18 Burst results for "Greg Johnson"

"greg johnson" Discussed on Native America Calling

Native America Calling

08:01 min | Last month

"greg johnson" Discussed on Native America Calling

"The community? I'm one of the instructors at the grade school in the high school here. And we covered that a little bit, but we're not really concerned with that because a lot of that culture that spearfishing culture comes to your family. And in many cases, in many cultures, there's coming of age ceremonies. And so when a man or a lady gets to be a certain age, is the first kill the first year, their first rabbit. The first part is the first fish. They're all part of that coming of age ceremony. So when you get to things, you have a little ceremony in your elders and your community members, your relatives all come and they support you. And they'll give you stories, they'll give you knowledge, how to take care of that fiction. And so on and so forth, they'll give you maybe a spear or a gun or a bullet or whatever you know, a knife. And so it's really important to carry tradition towards and when you occupy your life with these traditional style of harvesting and living up the land, like again, I said food sovereignty comes all the way back. We take care of ourselves. We don't need to eat fish sticks. Then that's the best food for us in our children. And Greg, are we thinking of, what is the best way to prepare and eat sturgeon? Well, like Marvin said earlier, you know what we do is we're big on smoking fish in our community. We smoke white fish, musky, northern, even wildlife sometimes, but that surgeon. That stopped here, that's the best stuff. They said that you can smoke that. There's different ways different types of brines you can use. We also make one from maple sugar that we use. And it is phenomenal. So yeah. That's the other part of our two, and we always tease people to people from electrifying more other nations we tease non native culture because some people say, why would you guys eat a sturgeon or a musky, they taste fishy in really? Yes, that's what fish are supposed to. Like Chris. And if you don't know how to cook it, then if you don't, if you don't like it, you probably never cooked it right. So interesting, interesting. Well, Doug Cox, how about down in menominee country? How do you folks eat sturgeon? Yeah, I'm similar. We've had that past down just like they have, you know, it's passed down from some not only in physically learning how to cook it, but our stories in our legends and our ceremonies, the nominee of the ceremony every spring and that's been going on for thousands of years. It is called a sturgeon ceremony. Now we've sort of modernized it because of those dams, but in April, we have a huge gathering, a huge polo in a massive feast. We take some of those fish that are donated from DNR in an MOU. And we'll smoke those and we serve them at the feast and we invite everybody and anybody that wants to come and free come celebrate with us. There's a historic dance. Nominee have called fish dance in that dance as part of our own to the sturgeon on their return and it's been practiced again for thousands of years. It's a sacred dance. Part of our stories we prepare those sturgeons to get smoked and feeds hundreds of people, they get to taste how we prepare those sturgeon and it's a really important cultural event for us every year. Young little ones all the way up to our elders, participate in this event. Well, Doug earlier, we heard these stories of 7 foot long sturgeons weighing up to 300 pounds. Nowadays, what is the average sized sturgeon that you see? Yeah, you know, the average drop in some is a number of factors. It's climate. It's fishing pressure. At least in our populations that we're talking about, not like Winnebago, those ones that Greg talked about in those non natives that are spearing that resource down there. Do you know how does monitor it? But they're trying to balance it. The average fish isn't that big anymore. I mean, in fish standards, 50 inches probably you're talking about plenty average of a healthy sturgeon population. But again, there's those ones in there that are 6 and 7 feet long. I've seen them also. So they're in there, but on the average that they're not huge. In the lifespan, I mean, how many of them can live 70, 80, 90 years? Is that are those outliers or is that kind of the norm that they live that long? There's a portion of that population that are involved when it's just like there's a portion that are young ones so that balance is there, but those older ones, those 7 footers and again shown all at that dam and wolf river, the DNR does collect them every year. They collected one there that was 200 and 250 pounds. Over 70 long, that fish is estimated to be a 125, 130 years old. And when they collected that, I commented to the DNR folks in our meeting that's like, do you guys understand that this fish one when he was young? He was seen in this system without these dams. Think about that. This fish was swimming in the system without using them that are stopping him today and he comes back now at a 125 years old and getting experiences these blockages and not being able to come home anymore. So yeah, I mean that age they lived out long and there's an important message in every one of them. Well, unfortunately, we are going to have to wrap up our show now. We're out of time, but before we do, I want to thank our three guests today, Marvin defoe, Greg Johnson, and Douglas Cox for sharing native insights about the cultural significance of sturgeon, along with risks, facing sturgeon populations. Join us on native America calling again tomorrow as we cover what you should be thinking about as you prepare your income taxes. Until then, I'm Shawn spruce. As people seek to know diverse cultures, tribal museums and cultural centers grow more popular, so the institute of American Indian arts who support this show now provides a master of fine arts in cultural administration, focused on social equity and support of cultural community growth this program combines administrative tools and techniques with socially engaged leadership, blending institutional skills and community outreach programming. Deadline to apply is February 15th at dot EDU slash MFA CA. Are you a Native American healthcare provider, recovery counselor, social worker, domestic and sexual abuse advocate or traditional healer working in Native American communities, doctor ruby Gibson, will begin a 6 month advanced immersion in healing historical trauma. This online masterclass looks through the lens of a 7 generational recovery approach to provide powerful proven modalities and has offered tuition free to tribal members. Registration deadline is march 24th, 2023, info at freedom lodged dot org who support this show. Native America calling is produced in the annenberg national native voice studios in Albuquerque, New Mexico, by chronic broadcast corporation, a native nonprofit media organization. Funding is provided by the corporation for public broadcasting, with support from the public radio satellite service. Music is by Brent Michael Davis. Native voice one, the Native American radio network

Doug Cox Greg menominee Marvin Winnebago Marvin defoe Douglas Cox wolf river Chris Doug Shawn spruce DNR institute of American Indian a Greg Johnson swimming
"greg johnson" Discussed on Northwest Newsradio

Northwest Newsradio

01:49 min | 2 months ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on Northwest Newsradio

