35 Burst results for "Grimes"

AP News Radio
Brunson scores 39, Knicks rout Nets 142-118 for 7th straight
"The Knicks have a 7th game winning streak following a one 42 one 18 collaborating of the nets. Jalen Brunson scored 30 of his 39 points by halftime for the Knicks who made 78% of their shots in a 47 point first quarter. Brunson furnished 16 points on 6 of 6 shooting in the opening period. Quentin Grimes all over 22 points, and Julius Randle added 21 with 8 rebounds and 8 assists. Cam Johnson scored a season high 33 points for the nets who have been blown out in their last two meetings with the Knicks. I'm Dave ferry.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Rocky: The Ultimate Underdog Story With Chris Kohls
"Talk about what is this movie to you because it's been described as a various things. The story of America, you just said the underdog. Some of the makers are called it a fairytale or a folk tale, what best describes rocky for you, Chris. Well, it's interesting you point out that grime and the dirtiness and the grittiness of it. Because I think that that is a product of the 70s. I think there was something in the 70s that was trendy about being ugly. It's kind of a weird thing, but I mean, it was a movie with an actor and a writer that came out just at the right moment in time. It's not a classic. I mean, let me just reiterate what you just said, whether it's the French connection or taxi driver. I mean, these filthy depictions of New York or Philly or anywhere. It was really a thing for a few years. Well, not just that not just that, but there was a kind of, I mean, the concept of like the big hair. You know, people, right? I mean, like greasy, dirty people. That was like a thing in the 70s. I don't know. There was a famous ad for Volkswagen. For the beetle, for the Volkswagen beetle. That just says ugly on it. Yeah, it just says ugly. And then you read it and it's like, our car may not be the best looking car. But it's the most reliable. So you want to buy. And there was something. And I realized when I was studying graphic design and thinking about the 70s that there was a lot about the 70s that was ugly, like you had these like mustard yellow and pea green and these colors were very popular. The money Pinto. Yeah, exactly, exactly. There was something about it. It was as if the culture said, you know what? Forget aesthetics. Forget beauty. We're going to embrace the grittiness of life, and that's truth, right? That's what they thought. And so that's depicted here in rocky. I think it just came out at the right time. And it doesn't even really look 70s that much, right? He added this sort of almost 1930s, 40s look to it. But there's two things that I think rocky is. One, it is an underdog story, of course. It's an underdog story in a million ways. But it's also a love story. And it's actually, I would say even more a love story than it is a sports underdog story. But we think of it as that sports story more because that's, you know, as guys that's what hits us hardest.

AP News Radio
How Luka Doncic and Mavericks overcame a nine-point deficit in 33.2 seconds to beat Knicks
"Luka Dončić had a franchise record 60 point triple double as the Dallas Mavericks rallied for a one 26 one 21 overtime win against the New York Knicks. Mavericks overcame a 9 point deficit in the final 33 seconds of regulation to send the game into overtime. Maris coach Jason Kidd says Lucas 60.21 rebound ten assist game is historic. You know, the history of the game is written by the players, and that was written again tonight for a player, Luca. Doing something that's never been done before. It's hard to do. Spencer Dinwiddie added 25 for the Mas while Quentin Grimes of the Knicks with a queer eye 33, Julius Randle and 29. Bob Stevens Dallas.

Artificial Intelligence (AI Podcast) with Lex Fridman
"grimes" Discussed on Artificial Intelligence (AI Podcast) with Lex Fridman
"This is the <SpeakerChange> evolution <Speech_Female> of the <Speech_Female> little literal <Speech_Female> universe herself, like <Speech_Female> we are not separate from the <Speech_Female> universe. This is the <Speech_Female> universe waking up. This <Speech_Female> is the universe <Speech_Female> seeing herself for <Speech_Female> the first time. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> This is <Speech_Male> the universe <Speech_Male> becoming conscious. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> The first time we were <Speech_Female> part of that. Yeah, 'cause <Speech_Female> it's like, we aren't <Speech_Female> separate <Speech_Female> from the universe. Like <Speech_Female> this could be <Speech_Female> an incredibly <Speech_Female> sacred moment. <Speech_Female> And maybe like social <Speech_Female> media and all these things, <Speech_Female> the stuff that <Speech_Female> we're all getting connected together, <Speech_Female> like <Speech_Female> maybe this, <Speech_Female> these are the <Speech_Female> neurons connecting <Speech_Female> of the <Speech_Female> collective super <Speech_Female> intelligence <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> that is <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> waking up. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Maybe <Silence> instead of something cynical <Speech_Female> or maybe <Speech_Female> if there's something to <Speech_Female> discover, like maybe <Speech_Female> this is just, <Speech_Female> you know, we're <Speech_Female> a blastocyst <Speech_Female> of <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> some <Speech_Female> incredible <Speech_Female> kind of <Speech_Female> consciousness <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> or <Speech_Male> being. And just <Speech_Male> like in the first three years <Speech_Male> of life or <Speech_Male> for human children, <Speech_Male> we'll forget about <Speech_Female> all the suffering <SpeakerChange> that we're going <Speech_Female> through now. I think <Speech_Female> we'll probably forget about this. I <Speech_Female> mean, probably <Speech_Female> artificial <Silence> intelligence <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> will eventually <Speech_Female> render us obsolete. <Speech_Female> I don't think they'll do it in a <Speech_Female> malicious way, but I think <Speech_Female> probably <Speech_Female> we are very weak. <Speech_Female> The sun is expanding. <Speech_Female> I don't <Speech_Female> know, hopefully <Speech_Female> we can get to Mars, but <Speech_Female> we're pretty <Speech_Female> vulnerable. <Speech_Female> And <Silence> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> I think we can coexist <Speech_Female> for a long time with <Speech_Female> AI and <Speech_Female> we can also probably make ourselves <Speech_Female> less vulnerable, but <Speech_Female> <Silence> <Advertisement> I just think <Silence> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> consciousness sentience, <Speech_Female> self awareness, <Silence> like <Speech_Female> I think <Silence> this might <SpeakerChange> be the single <Speech_Female> greatest <Silence> moment <Speech_Female> in <Speech_Female> evolution <Speech_Female> ever and <Silence> maybe this <SpeakerChange> is. <Silence> <Speech_Female> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> The <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> true beginning of <Speech_Female> life and <Speech_Female> we're just we're <Speech_Female> the blue green algae <Speech_Female> or where the people were <Speech_Female> like the single <SpeakerChange> celled organisms <Speech_Male> of something <Speech_Male> amazing. The <Speech_Male> universe awakens <Speech_Male> and this is it. <Speech_Male> Yeah. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> Well, <Speech_Male> see, you're an incredible <Speech_Male> person, you're <Speech_Male> fascinating mind <Speech_Male> you <Speech_Male> should definitely do <Speech_Male> your friend live <Speech_Male> mention that you <Speech_Male> guys were thinking of maybe <Speech_Male> talking. I would love <Speech_Male> it if you <Speech_Male> explore <Speech_Male> your mind in this <Speech_Male> kind of medium more and more <Speech_Male> by doing a podcast <Speech_Male> with her or just <Speech_Male> in any kind of way. <Speech_Male> So <Speech_Male> you're an awesome person. <Speech_Male> It's an honor to know <Speech_Male> you. It's <Speech_Male> an honor to get the saddle <Speech_Male> with you late at night, <Speech_Male> which is like <Speech_Male> surreal. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> And I really <Speech_Female> enjoyed it. Thank you for <Speech_Female> talking today. Yeah, no, I mean, <Speech_Female> huge honor, I <Speech_Female> feel very under qualified <Speech_Female> to be here, but I'm a big fan. I've <Speech_Female> been listening to the podcast <Speech_Female> a lot, and <Speech_Female> yeah, me and Liv would appreciate <Speech_Female> any advice and <Speech_Female> help <SpeakerChange> and we're definitely <Speech_Male> going to do that. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Anytime. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> Thank you. <Silence> Cool. Thank you. <Speech_Male> Thanks for <Speech_Male> listening to this conversation <Speech_Male> with Grimes. <Speech_Male> To support this podcast, <Speech_Male> please check out <Silence> our sponsors in the <Speech_Male> description. <Speech_Male> And now <Speech_Male> let me leave you with some <Silence> words from Oscar Wilde. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Yes, <SpeakerChange> I'm <Speech_Male> a dreamer. <Speech_Male> For dreamers <Speech_Male> one who can only <Speech_Male> find her <Speech_Male> way by moonlight. <Speech_Male> And her <Speech_Male> punishment <Speech_Male> is that she sees the <Speech_Male> dawn before the <Silence> rest of the world. <Speech_Male> Thank <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> you for listening, <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> and hope to <SpeakerChange> see you <Silence> <Advertisement> next time.

