. Apple watch series 8. Now with car crash detection, the future of health is on your wrist. iPhone 8 or later required emergency SOS requires a cellular connection or Wi-Fi calling with an Internet connection from your Apple watch or nearby iPhone. Hey, it's mini driver. What if you had insights into your genetics that could help you live healthier? How would you use that knowledge to change your life? You can hear me talk with 23andMe CEO Anne wojcicki about how insights from our DNA can affect our health journeys and the new season of the podcast spit from iHeartRadio and 23andMe. This season host baratunde Thurston explores how DNA isn't just about ancestry. It's a key to understanding your health when the new season you'll hear me and 22 other podcasters and influencers discuss what genetics taught us about ourselves and how that knowledge can impact the way we live our lives. Listen to my episode out now on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts. The thrill of forging your own path is powerful. Nissan is bringing that thrill to our community in collaboration with the black effect podcast network to create the thrill of possibility a community impact program and summit, curated to support HBCU students and science, technology, engineering, arc and mathematics, or steam, and introduce them to exclusive opportunities. Nissan is committed to creating opportunity for the whole community and ensuring that black excellence is a part of the new future of automotive. For more information about this program and how to apply, visit black effect dot com slash Nissan. There's been a dog snoring throughout most of this. Has Douglas been snoring. Yes. I remember you did our podcast and you were talking about your mom and it was really moving and lovely. And then you could just hear this. Crying. He was so wonderful. And I don't think it was empathy. I don't think he was going, oh, miss driver. Miss drivers speaking so movingly. I think he's just thinking, I'm bored. I want out of this room. Oh, let me out. What's happening? I remember your word by that. It's so funny. I like dog interruptions very much. It seemed quite disrespectful. I think that's entirely in keeping with dogs. Hello, I'm Minnie Driver. Welcome to the mini questions season two. I've always loved priests questionnaire. It was originally a 19th century parlor game where players would ask each other 35 questions aimed at revealing the other player's true nature. It's just the scientific method really in asking different people the same set of questions. You can make observations about which truths appear to be universal. I love this discipline and it made me wonder, what if these questions were just the jumping off point? What greater depths would be revealed if I asked these questions as conversation starters with thought leaders and trailblazers across all these different disciplines. So I adapted Proust questionnaire and I wrote my own 7 questions that I personally think are pertinent to a person's story. They are. When and where were you happiest? What is the quality you like least about yourself? What relationship real or fictionalised defines love for you? What question would you most like answered? What person place or experience has shaped you the most? What would be your last meal? And can you tell me something in your life that's grown out of a personal disaster? And I've gathered a group of really remarkable people, ones that I am honored and humbled to have had the chance to engage with. You may not hear their answers to all 7 of these questions. We've whittled it down to which questions felt closest to their experience or the most surprising or created the most fertile ground to connect. My guest today is the polymorphous wonder that is Graham Norton. Graham is perhaps best known for his chat show the Graham Norton show. For the 8 books he has written for the radio shows he presents in the UK and on and on and on because the thing for me that makes him so known is this extraordinary wit and spirit that just runs through every single thing he does. I can't tell you how many times I've been on his show over the years, but it's quite a few and I will tell you that chapters can really be a bit uphill. But I long to go on his show because I have never laughed so much in my life. After you've listened to this episode of my podcast, please just Google funny race horse names, the Graham Norton show, and you will see me genuinely crying with laughter at the hands of a merciless Graham. It's quite hard to become a national treasure in the UK, but Graham is one, and everyone knows it. I always feel better for having talked to him and this interview right now proved to be no different at all. Where and when were you happiest? I do know this, but I always kind of think I remember when I was a kid, there was a peanuts cartoon. I loved peanuts when I was a kid. But it's kind of weirdly deep for kids. I think it's Charlie Brown and Lucy, maybe talking, trying to balance someone else talking, somebody saying, you know, in every life, one day will be happier than all the other days. On the other little child is going yes. And then the first child goes, what if you've had it? And as a child, you know, that sort of blew me away. Because that's just seemed the saddest thing in the world that if you're 11 and you've had your happiest day, the rest of your life is lived out not as good as that. So I think you've got to live your life assuming your happiest days to come. I think that's very smart. Oh my God, it's so existential peanuts, isn't it? Yeah. That is so deep for a little children's cartoon. And it hit me to my core. That just seemed like meaning of life level of revelation. Happiest day might have happened. The answer to your question is I had a wedding weekend this summer in Ireland. Your wedding. My wedding. Yes, my wedding. We got married already, but we had this weekend. And you know, there were party planners and there was this going to happen. This is going to happen. People were flying in. But of course, then the airports were all messed up, COVID was still around. You know, I picked these party planners basically out of the phonebook. So they're telling me, oh yeah, we'll do this and you're thinking, I hope you do, because I have no idea. Anyway, the weekend could not have gone better. We got amazing weather. The moment I was happiest was with my husband just as the party was drawing to the close, on the Sunday. Where we were surrounded by our friends still, it was a beautiful night, the lights were all in the trees, the music was playing. And it was just, I didn't need to worry about how the whole weekend was going to go anymore. I didn't need to worry about the catering or the performers or the weather or people getting there. In that little, probably 15 minutes at the end. I could just be happy. In that little tail end of all the anxiousness and the planning, I felt supremely content and loved and loving and all those good things. And all the anxiety and the worry actually qualifies and probably has a huge amount to do with how happy

