18 Burst results for "Grody"

Stuff You Should Know
"grody" Discussed on Stuff You Should Know
"Bialys. What? A bialy is sort of a cousin of a bagel. Never heard of a bialy? No. I think of the deal with the bialy as there's no hole, I'm not sure what the other difference is. I didn't look this up, but I thought we should shout out the bialy because then it will get listener mail. It sounds suspiciously like an English muffin chunk. I think it's just, I gotta look it up because I don't want to misspeak, but I think it's a bagel without a hole. Okay, I've genuinely never heard of that by name or by concept either. Oh. Interesting. All right. So let's talk oats then. Yeah, oats is one of those things that is maybe in the running for oldest breakfast food. Because for centuries and thousands of years, people have been eating growing oats and eating oats. And some kind of sloppy porridge type thing. Yeah, what's crazy is the oat was actually domesticated relatively late compared to like wheat and barley because the yields of the odor much smaller. But eventually they were like, oh, we'll give this a try too. So as far as what about 4500 years ago, we were domesticating them and eating them. But the way that they were eating oats before was they would take the husk off and then eat the whole oat. And that method or that, what you have after you just de husk and leave the hole is called a groat. Yeah, that doesn't sound very good. No, well, prepare for this. Apparently, there are fats in oats, specifically in groats. That can go rancid. So you could be eating rancid groats for breakfast. Had it not been for a couple of geniuses named Henry Seymour and William heston, who developed a different process called rolled oats, which actually gets rid of those fats that can go oriented. That's right. And then you have exactly what we have today. I mean, there are obviously different kinds of oats like steel cut and different varieties, but rolled oats is what we're eating today. They founded hesitancy more founded Quaker oats. And apparently one of the they're not quakers. Apparently one of the reasons is legend goes that they named themselves Quaker oats is because they wanted to seem like an upstanding non fraudulent company because food fraud and the 1800s was a thing where they would water milk down and they would basically try and trick the customer into thinking they were eating a more pure product that was cut with something else. Like bad cocaine. It makes sense though. Yeah, if you're going to sell cocaine, you should be like, this is quicker, brand cocaine. And people would be like, I can trust you. I don't need to test that first. Oh, that's funny. So the Quaker man I was looking to see who it was based on because all those things were modeled on somebody. And I came across the very famous version of it that you and I grew up with. It was painted by head and sun blom, who painted the Coke Santa. Oh, okay. And once you know that you can kind of see the difference, the similarity. But anyway, some people say it was based on William Penn of the famous comedy duo Penn and teller. But apparently Quaker oats says no, it wasn't based on anybody. But if you go look at the old Quaker oats, like the original ads, it looks a lot like William Penn. Yeah. I agree. And I love that you sent me that little nostalgic page on the old 1970s and 80s. He's still making those delicious sugary flavored packets of Quaker oatmeal. Yeah, you can see the progression of them from like zero taste to adding raisins and then all this stuff and then by the 90s there was like a blue raspberry one did you see that? No, grody. But I think that was on that was on click Americana dot com, which is a great site for nostalgia like that. I do like the overnight oats thing. That's something I didn't know was a thing until a couple of years ago. Yeah. It seems to be very popular now, but those are tasty. All the kids these days are eating overnight. That's right. It's the hipster version of hot oatmeal. So we have to talk about coffee for a couple of reasons. I mean, we did an entire episode on coffee. We did an entire episode on caffeine. So we'll keep it short, agreed. Yeah, because we covered most of this. But the very origin, the very origin. The origin of how supposedly. And it's a pretty good story, even if it's not true. But the legend of the Ethiopian goat herder that saw goats eating what ended up being coffee beans or coffee berries. And those goats started jumping around and dancing and getting down in boogie and the goat herder was like, huh, let me see if I want to eat one of those. And they realized the stimulating effects right off the bat and caffeine and coffee beans became a thing. Yep, that was called the, by the way, the Ethiopian herder. That's right. So in the colonies in America, everybody mostly drank tea, even though coffee had made its way to Europe by then, but everybody like tea. And then England began to heavily text tea, and so they adopted coffee widely in America and became kind of a patriotic thing to drink coffee. But then round about this time, or maybe a century or so before depending on who you ask, coffee started to replace beer and wine as like the breakfast drink because people noticed that you didn't like fall over on your scythe at 11 a.m. if you drank coffee for breakfast in. You would if you drank a bunch of hard cider instead. Yeah, drink it boost for breakfast. Unless you're at sunny brunch, it's not a great way to start your work day. No, not at all. So get this, chuck. 63% of Americans drink coffee every day. Seems like a lot, right? Yeah. Australia has this just totally beat. 75% of people in Australia drink coffee every single day. It doesn't surprise me. They do, they do everything to the max. Okay, so you think that's pretty impressive though? Listen to this. Oh boy. In the UK, 84 percent of people who live in the UK drink tea every day. Oh, okay. I thought you were about to say coffee. That would have been blown away. Yeah, they don't do that. But 84% of people drink tea over there and only 63% of Americans drink coffee. I feel like I'm standing on my head right now. Should we do OJ? Yeah. All right, what orange juice is such a staple item for breakfast, even though apparently it's over the past couple of decades, consumption of orange juice has been going down in the United States. But it's still a staple breakfast item. And this is because, again, people were drinking low alcohol booze at breakfast for many hundreds of years. And then finally, orange juice came along, but it was really expensive. Oranges were expensive. You can't grow them everywhere, obviously. So getting them across America was an issue. But trains came along. And all of a sudden, you could get oranges around the country, pretty speedily. And vitamin C became a thing in the 1920s where scientists isolated and said, hey, this stuff is really good for you. And there's a lot of it in oranges. And this is also another breakfast food that came about because the company was like, we need to unload a bunch of these things and there's a bumper crop of oranges in 1916 and so orange producers kind of got together and started a campaign called drink and orange. And it was like, you know, buy a bunch of oranges and make orange juice and drink that for breakfast. So that's another idea where it came from. But they ran into a problem until the 1940s chuck. And that was that, yeah, you could get oranges across the country, and you could get orange juice kind of far, but there was a chance it was gonna show up turned. It was gonna spoil along the way. And so the U.S. government was like, our soldiers want orange juice, but we can't give it to them. We're gonna give a bunch of money to anybody who can come up with a way to get orange juice across the United States