Lex Fridman Podcast
"grimes" Discussed on Lex Fridman Podcast
"This is the <SpeakerChange> evolution <Speech_Female> of the <Speech_Female> little literal <Speech_Female> universe herself, like <Speech_Female> we are not separate from the <Speech_Female> universe. This is the <Speech_Female> universe waking up. This <Speech_Female> is the universe <Speech_Female> seeing herself for <Speech_Female> the first time. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> This is <Speech_Male> the universe <Speech_Male> becoming conscious. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> The first time we were <Speech_Female> part of that. Yeah, 'cause <Speech_Female> it's like, we aren't <Speech_Female> separate <Speech_Female> from the universe. Like <Speech_Female> this could be <Speech_Female> an incredibly <Speech_Female> sacred moment. <Speech_Female> And maybe like social <Speech_Female> media and all these things, <Speech_Female> the stuff that <Speech_Female> we're all getting connected together, <Speech_Female> like <Speech_Female> maybe this, <Speech_Female> these are the <Speech_Female> neurons connecting <Speech_Female> of the <Speech_Female> collective super <Speech_Female> intelligence <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> that is <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> waking up. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Maybe <Silence> instead of something cynical <Speech_Female> or maybe <Speech_Female> if there's something to <Speech_Female> discover, like maybe <Speech_Female> this is just, <Speech_Female> you know, we're <Speech_Female> a blastocyst <Speech_Female> of <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> some <Speech_Female> incredible <Speech_Female> kind of <Speech_Female> consciousness <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> or <Speech_Male> being. And just <Speech_Male> like in the first three years <Speech_Male> of life or <Speech_Male> for human children, <Speech_Male> we'll forget about <Speech_Female> all the suffering <SpeakerChange> that we're going <Speech_Female> through now. I think <Speech_Female> we'll probably forget about this. I <Speech_Female> mean, probably <Speech_Female> artificial <Silence> intelligence <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> will eventually <Speech_Female> render us obsolete. <Speech_Female> I don't think they'll do it in a <Speech_Female> malicious way, but I think <Speech_Female> probably <Speech_Female> we are very weak. <Speech_Female> The sun is expanding. <Speech_Female> I don't <Speech_Female> know, hopefully <Speech_Female> we can get to Mars, but <Speech_Female> we're pretty <Speech_Female> vulnerable. <Speech_Female> And <Silence> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> I think we can coexist <Speech_Female> for a long time with <Speech_Female> AI and <Speech_Female> we can also probably make ourselves <Speech_Female> less vulnerable, but <Speech_Female> <Silence> <Advertisement> I just think <Silence> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> consciousness sentience, <Speech_Female> self awareness, <Silence> like <Speech_Female> I think <Silence> this might <SpeakerChange> be the single <Speech_Female> greatest <Silence> moment <Speech_Female> in <Speech_Female> evolution <Speech_Female> ever and <Silence> maybe this <SpeakerChange> is. <Silence> <Speech_Female> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> The <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> true beginning of <Speech_Female> life and <Speech_Female> we're just we're <Speech_Female> the blue green algae <Speech_Female> or where the people were <Speech_Female> like the single <SpeakerChange> celled organisms <Speech_Male> of something <Speech_Male> amazing. The <Speech_Male> universe awakens <Speech_Male> and this is it. <Speech_Male> Yeah. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> Well, <Speech_Male> see, you're an incredible <Speech_Male> person, you're <Speech_Male> fascinating mind <Speech_Male> you <Speech_Male> should definitely do <Speech_Male> your friend live <Speech_Male> mention that you <Speech_Male> guys were thinking of maybe <Speech_Male> talking. I would love <Speech_Male> it if you <Speech_Male> explore <Speech_Male> your mind in this <Speech_Male> kind of medium more and more <Speech_Male> by doing a podcast <Speech_Male> with her or just <Speech_Male> in any kind of way. <Speech_Male> So <Speech_Male> you're an awesome person. <Speech_Male> It's an honor to know <Speech_Male> you. It's <Speech_Male> an honor to get the saddle <Speech_Male> with you late at night, <Speech_Male> which is like <Speech_Male> surreal. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> And I really <Speech_Female> enjoyed it. Thank you for <Speech_Female> talking today. Yeah, no, I mean, <Speech_Female> huge honor, I <Speech_Female> feel very under qualified <Speech_Female> to be here, but I'm a big fan. I've <Speech_Female> been listening to the podcast <Speech_Female> a lot, and <Speech_Female> yeah, me and Liv would appreciate <Speech_Female> any advice and <Speech_Female> help <SpeakerChange> and we're definitely <Speech_Male> going to do that. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Anytime. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> Thank you. <Silence> Cool. Thank you. <Speech_Male> Thanks for <Speech_Male> listening to this conversation <Speech_Male> with Grimes. <Speech_Male> To support this podcast, <Speech_Male> please check out <Silence> our sponsors in the <Speech_Male> description. <Speech_Male> And now <Speech_Male> let me leave you with some <Silence> words from Oscar Wilde. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Yes, <SpeakerChange> I'm <Speech_Male> a dreamer. <Speech_Male> For dreamers <Speech_Male> one who can only <Speech_Male> find her <Speech_Male> way by moonlight. <Speech_Male> And her <Speech_Male> punishment <Speech_Male> is that she sees the <Speech_Male> dawn before the <Silence> rest of the world. <Speech_Male> Thank <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> you for listening, <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> and hope to <SpeakerChange> see you <Silence> <Advertisement> next time.

Lex Fridman Podcast
"grimes" Discussed on Lex Fridman Podcast
"And he was like, you know, actually love is a survival mechanism. Like there's so many instances in the animal kingdom where cooperation and helping weaker creatures and all this stuff is actually an evolutionary mechanism. I mean, you even look at child rearing. Like child rearing is like immense amounts of just love and goodwill and just like there's no immediate. You're not getting any immediate feedback of winning, it's not competitive, it's literally it's like we actually use love as an evolutionary mechanism just as much as we use war and I think we've missing the other part and we've reoriented with culturally reoriented like science and philosophy oriented itself around darwinism a little bit too much and the kropotkin model I think is equally valid. It's like cooperation and. Love and stuff is just as essential for species survival and evolution. It would be a more powerful survival mechanism in the context of evolution. And it comes back to like, you know, we think engineering is so much more important than motherhood, but it's like if you lose the motherhood, the engineering means nothing. We have no more humans. I think our society should the survival of the way we see, we conceptualize evolution should really change to also include this idea, I guess. Yeah, there's some weird thing that's seems irrational that is also core to what it means to be human. So love is one such thing. It could make you do a lot of irrational things, but that depth of connection and that loyalty is a powerful thing. Are they irrational or are they rational? Maybe. Losing out on somethings in order to keep your family together or in order. What are our actual values? Well, right. I mean, the rational thing is if you have a cold economist perspective, you know, motherhood or sacrificing your career for love, you know, if you in terms of salary in terms of economic well-being, in terms of flourishing of you as a human being, that could be seen as some kind of metrics as a irrational decision suboptimal decision, but there's the manifestation of love, could be the optimal thing to do. There's a kind of saying, save one life, save the world, it's the thing that doctors often face, which is like. Well, it's considered a rational because the profit model doesn't include social good. Yes, yeah. So who do social good, then suddenly these would be rational positions? And it might be difficult to, you know, it requires a shift in our thinking about profit. And it might be difficult to measure social good. Yes. But we're learning to measure a lot of things. Digitizing. We're actually quantifying vision and stuff like where you go on Facebook and Facebook and pretty much predict our behaviors. Surprising amount of things that seem like mysterious consciousness soul things have been quantified at this point. So surely we can quantify these other things. Yeah. But as more and more of us are moving the digital space, I want to ask you about something from a fan perspective. I kind of, you know, you as a musician use an online personality, it seems like you have all these identities and you play with them. One of the cool things about the Internet, it seems like you can play what they identities..

The Gargle
"grimes" Discussed on The Gargle
"Raising your voice unfortunately having a two year old home for ten days and not going to nursery and having to entertain him when he's feeling better than well enough to be looked after by strangers. Maine's that i was as the french say shit outta luck. Insult to injury. Last night i fell asleep with the menthol strips. My mouth and i burnt my tongue all in all i actually would recommend laryngitis single paypal or childless couples a great way to disconnect from people and really hone that phone addiction. You've been toying with over the past couple of years for them. It's a real four out of five However four parents of young children and people who leave with a talking parrot modest two a five minus two out of five the first time we breached the zero barrier. That's a bold move on the elon. Musk of reviews instantly. What awful the one. The dog is lee. Secret service code. For boris johnson. And he's also brought interview Brought reviews in sweden. It is odd looking back at itself in a mirror appropriate reviews..

The Gargle
"grimes" Discussed on The Gargle
"Scooby enough office. We don't need proper fake dogs anyway. no hand tweeted this image. I look. I'm not going to criticize anyone making a pun. But you do not need the foster for solar is not something you can create what you just make a picture of him. So that's my first to get. I wanna you need to acquire dog. Did he just spent years training and doctrine you need to let let it take your life so the detriment of your relationship with your human family members you need to let your dog become betrothed expression of your inner self. You need to put here's a. F. and low hanish is this is symptomatic of the throwaway world that we live in people on prepares to takeover another living creature and project their personality onto anymore. Just put up a tweet announcing not sat. andy. I i know. You're being satirical but as a matter of fact lowen has received criticism that she's received from the furry community is that that the the depiction of hers insufficiently furry in its diminishing ferry traits of lo han esque traits and at the audience of middling quality thirty three d. artists called cade said that he believes it's lower quality because many artists would receive backlash if they took an nfc commission because apparently the ferry communities very pro environmental for obvious reasons given them. They think their animals. Yes i mean. She was missing ease. That's pretty basic. Pitch stuff is not when it comes to an animal put on it particularly a dog. It's really one of the defining reaches now is what's the point you see dogs with docked tails i guess but you don't see many with dots is now which is not justified. Either docking I think you know shop should be Peds but know. I think you're gonna get a lot of backlash from that heading so i'll be. What's the shock based community by these. The boise's w still fungible tokyo. The soins presages the decline in full of all human civilization. Alex yes it is indeed an emmy this thing i think as we do determined earlier in this episode all good art all good. Modern art is just asking the question of what are actually is and in this case a thing that is not very good that you can only by the idea of and have no real ownership over is in itself a question about what what actually is to promote an auction for the canine cartel as if there aren't enough cartels doing damage in the world suddenly bring dogs into the into the game as well of noam that i always thought that cartel was just another word for the tooth fairy ring. Yeah so i mean it's and the news is is closing on on that national conspiracy from But anyway so basically you've got nf. Tease doug avatars. The fact that these things have any financial at all makes you think we are being done here on this planet. There's no point as well that time and money. Turn a belatedly fix environment. All species has run its race and wanna say it's run it's race..

The Gargle
"grimes" Discussed on The Gargle
"Well. I mean. I guess it was. It was classic break-up the break up of the history of must feudalism and benach exploitation and humanitarian. Why mates go go becomes clean. Kills me boy. I think what i when. I absolutely love about grimes is how she's obviously. I think she's very very intelligent. She's really cool. she's really smart. She was a producer for her own music and sort of music by a self in. I'm bedroom all of the lot. Site is in the island tattoos and the wearing lay the cloaks like a wizard in the middle of an la. Winds are forty degrees. I still love her. Real name is clay. Can you imagine be so upsetting to preemptive betrayal on the part of her parents really. I'm listen 'nigma you'll clay cleanroom place one hundred percent y. They've given that their child that name. Yes yeah exactly. Oh even said his name. I think he has think it's shortened eggs because it was a long night and then the people that day poll. Whoever it is you're gonna have to give him a nine and he can. I get more mathematical equation than a name. Clinic looked sexist flaming which is quite good night algebra short for algebra in thing. Now though isn't it. Yeah but look the the words of of Of grimes and and marks which grimes and marks. There's something wrong about those names together. She wrote s- you gave up being good when you declared a state of war. I think something karl marx could these liberal. He wrote all is solids melts into air. Ola holiest profane jump. Pretty sure he played backward. You'll find hidden and grimes his hit song kill versus name so knows across iowa. We'll see each via. She said there's some good ideas but she said the philosophy. I'm most inspired by hasn't been created yet unlike anchored gracia pa. Very we get it ear exhausting. That sounds so much like bitcoin. Billion as excuse for why they haven't solved the problem of excessive pollution in the creation of bitcoin. Oh she says something to do. With crypto currency. Why on the money there is money. That's the real question. I looked up the cow..