Nissan andMe Anne wojcicki Graham Norton Apple Thurston Graham Minnie Driver Douglas UK Charlie Brown Lucy Google Ireland
"graham norton" Discussed on Woman's Hour

Woman's Hour

03:34 min | 1 year ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Woman's Hour

"What are you thinking about today? Oh, absolutely iconic. The fact is you do not have to have seen an episode of EastEnders to know exactly who dot cotton is to know what she looks like to see her with a cigarette on the go. She was just one of a kind. And actually, these characters in soaps that last for so many years for decades, it's not like anything else we can experience on TV and film when you watch something for an hour a couple of hours or a series maybe. Lots of people have grown up with her. Everyone knows exactly how she is. And that is no mean feat to create a character like that. And me, I'm looking at the statement from EastEnders, they say, it's not there are not enough words to describe how much June was loved and adored by everyone at the soap, her loving warmth wit and great humor will never be forgotten. Apparently never wanted to put her cigarette out. Exactly. I mean, I wonder how many times over the years they tried to say, shall we maybe not have her smoking on screen as much, you know? It's not the done thing these days, but June Brown enjoyed smoking, enjoy drinking. She was asked about it in her later years and she said, no, well, I'll die at some point and I'll die while I'm drinking while I'm smoking. But apparently didn't want to put it out as she was heading on to the set of Graham Norton. No, she had very iconic talk about iconic appearance with Lady Gaga where the two of them were sitting next to each other and you would imagine that Lady Gaga is the outrageous one, the one that God is on with the attention. And she was just mesmerized by June Brown. She had never met anyone like her. She just wanted to be her best friend. And June was a character outside of the soap and a real personality and wouldn't be, you know, we see so many media train celebrities, you know, exactly what to say in every interview. That was not her. For better or for worse, she was her personality and she would not quell that for anybody. And what do you think it was about her role in EastEnders though? Of course, for many, they'll remember many very funny moments, but also very moving moments as well. Hugely, you know, they weren't afraid to give her big storylines and she was a fantastic actress and able to carry those off..

June Brown Lady Gaga Graham Norton
"graham norton" Discussed on Daily Pop

Daily Pop

02:46 min | 1 year ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Daily Pop

"Thought lying and I were gonna throw daggers at each other. No, but it works because you guys do love each other. I know you love each other. All too far. Mutual respect. Right. That's the one. Making a respect. Somebody put some respect on Denzel Washington's name because we have been saying it wrong this whole time. What? Check him out on the Graham Norton show. I was quoting you Denzel is that correct. Actually, it's Denzel. Oh, no, is it really? Yeah, but so was your dad Denzel. Well, he was Denzel. And yeah, yeah, yeah. And I'm Denzel junior. So my mother started calling me Denzel just so, you know, she'd say Denzel and we both would show up. I had no idea. I had no clue ever, but when you have a good thing, you just stick with it. I think it speaks to how cool he is too. Like he's one of the top actors in Hollywood, and he's never felt the need to correct anybody. He's like, ah, whatever I know, I'm also, I don't need to say anything. But by the way, a name is 20% of your success. Link, Brad Pitt. Tom Cruise. Thank you. Those names, you want to, you want to make those people stars just so you can say their name. But do you know how many people have named their child after Denzel and it's actually Denzel? They're going to go and change all of them. I mean, really? I didn't even know that. But would he been successful with Denzel Washington? See, it's hard to Denzel. Denzel. And by the way, if your mother calls you whatever she calls, you not correct. No, no, no, no, no. No, no, no, no, no. Not at all. No, not at all. And once the hood picks it up, it's steak. No, I know. We love it. Sherry shepherd says it's time for women to get real about how much they make on bravo's watch what happens live. She shared how Rosie O'Donnell's financial confession changed her life. Is it true Rosie gave you advice on negotiating your contract when you join the view? Absolutely. Rosie told me told me how much she made. And she helped me negotiate it. And this is why I believe women, we got to stop being scared to let people know what we make. Because. I'm always telling women what I make. Only if you're doing what I do now, if you work at the bank and you're trying to ask me what I'm making ain't none of your damn business. First of all, the lady at the bank asking you, she going right through your financial. Not ready to look at it up. Trust and believe honey. Shout out to her for her new show, sherry, which would be premiering in the fall. I'm very proud of sherry. She is really worked really, really hard, you know, we went to stand up together on the road and to see her. This is something that she's always wanted. But I'm not sharing my.