Stuff You Should Know
"grody" Discussed on Stuff You Should Know
"Bialys. What? A bialy is sort of a cousin of a bagel. Never heard of a bialy? No. I think of the deal with the bialy as there's no hole, I'm not sure what the other difference is. I didn't look this up, but I thought we should shout out the bialy because then it will get listener mail. It sounds suspiciously like an English muffin chunk. I think it's just, I gotta look it up because I don't want to misspeak, but I think it's a bagel without a hole. Okay, I've genuinely never heard of that by name or by concept either. Oh. Interesting. All right. So let's talk oats then. Yeah, oats is one of those things that is maybe in the running for oldest breakfast food. Because for centuries and thousands of years, people have been eating growing oats and eating oats. And some kind of sloppy porridge type thing. Yeah, what's crazy is the oat was actually domesticated relatively late compared to like wheat and barley because the yields of the odor much smaller. But eventually they were like, oh, we'll give this a try too. So as far as what about 4500 years ago, we were domesticating them and eating them. But the way that they were eating oats before was they would take the husk off and then eat the whole oat. And that method or that, what you have after you just de husk and leave the hole is called a groat. Yeah, that doesn't sound very good. No, well, prepare for this. Apparently, there are fats in oats, specifically in groats. That can go rancid. So you could be eating rancid groats for breakfast. Had it not been for a couple of geniuses named Henry Seymour and William heston, who developed a different process called rolled oats, which actually gets rid of those fats that can go oriented. That's right. And then you have exactly what we have today. I mean, there are obviously different kinds of oats like steel cut and different varieties, but rolled oats is what we're eating today. They founded hesitancy more founded Quaker oats. And apparently one of the they're not quakers. Apparently one of the reasons is legend goes that they named themselves Quaker oats is because they wanted to seem like an upstanding non fraudulent company because food fraud and the 1800s was a thing where they would water milk down and they would basically try and trick the customer into thinking they were eating a more pure product that was cut with something else. Like bad cocaine. It makes sense though. Yeah, if you're going to sell cocaine, you should be like, this is quicker, brand cocaine. And people would be like, I can trust you. I don't need to test that first. Oh, that's funny. So the Quaker man I was looking to see who it was based on because all those things were modeled on somebody. And I came across the very famous version of it that you and I grew up with. It was painted by head and sun blom, who painted the Coke Santa. Oh, okay. And once you know that you can kind of see the difference, the similarity. But anyway, some people say it was based on William Penn of the famous comedy duo Penn and teller. But apparently Quaker oats says no, it wasn't based on anybody. But if you go look at the old Quaker oats, like the original ads, it looks a lot like William Penn. Yeah. I agree. And I love that you sent me that little nostalgic page on the old 1970s and 80s. He's still making those delicious sugary flavored packets of Quaker oatmeal. Yeah, you can see the progression of them from like zero taste to adding raisins and then all this stuff and then by the 90s there was like a blue raspberry one did you see that? No, grody. But I think that was on that was on click Americana dot com, which is a great site for nostalgia like that. I do like the overnight oats thing. That's something I didn't know was a thing until a couple of years ago. Yeah. It seems to be very popular now, but those are tasty. All the kids these days are eating overnight. That's right. It's the hipster version of hot oatmeal. So we have to talk about coffee for a couple of reasons. I mean, we did an entire episode on coffee. We did an entire episode on caffeine. So we'll keep it short, agreed. Yeah, because we covered most of this. But the very origin, the very origin. The origin of how supposedly. And it's a pretty good story, even if it's not true. But the legend of the Ethiopian goat herder that saw goats eating what ended up being coffee beans or coffee berries. And those goats started jumping around and dancing and getting down in boogie and the goat herder was like, huh, let me see if I want to eat one of those. And they realized the stimulating effects right off the bat and caffeine and coffee beans became a thing. Yep, that was called the, by the way, the Ethiopian herder. That's right. So in the colonies in America, everybody mostly drank tea, even though coffee had made its way to Europe by then, but everybody like tea. And then England began to heavily text tea, and so they adopted coffee widely in America and became kind of a patriotic thing to drink coffee. But then round about this time, or maybe a century or so before depending on who you ask, coffee started to replace beer and wine as like the breakfast drink because people noticed that you didn't like fall over on your scythe at 11 a.m. if you drank coffee for breakfast in. You would if you drank a bunch of hard cider instead. Yeah, drink it boost for breakfast. Unless you're at sunny brunch, it's not a great way to start your work day. No, not at all. So get this, chuck. 63% of Americans drink coffee every day. Seems like a lot, right? Yeah. Australia has this just totally beat. 75% of people in Australia drink coffee every single day. It doesn't surprise me. They do, they do everything to the max. Okay, so you think that's pretty impressive though? Listen to this. Oh boy. In the UK, 84 percent of people who live in the UK drink tea every day. Oh, okay. I thought you were about to say coffee. That would have been blown away. Yeah, they don't do that. But 84% of people drink tea over there and only 63% of Americans drink coffee. I feel like I'm standing on my head right now. Should we do OJ? Yeah. All right, what orange juice is such a staple item for breakfast, even though apparently it's over the past couple of decades, consumption of orange juice has been going down in the United States. But it's still a staple breakfast item. And this is because, again, people were drinking low alcohol booze at breakfast for many hundreds of years. And then finally, orange juice came along, but it was really expensive. Oranges were expensive. You can't grow them everywhere, obviously. So getting them across America was an issue. But trains came along. And all of a sudden, you could get oranges around the country, pretty speedily. And vitamin C became a thing in the 1920s where scientists isolated and said, hey, this stuff is really good for you. And there's a lot of it in oranges. And this is also another breakfast food that came about because the company was like, we need to unload a bunch of these things and there's a bumper crop of oranges in 1916 and so orange producers kind of got together and started a campaign called drink and orange. And it was like, you know, buy a bunch of oranges and make orange juice and drink that for breakfast. So that's another idea where it came from. But they ran into a problem until the 1940s chuck. And that was that, yeah, you could get oranges across the country, and you could get orange juice kind of far, but there was a chance it was gonna show up turned. It was gonna spoil along the way. And so the U.S. government was like, our soldiers want orange juice, but we can't give it to them. We're gonna give a bunch of money to anybody who can come up with a way to get orange juice across the United States