The Gargle
"grimes" Discussed on The Gargle
"Try the beer. And make sure you stop by the famous mannequin piece. Bronze statue which is dutch for little pissing man. Part of every brussels must see list is this representation of little naked boy doing a little naked way. His trauma counter was created in sixteen nineteen and produces about thousand two thousand five hundred liters of water a day. It's one hundred and four liters and our hundred and twenty five milliliters per second which is approximately half a glass of water. Now it's time feel celebrity section Andy celts manure a celebrity hound. I know you fuller entertainment news with avid attention. Absolutely obviously you deeply invested in the relationship of elon. Musk and grimes. Can you tell us a little bit about what's going. They're very deeply invested in the in the relationship of Musk and was Think i'll get to play the winner in the next round. So it's quite sauter. Grimes face of moved on from musk to his near namesake marks and as being seen reading the Communist manifesto written famously in eighteen. Forty eight call marks mark's body angles. I mean it's quite interesting. Mix of celebs this because we grimes not her real name. A performance name but karl marx himself was actually ironically. Pretty big on the london. Grime scene in the eighteen. Fifties alongside I'm in a lot of top celebs who at the time Painted dante gabriel rosetti. Before none of the monica pierre raff novelist george eliot. She went brother named the dangerous saturday. No recordings of gigs but So there's a linguistic link between the two. But i mean this quietly identical part what you can read into it as a in terms of Break break-up turning to the works of karl marx When the person you've broken up with his very much the embodiment of the logical end of lunatic capitalism. So i mean. I don't guess saying we're done for now but i don't know i mean have you either of you ever broken with someone and then turn to seminal work of political philosophy. Yeah certainly i think marks would applaud to see the means of production of drama back in the hands of the worker. Felicity how do you feel about the story. We'll you rooting for this. This couple. they still a couple. I think neither of them has has come out to explicitly say they on multi couple and we know that that they do that. That's something people do nowadays. They have a they have a notes app tweet that they tend to put out simultaneously partly separated this semi separated basically they still love each other but alone is in texas or something. A lot of the time now doubt improving the human rice worried about offers a global community rather than himself and his money and his paintings. But i'm i'm not. You know lots of people when they go through a breakout. We'll turn to dale. And i think it's really admirable that she turned to communist philosophy. It's just another break-up out really. isn't it..

The Gargle
"grimes" Discussed on The Gargle
"Guest editors for this week's edition and he's holtzman and felicity ward. Welcome allowed just a quick question. Bureaus in the official of guest editor. What when we're editing. I had to take a half. Because his term editors really looks and the is like Celebrity fashion lines. We send you the we've created a new look over and give a judicious. John batchelor cup stuff. I'm going gonna cut out every turn it were was planning to siphon off fill of countries including like coming onto time recording though the front cover the magazine. This week is grimes posing next to a shallow unmarked grave while reading the art of war by sun suit and the satirical cartoon this week is facebook instagram. And whatsapp going down with the middle aged man sitting in front of the computer going. Oh no how will comedians ever know that. I understood their joke. Without my slightly worse version of it in the comments section of the headlines this week face because announced it will pull. Its plan to make instagram for kids. In continuous plan for toning all adults into overgrown teenagers with no impulse control and daniel craig were controversial pink jacket to the premiere of no time to die making him. The only adult male at the premiere not caused playing as james bond. Now let's get into out section this week out. Section is muse of of a very controversial piece of art. Felicity ward urine art critic. Can you explore the story for us. There is an artist. cold yen's hunting. I'm sure that i'm damaging his name. Is i atlanta. And he was commissioned to create an artwork from a decade ago which was a bunch of a bunch of money frame. I think that was. I'm i'm sure it was a little bit more days album methods money in a frame something like that. And instead what he's done is taken the money and philip. That took me a lot of time. And i don't think this is a enough money. And so he sent them to blank frames and he's renamed the pace take the money and round now. I didn't know if he knows the name of the gallery. But it's constant museum. How did you think he was to act constant by handsome my nightjar but he has to january twenty second to return the money. And you just know it's going to be something might out a pipe mashed. Don't you such a beautiful story. I feel like it's the pinnacle of conceptual art because every quote from the gallery is them carefully saying how show they are that he will return the money actually said i love the sentence this. Ceo of the museum. This is for medical laughed and said that you work reminds us that we work for money. If he doesn't need another remind police in eighty four thousand dollars to ten. I royal greg. I think in many ways that this this needs to be applauded really..

Identity at the Center
"grimes" Discussed on Identity at the Center
"Two large. Tv's and walmart or somewhere at the same time and they let my transaction go through in the denied hers like two minutes later saw. There is little sms message going. Is this really you trying to buy this. Not me well. That's kinda probably the. I think the ultimate future of authentication if they see you coming from your your same device in location that you're going to be allowed to do what you do. The watcher action. See what you do seem. It seems like normal there will be this constant monitoring of what you do and it as long as you're doing what you normally do and it's not something higher risk you're probably not going to be bothered but if you go to transfer ten thousand dollars than maybe you have to provide an mfa. Token provide the last four digits of your credit card or something like that. So i i do think if future is not linked password bliss but i think token was i think for the most part Twenty years from now. Our grandkids are gonna laugh about the archaic methods that we used to do authentication because it just gonna be a fabric of what they do. And for the most part they're not going to be bothered until it becomes like a higher risk event. It'll be like you don't when people here like a modem and now and the there's like these flashbacks back to hearing modems modem signals and people staying off the phone. It'll be the same type of concept where you used to do what to log into things like you had to log into things you kids. Don't know how hard it wasn't. I had to remember twenty different passwords different passwords with different patterns for different sites. Some they're going to. They're going to go what they're not gonna be able to comprehend. I think you're right. You know you're going to be old when someone says what's password remember. My daughter got Three daughters in the summer one of my my youngest daughter was telling her france. My dad remember what it was like when. Dvd's were used you know. Like indeed. i do..

Identity at the Center
"grimes" Discussed on Identity at the Center
"But no matter how you authenticate once you've successfully authenticated behind the scenes it's all treated the same. I think like early. On when i was didn't really understand identity and authentication while enough i felt like if i did a fingerprint scan in my head i thought the fingerprint was being sent to the database of trying to log into the database like yep. That's roger grimes his fingerprint. He's allowed to access the database. I didn't know it was just a koros token or ticket. Or whatever in the background or cookie and it was the same regardless of how i logged in in that token can be captured by attackers. Amanda middle attack in evil jinx. I think hold that token is like back in the day when i started realizes when they're using a hacking tool on firefox browser all fired sheep but it would just kept your token once. It has your token. That's your identity. That's your driver's license. That person that your token can become you a and that was a big misunderstanding. So people won't protected. You are with mfa protected and authentication attack which are not protecting. Its anything after you indicate. So if you've got unpacked software if you've got somebody that's in on your on your computer or another computer and they get session cookie it or token it's game over no matter how you log basically talking about a fake. Id and he got into the bar with somebody who has a higher quality ticket. Because it's a it's a one replica. It but that's the same kind of concept. I hear and i see a lot of things. Now the space around continuous authentication and not just authenticating wants to get into resource. But using signals and other parts of data to try and have a more continuous authentication model in place curious. What your thoughts are on that things a great idea. You know this whole idea that we authenticate once at the beginning it's binary and then we're end is kind of silly so i like this sometimes called zero. Trust or something. But this idea that we are being authenticated based upon not only are successful authentication. But what we're doing howard doing it you know. Even maybe like keystroke dynamics how fast you typed in your password. Not your just your password. But how fast you type in your bathroom. One letters you hit. How fast apart..

Identity at the Center
"grimes" Discussed on Identity at the Center
"I know but it depends on how you define fishing designs bomb. What i guess like one of the most common ones that are. That's the hardest. To prevent from. Fishing is me sending new to a fake website. So it looks just so you click on a link that goes to the wrong place and then i completely fake your experience. A lot of the the best resilient. Mfa tokens won't even activate if you go to the wrong website. But all i have to do as the attacker is fake. Like it worked and then go. Hey we're having an error when you're token we're going to have a text or call you talk about replacing your token and then you start asking much personal questions what you logging. Id fishing them. Or you think you log into a bank like oh we need to confirm your credit card or having a problem token we need to confirm your credit card from your debit card information at the bank. It is almost impossible for an mfa vendor to prevent a completely thick website from just faking the experience. And that's why it's tough to prevent phishing. They're thinking about fishing as still in a password or this or that but to prevent all fishing. I don't know the solution. A lot of it comes back to the quality of the attempt rate when we think. We're all familiar with the terrible. Irs calls that we get right. We're going to be thrown in jail right if we don't answer the call right there that second and talk to somebody but i think it's just a matter of time where one know one for one replica of a site makes it extremely convincing for people and we're talking about. You don't need you know this is. This is a numbers game right. They're trying to get anything and everything. They only have to succeed once to be successful. Whereas if you're on the other side and trying to do defense against this you have to be right every single time. I think it's a very difficult challenge for a lot of folks that are out there. Yeah yeah exactly in. Let's say so. I said i sold a lotta. Mfa solutions in my career. Almost everybody that ever hired me to put an mfa had been compromised one or more times badly. Compromised like nolan proactively. Prior to this year one proactively clouds. Hey i don't wanna get mfa. It's always because they've been compromised so like i need to get mfa. I would go in and spend in. Be these million dollar projects in multiple months of time and i would get accolades on time on budget which that the computer is just insane right on time and on budget but every single one of those customers eventually got hacked again not through them face solution but through unpack software social engineering in most cases or could be miss configuration overly permissive permissions on aws towards bucket or something. You know it's it's it..