Denzel Denzel Washington Graham Norton Sherry shepherd Tom Cruise Brad Pitt Rosie Hollywood Rosie O'Donnell bravo sherry
"graham norton" Discussed on Elvis Duran Presents: Celebrity Buzz

Elvis Duran Presents: Celebrity Buzz

04:16 min | 1 year ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Elvis Duran Presents: Celebrity Buzz

"He'll attack you until you're blue in the face, doesn't care if you survive or not. In just in order to promote his album. The man has an album that was due out last week and shockingly enough. It's not ready yet because he's pulling people off that are associated with anyone or everyone. And as for the Billie Eilish incident, rob shooter. I just feel this is the problem with the Internet. You know what I mean? Billy's playing it right. And I think as a publicist, I think you former publicist, you can agree that as opposed to engaging and saying, yeah, I made it about Travis Scott, Billie Eilish simply just said, hey, listen, I was just helping a fan. That's all I'm saying. And everybody, everybody assumed their own conclusion to the story, including Kanye, and it didn't make good. He didn't come across good at all this weekend personally. Personally, you're absolutely right, but what's you really think is what we care about. Kanye targets Billie Eilish, does Kanye have a problem with young women. That's our question of the day. Our poll of the day, go vote on our tour de page at naughty noise robber. A Facebook page is naughty gossip. You can leave a comment there and be sure to check back to Laura to hear your results. What are you working on Garrett? Well, we knew this was going to happen with Adele eventually, but she is a 100% confirming that her Las Vegas residency will happen this year in 2022. Phew. I mean, we kind of knew it was the legalities alone of her not putting on that show. It would just be an astronomical at best. So she was on the Graham Norton show and big talk show over in your house. So she was telling Graham Norton, listen, I tried. And you got to believe she probably tried to get the show up off the ground her Las Vegas residency a few weeks ago. And it just didn't work out. And as Adele said, she can't just strip it all stripped down the show and just be on the stage with her and it gets guitar. Maybe for a song, but it's Vegas. You need big. You need loud. You need eye popping moments there. So she says, it's absolutely happening this year and she also laughed. And then she says, I want a baby next year. You can't delay that either. Imagine she has a baby and her baby or her baby just says, I'm not ready. And there's some more time. I got both ways on this one. You were the one that set the dates or your manager or your team. You were the one that signed the contract, do the show. I'm a big believer in this. If you sign up to do something, it doesn't matter if it is an extra shift at work or a residency in Vegas, turn up..

Billie Eilish Kanye rob shooter Travis Scott Graham Norton Adele Billy Las Vegas Garrett Laura Facebook Vegas
"graham norton" Discussed on Less Than Average Podcast

Less Than Average Podcast

02:49 min | 1 year ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Less Than Average Podcast

"Go-to one. I'll search from viewers. Low to high and i'll see if they had a catchy title a click it. I'll watch it for about a minute before i say anything. And if he does like engine It's terrible garon. And i think you've got a lot of success with reaching out to other things like i've seen people you know as i've been hearing from i don't know the start of your stream but i was one of your first ten sub on just how like the past couple months like it's been growing exponentially and i feel like this past couple of months really when you branched out more young. You've done other things and people don't wanna do that. They want the. I think it all comes down to entitlement. I think people just want more because other people have more and are willing to go to the other places to put in work to get more rattled get him. They're our viewers right. It's also you know american culture as well coming into play here where we expect everything to be handed to us. And you know. Just don't really want to do the work anymore. In you know this old into twitch a shitty platform to grow on now there's no algorithm right and in that that hurts the small streamer. You know if i were aung our youtube streamer i i would be in an algorithm somewhere. And we'll we'll end somebody who normally wouldn't be here. You know my youtube channel. I'll watch graham norton and next thing you know. I got all this shit from britain. That i'll never fucking watch just because i watched two hours worth of graham norton clips. You don't get that on twitch in to add that i think that would make the fifty fifty split a little bit better. We've talked about this. With yin vote is actually and chat right now to about how most of twitch in general is like old ask code. We called source code. Would you can change because would fuck up all these other systems so all of this like old code and the old platform and how was built. Is this fucking up all this future stuff and they're having to like figure out how to do all this stuff. Gsa says like there are algorithms in place in fact their algorithms that were recommended other small streamers because you typically watch them so there are things like that but it's like the way the built it in the weeds done on certain things like it's so hard to like in place for example. We talked on the podcast. When there was like a hot tub metal we talked about the hot tub meta right. And how much like how hard it is because advertisers are like having to go individually in pick people that don't wanna watch like Who was the big one Andy fox amaranth indie fox right..

graham norton youtube britain Gsa Andy fox fox
"graham norton" Discussed on GSMC Movie Podcast