"For an update on our world. More than a dozen House Republicans who voted for candidates other than leader Kevin McCarthy flipped their votes today, putting him closer to becoming Speaker of the House. Among those who switched is Florida congressman Byron donalds, who says of Democrats pitching votes for their speaker nominee. To those in the, those Republicans around the country that there will not be a Democrat Speaker of the House in the 118th Congress. Former president Trump has spent the day calling Republican holdouts, including the remaining 6 in hopes of getting them to flip their votes to McCarthy, say sources familiar with the calls. But his efforts don't appear to have an impact. The votes weren't flipping until the 12th vote today. Mister Trump had been making calls all week and releasing statements in little changed. Some members are openly publicly on the House floor rejecting mister Trump. Lauren boebert said yesterday that the former president should actually be calling McCarthy to tell him to withdraw. Chuck sievertson, ABC News. News radio 1000 FM 97 7, stay connected, stay informed. Good afternoon, it's two 31. I'm Taylor van seiss. Now our top stories from our 24/7 news center. Last month, we learned the cost of a new I 5 bridge connecting Washington and Oregon went up $2 billion. As northwest news radio's Brian Calvert tells us the project's director still insists they'll break ground on time. The new Columbia crossing is now estimated to cost about $6 billion to complete up from the original $4 billion estimate in 2020. Project director Greg Johnson explains the jump. And in that intervening time period, we have had, as you know, inflationary pressures have gone absolutely to the roof. We pass supply chain issues and other things that impact construction

Byron donalds House Kevin McCarthy Mister Trump McCarthy mister Trump Lauren boebert Chuck sievertson Taylor van seiss Trump Florida Brian Calvert Congress ABC News Oregon Washington Greg Johnson
"greg johnson" Discussed on KOMO

KOMO

01:41 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on KOMO

"Her involvement in a protest march to the home of mayor Jenny durkan and her decision to let a crowd of protesters into city hall during the pandemic Traffic cameras coming to 8 downtown Seattle intersections will soon start mailing citations to drivers who block the box Reports the first tickets will be warnings only Then sometime early next year getting caught blocking the bike or transit lane at one of 8 intersections or blocking the intersection itself will net you a $75 ticket mailed automatically after the camera snaps your plate State representative Jake Faye shares the House transportation committee We need to reduce the potential for serious injuries by pedestrians bicyclists and automobile drivers and this is the strategy to try to do that Critics say the automatic finds are another way Seattle criminalizes poverty because they say few can afford to miss work to contest a fine The Seattle times reports cans are going up on aurora avenue at Gaylord first in Columbia third in James third and Stewart fourth and battery fourth in Jackson 5th and olive and on west Lake at the valley Roy street intersection Corwin hake como news The project group formed to replace the I 5 bridge over the Columbia river is now going through the different design options which also means some decisions will have to be made to choose an option in May Among them are how many lanes of cars the bridge will carry and which mass transit will be preferred so that traffic congestion can be minimized Interstate bridge replacement project manager Greg Johnson says they had a productive conversation with people behind the cascadia high speed rail project Johnson says their work is important but they don't think it should.

Jenny durkan Jake Faye House transportation committee Seattle Gaylord first city hall The Seattle times west Lake Stewart Columbia Columbia river Jackson James Greg Johnson Johnson
"greg johnson" Discussed on WGN Radio

WGN Radio

05:24 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on WGN Radio

"On the tri state that semi fire that has now been cleared in those delays should be going away shortly There lightfoot will be presiding over a special meeting of the city council tomorrow morning It is to consider an ordinance proposed by several aldermen that would repeal her vaccine mandate It would repeal it retroactive to October 1st and replace it with a new ordinance that puts all policies rules and regulations covering the discipline of obsidian employees under the approval of the city council It will require any disciplinary action against city employees to have the councils full approval The American teenager who was convicted of helping to kill her mother in Bali back in 2014 is out of prison tonight Heather Mack was released after serving 7 years She was almost 19 and pregnant when the body of her mother was found in a suitcase in the trunk of a taxi Her then boyfriend Tommy shaver was sentenced to 18 years She is expected to be deported by Indonesia to the United States Illinois state Senate Democrats have approved new congressional maps on a party line vote It now goes to the house for their approval It is the fourth draft of a map The interesting detail that causes congressman Marie Newman and congressman Chewy Garcia into the same district Newman has already issued a statement saying the map ignores concerns of many of the people who attended public hearings on new district maps when those hearings happen on the southwest side of the city and in the suburbs No more masked mandates indoors and outgrow village That's despite governor pritzker's mask mandate still bleeding in place Village mayor Greg Johnson tells Steve Bertrand on Chicago's afternoon news the positivity rate and science backs up this decision to ease the mass restriction The governor told us for months and months that once you get below 5% positive rate once you blow 5% positive once you get below 5% positive rate we drop the mask and he did Well now we're at 1.6 What changed scientifically to now say that 5% is no longer the number Johnson says he is pro vaccine and says if you'd like to wear a mask you can He's just not requiring you to Held the visuals are getting ready to possibly start vaccinating children 5 to 11 years of age next week depending on how fast the FDA and CDC say yes to the use on children of that age of the Pfizer vaccine Doctor Jeffrey cobham with northwestern medicine telling our antibodies he's already getting questions from parents Vaccine is safe That's really the bottom line I think for parents they want to know that the vaccine is safe And FDA panel recommended its emergency use on Tuesday The full FDA and then the CDC also have to give their sign off The governor that is pritzker is pushing for a package of incentives for EV manufacturers but it hasn't exactly had smooth sailing The governor and manufacturing leaders are on board with the proposal but labor groups are not signing off They want to see new protections for workers that will fill these roles and are also for those worried about their current roles The major companies are also bringing major money to the states they are choosing Ford recently committing over $11 billion to build a new campus in Tennessee and two other plants in Kentucky governor pritzker is hoping to attract more of those investments to Illinois Cavern wells WGN news Now WGN sports former Blackhawks head coach Joel Quinn is now unemployed and it was by his choosing He has resigned After meeting with the head of the National Hockey League from the coaching job it all goes back to that report on the Chicago Blackhawks and how the team had the complaint of sexual abuse and harassment by one of the players back in 2010 The black ox will visit Carolina tomorrow night Pre game at 5 30 6 o'clock face off here on 7 20 WGN and WGN radio dot com NBA the next beat the bulls one O four to one O three Thursday Night Football the pack They beat Arizona the final 24 to 21 Now let's check your forecast Rain continues tonight winds pick up also we'll see gusta around 25 mph a low temperature around 50 56 on Friday rain likely throughout the day It'll be windy also those wind gusts between 35 and 40 mph We dry out during the day Saturday a high temperature climbing to about 59 cooling down again on Halloween Sunday up to 56 with mostly sunny skies I'm WGN meteorologist to meet Chris ivory 55 at.