Identity at the Center
"grimes" Discussed on Identity at the Center
"My the big problem is average person. Est threesome passwords. They share over a hundred seventy different websites. All my god. that's terrible. They should not share those bastards. Any shouldn't look good luck trying to use a single imma solution that worse across hundred seventy websites because that's an even harder problem to sell so roger Just as a clarification who twelve ways to defeat multi growth indication and that evil jinx Demo was part of that precipitation will have that in the show notes. I saw another youtube where that evil jinx kit was modified to Basically sit in front of google g. Mail and they had some code in their page to help you know in defeat kind of the headless browser which without getting into all the details of the technology behind the scenes evil jinx based on the engine x. reverse proxy technology the apache system But you know obviously really high tech companies like google are pudding features into their webpage to try to defeat this and in this demo. Which i think was at black hat. They showed how even gucci male has were with multi factor could be solan. So this is very realistic. Just yet dummy companies can be. You can have this to them. I mean do you have enough know how even Probably the the top one or two technology companies in the world and google can can faces kind of hacking exploits. Well yeah a lot of times. I i really based upon type of innova- right. You have all different types of innova- biometric Harbor tokens phone as a token software. Tokens you know. There's always different types of of a in just being type of them a makes you susceptible to particular types of attacks. That are many times. Difficult to prevent like biometrics. If someone is zone stills your fingerprints like. I was involved in two thousand. My fingerprints were reported this attack by chinese. Ap t against the us government and they stole five point. Six million people's fingerprints all alternative. The made they got my fingerprints by point. Six main people other people. My wife's fingerprints were in there and she had worked as a teenager in a shipyard thirty years ago. I'm sorry. I'm in ten years ago and she had her fingerprints stolen while once. Your fingerprints are stolen. Unless you do some type of al capone surgery or something like that. What are you going to do if your fingerprint is your authenticate how can any system that's asking freer fingerprint. Along a lot of the fingerprints systems are one factor. Not multi factor. How how can it really no. It's you if you fingerprints stolen you know and and and you know because you're biometric. They're really not secrets right. Anybody can go behind. You pick up a a soda cam that you throw away or a candy wrapper and then all of a sudden. Got your fingerprints..

Identity at the Center
"grimes" Discussed on Identity at the Center
"Are not coming up with the exploits themselves. They're downloading kits off the internet. And maybe doing some some script customization and they're looking for the easy targets and then they attacked the easy target so layering. Mfa is going to thwart some percentage. Why because there's plenty of organizations out there that still have them if they if you're using a very basic form of them. If if is not biometrics if it's not you know kind of you know a little bit more Then you're you're setting yourself up to have a false sense of security. I wonder what you think about that so exactly again. This tape a little bit in the past but a big article. This week is about a bunch of coin base users. People trading cryptocurrencies being compromised in coin. Face getting the money back right. Your currency against a lot of those people were using. Mfa right and the problem was is that they thought. Oh but you know everybody's like used. Mfa this is super high security. They don't tell you know. Mfa solution very few of them. Certainly not the people there like telling you. Hey this high security use mfa and this is high security so they kind of relax. I talk to people all the time. That thank if they're using. Mfa they can't be fish. Like no i can fix you. I can send you email. You click on the link in its game. They're shocked when they learn that now with that said light. What percentage of hacking will be fixed in remediated by. Mfa anybody taking that guest. Good luck but what i will say is if you look at one hundred percent of hacking. Just my best. Guess and i'm i'm around. Mfa a lot. I've been doing it for decades. I bet that. Mfa prevents thirty percent of tacky. And that's no small amount. That's a third of all hacking right but mfa at its best only prevents authentication attacked and doesn't prevent somebody from doing attacking unpacked software or eavesdropping. Or taking control of your in. You know you run. They tricked running a trojan on their desktop. It's game okay right so. Mfa only works prevents some types of authentication attacks. Now with that said it's a large percentage of authentication idex primary thing that mfa stops is simple fishing or sounds like hey give your log in and password and let me say those are a large majority of phishing attacks so using you know you cannot give away your password if you.

Identity at the Center
"grimes" Discussed on Identity at the Center
"Everything aches that the victim quote victim did was sent to the real server and everything the real server Had all the pictures and things like that were sent back to the victim in and neither side is that there's this man in the middle in between they would. The victim would notice if they saw that the u. r. l. that they're connecting to is not the right. You're out so it you know it was amazing. And i i remember thinking i was like i know how to hack. Mfa a bunch of different ways. So i wrote an article for rural magazine. I wrote for them for fifteen years as a weekly columnist. I call it the hacking thing hacking him. I know ten ways to do it. And by the time i got we writing the ten ways articles i knew twelve ways in the so then i wrote twelve as jack. Mfa didn't he. Book ended up being my most popular webinar. Unless i've done hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of webinars it's by far still the most popular webinar presentation. I ever give. I gave it. Rsa in in black cat time. Sue standing room only crowds of thousands of people and people out in the hallways in the overflow rooms and stuff like that my editor for i was trying to talk my editor. Jim mental mandel the publishing a book on quantum cryptography quantum to how quantum computers gonna break a quantum a break. Today's traditional encryption. Which i wrote that book. But he's like roger looking at these crowds. I think you should be writing a hacking them. If able ever that know how to hack. Mfa over fifty. different ways. And i tell people i like. Mfa in everybody should use mfa with the biggest problem is is that most people most sys admins most ceases. Thank that when they have deployed. Mfa that they are significantly less likely to be hacked in. That is not true. I mean i've been some webinars just this week and last week. Some cyber insurance webinars.

Identity at the Center
"grimes" Discussed on Identity at the Center
"Of dollars in you and like everybody. I need like all these stories about migrate times of fighting hackers on the sock. That book's been ridden five times in. Didn't sell five thousand copies. You need to do better so you need to write a book you need to prove to the public so that you can write and that you can actually write the book like many people get a book contract in. They write two or three chapters and they never finished because they said everything they needed to say. First couple chapters or it was hard to concentrate. That longer is a lot harder than i thought so. If you can prove to a book publisher that you've got a book that five fifteen thousand people will buy because again. They got to recover their expenses in what they do to help you. Get your book out there. Then they're going to be interested but then if you got if you prove to them. I will write this book on time. Let me tell you you tell me you can write the book. Indu it on time on the schedule that you've either given them they've given you. You'll be given so many book offers. You'll you'll get tired of writing books. So what's the most important first. Step down if i want to start writing a book other than perseverance and being able to handle rejection. Yeah that is a big part of it. I won't say go to any any site. What widely dot com great site to go to download the book Submission form and look at. What are the questions are asking like. A third of them are going to be kanye right. Example chapter the last minute example chapter. They're gonna wanna veteran expertise while you wanna do this book. That wanna see the chapters. You're going to create the organization that sort of stuff and then the other big part of it. at least a third of it is. You need to prove to them that this book will sell on. Isn't that your job. You're supposed to sell it. Well they're gonna be wasting or not wasting but spending tens of thousands of dollars on your book and you've gotta make them again believe that you're going to sell more than five thousand copies of your book or else there. Let me say that. Most of the books they published. Don't sell five thousand copies in. Although my joke is my next book. i'm gonna write about sex protecting the servers of sexy vampires or something like that. Whatever the the theme there meam is that month. That's what i need to write about but it's limit about hardest saucedo download a book proposal from one of the major sites. Read it and i have people like they fill it out in like ten minutes. No issued a weaker a month to appropriately. Fill out a book proposal. If you're hoping to get a book because they want you to be awful about how well your book is gonna sell. What your organizational skills our ally. What is your chapter lists. Look like you need to take that seriously and most people don't take it seriously another submit with typos and stuff like that. You know you got a lot of type was on a resume or a book proposal. You're not gonna get joe. Yeah that attention to details got the important. I got a follow up question on that one is. Is there a certain i guess page count. That makes a difference from a publishing standpoint..

Identity at the Center
"grimes" Discussed on Identity at the Center
"To that in our show notes. Welcome to the show. Roger glad to be your jeff gemma. Thanks and i just wanna go on record saying is i'm not gonna blame courtney love. There's like this unnatural thing that wants me. Blamed courtney love letting say it's not our fault. That's how i respond to that braid album break music though while roger she is named in the lawsuit so she is one of the big according to the article i read. She's one of the people named in the lawsuit is being sued for one hundred fifty thousand dollars or her role is sex sexual exploitation. It's an interesting story. yeah. I don't i don't know i don't get it but okay well whatever. Why don't we. Why don't we stick tight end. Because i think that's what we all. I think have more of a passion knowledge base on but before we get to that in a roger. Maybe can help us understand your background. And how you actually got into the identity and the info specks infosec base. Is that something that you can kind of take us through is a little of a journey. Here's her story. Yeah yeah. I think you know. Thirty four years of computer security experience is really why got in the ville early on was located like seventeen eighteen nineteen But i did like everybody else. Pc network technician all kinds of stuff on my journey But really will kinda got me in the identity. Space really was kinda my at least my door into it was. I was a big. Pk guy and so. I was doing a lot of pk. I love peaky i love. I love the crypt in typography in the beauty of it and that led to installing smart cards and that led to install a lot of different. Mfa solutions over the years. I probably installed two hundred. Mfa solutions in different places. Probably more than anybody else. i know. I've probably truly hacked paid the hack. A couple hundred others on probably twenty different projects from different companies. I worked for microsoft and other companies Found stone and stuff like that so kinda throat but it was all really through. Pk i that kinda. Got me into smart cards. Which was kind of the original one of the original multi factor authentication solutions and then and everything else and now you're a data driven defense evangelist. Which is a very cool title. And i'm not sure how how you swung that at no before. So what is what do you actually do. These days actually had the best easy job role. I get paid to write in talk actually. That title was funny as i was. I got hired an written a book called daydream computer data driven computer defense instill was an early big fan of it and really is it truly is like my magnum opus Which is literally says. Hey you should concentrate on the stuff of how you really act. And it's really about data like we're we're supposedly somewhat of a mature industry is what you would think. After thirty forty years of computers and computer security and network found out is that we're not really you know that mature in our thinking we're we're gonna like most cybersecurity is best guesses in gut feelings and when you look at the data a lot of times the data contradicts what. Conventional wisdom is like the nist digital identity guideline documents back in two thousand seventeen. That's nist special publication.