MMA Roasted
"grody" Discussed on MMA Roasted
"Roasted with Adam hunter. Who the fuck is that guy? What's up, people? Welcome to a brand new anime rose to podcast. It's me. I'm here with Greg Wilson and Don Frye, whose Internet sounds amazing. Which is awesome. I hope I understand jinx it. But it's great. You definitely just jinxed it. There's no dog fighting ring going on right now, which is awesome. And now you're fucking with me. That was pretty good though. I was like, I was like, this is really, you know, this is pretty good. This is a good clever impression. Now Greg, is that a T-shirt for you for what you do? Wow. That's amazing. You actually almost died of a heart attack, and now you have t-shirts. And you saw those shows and stuff? No, no, no, this was a gift from another comic. Named Sam grody, a female comic named Sam grody. I think that'd be great for you, man. I think that's actually a great I think you should like Patton that shirt. Yeah. By the way, that's not pictures of you, Don. Oh, it says it says it has like a cardiac monitor reading and it says, and I'm back. Yeah. Great, great. I'm glad, man. I'm glad. I have something. I do have a complaint, you know, when I picked you up and Tucson, a couple months back, I've been missing my watch ever since I gave you one. It was definitely me as the only Hispanic in the vehicle it must have been me. That is hilarious. Now, Don, I saw you at the fights. Seeing my people were taking pictures of you, having a great time. You were there? No, I saw pictures of you on your Instagram. Whoever whoever writes your Instagram posted it and it seemed like everybody wanted the picture, even pour it. You wanted a picture with you. Is that hard to believe? Oh, hey, look, people actually want a picture with you. Yo, bastard. He is kind of a haul favor. Of course, of course, of course. Now, by the way, on different notice, I had to mail it. I got one of those camera tickets. Those shouldn't even be legal, man, because I feel like you get pulled over by a cop. It's you versus the cop. When you go through a red light or something, or make a turn, and something else takes a picture of you. I feel like that's like cheating. I don't think they should get a ticket for that. But people say, you don't have to. You know what? What? You don't pay it. Don't pay it 'cause I read that the company or actually heard a radio, the company who is in charge of those 95% of the money that fucked up the city doesn't even get it, you know? And all you gotta do is say not right on the back of it, not be not my car, you know, and mail it back to them. That's what I heard, but then I heard people, I Googled it, they say California, you don't have to pay them..

WCPT 820
"grody" Discussed on WCPT 820
"They're saving babies That's what I know And they could care less There you go And then it's all socialism Okay Jessica and Maine hey Jess hi Okay we pull over real quick I'm driving My concern is plan B yep Yeah Because I was an advocate for sexual trauma and recovery services for many years and ran into one Doctor Who once declined said it was against her religious convictions I said how long does conception take She said at least 6 hours I said it's been four and a half Yep I had to go find a cardiologist to get this woman her plan B I pulled him out of the ICU And he was really nice about it But yeah no plan B that's going to go right along with abortion Contraception forget it I mean that's what plan B is Right But any kind of contrast Absolutely contraception So you can't prevent your rapist from impregnating you anyway Yeah There's just no way it can be done now Yeah But Jessica I take Jody's point is that we're seeding the point that this should always be a woman's choice no matter what No matter what decision between I mean talk about what about complications for the woman has there's a million different reasons Pregnancy Women very close to me had to award pregnancies They really wanted because everything and anything was completely non viable It was but it's like it has to be your choice no matter what Thank you And Jody's right that this should cover everything Remember the stupid debate that Rush Limbaugh started about birth control pills and what did he call a slut She needed it for endometriosis And it's not your business Why someone needs That's what I'm saying is that they're going after every single bit of it Yeah Well and he misunderstood why women take birth control every day Yes Because he was dumb And such a sex symbol was amazing that he wouldn't know that Ew Grody God Okay Laura in California Hello Laura Welcome Hey Stephanie I'm the government teacher And I just don't want to live in the republic of Gilead And I'm 62 but my daughter is a childbearing age And we cried all night Yeah I think Rachel Rachel was talking about that What do you tell your kids and your daughters and granddaughters Like it is just sort of stunning That 50 years this has been settled law They just made a second class citizen Yes they did I teach I teach roe versus wade And that's part of my government class Yeah And I teach that the Fourteenth Amendment says women are full citizens with full rights Actually we're not I know That's no longer true Because guess what It doesn't say in the constitution that women even have property rights That's true So we're going to lose those two Yeah Well I say we don't mention women's voting power So let's take that sentence and shove it up his ass And the midterms pardon me Yes Chris what You're afraid to talk to me Oh Susan Collins This has released a statement Oh is she concerned Does she have some level of concern and disappointment If this leak draft opinion is the final decision and this reporting is accurate it would be completely inconsistent with what justice Gorsuch and justice Kavanaugh said in their hearings and our meetings in my office As if she was misled by Kavanaugh Collins told us my statement speaks for itself.

Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard
"grody" Discussed on Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard
"That's right you did. Did you did something pretty. Grody that no one else would wanna do. Yeah let's tell people what it was. There was a rat in the bedroom. Upstairs at the dog. Brought in was freaky. I locked door. I thought it was alive but it was hilas debt. It wasn't but then you said you know what. I'll take care of it. Yeah do you feel brave in your heart. Yeah i feel like i earned that money. I think you did mock grade. Are you in third. Do you have any role models are while. There's this book called rebel girl that has like different women who writes change the world so i guess i in that book. Who's your favorite in that book. leave baiter inspired. We love her. What do you like about her. She fought for her like on the rights and that she could be a lawyer at not just men could. Do you think there's anything that boys can do that. Girls can't do Well when my grandma was a.

