20 Burst results for "Granny Granny"

"granny granny" Discussed on The RELEVANT Podcast

The RELEVANT Podcast

07:31 min | 5 months ago

"granny granny" Discussed on The RELEVANT Podcast

"It's Christian. Okay, it's time for your feedback last week. We got to talk about road trips and stuff. Maybe it's because Derek was out on the road. I don't know. We got to talk about Bucky's. We got talking about the rest areas that have the grills for the families to have big elaborate picnics on the side of the interstate. We just got talking about road tripping. So we asked you, what's your craziest road trip story? You hit us up on Twitter at Roland podcast. Here's a few of our favorites. Wow, this one from Anna is really, really a journey. She was 8 or 9. She was road trip with her meemaw to visit her aunt. First off, I just love the fact that she call her meanwhile. What are y'all call your grandmas? What do you all call your grandma? Do you have any weird names? 'cause I'm from the south. We had some weird names. Granny. Granny. We're just grandma. All I had was granny. My name is big mama and big daddy. That's the southern. You called the matriarch of your family. Everybody did. Big money. Was she black? Dude. They were southern southern. They had 7 or 8 kids. And she took care of everybody, you know? Because they were pastors and stuff. So after church, 50 people would come over. Big mama did not know how to cook for under 20 people. Everything she made of, whether it was a little meal of three people, she cooked for 20. Big mama took care of everybody. Big daddy, they were big, too. He was like 6 four. She was like 6 foot. I mean, they're big personalities. It just fit. Everybody called her big mom, big daddy. I feel like she needed me in a Tyler Perry movie. Big mama's House. Who was the first person to call her big mama? It was back in the 50s. Her grandma was called big MoMA. So from the 20s, and then just got passed down passed down. My mother did not continue the tradition. She is nana to my son. She didn't, my mom didn't want to be called big mama for some reason. I don't know why. I don't know if it's her choice to make. Can't imagine why. It's true. You know what I mean? It's like, it's like the kid. In elementary school, no longer wants to be called poot. Well, tough luck. We all remember that time in history class. How you got the nickname. And we're never going to let you forget. We have big moments always a big one. All right, go ahead, sorry. So on the road with me, mom. No, she's on the road with me mom to visit aunt. I'm gonna edit the end of this story because it's a little gross, but what's the word? On the way, the car broke down in the back road hills of Virginia, which, listen, I've driven those hills. It's desolate country. Soon after, I really needed to use the restroom. So I went behind some bushes near an abandoned house. It turns out, though, the house was not abandoned because an old van came up to the window and started banging on it and screamed at me to go away. Easy mistake to make. It's also sounds like the setup for a Netflix horror film. He's in the window, but he's just lightly Tapping the glass. That's the opening scene of one of those chief 90 minute little horror movies that pop up in your queue. But this is great. If you're in the back hills of Virginia, let me just advise you, folks. Those houses are not a bad thing. They just look at they're not a band. Oh my gosh. That's wild. I was on a road trip one time with my mom when I was a kid. And we had this older car. And I was in the passenger seat, and we were driving down the interstate, and my feet started getting hot. And I was like, mom, I was like 5 or 6. And I was like, mom, my feet are hot. And she's like, shut up. Stop complaining. No, mom, my feet are hot. Something's wrong. And my feet are hot. She's like, nothing's wrong. Whatever. And we're in the middle of nowhere. And all of a sudden, smoke starts coming out of the engine. We pull over, the car catches on fire. There was a fire happening underneath my feet. So the car catches on fire, it's my mom and a little kid on the side of the road. I remember how I was scared. We didn't know what to do. A trucker pulls over. This is the 80s. A trucker pulls over, offers us a ride. Can you imagine getting a ride with a trucker today? No. And he took us down to the for real. We got into the cab with the trucker and just drove off and he got us back to the closest town or whatever. But yeah. Samsung has caught on fire while you was driving it? Yeah, dude. We didn't have much money. So I don't know if they changed the oil. I don't know what they did, but yeah. Caught on fire. Jesse, do you remember the relevance? So we had an early days of relevant same thing. We had a van. I bought a used van because I'm frugal. And we painted it black, and we put a big old relevant sign on the side and we had a big old trailer, and we took a crew of interns around to all the music festivals and had a relevant booth sold our stuff. This thing put on every summer, they would leave in May, come back in August. I mean, they were just on the road nonstop. And we ran that thing for several years in a row. And again, I bought it with like 6 figure miles on it. And they were leaving the last, the last one up in the last festival up in Pennsylvania, I believe it was. And they were starting the journey back to Florida into the season. And they're just on the highway. And the story I was told was that a terrible noise happened, and then the pistons shot through the hood of the van. It exploded. It just couldn't take anymore. And the van just gave up and died and they left it in Pennsylvania. We got them different transportation to get back to Florida. We just left it there. The thing here's pistons. The moral of the story is if Cameron is in a vehicle. Right. Just be ready to jump out at any time. And even despite that, I was willing to drive two hours to have lunch with my friend on Sunday. I will say that that was Providence that I did. So my protection. Yeah. Anyone who'd been in that relevant knew what was time. Knew it was well over time. On the outside, the Cameron's point. It looks like a cool murdered out, had the logo on there. All black, rims, everything. It looked cool. The inside was like an abandoned middle school locker room. And it smelled like it. Did you like have to sign a waiver to get on the van? You would get in there and just, I mean, it could be, it could be a brisk 70° outside for some reason the interior of that van was up with sweltering. Oh, all day. I don't know. I think the black paint was just making it into an oven. But no, no one was sad to see that thing go. And nobody it's the state of Georgia's problem at that point, because we just lost it. The vin number, scraped off the vin number, took the plates, not our problem. Not our problem. Anyway. All right, well, there's more where that came from. Go check out our replies over at relevant podcasts on Twitter. We are without the blue check. We don't have the blue check because we will not pay for the blue check.

Illinois Democratic Worker Mary Lemanski Made Disgusting Tweets About Waukesha Christmas Parade

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:54 min | 1 year ago

Illinois Democratic Worker Mary Lemanski Made Disgusting Tweets About Waukesha Christmas Parade

"But I have to share a reaction from a Democrat in Illinois, that you need to hear, because to me, this sums up the giant riff between the Republican Party and the Democrat party in America. Are people who call this show all the time. Yeah, I'm a Democrat, and that's okay. You be what you be what you want to be. You want to be a Republican be a Republican. You want to be an independent, you want to be an independent. You want to be a Democrat for your Democrat. But if you're a Democrat, you share a party affiliation with a woman named Mary le mansky. Larry Mary le mansky is apparently the social media director for the Democratic Party in dupage county, Illinois. She's being blasted for a Twitter tirade. Where she referred to this Wisconsin rampage, a car plowing over children, grandmothers, this beautiful group of grandmothers called the dancing grannies, apparently one of the fatalities was one of those grandmothers, children lying on the ground being run over by this monster in his red Ford escape. You want to know what the social media director of demic of for the Democrats in dupage county Illinois tweeted? It was probably just self defense, Mary le manski wrote. Living in Wisconsin, he probably felt threatened. She added more sarcasm to her evil tweets. I'm sure he didn't want to hurt anyone. He came to help people.