Heather Mack Tommy shaver city council Marie Newman Chewy Garcia governor pritzker Steve Bertrand lightfoot FDA Jeffrey cobham Greg Johnson CDC pritzker Illinois Bali Newman Indonesia Senate
"greg johnson" Discussed on Nerdette

Nerdette

08:11 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on Nerdette

"The local official. Who got a reparations. Bill passed in evanston high older and suffered alderman rebel. All raining i all right resolution one twenty six one thousand nine hundred seen a city of evanston funding robin ru simmons toll reparations passes on a eight to one vote this week on art of power. Congratulations find power. Wherever you get your podcasts from wbz chicago. This is net. I'm greg johnson and ever since jaws came out in nineteen seventy five. This time of year is usually considered summer blockbuster season which makes sense right. I mean why not beat the heat by sitting in an aggressively air conditioned movie theater eating snacks in the dark while watching big loud movie with a bunch of strangers. It sounds great. Obviously movie theaters weren't thing at all last summer. And they kind of are. Now though the delta surged definitely means is unclear again about what's going to happen in movies that were planned for theater releases in twenty twenty one which means we are definitely still seeing the impact of covert on the entertainment industry later in the show. We're going to check. In with film critic robert daniels about his favorite flicks of the year including one. I was quite surprised to hear was actually good nicholas cage. This retired chef. Who just decide to retire the wilderness distrustful pig and all. He wants his piece. That's all he wants. But i here to tell us about some summer movies to check out and which ones to avoid and what the deal is with that full scarlett johansson. Disney lawsuit is eliana doctrine. She writes about pop culture for time. Eliana hello for having me. So let's talk about what has come out lately. What's good for sure. I mean i think one of the films that i have seen recently that i really liked was no law which supposedly the first movie based on twitter thread. You win here story about how Out come along. But if it's kind of a crazy dramatic story a true story about a woman who has sort of this friend ship like falling in love with a friend at first. i see. it's a sweet beginning. I saw this actually just over the weekend and yeah the beginning is yeah like new friend. Crushes or so exciting and they captured it really. Well thought yeah. Very relatable net says the rest of the movie maybe a little less relatable because they go on a road trip together to do what zola. The main character thinks is going to be working at a strip club in florida but then it turns out that her new friends may have a more malicious things in mind. And it's a trip. I mean it's it's fun while also being a little bit dark. It really does this. Great tonal balance. So i would definitely recommend it. I think that it's probably going to be a part of the oscar conversation If not the movie than some of the performances and has a lot to say about race in america and gender and but it's also just can be kind of fun almost like musical esque experience at times when they're just kind of partying and having fun but even more mainstream movies like i saw the suicide squad and that movie is guardians of the galaxy but disgusting like whatever i am assuming the conversation between warner brothers james gotten was you know how disney won't let you do xyz things do all of it here blow up as many heads as humanly possible and then like zoom in on those blown up heads but it is. It's pretty fun in. You are into gross talking animals. That bite people's heads off. Okay the weasel armless not harmless joke. Twenty seven children. But you know it's like. I cannot emphasize enough. How many heads explode in this movie. Okay good to doke. So let's see speaking of weird trailers i've seen. Have you seen the movie old yet. Tell us about that one. Yeah so i am not the biggest m night shaw in curson as of late because i think that you know he has like good concepts that aren't executed a vast i would put slot old in that category I sort of went in thinking that would be a movie about like the forest of like being a parent watching a child grow up too quickly like newsra momentum or that. It's not it's not really trying to do anything except age. These people super fast because just two people who haven't seen the trailer yet. Essentially it's like these people wanna vacation. They find this really beautiful secluded beach and like the kids disappear for awhile and the kids come back and they're like grown ass. Human beings essentially mortals just turned six two weeks ago whatever's happening very funny. You have wrinkles wrong with this speech. I am not the first person to say this but like why is this not international news that like people keep going to the speech that deford coming going. What what what is happening here. The people keep going to the beach. It has a twist as all m night shop movies do that. I won't ruin at the end. That is a little bit interesting but more they all dust is it because they're all dead. It's not because they're all dead but they are all like on the cusp of death because we stop the beach makes sure and being old is inescapable So yeah it's yeah. Throw that into the categories of their some weird movies out. Marie now The concept for this is weird and truly horrified because aging that quickly. I mean that's everyone's worst fear so so kind of a general trend question. One of my friends went to see fast nine probably a month ago now and they said all the trailers before watching fast nine refer superhero movies. I mean it makes sense people who go see fast nine. Probably wanna go see superhero movies But i don't know what do you think like. Are there actually more superhero movies now than normal. What's your take. I mean there are definitely more than usual. There are four marvel movies and we've only gotten one of them so far and in a typical year. I think they're like two or three. So yeah it's a lot. We're halfway through the year. We haven't seen three of these movies. All which currently right now are slated to come out in theaters which he d how that works out based on pending lawsuits which we can get into Yeah there's a there is a lot of backup like venom. Is coming out is sort of the sony spider verse movie that they're putting out. Obviously the justice league is coming out there's a fair number of wants to left on docket. Mostly it's these. These big marvel movies that unlike aac warner brothers which just ended up putting out wonder woman. Nineteen eighty four straight. Hbo acts disney hung all of these. Because it really wanted the actual releases its marvel movies. Honestly they probably would have held black widow even longer if it weren't for the fact that black widow sets up a plot of a future markle. Tv show and we can kind of see disney's priorities live right now They really want people to subscribe to disney plus and they're streaming service. So yeah it's kind of become a.