Identity at the Center
"grimes" Discussed on Identity at the Center
"Geoff. That's jim hey jim. Hey jeff how are you. Oh not so bad yourself. I'm good but you know what Do levels of human stupidity are being reached with all going on the news. I'm going and this is not a news show but the story. I'm going to report on. Is that the baby from nirvana's nevermind album cover is suing the band at kirk cobain's estate for alleged sexual exploitation so so for people familiar with this cover our with his album. The probably doesn't need to be explained but for those who don't know. Iran is never mind album as recorded like thirty years ago. And it's a baby in the pool being lured in by dollar bill on a fishhook and the baby is naked. Sexual exploitation never crossed my mind with this with this cover but apparently this is left. The baby who's now a thirty year old roan person So distraught that he's suing the band members and people associated with the band for ten people for like a hundred and fifty thousand dollars apiece for like one point five million dollars Absolutely crazy what do you think. I don't know i think this sounds a little bit like a money. Grab almost like the picture itself. But that's just me. I don't guess. I don't have an opinion on it. All one way or the other just seems seems kind of kind of a weird time to do it but who knows. I know. it's definitely a money. Grab as being opportunistic. And this is. I mean as why everybody's free to do anything in this society is that you could be sued for absolutely nothing. I'm sorry there's no way anybody would be able to look at this picture and no it. Was this person this thirty year old man. Now if he wasn't out saying that was me and i was exploited. I'm sorry this is this is just craziness to me. I think the guy's been promoting it for a long time and now i'm not sure why now all of a sudden it's an issue but i'm not a judge and i guess not my pig farm alternate on there why i'm interested to hear what our guest is going to say about it. Yeah so why. Don't we get into it a little bit today. We have a pretty cool conversation. We're gonna talk about hacking multifactoral authentication. I think most people when they have conversation on. Mfa they sita's kinda the end all be all and you know. It's certainly better than a password but does not mean that it's perfect So introduce our guest. His name is roger grimes. He's a data driven defense evangelist at before he's also author of multiple books including one called hacking multi factor indication which you can find an amazon dot com. We'll have a link.

AP News Radio
Mets' deGrom leaves with flexor tendinitis in win vs Padres
"A worrisome when for the matches they beat San Diego three to two the two time cy young winner Jake up the ground was terrific for six shutout innings allowing one hit with ten strikeouts for a six win but he was forced to leave the game with a right flexor tendinitis he expects to make his next start I've had a couple of issues before and I know what that feels like so my level of concern is is not too high pretty optimistic about it and pretty sure it's gonna be something that's that we can treat and hopefully not miss any time the ground has tossed twenty two consecutive scoreless innings and his ERA sits at zero point five six the Mets knocked out Blake's known the fifty billion McKinney doubled in a run and the grime added a two run single Mike thank you so New York

Daily Pop
Jessica Simpson Reflects on Ex John Mayer
"Jessica simpson speaking at about how she really fell. When john mayer told the world she was crazy in bed. Jessica wrote that and her memoir and she says she was mortified when john called her sexual napalm but in this exclusive interview. I look that she has with tamron hall. Jessica explained why he does not own her anything. Should he follow a justin timberlake and do this public mac hall pa for some of the very public treatment. I definitely don't feel grime. public apology. you can't take it back. I feel like people end up finding their way to let you know we're sorry And i and. I think that i mean he might not be sorry. That's okay but like to talk about anybody sexually disrespectful. But i mean that's on him. I wouldn't mind if somebody left their review from you know what i mean like. It could be on the other hand like what happened with halle berry. Somebody said that she was bad in bed and she hear trying to find these accusations. Implicated in watergate.

Motley Fool Answers
Where's the value in NFTs
"You first saw the acronym ft show up in your tweets you got as far as not at four. And then you realize you're quickly going down the wrong path and trying to decipher it. Nfc stanford non fungible tokens now from there. If you're like me you thought it had to do with mushrooms. Maybe mario brothers. I don't know so then you read a paragraph of an article got bored or confused and moved on with the knowledge that all of your assumptions were wrong. But then you didn't actually replace it with any real knowledge okay. And so that was fine until you started seeing f. T. everywhere and you realize that maybe you should learn what it means and also you have a podcast taping coming up so here we are. And it's not that ludicrous bro. Stay with me all right. Mitchell mitchell clarke wrote a delightful article on the verge explaining t so i'm largely relying on that also wired new york times and a few other places. Let's go all right. Non fungible tokens are essentially a way that you can claim ownership of a digital thing. So think music art tweets yes. These are all reproducible. But so is a postcard of the mona lisa. So non fungible tokens exists on a blockchain at this point. Mostly a theory but others are getting on board and there are online marketplaces like open sea bull and fifty gateway where you can buy and sell the official ownership of the digital thing again. We're talking music video. Art animated gifts for artists provides a new way to sell your work and you can also set it up. So that you get a little kickback. Every time the nfc changes hands with a new owner. Lots nice so right now. You're like bro. Why would someone pay millions of dollars for an animated gif when you can just download it for free again. Why would someone bhai a monet painting for millions when you can get it on a mug from the gift shop for fifteen dollars so it all comes down to the basic tautology that some things have value just because someone decides it has value now for some people the value might be bragging rights to that end. You get to buy an nf t fred digital drawing of a cat because you are looking for a new way to show people. You are wealthy for others. Value might be about your phantom or support of an artist or musician. Kings of leon grimes dead mouse and many others have released. And fte's for music and art and for others. The value might be purely speculative. You're buying the nf t for digital drawing up a cat because you think it will rise in value as many other people agree. They want that authentic digital drawing a cat. And you're like seriously digital yes. Ten years ago. A guy named chris torres created the animated. Meam niane cat. You know it as the flying cat with a pop tart for a body and it's leaving a rainbow trail behind as soon as you google. It you're going to be like. Oh cat i totally know what you're talking about. So in february torres created an nf t version and put it up for auction and it sold for nearly six hundred thousand dollars following a last minute bidding frenzy other f- tease out there. William shatner is dental x ray digital baseball cards photos of lindsay lohan. And the first tweet. By jack dorsey just sold for two point. Nine million. don't feel too bad because the proceeds argos support a charity. So there's that and if t. Are definitely booming right now with probably more speculators than collectors and fans driving up prices but experts looking beyond the boom. See a great opportunity for a new way to guarantee authenticity. So for example nike already has a patent to create. Nfc's attached to shoes to guarantee their authenticity. Called crypto. kicks so when you consider that. A pair of air jordan twelve flu games are worth more than one hundred thousand dollars. Yeah i think. I want an fte with that purchase. Please and maybe you're still skeptical like a bunch of people in the comments of the articles. I read but seriously. How is this all that new and different. It's not like people buy sneakers art or baseball cards for the value of the materials themselves. They buy them for the aesthetics. The design the rarity as the new york times quoted. Marc andreessen. ben. Horowitz a two hundred dollar pair of sneakers is like five dollars in plastic. You're buying a feeling and right now the feeling that. Fte's is similar to one a stamp collector or baseball card collector or art collector or fashion. Or even a speculator might feel. It's that feeling that you are special because you own something someone else wants.

The Breakdown with NLW
A Beeple Artwork Just Sold for $69M
"Sound. You hear the sound of people's heads absolutely exploding a few times in previous episodes. I've mentioned the people auction going. On at christie's this is the first time the famous auction house has auctioned off a completely digital good. They had previously included an f. T. versions of some physical items that were up for auction but this was the first time it was just an nf tea while the final bids are in and the price paid for people's the first five thousand days was sixty nine million three hundred and forty six thousand two hundred fifty dollars first of all the folks over on wall street. Bets are in utter disbelief that the price wasn't sixty nine million. Four hundred twenty thousand and sixty nine dollars. Second of all crypto. Twitter is absolutely frigging losing their minds. This is a crescendo. Perhaps the first of many but definitely the first of the nfc mennea sweeping the world. I've given the background before but in short. Nfc's are non fungible tokens non fungible means that rather than every token being like every other token in other words each. Bitcoin is like each other bitcoin. They're mutually interchangeable. Each other is equivalent to each other. Tether these are cryptographic. Unique tokens that uniqueness lens them well to the actual owning quote unquote of the original quote unquote of creative work. Like a piece of art and of have been a part of the crypto space. For years i mean remember crypto kitties but over the last few months and especially the last few weeks they have had a major breakout. There have been two really important categories within that the first is actually in the sports collectible slash trading cards space last year. The team that brought you crypto katie's launched nba top shots in conjunction with the nba. These are effectively a new type of trading card featuring efficiently. Licensed video highlights. Now i was watching this and things started reasonably but they have really picked up over the last couple months last month. Nba top shot process. More than two hundred fifty million dollars in sales from one hundred thousand buyers more than that admitted a whole new group of wales a wall street journal article today was called the whales of nba. Top shot made a fortune buying lebron highlights. They were the early to the hottest. Nf market and their collections are now worth millions of dollars. They take a look at people. Like michael levy a thirty one year old financial analyst. Who spent one hundred seventy five thousand dollars over six months whose collection is now worth twenty million plus or andy chore. Leeann a twenty seven year. Old dev who back in his younger days traded pokemon bought sneakers but then more recently bought. Thirty eight hundred. Nba top shot moments. That are now worth a collective fifteen million. I think it's really important to point this side of the market out because in many ways it is a completely different. Demographic than the crypto punks art type people and frankly the people interested in people at least on an artistic level. But i also think it's worth noting that collectibles in general are going crazy. Golden auctions is a huge trading house for cards memorabilia. It sarah on march seventh. Golden tweeted prior to two thousand twenty. There only ten cards that ever sold for one million dollars plus in history last night we sold five cards for a million dollars. Plus clearly there is something going on in these sports card collectible market as well and on a smaller level i track a small index of magic the gathering card prices just to keep track of what older cars in that space are doing and it's up four hundred and fourteen percent in the last year. This is going to be relevant for discussion in a little bit about what's really underlying what's happening in an f. Teas but for now. Let's get back to the art. There has been a ton of focus. Here i people were gobsmacked by the price of crypto punks which are selling for thousand sometimes even tens of thousands hash masks or more of the same but all in all these things felt pretty well contained within the crypto space they were insider games insider speculation and insider collectors over the last few weeks that shifted we saw people sell on nifty gateway for more than six million. We had musicians jumping in just in blau who performs as three lau sold a set of thirty three. Nfc's for over eleven million dollars. Grimes may just under six million dollars. Kings of leon released an album last week with full. Ft's we've seen more sports stars jump in with gronk releasing a bunch of nf teas and then we've had brand seemingly determined to ruin the party for everyone like taco bell who released a set of tease last week as well. Of course alongside the hype. The backlash has increased as well. I mentioned on yesterday's show that there is a huge group. Were now fighting on environmental grounds. Just to give you a sample of some of those tweets per the biggest thing. The nfc sh tells us that we have an extremely short amount of time to destroy the capitalist system before it scorches all live from the earth in of a three percent rate of return. Here's another one the. Nfc thing has drawn a line in the sand between the artists who are annoying for evil minting enough tease and artists who are annoying for good cyber bullying people minting. Nfc's until dimensions mentions are so exhausting. They stop like we're all annoying but it's how we use our powers finally. Let's do one more tweeting things here and there but my stance on teases final. It's horrible for the environment and a very critical time in the climate crisis. Therefore if you participate in it. I will judge you freely in gladly and no longer support you so i tweeted this out yesterday and got a huge number of responses of people who have seen similar things and keep in mind. These aren't like random accounts or at least these tweets are getting hundreds of likes responses. And re tweet so. It seems clear that there is this counter lash happening even as we speak all in all the point. Is that even before today. Things in this space. We're getting pretty heated. But then the people auction closed