Marion Now - Moving Our Community Forward
"grody" Discussed on Marion Now - Moving Our Community Forward
"D- <Speech_Male> It's still remains <Speech_Male> on that animal <Speech_Male> and goes <Speech_Male> into the ground <Speech_Male> and can be there for multiple <Speech_Male> years. So <Speech_Male> that's why we want you to double <Speech_Male> bag everything <Speech_Male> and put it in. Put <Speech_Male> it in a trash <SpeakerChange> landfill. <Speech_Male> Okay well <Speech_Male> there you go some some <Speech_Male> great information <Speech_Male> chad. I appreciate your <Speech_Male> time. How is the <Speech_Male> deer population <Speech_Male> in marion. County is <Speech_Male> it up. How's it been the <Speech_Male> last few years you've <Speech_Male> done this <SpeakerChange> for a long <Speech_Male> time here <Speech_Male> for a few years <Speech_Male> It seems pretty <Speech_Male> consistent <Speech_Male> with <Speech_Male> You know how. Marion county <Speech_Male> has <Speech_Male> been over the years <Speech_Male> There's <Speech_Male> there's some pockets <Speech_Male> of the you know the county <Speech_Male> where you know. I have individuals. <Speech_Male> Saying while i'm not <Speech_Male> seeing what i used to see <Speech_Male> But <Speech_Male> others where <Speech_Male> it's pretty much <Speech_Male> consistently what they have. <Speech_Male> I don't have too many people. Tell me <Speech_Male> i'm seeing so <Speech_Male> many more ear <Speech_Male> Although our <Speech_Male> wildlife areas over <Speech_Male> the past years we have <Speech_Male> been <Speech_Male> Implementing <Speech_Male> some regulations <Speech_Male> that <Speech_Male> Minimize the harvest <Speech_Male> of those and <Speech_Male> our guys. <Speech_Male> That work on the area definitely <Speech_Male> noticed. There <Speech_Male> seems to be more <Speech_Male> deer on the landscape <Speech_Male> specifically on the <Speech_Male> wildlife areas <Speech_Male> where <Speech_Male> you know previously <Speech_Male> you know they would <Speech_Male> move to other properties <Speech_Male> or whatnot <SpeakerChange> just because <Speech_Male> hunting pressure. <Speech_Male> I get i get <Speech_Male> it. Yeah we've got a little family <Speech_Male> lives out here. <Speech_Male> And i haven't seen them <Speech_Male> for a while but <Speech_Male> But <Speech_Male> in the spring. I saw them <Speech_Male> quite often. I <Speech_Male> like to head out there <Speech_Male> with my coffee in the morning <Speech_Male> and and <Speech_Male> quite often i would <Speech_Male> see two or three <Speech_Male> out there right along <Speech_Male> the tree line. And <Speech_Male> so you're you're in marion <Speech_Male> township here so <Speech_Male> don't don't go buy <Speech_Male> your bag of corn <SpeakerChange> this year <Speech_Male> and put it out to feed them <Speech_Male> will not. Yeah <Speech_Male> i got you. That's <Speech_Male> that's great. Yeah <Speech_Male> i i enjoy seeing <Speech_Male> about. They're doing their thing <Speech_Male> and everything so <Speech_Male> well good to know. <Speech_Male> That things are good chad. Give <Speech_Male> everybody your information <Speech_Male> if they need to reach out <Speech_Male> to you. They need to contact <Speech_Male> you as <Speech_Male> our wildlife <SpeakerChange> officer. <Speech_Male> How do they do <Speech_Male> that. Yeah some names <Speech_Male> chad. Grody once <Speech_Male> again. I'm with the division <Speech_Male> wildlife. <Speech_Male> I am the county <Speech_Male> wildlife officer. Signed <Speech_Male> here

Marion Now - Moving Our Community Forward
"grody" Discussed on Marion Now - Moving Our Community Forward
"And today we are welcoming chad. Grody in to the marion public library. Community podcast studio. It's another episode of the marian. Now podcast shed. Grody is wildlife. Officer here in marion county and other counties as well correct chad you work here and wyandotte county. A few others are just pretty much mary. So state while f. officers were assigned to a specific county..

Marion Now - Moving Our Community Forward
Deer Breeding Facility in South Texas Detect Chronic Wasting Disease
"Shed. Grody is wildlife. Officer here in marion county and other counties as well correct chad you work here and wyandotte county. A few others are just pretty much mary. So state while f. officers were assigned to a specific county. Marion county is the one i'm assigned to But we also work throughout the state. We have statewide jurisdiction and My work unit typically is more south in district one But wyan dot hardin. County is also connected in my general area. Where where the cw dvd's disease surveillance area is going to be. That we're gonna talk about. I got you and that's what we are talking about. So chad is in as a wildlife officer here in marion county to talk about chronic wasting disease which you may have heard of being in our dear you may have heard some rumors. You may have heard some things that are correct. You may have been reading on it. But we decided to bring chad in and talk a little bit about it because number one we're coming up to To deer season people again begin to to to hunt deer and number two. Obviously this is something that is affecting about a. I guess it would be more of a twenty mile area. It's a ten mile radius around where the chronic wasting disease was found up in wyandotte county. So chad first of all tells a little bit about chronic wasting disease what is it. What's the history. How did he get here and become a thing. Yeah so chronic. Wasting disease has been around for quite a while it's been located in other states around us and Cw d. was found in wyandotte county recently but previously we had found it and some of our whitetail deer homes and wayne homes and wayne county. Yeah so since Those have been located are found The disease surveillance area for them have expired We haven't had any more positives in that general area But unfortunately we recently had to positives in wyandotte county Which created the disease surveillance area for our general area. Okay

Final Form Anime Podcast
"grody" Discussed on Final Form Anime Podcast
"Simpson's runs folks talking about how toga shifted the dynamic. Then sh- sense. We turned it up even more like. Oh you're don't beaten down. And mike water buckle that. It's the hugh like you is does by gravity and file like us nearly like all. The earthquakes just does much line and shoot his To what dagga was saying his debut. I'm gonna try to find it and put it up that senior dude. That he they look at him. He's looking at them already. Oh fuck yeah. That's chills man. Doesn't it cut to black and white doesn't like very like it's just like it's like inland a crowd but everybody is blacked out but him. Oh yeah yeah. that's what it is like a psychopath. It's crazy yes. Yeah i was like what is going on. This is crazier out like yo. Who is nick writing about one. Just one he was a he was the last He was he was the last good part of you. Hawk show that last ten episodes or whatever After him was not quite as good as the rest of the. No i would never say the right definitely Definitely pushed him as characters. Got stronger just by like just by finding up the nets or a little bit but jews sadistic shortly Like he was about his hands to one-sided a personalities new law off oh yeah he he had multiple analogies to crazy may end up looking good. How did he just envision a gun on it. Then you like apocalypse when like back personality in mount nations crazy role. I love you by being put in a great again. Oh my god yes. You deserves to be talked about way better than bbc. I don't know why people consider that like often against it's a lot better. It's hunter x hunters daddy. Circle jerk inciting directors an ally. How hundred hundred hits oxo hits like non stop. It's crazy how that guy has to series at amazing for like options. Like nothing but hits. I know why 'cause it's fussing old that's why people don't watch it because it's fucking you ought to go on the hundred and go fuck yourself or watch it. If you haven't seen it. I answered. I i couldn't do reboot. I couldn't sit on animation. If you're asking for you to show reboot don't don't san route slander. Everybody that's asking for what we can't. It was already a masterpiece. It's fine okay. I see like a leave at the fuck alone. I see like a high quality rendering like trying to make it four k. But still keep the old animation because that just gotta stay. It's this is got Say grody is trying to watching the hulu just to see how it was some parts of it. Some parts of it are are are grody but man..