evanston robin ru simmons wbz robert daniels greg johnson disney nicholas cage eliana doke Eliana curson scarlett johansson zola deford chicago warner brothers Bill oscar twitter florida
"greg johnson" Discussed on WILL 580 Ag Reports: Commodity Week

WILL 580 Ag Reports: Commodity Week

03:36 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on WILL 580 Ag Reports: Commodity Week

"Thirteen seventy eight and new beans twenty hundred november thirteen eight. So a seventy cents. Spread there and tom Right now we're Or so unlike a five over on the old trump corn and twenty five under on the five over the dis on old crap and twenty five under on the new crop. And we're we're not really corn country up here so you know the name of the game up here. We tend Right now or selling an eight over the december or new crop wheat. you're not corn country but there is a big disparity. I expected that your corn bid might be at least in line with the rest of the country was surprised that it was only five over wise. That the case There's just we're a long ways from the demand sources that you guys are used to Where we'd have to truck corn five six hours to to find anybody that's Corn processor Lot of corn right now is going into canada and that has become for the last year more difficult to get in and out of candidates. So it's just a little more costly to go up there as well and soybeans are a crop that you handle fairly often when we have a crap yes and that's a concern this year. We're not going to have much for crop but You know there's a little more bands things a little more Ability to grow some swings in this country and Do see a fair amount of soybean acres every year so bill biedermann greg johnson asked. How will farmers respond to the inverse. there's not one to speak of really very much at least up where a tom is but in a much of the rest of the corn belt. Certainly there is How might they respond..

tom Right bill biedermann canada greg johnson tom
"greg johnson" Discussed on Nerdette

Nerdette

04:18 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on Nerdette

"I'm greg johnson. And we did it. We made it to another weekend coming up. A theoretical physicist says we should not dismiss the idea of extraterrestrials as wacky sci-fi. We should stop from the humbling. Vote that there is nothing special about us. We are probably just like answerless. Cyborg plus other david. Eun tells us about the books. He and his wife nikola wanna published under the new waie imprint joy revolution. We get to be a boutique. Imprint focused on you. Know love story starring written by poc with the full backing of the largest publishing house in the country. If not the world. But i it's our panel on the week that was with us this week. We have catch xiao. She's a journalist and writer. Who used to be on. Npr's code switch team. She has a memoir coming out next month. Called seeing ghosts cat. Hey hi thank you for having me on. Oh my gosh. thank you for being here. We also have joanne freeman..

greg johnson nikola wanna Eun david xiao Npr joanne freeman
"greg johnson" Discussed on Nerdette

Nerdette

04:50 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on Nerdette

"Who played a key role in the twenty twenty election also a bestselling author of romance novels and political thrillers. What do you get to do in fiction. That is different from what you do in many other things. That you pursue. I kill a lot of people. How stacey abrams does it all. That's this week on art of power from. wbz chicago. Fine art of power. Wherever you get your podcasts from wbz chicago this is. i'm greg johnson. And we did it. We made it to another weekend coming up a theoretical physicists. Says we should not dismiss the idea of extraterrestrials as wacky sifi. We should start from the humbling. Volt that there is nothing special about that. We are probably just like answering the cyborg plus other david. Eun tells us the books. He and his wife niccolo wanna published under the wii imprint joy revolution. We get to be a boutique. Imprint focused on a love story starring. Pse written by with the full backing of largest publishing house in the country the world. I is our panel on the week. That was with us this week. We have cat chao. She's a journalist and writer. Who used to be on. Npr's code switch team. She has a memoir coming out next month. Called seeing ghosts cat. Hey hi thank you for having me on. Oh my gosh. thank you for being here. We also have joanne freeman..

wbz stacey abrams chicago greg johnson niccolo wanna Eun david chao Npr joanne freeman
"greg johnson" Discussed on Nerdette