People of the Pod
Israel and the International Criminal Court
"Last weekend there was a major decision at the international criminal court in the hague that made it more likely that the body will try to prosecute israelis for alleged warcrimes. There's a lot to unpack here about the body itself. The charges against israel the players involved. And what it all means for the jewish state joining us now to help make sense of all. This is barack reviewed a correspondent for axios and the diplomatic correspondent at israel's while news barack. Thank you for joining us. Thank you thank you for having me. So first of all. I feel like the terms of the international criminal court. The is the hague they get tossed around as though everyone knows what they are. But i'm not sure that that's the case. The sec is part of the un is at a different international body. What exactly is its purpose. What is the i can tell you. For a fact that the vast majority of people have no clue and by the way. I don't blame. Anybody is not even for foreign policy. Wonks for international law wong's that's really a small sect in the world so it's not surprising that most of the people really don't know what to talk about. Let's explain the international criminal. Court was supposed to be established more or less after world war. Two as part of the lessons learned from that war but at the time the cold war was just starting and the tensions between the soviet union and the united states is not allowed to get a consensus to form such an international criminal court so instead they decided to form the international court of justice. Also in the hague. Many people get confused and mix up the to the international court of justice deals with more. Let's say principled cases between different countries while the international criminal court is like any criminal court. We know okay which means that it has suspicions. There are suspicions against a certain person for alleged war crimes and this person if he's indicted he's tried by the international criminal court. The international criminal court was only established in two thousand two. As part of the drafting of what is known as the rome statute the rome statute basically said what the international criminal court should investigate. What are the crimes that the food try people for and all the countries that negotiated destroyed at the end of the day had to sign it and approve it in order to be members of the international criminal court re in the us and you and israel have something in common probably many things in common in that neither of our countries signed the rome statute. So what explains that opposition. Why was the. Us opposed to joining the i c c so the irony is that israel was very involved in the negotiations leading up to the drafting of the rome statute and the establishment of the international criminal court. The reason the end of the day that israel did not join the icy and did not sign their own statute was because one of the things that several arab countries pressed very hard to include in the statute as grimes should be investigated by the international criminal. Court were issues that have to do with transferring population into an occupied territory. And as you know when israel built settlements in the west bank it moved its citizens into an occupied territory and for many many years. This was a main issue that israel did not see for example as a breach for geneva convention article. Forty nine in the fourth year neva convention is an article that israel decided that it doesn't agree with so israel. Basically defacto implements the fourth geneva convention other than in the west bank and gaza other than article forty nine because it has to do with settlements. Let me just ask this so one of the things that is illegal quote unquote under the rome. Statute is transferring members of population into occupied territory. And the reason that it's illegal is because like countries wanted to target israel for doing just that no the geneva convention okay from the late nineteen forties already at designated transferring of population into unoccupied territory. As something which is illegal okay. What happened here. was that at the end. You need to decide. You can't just decided okay. The icy sea will investigate any crime that we think at specific moment. It should investigate. No they wanted to Designate certain crimes that are. Let's say more serious. In order for the i c to be able to focus on the really most obscene acts of war crimes crimes against humanity crimes of those kind of things and when they negotiated the rome statute arab countries decided to press for adding this issue of of a population into an occupied territory as one of the things that constitute a crime that can be investigated by the court

Radio Specials
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"Be sure you never miss a story subscribed to the selected shorts podcast. And when you do, you'll get episodes of the spinoff podcast selected shorts too hot for radio. All you need do is search for both shows on iTunes and hit subscribe. We have one final piece on today's show celebrating James Baldwin, and it's taken from his work about family, religion and adolescence. Go tell it on the mountain. Though this is a novel Go tell it on the mountain presents the inner monologues of the churchgoing Grimes family as a kaleidoscopic Syria's of short stories. In the section we're about to hear Baldwin considers the false promises of the great migration entering the mind of the Grimes family matriarch. The reader is the always sublime Charlene would, er He had always seemed to Florence, the oldest woman in the world. Where she often spoke of Florence and Gabriel as the Children of her old age. And she'd been born innumerable years ago. During slavery on a plantation in another state. On this plantation. She had grown up one of the field workers for she was very tall and strong and buying by she had married and raised Children. All of whom had been taken from her. One by sickness

Radio Specials
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"Be sure you never miss a story subscribed to the selected shorts podcast. And when you do, you'll get episodes of the spinoff podcast selected shorts too hot for radio. All you need do is search for both shows on iTunes and hit subscribe. We have one final piece on today's show celebrating James Baldwin, and it's taken from his work about family, religion and adolescence. Go tell it on the mountain. Though this is a novel Go tell it on the mountain presents the inner monologues of the churchgoing Grimes family as a kaleidoscopic Syria's of short stories. In the section we're about to hear Baldwin considers the false promises of the great migration entering the mind of the Grimes family matriarch. The reader is the always sublime Charlene would, er He had always seemed to Florence, the oldest woman in the world. Where she often spoke of Florence and Gabriel as the Children of her old age. And she'd been born innumerable years ago. During slavery on a plantation in another state. On this plantation. She had grown up one of the field workers for she was very tall and strong and buying by she had married and raised Children. All of whom had been taken from her. One by sickness

Radio Specials
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"Be sure you never miss Be sure a you story never miss subscribed a story to the selected subscribed shorts to podcast. the selected shorts And when you podcast. do, And you'll when you do, get episodes you'll get episodes of the spinoff of podcast the spinoff selected podcast shorts selected too hot shorts too for hot radio. for radio. All you need do is All you need search do is for both search shows on for iTunes both shows on and iTunes hit and hit subscribe. subscribe. We have one We have final one piece final on piece today's show on celebrating today's show James celebrating Baldwin, James Baldwin, and it's taken from and his it's taken work about from family, his work about family, religion religion and adolescence. and adolescence. Go tell it on the mountain. Go tell it on the mountain. Though this Though is a novel this is Go a novel tell it on the mountain Go tell presents it on the mountain the inner presents monologues the inner of monologues the churchgoing of Grimes the churchgoing family Grimes as family a kaleidoscopic as a kaleidoscopic Syria's of short Syria's stories. of short stories. In the section we're about In the section to hear we're about Baldwin to hear considers Baldwin the considers false promises the false promises of the great migration of the great migration entering the entering mind the of mind the Grimes of the family Grimes matriarch. family matriarch. The reader The reader is the always is the sublime always sublime Charlene would, Charlene er would, er He had always seemed He had always to Florence, seemed to Florence, the oldest woman the in oldest the world. woman in the world. Where she often spoke Where she of often Florence spoke and of Gabriel Florence and Gabriel as the Children of her as old the Children age. of her old age. And she'd been born And she'd innumerable been born innumerable years ago. years ago. During slavery During slavery on a plantation on a plantation in another state. in another state. On this plantation. On this She plantation. had grown up one She of had the grown field up workers one of the field workers for she was very tall for she was very and tall strong and strong and buying by and she buying had married by she and had married raised Children. and raised Children. All of whom had All been of taken whom from had her. been taken from her. One by sickness One by sickness

Radio Specials
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"Be sure you never miss Be sure a you story never miss subscribed a story to the selected subscribed shorts to podcast. the selected shorts And when you podcast. do, And you'll when you do, get episodes you'll get episodes of the spinoff of podcast the spinoff selected podcast shorts selected too hot shorts too for hot radio. for radio. All you need do is All you need search do is for both search shows on for iTunes both shows on and iTunes hit and hit subscribe. subscribe. We have one We have final one piece final on piece today's show on celebrating today's show James celebrating Baldwin, James Baldwin, and it's taken from and his it's taken work about from family, his work about family, religion religion and adolescence. and adolescence. Go tell it on the mountain. Go tell it on the mountain. Though this Though is a novel this is Go a novel tell it on the mountain Go tell presents it on the mountain the inner presents monologues the inner of monologues the churchgoing of Grimes the churchgoing family Grimes as family a kaleidoscopic as a kaleidoscopic Syria's of short Syria's stories. of short stories. In the section we're about In the section to hear we're about Baldwin to hear considers Baldwin the considers false promises the false promises of the great migration of the great migration entering the entering mind the of mind the Grimes of the family Grimes matriarch. family matriarch. The reader The reader is the always is the sublime always sublime Charlene would, Charlene er would, er He had always seemed He had always to Florence, seemed to Florence, the oldest woman the in oldest the world. woman in the world. Where she often spoke Where she of often Florence spoke and of Gabriel Florence and Gabriel as the Children of her as old the Children age. of her old age. And she'd been born And she'd innumerable been born innumerable years ago. years ago. During slavery During slavery on a plantation on a plantation in another state. in another state. On this plantation. On this She plantation. had grown up one She of had the grown field up workers one of the field workers for she was very tall for she was very and tall strong and strong and buying by and she buying had married by she and had married raised Children. and raised Children. All of whom had All been of taken whom from had her. been taken from her. One by sickness One by sickness