The Gravel Ride. A cycling podcast
"grody" Discussed on The Gravel Ride. A cycling podcast
"Gravel ride. Podcast i'm your host craig dalton this week on the podcasts. We've got dave rosen ceo and founder of sage. Out of oregon. David i happened to meet at the envy build around up. And this is one of five episodes related to the envy roundup. That happened at the end of june in ogden utah. I have to reiterate. If you're known for the company you keep envy is known for exceptional relationships. That room was filled with outstanding builders from all over the world that chose suspect their custom creations with envy components and parts including their adventure for stems bars. And of course they're wonderful gravel wheels if you haven't already followed envy on social media channels definitely do and i highly highly recommend you seeking out imagery from the rodeo event so many beautiful bike so many beautiful paint jobs really worth looking at and keeping on your calendar for next year if you happen to have the opportunity to race. The rodeo event with an amazing ride out of ogden utah. They're really checked. A lot of boxes for me. It was both technical and challenging and scenically beautiful definitely one to have on your gravel calendar for twenty twenty two you with all that said. Let's dive right into my interview. With dave rosen from sage bicycles. Dave welcome to the show. Thanks craig great to see you after seeing utah at the envy build around up. What what an event was it really was fantastic. I had such a good time. It was so much fun just being able to reconnect with friends and doing industry stuff again. It just it was way too long and to be able to meet new customers and that kind of thing it just it just. It was great and just riding bikes. It was all about bikes up. Just everything we did from. Grody the little short-track event. It was a really good time. The i thought it was funny. That some of the builders. We're actually taking the bikes built and racing marauding riding them in the grody event the next day. Yeah that's what i did with mine. It was just. That's why i brought. It was meant to be ridden. It's meant to be raced. Although i really wouldn't classify my writing racing so much as it was surviving at my own pace so i can make it back in time for beer now. There was a bit of that survival strategy in my day as well but it was a great reminder in seeing all these great builders that i've wanted to have more of these conversations and particularly excited to talk about sage titanium so why don't we just start off with learning a little bit more about what led you to start the company and when it was started. Yeah so. I started the company officially on paper in two thousand twelve. My first inventory was produced in two thousand thirteen at the time. The original intent with the brand was to actually make the frames overseas the for that in the beginning with the idea of offering a lower cost price point competitor to what was out there. I knew i wanted to titanium. It was always about titanium. I've been in love with titanium as.

TechStuff
"grody" Discussed on TechStuff
"Foresee jiminy suit wasn't in for the first block of apollo missions but tragically. What would later be designated. Apollo one ended in catastrophe when during launch test. A fire broke out in the crew cabin and killed all three members of that mission. The rest of that phase of the apollo mission which was collectively referred to as block one was cancelled so the a one c never saw any use out in space. The second block of apollo missions would need suits designed for extravehicular activity and this would end up being a really big move in nasa history and a really big move in the history of space suits. That is where we're going to pick up with. The next episode in this series will pick up with the the creation of the apollo spacesuits. We'll talk about the issues of what happens when you go from flying very short space missions to very long space missions aboard spacecraft that do not yet have a toilet. 'cause that was a thing in other words the next episode is going to be. Grody all it's gonna be gross to them. Max so i hope you join me for that one but we'll also talk about how the spacesuit evolve further what it was like during the space shuttle era and why nasa was looking to update it because really spacesuits had not received a massive updates since the space shuttle era. But that will all come in our next episode. If you have suggestions for topics. I should cover in future episodes of tech stuff. Please reach out to me and let me know what those are. The best way to do that is over on twitter handle. The show is tech stuff..

What Fresh Hell: Laughing in the Face of Motherhood
"grody" Discussed on What Fresh Hell: Laughing in the Face of Motherhood
"That's funny because the the hypo sensitive this graphic that. I'm looking at says it. They love crunchy foods. They chew on things pen tops. And gunman whatever my hypo sensitive person was also always my adventurous eater like three year old. I'll try escargot. No problem like trying new things even like mom smell this. It's disgusting one kid. Who does this is my sensory seeker right. Like this is awful touch it. It's really funny. Because i have a friend from college. I mean it's just interesting to think about lake that people are made with various specific set points and how that works and thinking about that is interesting to me and i have a friend who is a doctor and who specializes in like really. Grody infectious diseases. That is not how she would describe her own career. That is how i am describing. That's under index. I mean business cards really. Grody infectious diseases. Yeah she's like i'm into really grody infectious diseases. But i was like. I just don't understand like it's so gross. What you have to deal with. And she was like. I was always the kid that like. If there was a raccoon killed in the road i was like running out to like look at it and see what was going on like. She has the opposite of this. She's like very fascinated by gross things. You know i never may be. Is that typo sensitive. Like i'm throwing that on the pile to my same hypersensitive kid is known for being the person who on more than one occasion has been willing to dive into the neighbor's pool to get the field mouse or the bird or whatever that's at the bottom of the pool. This kid has no like the plastic bag but still. I don't know what we would have to pay me to do that. But i don't think that number exists. It's not a real number. Yeah billion dollars. Maybe i don't know a quadrant. Who knows this kid is like ninety seconds. Ten bucks like who wouldn't do that. Nobody would do that. And so i guess there are many many. I mean good thing these people exist right. There are emt's and insertions. Yeah they're not afraid you have to have. That's the thing. What overall point is that these qualities. I think that we waste a lot of time as parents. And as i look back on my parenting journey as i hit you know this stage of it i think i look back at stuff and i wish i had just been like hardwired variable kind of a little bit more and i think what's interesting about looking at a chart like this. That says like could an a trampoline all day likes to smell you start to realize like oh this goes all the way to the bone like this is not something. I could have saved myself a lot of time being like complaining. Its deductions office. This is how the lights are probably should have brought sunglasses for him. You know like. I think that what i'm realizing in looking at these lists is like being dismissive of things that are very elemental to our kids. Doesn't go great amy. I guess what i'm saying. Yes it sounds very familiar when you go back..