Mary Le Mansky Larry Mary Le Mansky Illinois Democrat Party Dupage County Republican Party America Democratic Party Wisconsin Twitter Mary Le Manski Ford
CEO Alicia Grande: There's Something in the Water in Italy...

Art Beauty

02:22 min | 2 years ago

CEO Alicia Grande: There's Something in the Water in Italy...

"So crony lashing grande skara. I wanna ask you this. Because years ago. I heard maybe it's different now but i heard that there was like only. Let's say five or ten factories in the world that were they really produce miscarriage. They package it in different places. Is that true. But like most miscarriage like the actual formulas were really coming out of. Just a few labs so the fiber ten places I would say for me yeah. That's that's around right italy amazing. I'm sorry. I love getting behind the beauty. So italy has. Italy has most of the manufacturers. Right yeah and i. There's definitely for me like there's something in the water in italy that makes that mascara even better. I've tested miscarriages from Even korea or franson. I don't know like they say when you make pizza. There's some people that make pizza and they fly water from italy and they swear by. Have you heard of people flying water from new york to. There's places in florida right. You're in florida where they fly in florida. You're not in florida i'm in. I'm in the hamptons right here in the ham to accept the son in gorgeous. They fly in new york water. because to. i've seen that. I've went to boca. Yes drink the water in florida. I do drink the water in new york a so good okay so the water but let's go back to italy because everything in italy is better but the buser something you think that there's the skara you think is that's made the best is in italy. Yes that's a from the miscarriage that i've tested. I make a lot of products in italy. Actually my granny primers made mentally. My brow fills made in italy What else is made in italy. Yet and any miscarriages at a making i have grinding dramas another miscarriage that we made with cast royal. And then we're making another mascara. We're launching this year. That's made in italy grinding fanatic but every single miscarriage that i have now naming skara grinding. Drama 'grande fanatic. Those are all three different manufacturers. So not all the same okay.

Italy Florida Franson New York Hamptons Korea Boca
Predators Beat Hurricanes 4-3 in Double OT Again to Tie Series at 2-2

AP News Radio

00:43 sec | 2 years ago

Predators Beat Hurricanes 4-3 in Double OT Again to Tie Series at 2-2

"For the second game in a row the Nashville predators beat the heavily favored Carolina hurricanes in double overtime this time for three prints when lieutenant started things off as far less than a minute into the contest and he ended things posting his fourth career playoff goal thirty six minutes and ten seconds into overtime to even the series to to to just go play by the army over to granny granny from in the slot broke my stick agreement guy had already and I got up in the slot and you know found of found a way to get in there and have a great play by them just happy at when I use is often a career high fifty eight saves in the victory well it's counterpart Alex the dog which was spectacular despite the loss turning aside thirty nine of forty three shots Jenny take over Nashville

Nashville Predators Carolina Army Alex Jenny Nashville
Willow Smith Tells Her Mom and Granny She's 'Polyamorous'

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch

01:20 min | 2 years ago

Willow Smith Tells Her Mom and Granny She's 'Polyamorous'

"A lot of people are so full of shit. Willow Smith comes to mind. I know this happened several days ago, but, you know, Willow Smith will and Jade is dawn a recently came out as being polyamorous, a lot of people were like, what the fuck does that mean? What does it mean? It means she can be without the two people or more at the same time and not feel guilty about it. It's everybody who's young, who has a dream to fuck as many people as they want. It's not something special. Oh, I feel I'm polyamorous. Yeah, I was polyamorous all through my 30s and 40s. I just didn't announce it. So now she's 20 years old. And she reveals on this episode of her mother's Facebook series red table talk that she chose a polyamorous lifestyle over monogamy. Like I said, polyamory is the practice of having a romantic relationship with more than one person at a time with the consent of all partners involved. And in the episode, willow tried to explain her decision to her mother and her grandma, gami banfield Norris, who obviously is a little bit of star of the show,

Willow Smith Jade Facebook Gami Banfield Norris Willow
A Brief History of Entertainment Awards in the US

Everything Everywhere Daily

01:24 min | 2 years ago

A Brief History of Entertainment Awards in the US

"Awards are tradition in the united states. Which have been around for almost one hundred years. The first academy awards were handed out in one thousand nine hundred eighty nine the hollywood roosevelt hotel. The ceremony lasted a whopping fifteen minutes. It's unclear exactly where the term oscar came from. But there's evidence of the staff of the academy of motion picture arts and sciences using the name as early as nineteen thirty-one the oscars were a huge hit and soon other entertainment organizations followed. Suit the other. Three major awards were all established after world war two. The first tony awards were given out in nineteen forty. Seven you award is named after actress antoinette. Perry who is nicknamed tony. She died in nineteen forty-six and the first awards were done in her honor at the first ceremony. Brock pemberton. Who handed out the award called it. A tony and the name stuck the emmy awards were first given out in nineteen forty nine in los angeles. When hardly anyone had televisions the awards. Were i only given out for. Local television stations in the los angeles area name emmy comes from the word imi which is a nickname for an image. Or th- akon. Which is the name of a camera tube. That was once used in tv cameras. The grannies were created in nineteen fifty eight as a response to the creation of the hollywood walk of fame the name. Grammy is short gramophone. Which is what the trophy looks like. And was the first record player which could play the first recorded music.

Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel Academy Of Motion Picture Arts Brock Pemberton Tony Awards Oscars Tony Oscar Antoinette United States Emmy Awards Los Angeles Perry Emmy Hollywood
"granny granny" Discussed on Your Grandparents Did What?

Your Grandparents Did What?

04:19 min | 2 years ago

"granny granny" Discussed on Your Grandparents Did What?