Nerdette

07:15 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on Nerdette

"I'm greg johnson and this is the nerdy book club. It's just like a regular book club except sometimes the author stops by and that is what's happening today. Somehow it is july and that means book club pick for this month is david younes sci-fi thriller novel version zero. It is about max. He is a dude who works at ren which is also say. It's a social media company that everybody uses but everybody kind of hates so you know fill in the blank to realize when his bosses asked him to help design away to collect even more data from ren users he has concerns he gets fired so he and his buddies cook up way to get back at the industry. There's a love triangle and a reclusive billionaire and a of scheming. That's all i wanna say for now. Stay tuned for the super spoiler discussion group on the book later this month today. It is a spoiler free interview with david. You news here now david. Hi thanks for having me so nice to be here. Yeah so as. I mentioned a little bit like this book is about a lot of things. It's action packed. It's big and bold. i feel like it's also full of some really interesting ruminations about what the internet is. And what the rule of tech should have in our lives. And i definitely want to get to some of that philosophy stuff. Because i think it's really interesting. But i i'm curious to hear about when you first started thinking about this book as it is. I know you worked intact for like twenty years. Right is close to like thirteen or fourteen but stuck you know a long time. I mean i started from the beginning of the internet. I worked as a web designer and then we were called interface designers then after a while we're called user experience design it's because we had To consider like the whole like how do you bring customers on board. How do you keep them. How do you let them do what they want to do. Easily but also how do you get them to do with the business wants them to do. So there's a little bit of mind games going on Yeah and you know. I was mostly inspired. When i i worked for all kinds of companies i worked for like social media in cybersecurity but i also worked for an ad tech company and that was one of the most interesting jobs because it wasn't making. The advertisements was was making the technology that served up the advertisements. So this is the company where we build profiles off of users based on their behavior and the funny thing is everyone. I worked with had ad blockers installed on all the devices. I mean to to a person and these are all very smart nerds you know. And we hated the product that we're making. It was weird. We were totally. I like to say the nonsmokers. Working at philip morris like this is interesting. Isn't it this paradox. I wonder if there's a story here. That's an intense analogy to us. So that's interesting. Because like i mean in that instance. I don't know. I could see a world where someone is serving up ads that do benefit people. You know what. I mean like i think there maybe is a possibility of some good coming out of that but it seemed like unequivocally too complicated to everybody who worked there. Oh i mean there are we. We would complain. That like Instagram ads in particular. Were were just really good. We'd be like oh they know so well And there's a scene in version zero where they take some anonymous data and they anonymous and it's surprisingly easy to do that. That's actually pulled from an actual conversation. I had my job where we would look at a user profile and look at all their data and we could pretty much pinpoint you know what neighborhood they lived in at least without even trying very hard. so so that was the part that The flipside of the coin. You got these great ads on for jeans or whatever on the scrim and on the other side you have all this tracking data that gets sliced and diced and cut up and repackaged to different vendors. And that's the part. We made everyone install ad blockers on their devices. It's interesting because i mean obviously version zero is fiction. But i don't know i mean it's a even based on the conversation we've had so far so based in reality. Oh yeah i mean. I started this book man. It was like five or five years ago and this is before the rise of ticked up and it kept changing so quickly and in it would get crazier and crazier sort of beyond what i would imagine. And so i kept having sort of keep up with how things were changing. But at at the core there was a fundamental issue with technology that stayed the same you know and that was issues of trust and issues of like what happens when you get millions of people hiding their identity online and behaving badly so it made me wonder like what the heck is civilization like. How do you define civilization. Can you have civilized society when you don't know who's talking and you can't even get a response from them and that's sort of what the internet can be at. Its worst is just everyone shouting in the dark. Yeah that reminds me. There are a couple of really interesting concepts that come up as as your characters are just sort of like sitting around daydreaming with each other And they're you know. I would say pretty idealistic super smart young people who had jobs in tech one of them. There's a conversation that that goes akiko. Who's max's childhood friend. She says. I just remember that the internet was supposed to be this awesome place that would bring the world together. Yeah and max response. It did but not always in a good way. Would you say that reflects your own personal beliefs. I mean i don't like you did read it. Am after publishing version zero. Like wha what's your own relationship with the internet like at this point I mean it's kind of a relationship that i have with any think. All of us have with anything in modern capitalism. I remember. I remember like we used to want to boycott companies because they behave badly. And you can do that up to a point until you realize that all companies are compromised morally and it gets even more complicated when you use an app for instance and that app contain any number of code libraries by companies. That you've never heard of or aren't even aware of. And so what do you do in that case What do you do when the car that you drive. Has a spark plug made by a company in hungary that violates human rights. So it just it is. The default state of our of our capitalist society is to live with moral paradox and moral conundrums and the internet kind of is a really obvious Way to visualize that you can really see that the internet's can be very cool. Like i did the reddit ama and was awesome. I loved it but it is also notorious for posting pretty awful stuff and enabling some pretty awful stuff and you can't. There is no what you should do in that situation that you can only accept that. That is the situation what you do.

david younes greg johnson david philip morris Instagram akiko max hungary reddit
"greg johnson" Discussed on Tech Tech Boom

Tech Tech Boom

04:11 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on Tech Tech Boom

"I was not expecting it's a biscuit colored v-neck jumper seventy percent acrylic thirty percent. Polyester one hundred percent futures. Have nothing more to say. Thank you chad has left the stage really slow to process. Let's move into some post. Reveal jump analysis. I of all is even chance not visual enough to make an acrylic mix. Vienna really well. I wouldn't have believed that if it hadn't seen it more. Is it a case of doors. The jumper the bigger the genius in his mind. At least i mean it's practically flesh color so it looks like he's topless with no nipples and bunching. I'm seeing some bunching around the hips. Which gives the effect of love handles overall. It is not a flattering garment. Careless asto the nipples right now. Because i'm fairly sure he's right. Not shut beneath the signature jumping so worker in nipple contours visibles. The front-end rose is the coded message that carol. We'll find out when we speak to chad snapper. After this short break come. Okay thank guys. Hey how about this. Actually if you could just stand for this is just from my energy. Thanks that's good. And what's this four. Like an interview for bbc series about okay great so. Bbc's tv i can give you three minutes. Oh it's actually a podcast. I love that thirty. Two seconds max. Okay unless you're joe. Rogan joe rogan. Joe rogan on. My first name is joe. That's crazy you're all time it remember. We hung on your bedroom back in two thousand nine hundred. Yes do you kidding me. I couldn't yeah there you go. This is wild. Yes you got like. Twenty five seconds left the jumper. Why well i'm a genius. I don't wanna waste genius. Energy choosing close. Anything that holds me could affect human evolution. Are you minimalist in other areas of life to you know i love that. Yeah i only steam beans. I drink limited edition solid caramel mars milk. And you know showers. Rely on the need to wash office so for me. That's douse my mouth. Ears and anal region twice a day is water sleep. That's a lie to as as we all know. His love plans for this year weren't domination. We'll joke there. Haven't fun chilling with my hope. I guess out of a job have a job. This guy's cra- love this guy. Get out here show. Yeah yeah call me but yeah is it today. Give it a few days like three days. I feel all nice. Yeah made it a little later. Look you create. This was so great. So that's the end of our amazing special and we can announced the launch of the phone. That will complete you. Wlob are now officially the most profitable company in the world. Wow say guys. I'm just buzzing chats napa celica cooler neutral but what would that mean protect tech boom joe shirley that means the end no carol tech boom will continue on our hearts and on the internet and nothing ever dies. Buff mazdas rights western democracy in the concept of objective truth. So that'd be sad. Carol me old corolla virus is not good. Bye no no no no no okay. Cool goodbye is produced. By andy goddard executive producers chris stock and the writer. Is tim telling with additional. Material from olga. Cau- greg johnson and jack murray. It's epa trump production for bbc sounds..

chad snapper Rogan joe rogan Bbc chad Vienna joe Joe rogan carol Wlob joe shirley carol tech andy goddard chris stock Carol jack murray tim greg johnson
"greg johnson" Discussed on The God and Gigs Show

The God and Gigs Show

04:47 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on The God and Gigs Show