GSMC Movie Podcast

04:37 min | 1 year ago

"graham norton" Discussed on GSMC Movie Podcast

"Is able to really go on this adventure. So joe is doing some self learning about what has passions are and if music mu. He thinks his purpose in life is music and he ends up finding out that that's not necessarily the case. His passion is music. It's not his purpose so th the movie tries to make a distinction between these two things. I'm really messing around with a pop filter right now with all these peas petunias. But i think how so how does twenty twos Conflict resolution and basically while twenty two is within joe's body. There's a bunch of little moments that she has. She's collecting these little objects. That are at first. Glance are pretty trivial but mean a lot and really impact twenty two in some kind of way and you see even at first. Joe looks at these objects that twenty two collected and he. He's like what is what is all this and twenty two. you know. Those are my things i collected and by the end of it you eat. You're able to to see the twenty two really does have a passion for in. It's not does not necessarily music but it's it's being able to make these connections with certain people and it's it's a really beautiful thing at end because they do have this fight towards the end where is saying you know. You're only you only have any sort of spark because you were experience experiencing life through my body which basically null and voids anything that twenty two his feeling and twenty two becomes a lost soul and which is a whole part of the movie which haven't really even explained yet. I'm running out of time in this segment because there's just so much to unpack here but the character moon voiced by. Graham norton is He's basically the keeper of this lost vast desert It's is it the fields of loneliness or something like that and it was the of loneliness and twenty two becomes what would be called a lost spirit or a wandering spirit and.

Joe Graham norton joe two things twenty two twenty twos first
"graham norton" Discussed on Miss Information: A Trivia Podcast

Miss Information: A Trivia Podcast

01:57 min | 1 year ago

"graham norton" Discussed on Miss Information: A Trivia Podcast

"You'd be like oh. This is a nice song. Nice like late nineties boy. Dan yan about how he's a fallen angel can't doesn't deserve her. Ticks bless him dressed in a giant floor length. White fur coat wearing sparkle sparkles and huge white angel wings and sunglasses and surrounding him. Oh and he's changing he's chained and then surrounding him are dancers dressed like the devil black devils with wings and claws giant whore. I mean they really went full dante. Dante's inferno on this and there and the dancers are giving. I tell you something about the eurovision dancers. They give love everything. I leave it on the dance floor. They're on pedestals. There shaking back and forth. They're pulling on those chains. They're saying your fallen angel. You will never have her right moir. And they're doing enough to and sing and they're shaking and then at one point they like hunch over and they're like running around him circling him. It was so performance like the visuals yes versus the actual song was yes so disparate. Oh absolutely and and. I can't remember his name. Scott mills. no no the other one. Graham norton and graham norton even mentioned he was clearly. All the people who were on board with this on norway was like all right What should the performance speed. He talks about being a fallen angel great. It doesn't devils. Let's go to lunch like they didn't even need did not even like explore any deeper there. Were like where do angels and demons. It's going to great all right this next one. I gotta be honest with you. I don't remember in the moment but it's by.

Graham norton graham norton Scott mills norway nineties eurovision one point
"graham norton" Discussed on The Qwipster Film Review Podcast

The Qwipster Film Review Podcast

05:11 min | 2 years ago

"graham norton" Discussed on The Qwipster Film Review Podcast

"I'm going to be getting into the latest film from pixar. It's called soul. It is a pg rated film at does have thematic elements in some language. The run time is an hour and forty ish minutes while the credits really seem to last fifteen minutes of that. The cast includes a lot of vocal talent including jamie foxx. Tina fey graham norton. Rachel house alice. Braga and many others director is pete. Doctor and kemper powers gets co-director credit. The screenplay credited to dr empowers along with mike jones..

mike jones jamie foxx pete Braga an hour and fifteen minutes pixar pg Tina fey graham norton Rachel forty ish minutes soul dr alice
"graham norton" Discussed on WBZ NewsRadio 1030