"I'm still not everyone's cigarette. Sorry buddy it's okay on your death now james on. I'm gonna be like triggered every time and see a chainsaw now key so hard. Your rachel sworn yellow. Yes you're maggie walker high was going on. We're bff's making a podcast. Yes thank you. We appreciate you as we do. Honestly you give us reason to continue to three to continue weeded out are like really biggest fancier and they're they're invested there s when we come up with a fan fan name The all grand have not just the granny granny's again granny holler if your granny all right. Well we are episode. it is and we're doing consumption. How things researched it always. Yes as such a crazy week though. It sounds like it's been a week long the week. Just feel so long. I didn't even know what happened. I had a busy workweek and it was nice out of the house a lot more which is not used to to sudden it on my because i haven't been outside like ten months so the two hours i spent outside the playground. I came home. I was like why does my forehand field. I looked at it and it was all right. Know i know i was like i need to get my sunscreen. Oh i know. I today again and guess what forgotten. How do i know well. That's what i'm like. Really thankful for. spf in my facial moisturizer. I'm like you are just like doing the work for me because i would never remember well vaccinated good skin care routine. I kept it separate but equal. And maybe i should go back to. I'm just doing anno- dreitzer. But i just you made me remember when When kobe i started like when we went into lockdown yameogo today tomorrow tomorrow teens thirteenth. Yeah i went at a cardiology appointment. That got cancelled. I was all annoyed. Because i had to take into the cardiology listening And that was the last time we did. Yeah but i remember standing in my bathroom looking at like my makeup all my stuff and i was like you know what i'm excited for thirty days..

james today two hours thirty days ten months yameogo a week three today tomorrow tomorrow teens kobe maggie walker
Trevor Noah Doesn't Want To Hear Your Vaccine Excuses

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah: Ears Edition

03:23 min | 2 years ago

Trevor Noah Doesn't Want To Hear Your Vaccine Excuses

"Hundred thousand covert deaths a number that. Nobody wanted to see and as painful as that. Is you have to admit you have to admit it is nice to see. America's president actually take a moment just a moment to recognize the toll that corona virus has taken. I mean the only time the previous president showed any sadness was when he accidentally deleted fox news off of his. Dvr what a day for americans. What does that day. My sweet hannity has gone. The good news is that the number of new infections has plummeted in the last few weeks. But what's interesting is the number that they've plummeted to is where they were lost july. Which at the time. Everyone thought was so horrifying that the country immediately started locking down again. And this just goes to show you that your perspective can change based on where you're coming from. That's it's like. If i go to tech right now wolf i'd probably be like this is my life but if i went from being attacked by full wolves to one wolf. I'm probably be like what a relaxing way to stop the week. So look this is why it's so important to get people vaccinated as quickly as possible. And don't give me any excuses about how you're too busy or it's not convenient last weekend and nine hundred year old. Seattle woman walked six miles in the snow to keep her appointment because the roads hadn't been plowed. Which is incredible. Although if you believe people stories walking miles snow is what they do all the time. They love that shit but still if a nine year old woman can do it. You can do it too. I don't tell me but trevor. I'm not ninety years old too young to get the vaccine right now. That's also no excuse a strange story now. Showing the length to florida women were willing to go to to get the vaccine. They're caught dressing as granny's just so they can get the shot now. Here's the thing it worked for. The first time around officials say the women are thirty. Four and forty four years old so you can see one of the more abundant and long cardigan. Didn't make much of an effort to cover up a vaccinators thought. They looked funny so they were stopped before getting their shots. And that's when they found out both women had faked their birth dates. Now officials want to know how they were able to get away with getting the first shot. The women are not facing any charges but police did yell at them calling their actions selfish okay. This is outrageous. You call that dressing up as a granny. All that woman did was put on. Its own and that other. One didn't do anything to wig hunch over or even easier just download the facebook phone. I mean if you got that you're seventy five minimum. If you want to teach away to the vaccine you at least have to put in the work. No one would have booked charade. I'm pretty sure. Mrs doubtfire wouldn't have gotten the kids back if he's just showed up like hey. It's me mrs doubtfire nanny. How did they even think that they could pretend to be old women at that age. I mean personally. I blame porn. You know they start putting women in the category of twenty six. Of course we have unrealistic ideas of what granny's look like but what's crazy is they would have gotten away with it if the doctors hadn't gotten suspicious. Hey wait a minute. If you're a grandma how come you haven't tried to set me up with one of your grandkids yet.

Hannity Fox News America Trevor Granny Seattle Mrs Doubtfire Florida Facebook
Midwife Ashlee Sourapas on the Stigma of Home Births

Mommies Tell All

01:45 min | 2 years ago

Midwife Ashlee Sourapas on the Stigma of Home Births

"Feel like our culture has it doesn't speak of birth. The way that birth is it doesn't teach women that they're powerful all like. Did you learn throughout your lifetime. That you're powerful amazing. Strong body could create life and bring forth life. And these aren't the things that we were taught growing up. These are the things that we're learning now. These are the things that we're learning to teach our children but that was not something that even our mothers and grandmothers have in the believe it was the eighteen. Hundreds there was a lot of lay midwives granny midwives traditional midwives who worked in the communities and took care of their births labor delivery. All of it was at home and then they started training. Obstetricians and these schools started pumping out to take care of women in the hospitals and they started marketing it so it became a very big marketed. Strategic thing of basically blasting the traditional midwives saying like don't birth with these women. They're dirty they have diseases or they're witches or whatever and then it was like birth in the shiny beautiful hospital where we will keep you safer and so there was this huge shift in the victorian age where women were like. Well why wouldn't i wanna give it. It's like the more prestigious way to give birth was in this clean sterile hospital quote unquote sterile hospital and so midwife became very ostracized and belittled and overtime went from one hundred percent births at home to less and less and less and less to now. We're like one point something percent. It's it's very interesting Tactic and i think now. We're seeing the swing because people are starting to waking up to them to themselves until waking up to their power and find what what they really do feel intrinsically. That they're meant to do with their bodies

What should I call my podcast?

Brands On Brands On Brands

07:10 min | 2 years ago

What should I call my podcast?