"Father was pleased in him for us. That's found indefeasible. One ably one in three where it says a god. It gave him great pleasure to be two for him to accept us know before the foundation of the world. So you know our life for the christian it is genesis our prototype before we do anything. We are accepted period. And if if if if we're rooted in that than what we do is it comes from that place and not to gain or maintain or to earn. But it's it's more million gratitude. So what. I said earlier that it'll be good to tell the people why it took us so long. Yes right yeah yeah. Everything wasn't a technical difficulty. Some of that was to perfection. Emmy that part you did not know. I remember that the there was one i remember. There was when we was supposed to do around six o'clock. And i got our mixed. I'd still go. I honestly lost track. But i remember several a lot of it was running because in his thinks it was. I wanna sound crazy. I i can't i don't have control of this can't punching i can't edit and i'm analyzing like i'm i'm talking now but i'm analyzing the make sure that you know i don't have a gramley check right now live it. You know it. it's. I'm being so on his right now like that. Is i appreciate you so much. 'cause that's that's real was about that it was fear of. I'm going to you know some of them are my subject. Verbs going to disagree in. You know i'm going to say it. It's it's that type of thing to wear it's wanted to present yourself s. spotless and have it all together and student students sharpen okay. You know what first comes to mind. And i don't think i have it on of his first or second. Corinthians not You guys doing into the thing are now. We're gonna check me on my chapter and verse. But paul says i do not even judge myself when he gets to that point what. He's trying to defend themselves against some of those people who are talking about his ministry and he's like look. I don't judge you i don jessop judge myself anymore. And then he go. Daddy does by the way he does lay down the law about why we use it why he has acted out what god had given him. As far as being a father to that ministry but so many times he does the whole. I counted as rubbish thing. Like right after that Whatever like i'm gonna do what i'm supposed to do and so i appreciate you being honest about that because again you're free and a lot of people who either haven't done their platforms have gone out. There credit their books. They haven't written the song they haven't sung in front of people. They're all thinking the same thing you're thinking which is what are they gonna say. Why are they going to say. And it's honest feeling but it's something that if you step through it you go to the other side light. Nothing happened like the worst. That could happen is nothing and usually. It's nothing that happy's in our member. Rightness line in upcoming blog as i say we we build someone at everybody loves but nobody knows who created. Why did you write this yet. Oh my god it's you have it. I think we're going to do it and to say that again tonight. We'll say say it again because we just let them know they to go read this. Go ahead we. We.

tonight three paul two second around six o'clock one first One Emmy christian Corinthians
"greg johnson" Discussed on The God and Gigs Show

The God and Gigs Show

01:34 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on The God and Gigs Show

"Back to our talk with gregg in just one moment but it's so important that you hear my heart on this when it comes to your creative life and whether or not you've got the people in your corner that can help you grow beyond where you are right now. You see what. I've noticed in most of our creative lives is that we end up being our head against the wall at certain points feeling like we're all by ourselves and unable to really get the information the tools and the answers that would really help us to reach our god given potential as creatives. That's why i created a new membership of highly motivated. Creatives could find the answers. They need and more importantly the encouragement and support. They need from other creatives. Who also believe what they believe. Grow the way that they want to grow. And i called this got engaged. Three sixty gotten gigs. Three sixty is a groundbreaking new program designed to help creatives to get out of their own way and to grow completely confident as thriving creative entrepreneurs. We're going to give you the count ability. The community the training and support noticed that spells out axe. I loved that acronym it spells it out. Because that's what we wanna create. We wanna create action in that accountability community training and support that you need to move to the next level. That god is calling you to if you only took yourself just a little more seriously and put that commitment in and that's what this community is here to help you to do..

one moment gregg sixty Three
"greg johnson" Discussed on The God and Gigs Show

The God and Gigs Show

04:58 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on The God and Gigs Show

"By ricky dillard why was challenged by passing mark cooper of our hometown heroes. I'm going too far. But he challenged me to learn that song. When i want to learn more and so he challenged me what to actually learn that whole record got it. That's and that's so important. That you mentioned pass cooper Some of these other legends in your life in south florida in universal of south florida. I actually came to south florida. That's the difference. I grew up in florida where you are now. Closer to my hometown. Didn't know until now. Yeah yeah. I grew up in physical florida. So that is the we switch places. i m panhandle in mobile and luxy. All those areas are like my mic stomping grounds growing up. And then i came down south to south date in south miami down here so i didn't know about ingram zingers until i got here. I didn't know about mark. Cooper's in florida mass. I didn't know it was such a rich musical heritage in miami. You know 'cause. I got here really not the is not to end of it but you know. There was kind of like a heyday when when all that was happening. So did you experience a lot of that like what would alleges that you were looking up to definitely mark cuban friends. I see if i started naming. I'm going to get now. It's okay to name a few. We know we're not gonna have tag him. Don't worry they're not gonna reload mark. African friends Kindle hunter loops ingram gospel singers. Melvin dawson. who actually gave me my start. we can talk about that later. Riviera dawson and a host of so many ots man. Those names kid. I was maybe eighteen. Seventeen how you said sixteen. So what would you say was a big break. I hate saying in music like big break. That doesn't sound right. But you know what. I mean like your i was it a major Tour was it a major artist. What was the time like. You felt like okay now. They're trusted me with a lot. Like what was the first time. Maybe you have something like that where you realize. You're starting move to be a pro. I would definitely say the memorial day midnight musicals that kindle hunters to host holy temple number one fort lauderdale. Wow okay your specific. You remember all of that i remember..

ricky dillard Melvin dawson miami south florida florida mark cooper Cooper eighteen sixteen south miami Riviera dawson mark cuban Seventeen mark first time south date Kindle memorial day fort lauderdale pass cooper
"greg johnson" Discussed on The God and Gigs Show

The God and Gigs Show

04:38 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on The God and Gigs Show