Chompers
Bodies Week Morning Riddles
"Good morning it's time for choppers your tooth brushing show start brushing on the top of your mouth on one side bowler team all the way in the back. And it's bodies week on chompers and today we've got some head scratchers for you. it's riddled here's your first one. These pearly whites fall out of kids and grow back just one time. You use me when you're chewing and brush to clean the grime. What are they teeth but things. You're brushing right now. Switzer rushing to the other side of the top of your mouth. Don't forget those front teeth. Teeth are the hardest part of the human body even harder than bones. But don't go testing your teeth. If you break a bone it can grow back together but teeth. Don't he'll Here's your next riddle. I cover the whole body and wrinkle when you're old i'm sweaty when you're too hot and get goosebumps when you're cold. What am i switched to the bottom of your mouth. Don't brush to heart. Skip is your body's largest covering basically your body a scientific name for skin. His epo dermot. Don't look now. Your epidermis is showing. Here's another riddle. I don't get hurt when i get cut. I grow longer every day. And when you get much older. I fall out or i turned gray. What am i. Switch rushing to the other side of the bottom of your mouth. You brushing hair grows on almost every in of your skin. The only places that hair doesn't really grow is on your lips. The palms of your hands and the soles of your feet. Okay here is your last riddle. Longest one is your femur. The smallest one is in your ear. They make all of your blood cells and breaking is what they fear. What are we talking about the for you tonight. All you have to do now is

The Paul Finebaum Show
Chris Doering talks Florida and Georgia
"We welcome in chris during Who gives us her. Quite a look ahead to tomorrow's game. Chris in most years florida hosting lsu of the sec this week. It's been pretty quiet. I am curious as you know those two teams so well especially from florida side What what are they thinking as they get one of their bitter rivals in a bitter rival that they are a prohibitive favorite. It is weird. Isn't it paula. Me and thinking back to win. This game was originally scheduled. I thought most lsu people felt like we're gonna get a chance to play later in the year we'll get healthier. We'll get miles brennan back. We'll be in better position. And i would argue that. They're actually in a worse position now than when they were originally scheduled in october. So i it's kind of a weird dynamic with a lotta florida. Fans looking forward to sec. Championship game next weekend for me. This is all about. Florida has nothing to do with their opponent. Lsu it's about getting right offensively full full-fledged dress rehearsal right costumes everything. Let's go for what we're gonna do next week. I i honestly been kind of disappointed with florida's offensive performance. The last three weeks dating back to the vanderbilt came. Because they just look inconsistent. They look like they walk through a haze periods of time. They look like they're not executing and part of it's their own fault for looking so good against arkansas in the second half and missouri against georgia. We set the bar pretty high for them but focused level has not been there for a full sixty minutes. I want to see all fence. Get back to executing at the level. They were early in the year defensively. Let's get some things shored up. Let's figure out how to keep from giving up these long passing plays. Let's get generate some more pressure on the quarterback. Let's be able to to penetrate and stop the run something. I thought they did. Well against tennessee last week but The thing i'm gonna keep my paul. What are the numbers for. Kyle trask because obviously this is a game as you said against a A bitter rival one. That beat florida by fourteen. Last year florida's got a chance to return the favor but they also have a chance to outduel in back to back weeks what mack jones get did against the very same defense. And don't think that winning the heisman trophy is not something that dan mullen really wants. For contrast and something that will help his program significantly going forward in on that subject. How do you compare. Kyle trash to meg jones. And that's really his main competition now and that we know we know what had next two weeks especially next week but what what what what separates college trask. If anything well first of all. I love both of these guys you know as a former receiver. I love the the accuracy. I love the the the way they re defenses and get the ball to the right guy. On what the defense is dictating But i would go back and say kyle. Traffic is probably had a tougher. Time than what mack jones at and. That's not taking anything away. From mac ios but look at how. Good this offense of line is for alabama. Look at how well they've run the football over the last six games or so look at what. Najji harris has done. Devante smith the reason why iraq jones's numbers look so good on the deep passes over twenty yards and no disrespect. Mac has been really accurate. But when you're throwing a guy that's five yards behind the nearest defender. It makes it a little bit easier. So again i think without the run game florida certainly not able to run the football very well. I don't think they're offensive. Line is the most consistent So i think the load that kyle. Trask bears a little bit harder to to carry them. What jones does now with that being said. Look at the weapons of florida has i. I don't think i've ever been able to say at least in recent years. That florida has more receiving weapons around their quarterback than what alabama does. They've been absolutely loaded but Looking at the way that that not only kind of is utilized trayvon. Grimes justin shorter. All those receivers. Jacob copeland has come on as well Forgetting about tony. Who might be one of the biggest Factor mismatch guys in the sec. Right now but the way. They use the running backs as well. That was something that we saw against georgia so a lot of different guys. That are helping. Kyle trask out. But i think with the advantage that alabama has on the offensive line and that run game to complement the throws down the field. I think kyle may have a little bit more of a impressive Season just because of how much he's had to do himself chris. Couple of games. I want to ask you about one. Particular auburn at mississippi state mississippi state has been up and down we. We've been through that conversation. But i'm really curious about auburn. Because they've had some really good moments this year and then some clunkers especially lately. I know what you're doing here paul. You love it. When i go off on auburn and it's been up and down year with them right early in the season. I was really down on him. I was starting to get A little bit more positive with the way they were able to run the run the football figuring out who they were with take bixby and that offensive line and then they got hit with a bunch of injuries up front Bixby was was banged up.

Photography Radio
Interview With Sharon Williams
"Hello everyone and welcome to another edition of the frames podcast. My name is Scott Olsen. And today I am Overjoyed to be talking with Sharon Williams Sharon is a member of the frames Community. She lives in one of God's gifts to photographers Ireland and his doing work that when it goes by on my screen is immediately arresting immediately compelling and someone that I've wanted to meet and talk to about her work for some time now Sharon, how are you today? I'm really good Scott. How are you? I am wonderful. I have to ask because I'm just completely jealous. How is Ireland? What does Ireland look like today? Well, Ireland Spain Four Seasons in one day. I suppose as it is most often. It's a very wet and windy but lots of sunshine in between. Oh man. I've Had The Good Fortune to be there a couple of times and every single bit of it from you know the song Inner City to the the countryside is from a photographer's point of view. I think really compelling you are doing work that is not like the work a lot of people on the commission are doing and work that when it goes by as I said really does cost me to stop and look and you're calling it fine art floral photography. That's not all you do. You do landscaping do portraits that this is all on your website for those of you that are that enjoy looking at websites during these conversations. Her website is s Williams images.com s w i l l i a m s i m a g e s. Tell me how you got started in photography. Did you remember your first camera? Do you remember when you first start thinking of yourself as a photographer? Yes. Well, that's not that long ago and my husband bought me a Camera DSLR nickel and for Christmas one year. It's probably dead. 2014 and and then a couple of months later. I'm thrilled cuz I had an idea that I would like to take photographs and a few months later wage. I work in the local hospice and we were looking at maybe doing a calendar for the first year as a fundraiser, cuz I had me brand new camera. I was nominated as a photographer. So there's no pressure. So it was the best thing ready cuz it really focused my attention on what I was doing and I said about we change the the Hospice and and dairy here boy hospice is set an amazing Grimes. We it's it's on the banks of the river Foyle and it has sneezing Gardens that I've been a script and maintained by volunteers over thirty years. And so that's where I immediately Drew my inspiration from the calendar and the calendar worked out really well. So I was inspired to sort of keep going. And did you have any training at all or was it just you know work yourself off of automatic as as gradually as you could chuck. Yeah. Well, my dad does spend to stay away from automatic and go straight into Nigel. So that's what I've always done. I never use automatic. In fact, if I do I get confused. I like the absolute control over what I'm doing but in the September of the following year, I did take a short course in the local College here and the city and Guilds of course and which really introduced me to page, you know, hire a camera works and and introduced me to a new community of people as well which and it was amazing. And then after that I took another course and it was at that point. I had started really experimenting with this and came across this sort of like pad photography, but I have to say I was always fairly experimental because off The rules were a bit too fast and maybe a bit too rigid for me. So I had always sort of my first delved into like an intentional camera moves. I see em work. Yep. And I love that. I just love the movement you could get from that. And from there. I started working in Photoshop bringing like the Box focused into the ICM work and blend on the two together so very abstract and but seemed to go down well with you know, some people that aren't really appreciated it so long I kept going.