KCRW
"grody" Discussed on KCRW
"We are NPR news for Southern California. It's 7 35. It's morning edition from NPR News. I'm Noel King. And I'm Steve Inskeep. Good morning. A court case in Pennsylvania is asking a big question. How long should people stay in prison before they get a second chance? More than 1000 prisoners were serving life without parole in Pennsylvania. These air people convicted of murder, although the evidence shows they never intended to kill anyone. 70% of those people are black. NPR justice correspondent Carrie Johnson has been covering this story and she's on the line. Carrie. Good morning. Good morning, Steve. What's the case? The case involves six people in prison who have no chance of parole because the way Pennsylvania long works, but You're hoping to change that and eventually get away out using the lawsuit and report the story. I talked with people involved in this case. Some of them are incarcerated now. This is a call from Pennsylvania State Correctional Institution. Dallas. This call is subject to recording and monitoring. I met Irene Rivers on the phone in November, and his voice was a little muffled. Well, I had two or three Mariska Early to rise Go, so I'm trying to stay safe. Staying safe is hard when you're confined with hundreds of other men during a pandemic. Rivers is 43 years old, and he spent more than half his life in prison. He grew up in a rough part of Philadelphia when he arrived behind bars in 1997. He says he was hooked on drugs and could barely read. Never really understood the concept of you know, life without parole. You know, I didn't I didn't Shoot. Nobody. I didn't stab anybody. I didn't rape anybody. Here's what he did do snatch the purse of an 85 year old woman. She died in the hospital two weeks later from her injuries. The evidence presented a trial suggests he didn't mean to kill her. But that didn't matter under a concept called felony murder. Brett Grody is legal director at the Abolitionist Law Center. The felony murder concept is if a death occurs during the commission of another felony that is considered a form of murder that's attributed to anybody who participated in the felony, regardless of whether they had any criminal intense in regard to the death of the other person in Pennsylvania that's also known as second degree murder. Brody is suing the state on behalf of time re rivers and five other people convicted in their late teens. They've already served a combined 199 years in prison. Case argues the punishment for felony murder in the state is cruel and unconstitutional. Under Pennsylvania law, Grody says it means an effective life sentence. People in Pennsylvania who are serving life sentences do not have the possibility of parole. And the only way they are being removed from prison and the overwhelming majority of the cases is in a body bag. Their lawsuit hopes to change that by forcing the state Board to grant prisoners parole hearings and to push the state legislature to change the law. Attorney General Josh Shapiro is on the other side of the case. He didn't want to talk on tape. Instead, he sent NPR a statement saying that he's duty bound to defend the law. But he wants the General Assembly to change it. So that second degree murder doesn't mean an automatic life sentence. Another lawyer for the plaintiffs. Queen Cousins points out another problem with the way the law operates. Now, cousin says 70% of the people serving life for felony murder in Pennsylvania are black, even though only 11% of people who live in the state are black, so that's obviously a huge disparity and something that's indicative of How this punishment is imposed and who is imposed on and what purpose it serves. There is one way for people like Tyrion rivers to leave prison before they die. Good morning. Good morning, everyone. We're here today for the public hearing portion of the computation cases in Pennsylvania, A state pardon board considers those petitions and recommends clemency to the governor. At a public meeting last fall, the board considered the case of the Evans brothers. They've spent 37 years in prison in 1980. The brothers took part in a Carjacking with an antique gun. They dropped off the man whose car they stole and a pay phone booth. Later, the man died of a heart attack. The Evans brothers refused a plea deal. They have now served double the time they would have gone away if they had taken that deal. In a familiar dynamic. The prosecutor in the corrections expert at the board meeting that they didn't have enough information about the men's culpability or their turnaround in prison. Another board member, Lieutenant governor John Fetterman, said the stakes were too high to punt. And that's been my point consistently is that we are on the side of mercy because the stakes are so high if he's denied Almost assuredly going to die in prison despite serving four decades in prison. Then he called on Nancy liked her father. Leonard died after that Carjacking. They were 18 and 19 year old teenagers. When they went into prison, and they are now 58 59 year old men. They have accepted responsibility. We believe they have paid their price and now it's time for them to be released. Ultimately, the board voted unanimously to pave the way for the Evans brothers to be released last September, but they're still in prison because Pennsylvania's governor has not signed the paperwork. I spoke with time Room rivers again in early December. Ah, a little under the weather, so to speak. Still optimistic. Rivers told me his sense of taste and smell were off. He later tested positive for covert 19. I asked him what he wanted people to know about him. Okay, so I would like some people have no Made bad decisions in the past. Hmm. Have a sense of Regret and remorse. For my actions. Um I don't know, man Things. A few weeks ago. Rivers email me he's feeling a little better optimistic. Someday he'll get out of prison against the odds and put his paralegal training to use in a case that doesn't involve himself. Carrie. Thanks for that reporting. I really appreciated hearing all of those different voices. Now let me ask. How does this story in Pennsylvania fit with the wider national effort to reduce the prison population? Yeah, There's been a bipartisan campaign to send fewer people to prison. But that leaves the manner of what to do with people who are already behind bars, and most of the advocacy and rhetoric has focused on Nonviolent drug offenders, Criminologists say, though, in order to make a big dent in the prison population, you're not going to do that. Unless you re think how to treat people who were convicted of violent crimes sometimes long ago, like these people in Pennsylvania timeline, rivers and others, Steve I'd point out that one of the people who was granted clemency by the pardon board actually died in prison recently in Pennsylvania because the governor had not yet signed the paperwork. So these are big stakes..