"Today's topic is how to name your podcasts. Or how to name your show. We're focused on podcasting here. Because i know a lot of the listeners are in that space but it could work for anyone. That's creating a show out there and what's important. Today this is a solo show. We are diving deep on this topic. And what i want you guys to take away from. This is your podcast name or your show name his first impression. It's your first impression. Is the first impression your audience is going to get of your show. So i think they're going to hear that they're going to see when deciding if this show is for them. If the built is what they are looking for today it contributes to your find ability within podcast players within the show the places where shows are housed and also across the web. It determines your ability. Because if you're using the wrong words to describe your show and people don't know about your show then they're not gonna find us. We're gonna talk about that. And also your show name is one of the most important decisions you can make when getting started because it contributes to your identity. It's what you become known for. So don't take those decisions lightly. Listen up today as we dive into it. S all right. Let's get started by the way for my new listeners. Out there if you guys are interested in diving into your content and making more of it. Not just creating but repurposing i do wanna mention. I have a quick free resource for you is how to convert your one hour of content into one month of content for all the podcasters in content creators out. There have created a step by step guide. Just for you all about repurposing content. You can download it now. At my free resources page at brands on brands dot com slash resources. Go check that out all right. Let's get going so category and keywords where we're going to start you're talking about how to name your podcast. You always should be starting with the macro view of your category and your keywords so thinking about it this way if you wanna understand your category. It's really figuring out. Which box do you fall in and apple. Podcasts has a categorization for you. They've already done all the work to figure out. What are the main buckets of information that people tend to look for and they put them into boxes for you. Categories like business health finance. They're all there already and you pick which bucket you wanna play in because yes most of our shows can be put into multiple buckets. But when someone's actually looking for your content. If they were to go on a category search where would they start thinking about that and pick something and once you've picked that category decide okay within that. Is there a subcategory that would fall into like within business. My shows within marketing. That is a subcategory of business. There's many subcategories of business entrepreneurship is a big one for podcast. So there's a whole sub category of that but it all resides within business. so pick those subcategories. And why is this important for figuring out the name of your podcast because when you know where you are heading then you know how to get there right so if my category is marketing within business i now have to figure out. What are the words that i can use to describe my show that helped define it within this category. So think about it. As when you've isolated your subcategory say it was marketing for me. How do you fit into that space. What's your niche within that category as you've identified that you can build it into the name of your show as well so if your show is all about facebook ads within marketing you can use the word facebook ads in your title a wooded. Just call it. The facebook ads show. You can get more creative with that. And we'll talk about that later but the main keyword should be included somewhere in the title. And you can either have it as part of the main title or as the subtitle so for me. My show is called brands on brands. Right pretty vague. But at least you know. It's in the marketing category in that branding part of the market categories. I've slightly niche down. But if you go a step further. I've subtitled it not just brands on brands. It's brands on brands dash personal branding and content marketing. Why is that important. It's important because now if someone is specifically looking not for any kinda granny but for personal branding for branding. That builds their own self or they are the business. It's the business of them. Their name matters. They might type in the word. The keyword personal branding and guess what pops up to the top my show because i've listed in the title and also in the descriptions. That's what's important so you can't just throw out a vague name like john talks today or john. Talks live or john's news because that is not going to help people find you. You know maybe every monday you go live and you're like it's mondays with john. That's fine but no one's going to type in john. No one's gonna type in monday. No one's gonna find you because of that but if you call it mondays with john dash facebook ads and funnels now. You are helping the algorithm. You're helping these search tool tell the world what the show's about that matters to miss that. Step then you're not taking advantage of the functionality of searches bills into these tools. And not just the podcast tools all of the tools. The same thing works for google search when on your website these titles will carry over to the blogs that you create. That'll carry over to the youtube. Shows that you create or the outputs into videos and it all starts with the name of your show so have to get those keywords built into your your name. The second thing to help you guys go a little further. Because i know it's hard to pick a name like what i can still kind of vague just my name and facebook ads. Says that's not a very specific. Okay so let's get deeper the second thing you can do step. One was categories and keywords thinking about those things number two is figuring out what you stand for. And i'm going to call this your line in the sand. That's not the only one that calls this. But that's what we're gonna call today your line and so on and keywords and number two your line in the sand think about what you believe in that determines how you will own your corner. Your niche right. So for me. I started shows off by saying i believe the building a brand that matters today is the only way to thrive. I think your brand has to matter. You have to have some kind of connective tissues engaging experience you have to touch each person individually and say. Hey what is it that you need. How can i help you. That's how i think you build a brand one person at a time when experience at a time. That's my corner so for you you have to determine what is it that you believe in that. Is what your audience needs to succeed or to benefit from this show. What is your approach to telling these stories and to finding the next level for your audience

Facebook John John Dash Apple Youtube Google
K.T. Oslin, country singer of ‘80's Ladies,’ dies at 78

Morning Edition

00:55 sec | 2 years ago

K.T. Oslin, country singer of ‘80's Ladies,’ dies at 78

"Singer and songwriter KT Oslin has died at the age of 78. As NPR's NEDA, who'll be reports husband was the first woman to win the Country Music Association Award for song of the Year. The year was 1987 and the song was eighties, ladies. You want three? Man. Was from school. Also, It was 45 years old when she recorded that song, just one of a string of country chart topping hits said also learned her three Granny's. Austin grew up in Texas, but moved to New York, where she performed in musicals and toward with Carol Channing and Hello, Dolly. Awesome songs were recorded by Brandy Clark, Dusty Springfield, the Judds and many others. Katie Olsen retired after releasing her final album in 2015. She had been diagnosed with Parkinson's Nedda You Libby, NPR news Rolling

Kt Oslin Country Music Association Awar NPR Brandy Clark Carol Channing Katie Olsen Austin Dolly Dusty Springfield Texas New York Nedda You Libby Parkinson Npr News Rolling
Introducing Melanie C

Homo Sapiens

02:24 min | 3 years ago

Introducing Melanie C

"Which spice isn't chris c. Whoo sport is only guacamole. Such massive part of my childhood. And i did resist telling her that. I know you're ready. M restrained so interesting high sort of conquering and sort of pervasive. If you will the spice girls wet especially to several generations. Because that's the thing about them. They were really you know from the little kind of five year olds to granny's loved them. Yeah so they have. People go the quake in their boots and go. You know jelly like when you when you have a spice girl ryan and ask do i. But of course. I have my inside knowledge. Having been in the spice girls film you were in the spice coast moving their less. So you're you're an unofficial spice boy like i think i've got thing on my wallet a card from them and it says to our special space boy That's so nice. It's a lovely well. I think it's a lovely about mousy is that she was at the time always described as being you know. It's this sort of slight outside of the spice girls because she will tracks is basically and she didn't ascribe to all these really narrow ideas of what a woman is and actually she was bucking trends back then and Has sort of had this reinvention as someone who's become even more central to the oj bt community by doing going on tour with the paying and yeah for someone who's been through like unfathomable fame. She's just this wonderfully reflective generous kind person. Yeah and i'd also really interesting. But melanie is that she is the sort of. She's the one who's had the biggest music could he had in terms of. She has stayed in a as a musician. I guess Jerry said more hits and things. I suppose but she's actually being kept out and i think that's what's really great. She was like the to sort of musician and she stayed a musician. Yeah just plow to making our own stuff on. I just think. I really admired her. Because she's I've loved our work over the years. And i think she's still doing it. And she still making these records and putting onto saying and reinvent as you said reinventing ourselves. And i think a great voice and she's just great spirit