Past Gas
Pike's Peak: The Complete History of the World's Highest Hill Climb
"Pike's peak is a giant among giants. It's the highest mountain in the front range of the rocky mountains. It is formed from billion-euro old granite. That's right. Billion with a B. and was first named by the native people who lived in shadow the called the mountain. Taba meaning son and they were the Tableau Watch meaning people of San Mountain. In eighteen o six, the mountain was quote unquote discovered. By American explorer lieutenant, Zevulon Yuan Pipe. These God I sounds like an alien spaceship guy. On. Doesn't look as cool as his name suggests I'm just GonNa tell you right now he was sent by Thomas Jefferson on a mission to explore the West and upon seeing the Mountain Zevulun apparently swore the mountain would never be conquered by man cars didn't exist yet, but it's safe to assume pike would have included them in his assessment as well. Given the chance it only took fourteen years. To prove old Zebulon Pike. Wrong. The mountain was first scaled by a European in eighteen twenty when Edwin James, a botanist and explorer successfully reached the summit collecting flowers all the way up quote the most notable day of the expedition for botanical collecting. Now, I don't WanNa give all the credit to Edwin. James although it sounds like he had a great time, I'm sure that one of the Taboada probably. Did it before him yeah. One hundred percent. Yeah attaboy watch like a a wildfire up their boot who was just like I'm GonNa Climb that today flowers. We're lovely but it was a Shinier commodity that attracted the first wave of settlers to pikes. Peak Pike's peak or bust was a common slogan of the Colorado Gold Rush of the eighteen fifties although is more of a marketing slogan. Do the prominence of the mountain gold wasn't discovered near pikes peak until later in eighteen ninety three, it won't be the first time that the mountain inspired the imaginations of those who climbed it in that same year after reaching a summit of the mountain and taking in the view Katharine Lee Bates wrote the Song America the beautiful. Describing Purple Mountain Majesties above the enameled plane over the years the mountain was commonly referred to as Pike's highest peak before finally being simplified just to pikes peak the next notable American to shape the fate of the mountain was Spencer Penrose, and he also might have been the one to introduce cars. Penrose had a name that sound like the bad guy in a murder mystery but he also had a job that would fit right into the genre. He was a mining speculator of the American West just like a murder mystery penrose had a history that could make you think you is both a suspect and a savior he graduated from Harvard but at the bottom of his class. His father and brothers were doctors and lawyers he decided to travel out west and try to make a name for himself at first he failed before getting a tip about some land near Cripple Creek that made him millions of dollars, and that's million dollars like in the movie this guy is played by Walton Geoghegan's. For sure. That's love that whilst. Yeah. And that's millions of dollars in eighteen hundreds money, which is like a lot today billions today. I Love Walton Gardens he's so. I feel like if I went to Harvard I'd WanNa, graduate the bottom of my class. Look I'm I'm the best on the rowing team but. Not great at socio economics I mean I went to. Harvard. So I'm pretty good at stuff but like I partied penrose settled. Colorado. Springs. The closest town to pikes peak was met a woman named Julie Villiers McMillan although. Penrose was by then in his forty s, he had sworn to stay a rich entrepreneurial bachelor but Macmillan proved to be grimes to his Elon Musk and the two got hitched in traveled to Europe for a lavish honeymoon staying at beautiful resorts around Europe inspired penrose to murder his wife what now? In fact, the inspiration was to open his own motel modeled after the places he had stayed specifically on the Mediterranean coast. This became the Broadmoor hotel opened in nineteen eighteen at the cost of three million, nineteen eighteen dollars translating to scrooge mcduck. Gold Coin Swing Pool amount of money in today's money. The Broadmoor was and is a seven hundred, seventy nine room Italian renaissance style palace with eighteen restaurants a golf club with three courses including one designed by Arnold. Palmer himself an automotive museum, the contents of which will soon arrive at this thing is like massive. It looks awesome. Yeah. I WanNa go to the odd more. Yeah. Let's do it. How do you feel? Seven hundred rooms every night. That's nuts penrose was no fool. He knew he knew that to attract people to the hotel you needed to do things great reviews on tripadvisor, dot com and promotional stunts. He set out to work on an ambitious project as he built the hotel, it was a two hundred, eighty, three, thousand, dollar gravel and dirt road to the fourteen thousand, one, hundred, fifteen foot summit of pikes peak with the idea of promoting tourism to the area and indirectly his own hotel.

She Podcasts
World's Record for Most Podcasting Mistakes In An Episode
"Pretty? Frenzy and. Unfortunately my microphones behind it last night when we were. Practicing, I kept going like this so that I could. We have to remind her to get out of the. Presentation so Welcome she podcasts on fire. Or your host Jessica and Elsie can you just keep take over? I? Think. I have to send this quickey email. All right. So three mistakes rate, their people number one, please don't name your show on fire just because or which actually expands even more to please don't copy somebody else's show because or a variation on the name because you think it's really cool and that's the same way that yours is. Please don't do that The other thing she moved away from the mic we oftentimes get very excited and then move all the way over here, and then we're doing this and we don't realize you have to be on Mike to get very good levels for your end product. You must be engaged and lastly she's GonNa take care of an email most of the time I, get one of the things with just. An opportunity to see her and I cannot tell you how many different times I'm just like just. Just Pay Attention. Listen I'm very busy and important. That's right. Foot people can hear you typing just. So you know you're not fooling anyone and yeah she can see me typing actually but normally it's because. I mean to be fair. You're talking about something that I can't speak on right I understand so. Editor can hear you the is which sucks. So yeah, it's better to not do that. All right. So let's get started with the opening one's here. Let's see how do we start moving right along. Okay sees. So yeah, be mindful of your microphone I am really hiding are Holland be mindful of your microphone be mindful of your listener I'm doing it. Now we're recording this for our show this week and I'm moving to the MIC like specifically not supposed to be doing. This is not actually me being funny I. I. Just have to Redo it. Mind you this actually gives the other the other one of the tips that we're going to be giving. You need to test things out before you actually record, and this is what we are showing you. That is not happening. So part of the deal when you do your show is that you have to pretend as if it's actually happening even though nothing is happening to. Know, the right placement Yes tech is tricky. ECHINACEA don't do anything that will mess with it. Don't FIDGET DON'T CHEW ICE Don't. Talk and look out the window. Don't shoot anything. that. I've been asked. Not to do lots of times and make sure you have water something to drink on your desk because if God forbid you do. Get something caught in your throat you will. You. You know it's not good to have to get up and go get something also checking your connection if you're a person with more than one Wi fi network, which I am oftentimes. One, of them will be better than the other that day haven't made sure that I've looked to make sure and also choosing the right microphone. So the difference between the one that you WANNA record or your headphones or the computer like right now there's three and play and the right one is chosen. It'll sound. So terrible. You have to do add that on a little bit just think about whenever you choose your microphone that are certain APPs that use separate microphones. There are times when you can definitely set your computer to take on the specific microphone that you want it to us. But there are times when that gets a little bit glitzy depending upon what software you're using. So be extra crazy about checking it. So right now we are on zoom, and so I get a chance to go check on zoom if it's Pick there even though were also recording on another external like soft piece of software that's capturing our audio. We also need to make sure that that piece of software also has this Mike picked in its every single time because I guarantee you when it really matters when you're like Oh everything's okay. You'RE GONNA find out that one interview that one conversation that one amazing show you didn't pick the right Mike. And you'll be sad. Very very sad No. Yeah. Those things are super important. You know what I just realized. Also, we forgot to introduce ourselves completely. So for those of you who don't know us. You should. We are the CO founders of she podcasts I. Am just a cup from in. This is Elsie. Escobar. who was on earlier we co-founded she podcast in two thousand fourteen. MOSTLY TO HAVE A. Safe space to ask questions where we wouldn't feel we were asking stupid questions or get answers from people that might think we're stupid I. Guess That's The you had a very nice description earlier, which was you know we just needed a I forget what you said, but it was perfect. We. Just needed a place to hang where we would feel safe to ask the questions out. We needed to ask and not feel like I. Think part of it is that. I felt. Dumb or stupid about asking or an antenna like I should know these things and or that you'll be looked down upon for not knowing those things when realized just started. And also for me, it was lake getting technical answers to questions that I didn't feel needed technical answers. There was probably a simple solution for people who weren't trying to be like the next. You know. Adam. Curry that we shouldn't all have to aspire to be that so. That's why so yeah. So Jazz Elsie. and. This is kind of our show. This is her to every single time where on which. Kind of yes. But we are going to address all of these mistakes. So we've what you've already seen as well. The mics are not on. Possibly chewing gum chewing ice not a good thing everything's on your. Any everything is being recorded messing around with hair and earrings. Talking while turning away from your microphone, making sure that you're definitely on there and not having water and so impart when you were talking about the water thing just. I'm a fan of having something with a lid on it throw yes. because. You can spill your water while you are recording. So having something with a lid has been really great for me 'cause. I'm such a klotz myself and the other thing is that you have to make sure that you make you use. The. Mute. Button. So the mistake would be not using your mute button as much as you can when somebody else's talking or you're drinking because this thing happens watched us. Did you hear that? Yes. So the pop grimes you myself when I Open My. Bottle. Time I know it's annoying but I don't want that noise

Morning News with Manda Factor and Gregg Hersholt
164 nurses' shoes placed on the lawn of the Capitol
"Says the number of actual Covad 19 infections infections is is a a lot lot higher higher than than the the 3.9 3.9 million million reported reported so so far. far. This This is is based based on on a a new new study study and and we we hear hear more more from from ABC ABC is is Victor Victor a a kendo. kendo. The The study study looking looking at at antibody antibody tests tests in in 10 10 cities and states from March to May. Finding depending on the location. The case rate could be 6 to 24 times more than initially reported were now in July. With hospitalizations on the rise in 40 states. The self looking like the Northeast did in April. In his first Kuroda virus briefing since April, President Trump acknowledging the severity of the pandemic, it will probably, unfortunately, get worse before it gets better. Hospitals like Baptist help here in Miami or pushed to the brink. It's exhausting every day. We feel feel like like we're we're in in a a race race a a marathon marathon with with just just one one I I C C u u BED BED left left nurse nurse Rachel Rachel ever ever says says it's it's wearing wearing on on the the staff staff compared compared to to March March and and April. April. What What are we seeing now in the I C U Oh, March was just a tip of the iceberg, and every day it's coming into more patients, and they're very sick. As cases rise. The debate over reopening schools raging the clock is ticking. Mindy Grimes Pesky is one of dozens of educators and parents suing Governor Rond De Santis, who wants kids back in the classroom. The governor suggested. The teachers who don't want to go back inside of a classroom could do something like take a sabbatical. Could you could other teachers afford to do something like that right now? Absolutely not. I mean, to make that statement just lets us know that he is not in touch with what's happening. She and her husband are both teachers, and they're concerned they could bring the virus home to their son who's immuno compromised. In a congressional hearing, Executives from five pharmaceutical companies said they hoped to have hundreds of millions of doses of affordable vaccine. To be ready by next year. They were asked if they would send their kids back to school without one. I don't know the answer. Yet even for my three Children were wrestling with the same challenges. Parents cross country trying to figure out right. So you come to a conclusion. No, sir. We were talking about that tonight at dinner. I don't know you. Just if if you're confused, Think about that all across America. Vice President Pence with a different message. I can tell you with my wife seated right here. If our kids were elementary school age or high school or college, we wouldn't hesitate sending back school. Because I've been looking at this data every day. The virus continuing to take a deadly toll on frontline workers, Fianna Tulip mourning her mother, Isabel Papadimitriou, a respiratory therapist in Dallas, writing this skating obituary, blaming politicians and their lack of action for her death, writing Like hundreds and thousands of others, she should still be alive today. Even inviting Texas governor Greg Abbott to her mother's funeral, saying his statewide mask mandate was too little too late. I invited him so that he can see behind these numbers. There are really people who are suffering Jackson Alabama in Washington, D C. The National Nurses union, placing 164 pairs of shoes on the lawn of the Capitol to mourn their fallen