WBZ NewsRadio 1030

05:33 min | 2 years ago

"graham norton" Discussed on WBZ NewsRadio 1030

"And I am Mac And we are the Mac and Goo program. We bring you philosophical. Discussions about what is the purpose of life today we're going to be discussing the latest Disney Pixar Joint Soul Soul was released on Disney. Plus on December 25th. That is Christmas Day. Same day is Wonder Woman 1984 1st of All This is It's really better than 1984. It is And it is also Frito Watch if you've got a Disney plus subscription, unlike they tried the pull of move on trying to make you pay 30 bucks from a lot, which is really funny because they knew almost immediately like we've made a huge mistake. It was job in the hospital bed almost immediately do I'll tell you right now. This is one of the I think I like least offensive movies I've ever seen one of the movies that has like the least amount wrong with it. It's such a well made movie, and the visuals are incredible. This is a rated PG animation, adventure and comedy. Got a line on the comedy. But there are some more I would say outside of. So you you have a green screen. Just him. Hey, cats, you know? Behold, I'm not my stuff. I'm not actually in a barbershop right now. Believe it. Mac Right now has a green screen up with the visual of the barber shop. And I would say outside of that and maybe one scene after No comedy. Well, I would say the whole time that 22 was in Joe's body was funny, often on definitely more comedy when she was in the body, but overall, not the funniest movie, but they weren't trying to be funny. No, they weren't too, Dawg. This is a run time of 100 minutes, but it's actually more like 85. The last 15 minutes is literally just credits. It's all credits. Yes, you have to play that music friend Dresner brushes the soundtrack. Absolutely. Yeah. This is a rotten tomatoes score of 95% 89% from the audience. I have no issues with that. No medical once again, not not do this every single time, But rotten tomatoes is simply like it don't like it and I don't know how anyone could just be like I don't like this movie. The only thing I was thinking is no one had seen a preview for and thinking it was another kid's movie. Maybe. Yeah, that's something. Yeah, but even if you're a kid, I mean, obviously you want some, or like action in it. But the animation is so crisp and beautiful literally blew me away The animation This is a metacritic score of 83. Honestly, I thought between the the resin er and rock. What is it, Ross is is that his partner, Johnny Ross. Yeah, between the the resin Er and is it Atticus? I don't know. You do this part. Between his bench. Yes, that's who it is between the residents score in the visuals in this movie, that alone should get it in 83 on metacritic, but whatever I don't really We don't pretend understand Metacritic. It's just another don't understand any of this. I don't understand Movies in general. This movie is written by Pete Docter, who did Toy Story Toy Story two. Gonna go to register zinc, Wally up and inside out, also to co writers here. Mike Jones, who's doing the upcoming Luca movie, which is gonna be another Disney Pixar and kept powers, whose Relatively new comer. He's got a writing credit on one night in Miami, and he's done some Star Trek TV stuff, So he was really brought out. I think to sort of mold Joe specifically, and I believe when it comes to Easter eggs Pete Docter put at least one from each of his Pixar movies in this movie that makes sense. Why not might as well. This was directed by Pete Docter. Who directed Monsters, Inc. Up and inside out and kept powers actually got a co directing credit, too. And I think the reason for that is the main character here voiced by Jamie Foxx. Joe Gardner is Pixar's first black lead. So I think Kent powers is a big reason why Joe is the way he is Goose Synopsis, a musician who has lost his passion. For music is transported out of his body and must find his way back with the help of an infant soul learning about herself. So that synopsis well It's kind of spoil ARY because no spoilers in this movie The synopsis gives away that he lost his passion for music, which is what happens at the end. I don't think the synopsis gives that away. Do not. If you just watch the first act, you say, Wait a second. He hasn't lost his passion. He loves music. Well, I don't think he loses his passion. The end either. So it says he loses passionate. So here's the thing. What happened to the start? He ever actually have that passion? Don't whatever yet? I think he realizes it's not a spark. Is a different thing. So my question is, he's a He's a middle aged man. I would say, What is this? Yeah, he was probably 40. Yes, but he sounds about right. His spark is teaching correct. Which is something that you knew the whole time? That's sort of what I figured It was gonna be. S so this movie does start Jamie Foxx as joke. Our gardener Tina Fey voice is 22. I think she's really good, But so these are the two leads here. Tina faced Way to Jamie Foxx is Joe Gardner. I think Jamie Foxx did one of the best voice over jobs they've ever seen. It's so good and I was really afraid with him that he would go too far over the top like he usually does. I thought he was perfect. I think the best thing and the supplies Tina Fey actually is. Well, the best thing about the job gardener voiceover is you didn't really know it was Jamie Foxx, which is amazing. Graham Norton plays Moon Wind If you don't know who Graham Norton is he hosts a show in the UK is actually pretty funny Guy..

Jamie Foxx Joe Gardner Pixar Disney Pete Docter Tina Fey Graham Norton Johnny Ross Mac Dresner Atticus Miami partner Mike Jones Kent UK Luca
French children's podcast platform Keeku launches

podnews

02:51 min | 2 years ago

French children's podcast platform Keeku launches

"Key coup is a new french children's podcast platform which has just launched it features curated children's audio content from a variety of publishers curated by age group theme or time of day. The company says it's good to the mid screen time sprouts have released. Their platform stands for october and will publish these online. Every month from now on apple is now forty seven percent and spotify twenty four point four percent of all the data includes podcast apps episode generation downloads over the first seven days and lots more. The reuters institute has published a new report about daily news podcasts. The research points to them being very successful in terms of total downloads and highlights four types of daily news. Podcast currently available as recline is leaving. Vox the company. He co founded and joining the new york times as columnist and podcast host. He starts in january and leaving luminary. Your lander sang when he is now senior director for programming at npr. Google podcasts third. Most popular podcast app has now reached fifty million installations on android the fat. Mary's podcast is a podcast from australian restaurant. As jake smith and kenny. Graham who in recent episode described their employee's whining and self entitled according to the sydney morning herald podcast producer. James atkinson says that ad-libbing is a risky approach to content curation and business insider writes about your stralia in podcasters who are quote earning thousands of dollars a month for decades a quiet and remote australian country town nurtured a world-class monster. A man who often more than half a century is only now coming into focus as possibly this nation's serial killer his name. Is vince dempsey. Psychopath gangster child killer rapist. That's one of queensland's best known investigative journalists matthew khandan. He's launched a new true crime. Original with bush ca studios ghost gate road examines vince so dempsey a multiple murderer who claims to have killed thirty three people. Though it's thought the real number is more than one hundred. How i found my voice banquets third season. Samir ahmed hosts and talk. Show host graham norton based guest and focus on foot has won the gold award and the people's vote best arts and entertainment. Podcast at the lovey awards season six. We'll start on december. The eighteenth with an extended episode with richard thompson.