Chris C Ryan Melanie Jerry
What happens when the salmon stop coming home

Unreserved

04:12 min | 3 years ago

What happens when the salmon stop coming home

"They're called the miracle fish. The lifeblood of first nations up and down the pacific northwest. They feed the river system that snakes through british columbia giving back to the earth and the animals. The journey of a wild sockeye salmon is nothing short of a miracle every year. They swim hundreds of miles from the ocean to their spawning grounds to inland rivers and streams. When they finally made it overcoming countless obstacles along the way the parents lay their eggs and die and then a new generation of salmon make their way downstream and into the pacific ocean to do it all over again it's an astounding journey and it used to be that tens of millions of vibrantly colored wild salmon could be seen swimming to the upper reaches of the rivers to spawn. This fall there were fewer than three hundred thousand. That's the lowest number of wild salmon ever recorded. And that's cause for huge concern. Cbs's jennifer trumka brings us documentary swimming upstream. Salmon is who we are as first nations people and i cannot name a first nation that has any measure of abundance of wild salmon period. We need them. they're the canary. In the coalmine. As go salmon so goes our ecosystem that we had the lowest returns. Ever you know just a few hundred thousand sockeye to the entire fraser river this year. you know. that's that's quite scary. We are down to absolutely historic glow returns. There are just so many domino's that fall over. That will fall over when the fish are all gone. It's heartbreaking aim. Is bob chamberlin. I was the elected chief. Councillor for the Copies first nation of the meuse outing people and territories about archipelago of also served nine years as vice president the union to be seeing the chiefs my bach home her way. traditionally ms galactic Yeah that's who i am and we're here. In the beautiful territory of the squamish. People bought chamberlain is a high profile leader who stands tall and poised. He also radiates warmth. We've met at an ocean side. Park in west vancouver where there's a totem pole. It's of a human figure wearing cedar hat and has awale carved on its back and as if it were planned as bob gates close to bald eagles landing on top of the pool. Coming down here because of the welcome poll. That's at the end of the jetty here. So we see. I believe this is a welcome figure and you know this being at the mouth of the kaplan a river. This is a place where the salmon come back for the people and always have and they've always been here. I i grew up going home to our village quiet stumps on gilford island and i remember seeing my family the whole community working on fish. You know in the summertime when we would go home and so is imprinted upon a very young age. Just how important. It was to our village to our people and to sit and enjoy our traditional foods with my grandmother and my uncles. My aunties and to know that i was home and to be able to enjoy that and then as i quite long time ago when i was a commercial fisherman in campbell river i'd get fish food fish and we'd go out and make a special trip during the season. And then we distribute the fish to all of our family. And i would always get two one hundred and two hundred sockeye and the reason i did. That is because we'd go to auntie mabel house 'cause she had two big back yard you'll bath tub in the back and and tim able and granny any and my mom. Would we'd all work on fish so we would have filleted fish in the deep freeze beat have canned fish for everything else and it was really nice to be able to bring in that food source. That was so cherished. And then i look at today and i feel fortunate. I got to sakai in the deep freeze.

Salmon Jennifer Trumka Bob Chamberlin Swimming Pacific Northwest Awale Pacific Ocean British Columbia Fraser River CBS Gilford Island Bob Gates Chamberlain Chiefs Eagles Vancouver Campbell River Mabel
What happens when the salmon stop coming home

Unreserved

04:46 min | 3 years ago

What happens when the salmon stop coming home

"Salmon is a staple food for many indigenous people in the pacific northwest. Many names chinook. Coho sockeye pink chum. The fish has been the subject of song story and artwork for thousands of years. It is also a symbol of fortitude and self sacrifice but in recent years the mighty salmon has been facing some scary realities today on the show a deep dive into the ripple effect of the dwindling fish stock. And what happens when the salmon stop coming home. They're called the miracle fish. The lifeblood of first nations up and down the pacific northwest. They feed the river system that snakes through british columbia giving back to the earth and the animals. The journey of a wild sockeye salmon is nothing short of a miracle every year. They swim hundreds of miles from the ocean to their spawning grounds to inland rivers and streams. When they finally made it overcoming countless obstacles along the way the parents lay their eggs and die and then a new generation of salmon make their way downstream and into the pacific ocean to do it all over again it's an astounding journey and it used to be that tens of millions of vibrantly colored wild salmon could be seen swimming to the upper reaches of the rivers to spawn. This fall there were fewer than three hundred thousand. That's the lowest number of wild salmon ever recorded. And that's cause for huge concern. Cbs's jennifer trumka brings us documentary swimming upstream. Salmon is who we are as first nations people and i cannot name a first nation that has any measure of abundance of wild salmon period. We need them. they're the canary. In the coalmine. As go salmon so goes our ecosystem that we had the lowest returns. Ever you know just a few hundred thousand sockeye to the entire fraser river this year. you know. that's that's quite scary. We are down to absolutely historic glow returns. There are just so many domino's that fall over. That will fall over when the fish are all gone. It's heartbreaking aim. Is bob chamberlin. I was the elected chief. Councillor for the Copies first nation of the meuse outing people and territories about archipelago of also served nine years as vice president the union to be seeing the chiefs my bach home her way. traditionally ms galactic Yeah that's who i am and we're here. In the beautiful territory of the squamish. People bought chamberlain is a high profile leader who stands tall and poised. He also radiates warmth. We've met at an ocean side. Park in west vancouver where there's a totem pole. It's of a human figure wearing cedar hat and has awale carved on its back and as if it were planned as bob gates close to bald eagles landing on top of the pool. Coming down here because of the welcome poll. That's at the end of the jetty here. So we see. I believe this is a welcome figure and you know this being at the mouth of the kaplan a river. This is a place where the salmon come back for the people and always have and they've always been here. I i grew up going home to our village quiet stumps on gilford island and i remember seeing my family the whole community working on fish. You know in the summertime when we would go home and so is imprinted upon a very young age. Just how important. It was to our village to our people and to sit and enjoy our traditional foods with my grandmother and my uncles. My aunties and to know that i was home and to be able to enjoy that and then as i quite long time ago when i was a commercial fisherman in campbell river i'd get fish food fish and we'd go out and make a special trip during the season. And then we distribute the fish to all of our family. And i would always get two one hundred and two hundred sockeye and the reason i did. That is because we'd go to auntie mabel house 'cause she had two big back yard you'll bath tub in the back and and tim able and granny any and my mom. Would we'd all work on fish so we would have filleted fish in the deep freeze beat have canned fish for everything else and it was really nice to be able to bring in that food source. That was so cherished. And then i look at today and i feel fortunate. I got to sakai in the deep freeze.