"Welcome to the program. How you doing brother. I'm doing good. Thank you for having me man. It's an absolute automatic. You know again. Like i feel like even though we've only had a few moments to be in the same building like be be honest with you. I feel like you're my you're might might by by blood brother. My musician brother my creative brother on brother and lord and yet you and i have not had this might be our maybe fifth or sixth time actually being able to speak face to face yourself virtually anyway so this is such a pleasure for me. This is why. I want to make sure that. Now that finally have you on this show just comic kind of wrap this up. I'm not. I'm not gonna talk about. How long was it. We'll talk about that when i talk about. How many times have we were supposed to have you on the show. It may be good really on where the conversation goes. Yeah okay so we have been trying to do this for a long time. Greg is an extremely busy man. He is doing so much for kingdom at his church at north view christian church and i was wanna give him the chance first to introduce himself to you because i feel like there's so much that we can get this composition but first grade. Yeah just say hi to the people. Just tell them who you are giving the elevator speech. You know where you serve and Get them that little beginning that we're going to go deeper later but just telling who you are what you do. So yeah i'm greg johnson. I'm currently living in dothan alabama originally from hollywood florida service directive. Music here at three christian. Church dr ramsay in. Yeah that's that. Has that c- man a few words unless you get a behind a keyboard or a the right keyboards you speak on the keyboard on the keyboard you right. You have written blog posts. Forgotten gigs before. I wanted to put that in. You wanna i people who actually responded to my call. When i wrote the book ida gigs for quotes and discussions on the book as a matter of fact if i remember correctly you actually bought. Am i right my right about this. Did you get the study guide for your team. Yes sir man that blessed be beyond words. You had so much faith in what i was sharing. I'm like i don't know what i'm talking about. I'm just trying to make this work and make these words go together. That was necessary. Very appreciate it man. So tell me a little bit about you. Know what you started with. 'cause i honestly don't know the answer this question. Where did you start in ministry. Did it start in your family. Did it start with their church. It start with the choir. Don't worry the i totally understand. You got a lot of guys tried to get in touch with your. I know even then on okay. So tell me a little bit about your beginnings man. Because i honestly don't know this. I do know some of your background but not all of it. So were you want those guys that was born in the church few born on the oregon or was there another route. You took if you even gave started in church ministry music so yeah i was born in church. I'm in a musical family. Mom's side full of singers. My dad was musician so before he went into past ministry. He was a musician an organ player. So let's say.

greg johnson Greg fifth sixth time first grade dothan alabama first hollywood florida north view three christian ramsay christian church ida
"greg johnson" Discussed on The God and Gigs Show

The God and Gigs Show

01:49 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on The God and Gigs Show

"I'll look at me administers way. Where pastoring the church until the day. Senior pastor gets there so now that goes into song selection right that goes into the responsibility of the atmosphere. The words you're putting in people's mouths when they worship it's a it's a whole ballgame and so you're sing and stuff and you don't know the mission statement because you just there for a check. I also like this. If the check is the only thing you're getting from the church you not getting anything. You've just heard some of the insights that you're going to gain from listening to today's episode with my guest gregg johnson. He is so insightful and so earnest when it comes to the things of god when it comes to knowing what you believe why you believe it and how these beliefs can impact your daily life as a creative as a musician as a christian. I wanna make sure you understand that. This episode is not going to shy away from some deep topics of fate. Some things that will really get you thinking and really make you sit back and examine exactly what you know about your and that's a good thing because if you don't know why you believe you really don't know what to believe and i think greg's going to help us to figure that out in so many special and important ways so please this time i'm not gonna say a pin paper. You might want to also have your bible handy for this episode. Because it's going to really really help you in your walk with god and in your creative life so let's cue music and give me a moment to welcome those of you. Who are listening for the first time. And then we're going to get right into this incredibly insightful discussion artis musicians and creatives.

today gregg johnson bible first time christian
"greg johnson" Discussed on Sports Talk 1050 WTKA

Sports Talk 1050 WTKA

02:00 min | 1 year ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on Sports Talk 1050 WTKA

"Your local auto value bumper to bumper art Store taking your thoughts on Phil Mickelson winning the PGA Championship on a historic Sunday weekend of golf as Bigas it gets and as good as it gets, it's like Tiger. Oh, Mexican, in his personal and on the course come back at Augusta, And the most beautiful thing is no matter what age you are right now listening if you're 80 If you're 50 If you're 18 We are seeing this multi generational leaderboard. Hand. You have the old school? Going on on the friends. You get some of these senior golfers, but you have Arnie and Jack and those of you that grew up In that area. Then you could fast forward toe. John Daly. Or Tiger and Phil and their emergence and that 30 Is it almost 30 Years of Tiger to wow. And then if you were a young golfer on your 12 13 14 through high school golf or even a college golfer who is sitting right now you have that great speech, and Justin Thomas and Ricky seem like the role. And you get the salad Tauruses and you look at the column or a collis. There aren't a lot of sports that can give you The great veterans. Guys in their prime and rookies. I know. Sometimes you'll see that In baseball, little bit right or Brady They got a rookie. Somebody could be like 20 years old. Like Sewell, who just turned 20. The one thing about PGA golfers away from their endorsements or their appearance fees. They earn what they get. Phil Mickelson, ma'am. What a Sunday Greg Johnson.

Justin Thomas Phil Mickelson John Daly Greg Johnson Arnie Phil Jack Sewell 20 Ricky Augusta 50 PGA Championship 18 80 Brady Sunday 30 20 years old 12
"greg johnson" Discussed on Digital Ankit Podcast | Motivation, self-help, digital marketing In Hindi

Digital Ankit Podcast | Motivation, self-help, digital marketing In Hindi

03:22 min | 2 years ago

"greg johnson" Discussed on Digital Ankit Podcast | Motivation, self-help, digital marketing In Hindi