Jake Smith Sydney Morning Herald James Atkinson Spotify Reuters Vince Dempsey NPR Apple New York Times Matthew Khandan Kenny Graham Vince So Dempsey Mary Google Samir Ahmed Queensland
tennis without crowds

The Tennis Podcast

07:41 min | 3 years ago

tennis without crowds

"Thank you rose for introducing this edition of the tennis podcast. Catherine Matt and Myself David Law are here to answer your questions today. Because it's Thursday. We wanted a podcast. We've only answered about five or six in every other previous listener questions podcasts. So we've still got loads and loads to get through plus about another hundred and fifty came in with matches putting out single tweet. So how you doing both Matt? You're fine thank you. Yes busy waiting through those questions that has been completed and we are ready to get going ready ready to rock and we'll have to rock because one of them's about entrance. Music Castro in for us to come into call wait for that one nice boilers today. I'm all right. I've worn. Put a Cardigan over over my dressing and to try and disguise the facts that I am not dressed. But it's I'm I'm looking at myself in the in the camera and I'm realizing it's it's a flimsy disguise. Isn't it fooled me? It did it. Oh okay I needn't have mentioned anything. Twenty seconds ago it's coming to say look down and everything okay so little insight there folks stuff. We didn't do. We both thought Catherine had dressed up for the occasion. But apparently this is our earliest recorded lockdown. I think it is a bit early. Isn't it Crikey ten thirty in the morning folks that doesn't exist on Catherine's clock she's have to borrow on. I write questions. We are going to get cracking immediately. Matt's what have we got first game to Sherry be on instagram. Who Asks probably in response to our pod on Monday when we some this topic. How can we make tennis more enjoyable without an audience? Pool is a big ask is probably something we should be thinking about though. Isn't it rather than I mean you know? We settled on the last that we will have reservations about tennis behind closed doors about crowd. Whatever you WANNA call it But it's a very real prospect I've done a couple of interviews in in the in the last couple of days one with Sergio Bruguera with Michael China. Be Hearing bits of the move the over the coming weeks we. We touched on lots of topics but I asked them both how they felt about tennis behind closed doors and their opinions could not have been more polarized surgey yet. I'm absolutely all four. It just bring tennis back as soon as possible. No matter what you have to do just bring it back. He he's panicked. He said bring football back. Bring tennis back. I need to watch Selena as a matter of urgency needs tennis return and when he first onto the question he was. He was definitely talking from a spectator's perspective. And I said what about what about as a player would imagine playing French. Open final with with Nike Crowds. And still he said. I don't care I don't care to bring it back. I put the same question to Michael Chang. And he said the opposite he said Noah I I just can't visit it's it's it's It's to wizards comedy get get my head around it. So there is going to be a massive divide in the tennis community. If one the first actual tool level event gets gets announced that it's going ahead you know this is GonNa be little debate flying around so we're getting in the we getting in the. I wondered if I covered a champion's tour event in two thousand and eight in Istanbul in July. It was my first one flying so lame and Istanbul in July. It was about forty five degrees. I'm not sure why they decided. That was where it should be in the calendar but anyway it was to be outside for long periods watching sports so there was just nobody in the crowd nobody whatsoever so they pumped crowd noise in and it was. It's of course it was weird but maybe it helps a little bit. I do now is like what she they've been doing. The the Graham Norton show haven't they with him from his from his house with a little sort of mini studio setup and he still does his little comedy. Bits in between guests and what he's saying is funny and he's still the same guy he's still is charming and funny as ever hearing those jokes land without any crowd response is really really painful. It puts a completely different complexion on it. I'm of finding myself a company of I'm saying this because I've spent fifteen years talking about. How candle do is the only bad thing about. I'm Alan Partridge but it makes me sort of cry out for some canned laughter. Deny what is this? What is endemic doing to me? So this is going to be like sports office style. Isn't it great? Things Happen to utter silence. And that's going to be a bit jarring all. I think there's two things one think it'll be interesting to see whether we adjust as viewers. It is a different world. Let's assume it's a different world for a long time and we just have to. Kinda of get used to it and we can't do what we used to do anymore. John macular used to fly a Concorde to London every so often he can't do that anymore yes to go on a on another planet. That's the same unknown but there are certain things that Diane Struggle Israel but it is still only sports is not so. Maybe you knew of the game. That doesn't ECON. Flippantly say at a time when we will disgust and made hot felts given heartfelt accounts of whites not just sports come on e. Can't flippantly say I wonder whether we'll find something else within the sports other than just the sound the look. I don't know I'm just. I'm wondering whether whether I will watch the sport. In different ways other senses will become more. Attuned yeah possibly may or may fall out of love with it. That's also possible. I think ultimately the fact that it isn't just sport is actually the strongest argument to bring it back without fans because it's what players need for their livelihood so if they if if there's a way to get the tour back up and running and get the economics of it back up and running without fans that is going to be more important. I think than consideration of whether fans in the stadium will not if if we're going to be able to give these players chance to play with prize money and all that kind of thing then they need to take. That opportunity is going to be weird. But we're going to have to accept that. I think I think that's more. I think that's more important consideration than whether it's a bit weird or not for