Pacific Northwest Salmon Jennifer Trumka Bob Chamberlin Swimming Awale Pacific Ocean British Columbia Fraser River CBS Gilford Island Bob Gates Chamberlain Chiefs Eagles Vancouver Campbell River Mabel
Acorn Woodpeckers Fight Long Bloody Territorial Wars

60-Second Science

03:10 min | 3 years ago

Acorn Woodpeckers Fight Long Bloody Territorial Wars

"What you're hearing is worth. Woodpeckers a species called acorn packers. The birds fight long bloody battles over access to trees where these woodpeckers nest and store their food. You guessed it Acorns, the abilities, giant Ligon grannies, and these are. Basically on storage structures, but the store thousands of ACORNS every fall Sarah's with the Smithsonian national, Museum of Natural History in Bark and dead bars of trees they make individual holes in which the store one garnered a time and Some GRANITZ may have tens of thousands of holes, woodpeckers that hold high quality territory die others come to claim it for themselves. That's when the fighting began so. It's a lot of energy that they were in and that sort of as you how valuable big grants are for them. So they put in a lot of effort in the shark known for this big long term price. Bourbon is colleagues tracked acorn woodpeckers doing these power struggles the researchers observed to twelfth groups of birds sparring for a single territory typically with three or four birds pork lamb. Individual, birds May, fight more than ten hours a day for several days. We don't know that board last that long it's it's really really amazing. You have. You can imagine if you can imagine the. California. There's the big oak tree and you can just hear board calling a because they give very distinct. These WACKO WACKO calls when they're fighting each other. From. You can hear it from far away. There are so many boards calling and when you go closer, you'll see birds. Flying around pretty chaotically, there are birds washing so most. Coalitions will group together every now and then and sprouts spread out their wings on a prominent branch of the tree anshuman basically who they are that they are together but these conflicts often the violence the you see birds with big injuries in see bloodied feathers you can see is style boards with some injuries that are obviously fatal be seen boards, broken wings and also boards far the crown like fighting each other like like I often boards. Have Spears from out. So they can do a lot of damage to each other other woodpeckers flew in from up to three kilometers away just to watch the fighting and to Glean Social Information The studies in Journal current biology. The scientists say these battles reveal a lot about animals social behavior. If you often think of birds is not very intelligent animals, but we are discovering very quickly that we are not the only a busy busybody nosy super curious social animal. And boards are doing that all the time social complexity is something that's a multiple times in the animal kingdom and we are just one of them.

Acorn Packers Ligon Journal Current Biology Bourbon Museum Of Natural History California Sarah Spears
Marianna Leivaditaki's Chestnut Onion Stew Recipe

Monocle 24: The Menu

05:20 min | 3 years ago

Marianna Leivaditaki's Chestnut Onion Stew Recipe

"Hello My name is Marina Boulevard key and I am from Crete half creighton and half Scottish Ashley I am a chef and I work here in London. And have been doing. So for many years, I was the head chef Mario and currently the head chef at Maurito at Hackney road. The race appeared like to share with you today is a chestnut and onion stew with the option of adding Pumpkin to it. So dishes really simple. A slow cooked stews. So you just need to create a really small base and sweet base using finely chopped carrots and celery and garlic and kind of cutting them really small and putting them in a pan with a little bit of olive oil and making sure they're nice and sweet. So cooking them for about fifteen to twenty minutes and then adding lots and lots of baby onions. So I like to use the Bora tiny. Tyler onions because they're small the really sweet and they're quite mild. So depending on how many people I want to do this do for I locate about five to seven baby onions, per-portion sa- loads, and loads, and this will make you really really beautiful. So after your base is nice and sweet, you just add the onions and then you add your cooked chestnuts. So of course, you can use chestnuts that you cook and you. Peel, but that will take a very long time. So I like to use good quality vacuum packed chestnuts. So I would say you kind of us about one hundred, one, hundred, twenty grams of chestnuts per portion just to be really nice and generous, and this is kind of what this is about using chestnuts instead of meat. So it's adding this kind of really really nice richness to this to that meat word if you using. That so you get everything in the port you add some really good quality chopped tomatoes a nice amount of red wine you season with salt and pepper, and a little bit of Orange Peel, a cinnamon stick, and you just make sure your port is nice and liquidity and there's enough liquid to kind of let this to cook gently few think the reason you can always add some wine or you can just add some water. Place a lead and just let it simmer for half an hour forty minutes just until it start smelling beautifully, you will be able to smell the orange and the cinnamon. When you take the laid off, you will see actually this source has really thickened and this Jew is just absolutely delicious. I wouldn't say it needs more than forty five minutes send. Another amazing ingredient to add that is very seasonal at the moment is. The pumpkin or the butternut squash or any funny squash that you might come across. You can just peel it Q-bert and added in this do at the same time with your base, your salary and your carrot, your onions. So I think here in London I don't often see chestnuts Jews and it's a true. That's very traditional in Greece in the winter months and it's absolutely amazing like if you go up the mountains, you know you. Might Walk into Taverna. The is run by an old granny and before you even kind of you just open the door and you're like, okay, she's Cook Chestnuts Stu. You know. So it's something that you find, but it's something that is also special. So it's not everywhere. It's not in every TAVERNA eater you go two sets a win today sheets really warming at celebrating chestnut, which you know are just absolutely amazing and I love them. And, it's a dish that I recently I collaborated with this amazing new project called wild radish, and this is my dish for Christmas together with lots of other things. So it's a little bit more elaborate, but the main stew is this chestnut and nonunion stew and it's been fantastic collaborating with world radish because it's just an amazing new project asking US sheriffs and other really really lovely beautiful capable sheriff's. To think of dishes they love Cook them, create them, write them down, and then they make them really easy for everyone to do. So you receive this amazing box with

London Peel Bora Tiny Mario Nonunion Tyler United States Greece
Monkey-Fighting Grannies with Airsoft Guns

Kottke Ride Home

01:25 min | 3 years ago

Monkey-Fighting Grannies with Airsoft Guns

"If you want some real world heroes to celebrate look no further than the self-declared monkey busters of Japan three elderly women armed with air soft guns, keeping monkeys away from their villages crops. The monkeys have been a big problem in the prefecture of Fukui where the women live destroying fruits and vegetables grown by the residence for the past five years. This past spring, the local government hosted a class to teach residents how to get rid of the monkees. All three women took the class and have now taken it upon themselves to control the situation in their village of Keishi town. Report saying that the three are so dedicated that they often drop everything in order to scare a monkey with their air soft guns when needed frequently appearing still in their aprons. Which they don for a photo shoot with a Japanese newspaper creating photos that looked like the coolest Charlie's angels reboot ever one of the women seventy four year old Masako Moorer her husband told the newspaper quote. There are many elderly people in the Miami area and the cultivation of fields is indispensable for health and vitality. It is necessary for the area to continue working together in the future and quotes. Interestingly Newsweek reports that a similar invasive monkey problem exists in a village in India where locals of taken to dressing up in a bear costume intern to scare away the monkees all these creative problem solvers out there. You'll love to see it.