WNYC 93.9 FM
"grody" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"It's morning edition from NPR News. I'm Noel King. And I'm Steve Inskeep. Good morning. A court case in Pennsylvania is asking a big question. How long should people stay in prison? Before they get a second chance more than 1000 prisoners were serving life without parole in Pennsylvania. These air people convicted of murder, although the evidence shows they never intended. Kill anyone. 70% of those people are black. NPR justice correspondent Carrie Johnson has been covering this story and she's on the line. Carrie. Good morning. Good morning, Steve. What's the case? Case, and we have six people in prison who have no chance of parole because the way Pennsylvania law works, but they're hoping to change that and eventually get away out using the lawsuit and report the story. I talked with people involved in this case. Some of them are incarcerated now. This is a call from Pennsylvania State Correctional Institution. Dallas. This call is subject to recording and monitoring. I met Irene Rivers on the phone in November, and his voice was a little muffled. Well, I have two or three Americans. I really to rise goes, I'm trying to stay safe. Staying safe is hard when you're confined with hundreds of other men during a pandemic. Rivers is 43 years old, and he spent more than half his life in prison. He grew up in a rough part of Philadelphia when he arrived behind bars in 1997. He says he was hooked on drugs and could barely read so far. Never really understood the concept off. You know, life without parole. You know, I didn't I didn't Shoot. Nobody. I didn't stab anybody. I didn't rape anybody. Here's what he did do snatch the purse of an 85 year old woman. She died in the hospital two weeks later from her injuries. The evidence presented a trial suggests he didn't mean to kill her. But that didn't matter under a concept called felony murder. Brett Grody is legal director at the Abolitionist Law Center. The felony murder concept is if a death occurs during the commission of another felony that is considered a form of murder that's attributed to anybody who participated in the felony, regardless of whether they had any criminal intense in regard to the death of the other person in Pennsylvania that's also known as second degree murder. Brody is suing the state on behalf of time re rivers and five other people convicted in their late teens. They've already served a combined 199 years in prison. Case argues the punishment for felony murder in the state is cruel and unconstitutional. Under Pennsylvania law, Grody says it means an effective life sentence. People in Pennsylvania who are serving life sentences do not have the possibility of parole and the only way they are being removed from prison and The overwhelming majority of the cases is in a body bag. Their lawsuit hopes to change that by forcing the state Board to grant prisoners parole hearings and to push the state legislature to change the law. Attorney General Josh Shapiro is on the other side of the case. He didn't want to talk on tape. Instead, he sent NPR a statement saying that he's duty bound to defend the law. But he wants the General Assembly to change it. So that second degree murder doesn't mean an automatic life sentence. Another lawyer for the plaintiffs. Queen Cousins points out another problem with the way the law operates. Now, cousin says 70% of the people serving life for felony murder in Pennsylvania are black, even though only 11% of people who live in the state are black, so that's obviously a huge disparity and something that's indicative of How this punishment is imposed and who is imposed on and what purpose it serves. There is one way for people like Thai bream rivers to leave prison before they die. Good morning. Good morning, everyone. We're here today for the public hearing portion of the computation cases in Pennsylvania, A state pardon board considers those petitions and recommends clemency to the governor. At a public meeting last fall, the board considered the case of the Evans brothers. They've spent 37 years in prison in 1980. The brothers took part in a Carjacking with an antique gun. They dropped off the man whose car they stole in a pay phone booth. Later, the man died of a heart attack. The Evans brothers refused a plea deal. They have now served double the time they would have gone away if they had taken that deal in a familiar dynamic, the prosecutor and the corrections expert at the board meeting that they didn't have enough information about the men's culpability or their turnaround in prison. Another board member, Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman, said the stakes were too high to punt. And that's been my point consistently is that we air on the side of mercy because the stakes are so high if he's denied Almost assuredly going to die in prison despite serving four decades in prison. Then he called on Nancy liked her father. Leonard died after that Carjacking. They were 18 and 19 year old teenagers. When they went into prison, and they are now 58 59 year old men. They have accepted responsibility. We believe they have paid their price and now it's time for them to be released. Ultimately, the board voted unanimously to pave the way for the Evans brothers to be released last September, but they're still in prison because Pennsylvania's governor has not signed the paperwork. I spoke with time Room rivers again in early December. Ah, a little under the weather, so to speak. Well optimistic. Rivers told me his sense of taste and smell were off. He later tested positive for covert 19. I asked him what he wanted people to know about him. Okay, so Well, I said he wouldn't know. I am not a better person. Made bad decisions in the past. Hmm. Have a sense of Regret and remorse. For my actions. Um I'm a man of things. A few weeks ago, Rivers emailed me. He's feeling a little better optimistic. Someday he'll get out of prison against the odds and put his paralegal training to use in a case that doesn't involve himself. Carrie. Thanks for that reporting. I really appreciated hearing all of those different voices. Now let me ask. How does this story in Pennsylvania fit with the wider national effort to reduce the prison population? Yeah, There's been a bipartisan campaign to send fewer people to prison. But that leaves the manner of what to do with people who are already behind bars, and most of the advocacy and rhetoric has focused on Nonviolent drug offenders, Criminologists say, though, in order to make a big dent in the prison population, you're not going to do that. Unless you re think how to treat people who are convicted of violent crimes. Sometimes long ago, like these people in Pennsylvania timeline, rivers and others, Steve I'd point out that one of the people who was granted clemency by the pardon board Actually died in prison recently in Pennsylvania because the governor had not yet signed the paperwork. So these are big stakes and really emotionally difficult cases to handle. Judge Justice interviewed justice correspondent Carrie Johnson. Thank you so much..

WNYC 93.9 FM
"grody" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"We're joined now by Catherine Hello. How are you? Hello, everyone. So you guys are now influencers, your tic tac influencers. I mean on Asleep to this moment. No insult to the young people that love you Talk. I honest to God do not understand. It makes Twitter look like Shakespeare. I even know how to find Chip dog. I don't even know how to find Instagram. I am completely You know happy? Yes. Zeller do researching for you. Did you did have you had the anniversary of your 1st? 8 42 years ago? Yeah. Yeah, Extraordinary. We heard a story. I don't know if it's true that some something to the effect that Mandy you said to Katherine on your first date. I'm going to marry you. Yes. And then I believe she said to me with her finger up like this pointing at me. You don't know what you're talking about, and I went clear. I took a picture of it and she said, You're an actor and a baby and you're gonna get hurt, And I said, that's okay. Now she's she's pulling her hair out, because matter what story I tell about this, it's the wrong bird. We don't have time on this program for different your rebuttal. Michael Well, Michael Weller, who wrote the play came up to me and said, What do you think about Mandy and I said, Oh, he's great. Wait a minute. You mean for me personally? I said forget it. He's an actor. He's a baby. He's a little bit crazy. No, The next person I'm with is going to be the father of my Children. And he's not. He was 25 years old. I was 31 way wanted to use this occasion to tell you that more rock is actually the father. What's amazing about you, Katherine. And I want to say a genuinely admire this even though when you're telling a story about how you were completely mistaken about something, you're still the smarter Person about memory. No, no, he is the smartest person in the smartest one in the family. It is so true. It is true. It is Katherine. You deserve at least 50% credit. You said the next person and we will be the father of my Children, and he won't be you and you were half right. I think that counts for something. Well, Mandy particular. It's great to talk to you and Katherine you too, But we have asked you here to play a game. We're calling. Tic tac, tic tac tic tac. So you are tic Tac stars now, so we thought we'd ask you three questions about the original tic tac stars, which are clocks. Get two questions about clocks. Right, you'll win our prize, one of our listeners the voice of anyone they might choose for their voicemail jokey who is Mandy Patinkin? And May I say Kathryn Grody playing for Dani Rosen of West Hartford, Connecticut. Here we go. Here's your first question. Before the invention of inexpensive clocks. People in Britain had to manage their time and different ways, including which of these a killing a mouse every morning and then telling time during the day by how badly it was smelling. Be hiring people to walk the streets of the city in the morning and wake them up by shooting at their windows with pea shooters. Or C getting out of meetings by saying, Oh, I'm sorry. I have a witch burning to get to You shooting pea shooting? What was the shooting shooting of windows? Um okay. Yeah, that sounds great. That's the answer. Congratulations. That's the right one. Uh, the human alarm clocks were called knocker uppers. That was the name of the job. They used the shooters, at least in one instant. Sometimes they used a canes or clubs to banging the windows to get people up in time to get to work. Next question. Clocks or not beloved everywhere. In fact, schools in the UK announced they were removing clocks from classrooms why a students were stealing the clock hands and stabbing each other with them. Be to prevent students from yelling. 10 98, etcetera is the period came to a close or C because students are simply no longer able to tell time. Oh, wow. See, There you go. You're right. That's exactly it. They students can no longer read analog clock, so they're just removing them from plastic kind. I know. All right. Here's your last question. People pretend to hate daylight savings time. But most don't know the origin of daylight savings time. Was it a Ben Franklin invented it as a joke. Be. Mussolini came up with it because he couldn't figure out how else to get the trains to run on time or see Napoleon invented it, so his army would always surprised the other side by getting their one hour early. I'm pretty sure it's been Franklin, You're right. It is Ben Franklin. He sent a letter to the editor when he was a Paris's ambassador. Saying that hey, if we all get up when the sun rises and go to bed when its sense We'll all save money on candles junkie. How did Mandy Patinkin and his wife, Kathryn, Grody do on our quiz after more than 40 years in show business and more than 40 years of marriage? I think it's safe to say this is the hype. It would be both safe and tragic to say that I hope that's not true. Mandy Patinkin and Kathryn Grody, your celebrated actors, singers, writers and surprise tic tac stars. You can find them both on Tic Tac at Mandy Patinkin. Thank you so much for joining us on Wait, Wait. Don't tell me Enjoy.