Tennis Catherine Matt Istanbul Nike Michael Chang Selena David Law Graham Norton Castro Sherry Sergio Bruguera Noah Football Alan Partridge London John Macular Diane Michael China
Sorry, Diplo: Sophie Turner Would Have Kept Her Wedding to Joe Jonas a Secret

Lee Matthews

01:39 min | 4 years ago

Sorry, Diplo: Sophie Turner Would Have Kept Her Wedding to Joe Jonas a Secret

"Joe Jonas. He got married to Sophie Turner. It was a secret wedding back on may first, and he had some issues because dip blow was actually at the wedding, and he was alive, streaming during the wedding, and posting things and a lot of people found out about it from diplo's livestream. So here's what Joe Jonas had to say about that. Actual wedding while he was on the UK radio show. Capital breakfast with Roman Kemp Ditlow ruined fees on Instagram. I loved it, blah. But he loves his grand more than thirteen year old. He literally like livestream with dog face filters. I just laughed we loved it. We thought it was ridiculous. And I just love that he was walking into the chaplain. He's gonna hit this wedding real quick. Joe jonas. He's been very nice because I'll be highly upset. If you know you came to my wedding, and was recording my, my wedding, especially if I asked you not to nobody else was doing that, right? Well, that's how people found out about it from watching his lyceum. And then Sophie Turner was on the Graham Norton show. And she said, well, we didn't choose them to be our wedding photographer. He just decided to livestream. It will so wag about that. That's not even your moment diplo. You know what I'm saying? That's your friends moment, and his women's moment. And they're getting married. Why are you making it about you because technically what you're doing? You're making it about you. Let me go hit this white and real quick. I right now Joe Jonas responded to this video. He said the only thing that I mean dip lower responded to Joe Jonas interview. He said the only thing that ruined the wedding was your fit. So as lame as any, the diplo's celebrity like he's popping, like he don't want his privacy, clearly, not if he's just always on Instagram showing off everything. Wonder when you want one of those private moments to yourself, diplo? And then you're going to know how Jodi on the field with somebody blows

Joe Jonas Diplo Sophie Turner Roman Kemp Ditlow Instagram UK Jodi Graham Norton Thirteen Year
Blaze Interview with Ethan Hawke and Ben Dickey

Talk Nerdy to Me

04:22 min | 4 years ago

Blaze Interview with Ethan Hawke and Ben Dickey

"Object, lots joy, Sanger. And here this with the pastoral post. We have some esteemed guests with us various team, Ethan Dickey of the film that's coming out here. You need to check it out over at the Alamo draft house. It's called for the second showing, I think are also without a third showing. That one is. Off the rails, but full of wisdom. I christian. So just. Some nice cuisine. Jay last night. Yeah, we're going. I don't even know. People have thrown the water. Saturday here before. Hu's trip here for sure. Got to go to high miss hut. Three. It's a Mexican restaurant, open three till twenty four hours. That you're sitting everybody, we talk, scary drive everybody interviews till. There are so many good ones. Fort worth. Yeah. Got the news about the interview yesterday with you guys. Trae shoots me tax. He says, got got eaten in Ben coming up tomorrow. Don't wear take. And as one does for interview you brush up, you know, you look at Google. You know, we competed last ditch effort, but the. I'm looking up and then just Bartik with this news about and we host a geeky talk show called talk nerdy to me. So this is a little apropos ears. Throw it out there. I'm not even put an context into context. Yeah, even hawk aid superhero. Logan socked. Here's the thing. I had no idea how sensitive superheroes were. If I did, I would have been a lot. Let me correct the record. Okay. The reason I was talking about Logan is because I love it. I love superhero movies. I like every kind of movie. I don't think there's a difference between high art and low art. There are movies that people put their heart into in their movies that people try to cash in on in the ones I like are the ones that people put their heart into, and you can feel it in a superior movie or you can feel it in horror movie or you can feel it in some art house movie. What I was talking about is that there is so much money being spent commercially making it so that that's all we see in. There aren't rooms for the movies that I grew up on. One of the Kuku snus I'm day those type of movies would now be art house movies in their made to feel fringe in their made to feel small. You know, I was making the joke that if if Logan dark Knight and Dr. Strange are great art films. What is fanny? Alexander do nothing. Theater today. The most of my, those are my favorite superhero movies. Doctor strange, Logan, darva this great films, but they're not. The only thing there is in young people grow up today. Thinking that's not a real movie. Was. A green screen not involved, and it's not. It's not a real. Our country turns everything into a competition. They wanna tell you what's score on rotten tomatoes. What's how much box office did it make in when it was going up to things didn't exist, and you could just absorb movie for how it meant to you? It doesn't. There's no game to win. You know, that's not what artists he said. With music film women. Elevator out to pay. Let's see what that's all about. So let's talk about the stock about blaze here of the film that he directed Ethan the road and. Stars here. And when the most interesting things about this Bill also the Genesis of how this came to be you guys known each other, what fifteen years and cut me from road. You guys were jamming out to to blaze and what happens slower than that. The truth is how well we are girl friends or best friends right since like the second third grade. And so we would go on vacations together in those two gap all night long. And we a friendship happened. I grew to love Benz, music Benz in a band called the blood feathers and Philly that I loved