Monkees Masako Moorer Fukui Japan Newsweek Intern Keishi Miami India
3 Awesome Senior Savings Top Tips

Your Medicare Benefits

06:46 min | 3 years ago

3 Awesome Senior Savings Top Tips

"Well, what are the many benefits of being the father of five? Wonderful Beautiful Smart. Daughters yes. I. Have Five daughters is that they are very savvy when it comes to what's going on the Internet. And they tell me Oh dad you gotTA. Do this dad you've got gotta do that try this try that. And I'm thinking okay, enough's enough. You guys know everything. I. Don't know anything. But it's come to the point where. They were right in some cases. Of course, I don't tell them that hope that I listen to this podcast. But they turned me onto a couple of things that have really been a lifesaver for me and my wife. When it comes to running all over. Town trying to get this and trying to get that. And also I also assume that everybody knows about this stuff but me because I don't. I just don't read the Internet like the young people do. So they turn out to a few things. And don't worry I'm GonNa have this in the show notes down below. So you don't have to worry about that. I'll have links to these sites so that it's easy for you to just go on there and find out for yourself. But I can tell you it made my life so much more enjoyable. stress-free. Don't have to leave the house to go get different things. And saved a ton of money. So not endorsed by the way, I am not endorsing any of these services but I can tell you that I use them. So if you can try it out and see if it works for you. Let's start with the first one. If you've not heard that you can get your deliver your groceries delivered for free. Now a lot of the grocery stores will now deliver your groceries not only will they deliver them? They'll shop for them you go online. You tell them what you want I want nine bananas, three heads of Broccoli and five. Granny Smith apples in two gallons of milk. And they will have a shopper in the store. That will go get that, and in some cases, you can either pick it up. which I don't do or they delivered. And there are delivery services that do that for you. There's probably a dozen or so. Probably one of the biggest ones this. Again I didn't believe that this would work I didn't like the idea of this whole thing. People buy my groceries picking out my bananas or whatever may be but I was amazed when I tried it there's a fee for it I. think it's nine dollars and ninety nine cents a month or a hundred dollars for the whole year whatever. But you know how we go to the grocery store, the pharmacy or Costco or SAM's Club wherever. We go in there for four things we come out with forty, right Happens to me every time. So. Yes. I do pay ten dollars a month whatever it is for unlimited number of deliveries to my home. It's well worth it. It's saved me more than ten dollars a month. So instant card is one of the more popular ones I know there are some regional ones. There are some local ones I encourage you to use local if you can. It's always good to help out our local businesses. regional businesses but I'll put a link down below to the INSTA- cart. Website and you can check it out for yourself and see if it works for you. Now the other area that I want to help you save some money on is in pharmaceuticals or prescription drugs. It can I assume everybody knows this if I know what I assume everybody else does but He was talking to a client yesterday. These people are extremely wealthy. And I thought they knew about this stuff they didn't know about INSTA- car first of all the lady was absolutely amazed about heart. She said, really, how can I sign up I center link instantly she signed up instantly and I think today she's already got a delivery come to her house This is very important because this woman. She's sixty six years old. She's extremely mobile capable. Every sharp lady however, her husband has a very serious the. Diagnosis ends in a wheelchair. So you know for her to go to the grocery store by herself. Leave him alone is a problem obviously for her to bring her husband is also a problem whether he just sits in the car or not. Can you imagine what she has to go through every time if she needs a gallon milk or runs out of paper towels? To nightmare, she was amazed about what instagram would do. But she also didn't know. About some of the pharmaceutical savings that I showed her. Now her husband again, I'll use him in particular. He takes medication that seventeen hundred and twenty two dollars a month. With insurance. Data very rare drug. Mentioned he's got a very serious condition. Chronic. Of course, there's no generic substitution for it at Seventeen, hundred, twenty, two dollars a month. And they have Medicare and again, these people are extremely wealthy. Seventeen hundred dollars isn't a big deal for them. However, everybody wants to save some money. So. What I said to her was. Let me do some research for you. Let me find out who makes that drug. Thought out who makes the drug shirt off to that drug manufacturers website and as a coupon. For the next ninety days, he could get a ninety day supply of medication for thirty dollars. Ninety days for thirty dollars. Had I not done that she would have gone to the pharmacy and paid seventeen hundred and twenty two dollars and forty three cents. Amazing she was absolutely stunned now this manufacturer's website by the way. Some of them are income based. In some cases if your income is low enough, you just tell them your income is whatever it may. You may qualify to get the medication for free. But in this case, it didn't ask for any income questions and again, these people are very wealthy. And she was just amazed. Ninety Day supply for thirty dollars. She was very, very happy. Somebody gives you the names of a couple of. Opportunity To. Save. If you haven't heard of good Rx DOT com. I don't know why I use it. I was a skeptic at first used it. Love it, recommend it to all my clients. I have a stack of good Rx cards in my office and you don't need one. I handed out everybody that comes in you go to the doctor's offices they also hand out modest you probably see their yellow and white. Terrific, program. I don't know how they make their money, but I can tell

Costco TA Insta Granny Smith Instagram Broccoli Medicare
3 Awesome Senior Savings Top Tips