"Lou saga dobbs advocates podcasts. Me humbert cutting equality important topic about me. He book communicating ra. Probably i think leaking nestle minaj individuals. Assad is topic or getting to gaggy ardy okay former sunada who licking abi amorphous. Hardcopy through mexico up duar geeky opco Ski sorry no. Let's go canoeing body. You find not you up school. So the idea. Because i think he was was Upside mature now key which he didn't go up cooper's going to get up wiki duar Google also Milteer okay so. It's comment virus around book on tin gun grow rich rookie napoleon or a scar you to manage allegedly with out matola but this menu belly story. Arpaio lord.' thomas Vicki thomas edison. I mean donaldson. Decent eka but not do com- kannada. Woo sitcom ganiyat skied. You shut would tiki Oughta a businessman partners To use clear. Chinese skewed budding Think even little which outta or was newkirk. Ugalde is keep Miki other up gander. A burning desire Party or squadron bars stay order We'll yes moscow gardner. I will definitely then Lovely you will be able to kooky out key hopkins The passer no doubt. She's liotta apple skinnier bluer situation. They just it gives me to make it School new to calcutta tacky. Saudi megan deeper rudy to attend to. Does he not parker toco. Saudi jehad dan on goodell awada or a police. Say no address card. Dotty dickey Cocky sausage a hajjah would gilady again to occupy which is in the occupies issue is key. kottayam i mean you are in dwindle situation to occur to one to give out the due to do outta outta the disney georgia gela deity. Would you could digital to Burning desire digital your dick tuckey hike bundy under wu. Heater key up to Greg johnson up to not be my workers japan take to goodell darlene. Look when you do actual putin schoon huge razzano to your victory under a power to it. Thank you put and zillow dot com liberty. I'm.

Greg johnson Assad goodell darlene donaldson thomas edison calcutta tiki Oughta Miki Google Chinese goodell awada thomas Vicki Milteer cooper japan Lou saga jehad dan mexico sunada dot com
Investing for a Better Tomorrow with Greg Johnson and Paul West

Entrepreneur on FIRE

07:09 min | 2 years ago

Investing for a Better Tomorrow with Greg Johnson and Paul West

"Fire nation sitting very patiently listening to all the great words of wisdom that you're gonna be sharing with us about investing for a better to morrow ends greg. Let's start with you. I'm curious about your thoughts on the importance of both diversification in risk tolerance when it comes to creating long term wealth. My audience are entrepreneurs. Small business owners. They really need to understand. Where diversification in risk tolerance are going to play in their world's good question. It's good concept. I yeah we deal with a lot of times with our clients you know. Sometimes you know when we have new clients or when we're talking to are trying to pitch the new people as well but He'll which really kind of interesting is a lot of people. Feel like you're not in the market meaning in by their terms of the market is just equities That is the only way you can make a return now. It's the only way of long hung to be successful if you do look at you know. Equities will perform better than obviously other asset classes. You know over the long haul. I we kind of showed our clients. And you'd look at you know the Portfolio just the s p. Five hundred since two thousand until now in menu look at the a diversified portfolio. Where it's sixty cord sixty percent Equities forty percent barnes. She may have some. Neil that as well may have some International stocks on the equity side but the sixty forty portfolio actually rob performance. Confide under which really interesting edgy. Do that taking less risk so what. I really say the people is look at times. We go up to seventy or eighty percent stocks. You know there's going to be other times when you make below sixty or sixty forty down to fifty fifty something of that nature. But you don't just believe that by taking risk your get returns for it. And that's something that's it's difficult concept for people to understand especially earlier but careers but it's something once you do understand it's gonna awards over the long haul and fire. Nation is critical. To think about is even when greg sharing this information and you know he might be talking about a one or two percents. You know of a higher return per year. My some people might kind of be like Well is that really that big of a deal and the answer is it's a huge deal as a massive deal over the course of a ten year portfolio. I mean it literally can be the difference of millions and millions of dollars so paul. What do you want to add to what greg share. What do you wanna riff on. Greg makes good points here. Just a piece i would add onto. This is diversification is all to help people be comfortable so when i think about risk. It's a lot of it's behavioral Everyone likes to chase latest had ideas. We're certainly seeing that ear and twenty twenty out so we had the market deterioration in Bartsch what happens every start selling because see other people selling and what had been happening since markets back quite nicely so if you did nothing to x. point in a better spot if you properly allocated to begin with The market's always done a wonderful job of making the majority of people and that's why having the right play together is a really good strategy and it's hard right because it's you see other people making money. You wanna make adjustments because no-one wants to feel like they're not the smartest person in the room so they wanna go chase returns. And that's why with you build out a plan and build out a target asset allocation curve. Sticking to it by greg. Bench is the most important thing they could do now. I just want to be very clear. Fire nation. that's. I'm not near the level of either gregor paul and the financial knowledge space. I spend a few years of john. Hancock in corporate finance. And i did my six three six six and my series seven as well so i do kind of know the talk and i know the lingering understands some things although it's been a long time and one thing that i really was thinking about when policy talking. Was you know. There is a big big difficulty when people churn when they come in and out of investments a lot. Because there's just a lot of fight this fees just a lot of expenses that go along when you are churning in and out of things and that's why you know when paul was going through and saying hey like if you're actually properly allocated at the beginning and probably diversified the beginning and you wait things out your oftentimes a lot better situation. Because over the last seventy eight plus years markets you know been nicely trending up but one thing i wanna talk about and let's stick with you here paul on this one is how can an investor enter and exit a position properly. Because i know that we don't wanna do this often times when you do want to actually get in or get out of a specific position. How do they do that properly. Given their specific time horizon there's probably several different pathways. You go down with this. John but i mean you're talking about specific positions. They usually mean. Someone's investing with money that i'm going to call. It is Disposable because they're now make it a calculated risk on when to get in and went to get out so there is certain timing things and what we see in especially for all your listeners. If they're working or they're busy during the day then they're not making trades during core hours. So it's easy to do sit at home at night. You're on your ipad it. You're looking up stuff. You're doing your own research. Like oh i really like this so you go enter in an order. Now you're dealing with after mark trading hours. So you need to be smart about when you're actually implementing your trade because a good traders know that People who don't do this frequently will push the buttons at odd times of day into especially if they don't understand the difference between what we call market orders versus limit orders. Where you actually name. Your price is people can be caught up guards. We wanted to be careful with that in like getting in and out is in. I always advise against it. Because you're just you're you're guessing. I'd almost rather say hey. Who do you like to bet on the football game. If you're probably just been chance to get that one right your point also about disposable income. I've always been a believer in having your core and then you're explore so you have your core. That's going to be that rightly diversified. Where you're in it for the long haul. This is the long term time horizon. But you know you can have that explore if you really want t know tesha waters in a few things but it should be within that disposable income

Greg Greg Share Bartsch Gregor Paul Paul Neil Hancock John Football