Jonathan Winters Robin Williams Robin Zero Jack Nicholson BEN Graham Norton Nike KIM San Antonio Denko Ethan Swoosh Blaze Foley Robinson Twenty Year
Michael Fishman, Roseanne and Cnn discussed on Mojo in the Morning

Mojo in the Morning

02:44 min | 5 years ago

Michael Fishman, Roseanne and Cnn discussed on Mojo in the Morning

"Whole lot more ranting more racism and attack on former cast members really putting the ambien in nam being the racist he deleted good michael fishman who played plays dj connor on the reboot said my character was designed to represent the inclusive nature of my views to represent portions of society often marginalized in this moment it's important to be clear we must stand up against bias hatred bigotry and ignorance to make society a better place for all roseanne replying to his tweet by saying you throw me under the bus nice on cnn with anderson cooper rosen's exhusband tom arnold said he is not surprised by any of this that surprised what would doubt and the show was canceled i i had a feeling this is going to happen when i first heard it was coming back when i read her social media she was so into the conspiracy stuff with donald trump and so how far gone she was the pizza gated hillary's pedophile baba wasn't board here she was you know a birther how crazy that was i just do that this will not end well president trump weighing in of course i demanding an apology from abc claiming the network offended millions of people by pulling the show harvey weinstein was indicted by a grand jury in new york city yesterday to council of rape in the first and third degree and a single count of criminal sexual act in the first degree if he's found guilty of all of these charges he could find himself getting cozy behind bars for up to twenty five years the indictment came hours after his lawyer said harvey would not be testifying in front of the tree and guardians of the galaxy star chris pratt telling a funny story in the graham norton show about his five year old son surprising him with a few swear words i had this rule with my old man and i have it with my son which is when you're fishing you can swear it's just the guys go ahead and let loose and so we're out fishing he catches a fish and it flops out of his hands and he's bass have these little spines on their back and the fin pokes him in the hand i said hey buddy are you alright you already said dad i'm about to swear you know you know the rules and he goes at bass at bassus stupid all right buddy stupid bass for all of today's dirty check out the dirty page on mojo in the morning dot com this is tom arnold all my ex's listen to mojo in the morning shannon's dirty on the thirty eighth spike scams next down the morning.

Michael Fishman Roseanne CNN Cooper Rosen Tom Arnold Donald Trump Hillary President Trump Harvey Weinstein Rape Chris Pratt Shannon Anderson ABC New York Twenty Five Years Five Year
Jeff Goldblum Is Making a Jazz Album

Q: The Podcast from CBC Radio

00:34 sec | 5 years ago

Jeff Goldblum Is Making a Jazz Album

"Mona lisa of and so that's greg reporter performing nat king cole song mona lisa on the graham norton show late last year playing the piano though listen to that is jeff goldblum himself that performance impressed the folks at decca records so much they offer jeff goldblum big record deal the director of an for decca set as far as i can tell everyone loves jeff goldblum it's like a universal truth i also don't know why put on my nine hundred thirty s record deal voice but jeff goldblum album will be out later this year.

Mona Lisa Reporter Director Decca Jeff Goldblum
Jeff Goldblum Is Making a Jazz Album

Donna and Marley

00:57 sec | 5 years ago

Jeff Goldblum Is Making a Jazz Album

"Disclaimer you say more right jeff goldblum will release his debut album later this year it's going to be a collection of jazz recordings gobin learned classical piano as a child before switching to jazz and played in cocktail lounges in pittsburgh from the age of fifteen he has played ever since and regularly performs jazz standards with his band the mildred snits or orchestra named for a family friend though he has never before recorded his work for release is signed with decca whose executives accorded him after seeing him play on the graham norton show wow that's kinda cool i like jeff goldblum i want to see what else he can do mark on tv tonight we have the fourth season premiere of the breakable kimmy.

Jeff Goldblum Pittsburgh Mildred Snits Decca