Your Medicare Benefits

06:15 min | 3 years ago

3 Awesome Senior Savings Top Tips

"Well, what are the many benefits of being the father of five? Wonderful Beautiful Smart. Daughters yes. I. Have Five daughters is that they are very savvy when it comes to what's going on the Internet. And they tell me Oh dad you gotTA. Do this dad you've got gotta do that try this try that. And I'm thinking okay, enough's enough. You guys know everything. I. Don't know anything. But it's come to the point where. They were right in some cases. Of course, I don't tell them that hope that I listen to this podcast. But they turned me onto a couple of things that have really been a lifesaver for me and my wife. When it comes to running all over. Town trying to get this and trying to get that. And also I also assume that everybody knows about this stuff but me because I don't. I just don't read the Internet like the young people do. So they turn out to a few things. And don't worry I'm GonNa have this in the show notes down below. So you don't have to worry about that. I'll have links to these sites so that it's easy for you to just go on there and find out for yourself. But I can tell you it made my life so much more enjoyable. stress-free. Don't have to leave the house to go get different things. And saved a ton of money. So not endorsed by the way, I am not endorsing any of these services but I can tell you that I use them. So if you can try it out and see if it works for you. Let's start with the first one. If you've not heard that you can get your deliver your groceries delivered for free. Now a lot of the grocery stores will now deliver your groceries not only will they deliver them? They'll shop for them you go online. You tell them what you want I want nine bananas, three heads of Broccoli and five. Granny Smith apples in two gallons of milk. And they will have a shopper in the store. That will go get that, and in some cases, you can either pick it up. which I don't do or they delivered. And there are delivery services that do that for you. There's probably a dozen or so. Probably one of the biggest ones this. Again I didn't believe that this would work I didn't like the idea of this whole thing. People buy my groceries picking out my bananas or whatever may be but I was amazed when I tried it there's a fee for it I. think it's nine dollars and ninety nine cents a month or a hundred dollars for the whole year whatever. But you know how we go to the grocery store, the pharmacy or Costco or SAM's Club wherever. We go in there for four things we come out with forty, right Happens to me every time. So. Yes. I do pay ten dollars a month whatever it is for unlimited number of deliveries to my home. It's well worth it. It's saved me more than ten dollars a month. So instant card is one of the more popular ones I know there are some regional ones. There are some local ones I encourage you to use local if you can. It's always good to help out our local businesses. regional businesses but I'll put a link down below to the INSTA- cart. Website and you can check it out for yourself and see if it works for you. Now the other area that I want to help you save some money on is in pharmaceuticals or prescription drugs. It can I assume everybody knows this if I know what I assume everybody else does but He was talking to a client yesterday. These people are extremely wealthy. And I thought they knew about this stuff they didn't know about INSTA- car first of all the lady was absolutely amazed about heart. She said, really, how can I sign up I center link instantly she signed up instantly and I think today she's already got a delivery come to her house This is very important because this woman. She's sixty six years old. She's extremely mobile capable. Every sharp lady however, her husband has a very serious the. Diagnosis ends in a wheelchair. So you know for her to go to the grocery store by herself. Leave him alone is a problem obviously for her to bring her husband is also a problem whether he just sits in the car or not. Can you imagine what she has to go through every time if she needs a gallon milk or runs out of paper towels? To nightmare, she was amazed about what instagram would do. But she also didn't know. About some of the pharmaceutical savings that I showed her. Now her husband again, I'll use him in particular. He takes medication that seventeen hundred and twenty two dollars a month. With insurance. Data very rare drug. Mentioned he's got a very serious condition. Chronic. Of course, there's no generic substitution for it at Seventeen, hundred, twenty, two dollars a month. And they have Medicare and again, these people are extremely wealthy. Seventeen hundred dollars isn't a big deal for them. However, everybody wants to save some money. So. What I said to her was. Let me do some research for you. Let me find out who makes that drug. Thought out who makes the drug shirt off to that drug manufacturers website and as a coupon. For the next ninety days, he could get a ninety day supply of medication for thirty dollars. Ninety days for thirty dollars. Had I not done that she would have gone to the pharmacy and paid seventeen hundred and twenty two dollars and forty three cents. Amazing she was absolutely stunned now this manufacturer's website by the way. Some of them are income based. In some cases if your income is low enough, you just tell them your income is whatever it may. You may qualify to get the medication for free. But in this case, it didn't ask for any income questions and again, these people are very wealthy. And she was just amazed. Ninety Day supply for thirty dollars. She was very, very happy.

Costco TA Insta Granny Smith Instagram Broccoli Medicare
To Kegel or Not to Kegel with Dr. Tayyaba Ahmed

The WoMed

04:41 min | 3 years ago

To Kegel or Not to Kegel with Dr. Tayyaba Ahmed

"I feel like we gotta, talk about. Sex and other stuff in periods, and the more people who listen the better. Yes, and the they can in turn. Send that knowledge off to. One hundred percent. Oh God. There's such a taboo on it. Definitely I. Mean even now I mean years ago, there was a huge taboo. People would talk about like certain topics like finance and divorce and many when you're pregnant, not telling anyone and like sex forget about it even. Huge, it's still it's still so big. Oh, yeah, and then He. Oh, my Gosh, you couldn't even mention the word like period around men or something like. Oh, no way back when I mean even now it's. It's still like guys like what? I know I. I had like a dollar for every time I went allege set period where the guys rely A. Involuntarily like shudder or something, it's like why. I brought that up to. I had this like six cents in. You know like I woke up and I was like Oh God like my period I just started, and I just made it to the bathroom and was just probably graphic, but you know whatever. This plot just like came out and I'm like. And I texted my group of girlfriends like. What if men just bled from their penis? Would they still. They would be like floor crying like they had. The man flew all day. Long Term my God now. Well. First of all I hope you get. You have thanks fannies. Thinks okay good one. I want things to be a sponsor so if they're listening I. All the time. I will tell them I'm thinking embassador so I really. Obsessed with thinks they are doing not an ad by the way, but they are just. Only God. They're doing so much good for like like. Women and stuff all over the one hundred percent, so like I been wearing. Thanks for like five years and. Wearing them I stopped leaking my bedsheets. Because I I was definitely that tech teenage girl who is constantly. dirtying my bedsheets, waking up in the middle of the night and yet and having that like crazy periods, and like yeah, but all we already have gotten it on my pajamas and I'd be like. Oh, another pair down I know. But Yeah I do thanks for Reverend. Now that I treat pelvic pain I'm like such a big fan of it. Because of my endometriosis, patients who are constantly leading heavily yeah. I will definitely tell them. and reach. Have like maybe reach out I. Don't know how that goes, but young. I'll just give them my email I'll give it to you afterward. Done recording, not kidding I love them so much. I was that girl like? who before she went to bed would stick like. A regular like overnight Patton, and then like another one up the back like jutting. Or, like a towel underneath. I've definitely done that. Yeah, but like thinks has like such different. They have so many different styles that have different lake flows that it will that. Have! You gotten the super. No so the super is like super, super thick. It's like it's like it's almost like cloth inside of it. L. My Gari so like. That one's the thickest. Obviously, it's more like granny panty ish, because it is bigger but I mean on day one. Yeah, pretty I will go in entire day like. A backup pad I don't have time to go to the bathroom at work all day along the entire day and not have to change not leak. No and they're still dry, yeah! That's amazing like it's like. They're so comfortable and it's not like. You're sitting in like wet blood all day like it literally wicks it all away there, so yeah, I can't say enough good. Kenny I could go on about them because realistically who the Hell Wants to change their pad and also they're just economical and good. Yes hundred percent, and they're they. They provide like reusable famine. Enough hygiene products to women in Lake Third World, countries like underprivileged nations and stuff, too, so girls can in school and Oh, I love that.

Kenny I Pelvic Pain Lake Third World Patton