850 WFTL
"grody" Discussed on 850 WFTL
"Public this week. Music public stock com slash compare and you'll find out Wal Mart doesn't always have the lowest prices. Save it. Public's were shopping is a pleasure not listening to the all eighties weekend on Sonny 1079 would be grody to the max. Sorry. Eat up. E can't down Thomas spinning around and round and round and round round. It goes where it stops. Nobody knows. Every time you come on name I hit up like a burning plane burning flame full of desire. Just baby. Let the fact that reach out and grab ya. You make me up. You make me side. You made me laugh. Make me crying. Keep me burning for your love with a touch of a man who could ever reach out and grab it. Never have really happy magic in your arrest. I feel magic. When I touch your girl Tokens happened, letter laced black baddies with an angel face magic. In your eyes. I have magic in your ties. Just when I think I'm gonna get our way.

850 WFTL
"grody" Discussed on 850 WFTL
"Listening to the all eighties weekend on Sonny, One of 79 would be grody to the Max. It's supposed to me all right, something People's Americans from the door. That almost you scream, but you're making And you start to bring his ass over the right between your Barry dies because of me. You know? Well that you just mentioned There is no longer your increasing cream and nothing will never die. Yeah. Stop to walk in them school. That's Lord escaping the jaws of people time. Oh, there we owe you Civilian on step aside. I think you should change that. No see. I'm gonna get to the bottom of this Oh, across the man in the midnight hour is close at hand with creatures crawling search of blood to terrorize your neighborhood Who's, however, that will be found Without the cells are getting down, must stand and face the hounds of hell and rot inside a corpse's shell. Foulness dentures in the air. The funk 40,000 years and grizzly ghouls from every tomb off closing to seal your duke on though you find To stay alive. Your body starts to shiver for know any mortal can resist taking the final. Yeah, Let's check who's gonna be on late night TV tonight is Tracy and Sonny 1279. It's and we love the eighties weekend. Rob Lowe is gonna be on Jimmy Fallon when his culture on Jimmy Kimmel and George Clooney, Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep on Stephen Colbert just walk away. Just let you leave without a trace when I stand here, taking every breath with you. You're the only one who really knew me. You'd know how you just won't wait for me. When all I know is what you live your love around shit cheese. No one will be any new or me know? Jaws manages things There's not been doing just be on your face. Just not just face did you coming back to me? Oh, That's why God Stop. It just made me turn around. Turn around so much I need to see Oh, man. Yeah, no one really knew me space. Has not been just me face to face. Fucks way is alive and well, That's why I got a baby. Oh, Standing and she's coming back to me is against Allah gets the chance. Got a tail? Take me now. Sunny windows 79 West Palm Beach is home for holla notes. See you. You see me? You know, in line when your baby This ain't no girl, you got to put my head over love to my heart when it's watching you get you Watching you watching you watching you. Your way around there that goes down. No, you let me in or let any go No lie when you're hurting inside, But you gotta stand by. Watching you watching you watching you watching you watching you. I'm watching you. You know what Fuck you. Welcome to all we love the eighties weekend on Sonny winning 79. Did you hear what's happening next weekend Day one next Friday, the 15th, South.

WTVN
"grody" Discussed on WTVN
"Com slash catering. They'll walk you through everything, but, um, you know, I had one of those because you don't know this. I had a virtual pizza party where I used you guys. You don't know this either. No, But of course you did for my team. You know, you wanna make your team happy? And how do you do that Over Zoom when you're at home, right? So we I only have a team of about 10. So it's a small team, but with it, we ordered pizzas and they got them delivered for lunch. And we had our Christmas party that way. That was a virtual sit Donatos. Yeah, That's what I'm saying. Way had Donatos and we're glad you did that. And that's the great thing about you know, we have so many central high locations that everybody in your office doesn't have to be like in the same neighborhood or something like that, so they can afford her. And our catering department will help coordinate all that. You don't have to do any. I think you could just call him. I didn't do it through that. I should have done it that way. I next time, Okay, Jules, But next time you guys open like 10 new locations, haven't you? Yeah, I mean that. That's been the other thing that during the pandemic since April, we've actually opened 10 New Clinton new locations, including five in Florida, where we had zero at the beginning of this year, So we have five new stores in Florida, part of Florida. Do you know what s so There's three guys who moved there, probably in Sarasota. There's one in Jacksonville. And then there's one in Winter Park, which is In the Orlando area so and that markets just continuing to grow, and I mean, we expected to expand and but super excited is three different franchise partner groups there and, you know they've been very successful, and we've gotten a lot of Buckeye fans. They're happy about that. But then ah, lot of other people are telling us. Hey, this is really good pizza. We didn't have good pizza down here. One of the things that's done very well. There's our cauliflower crust, which I brought one of those today. I'm going over there because it's their sausage on this one, so plant based sausage Yeah, And And so I know. I mean, it's all theirs, Not regular pepperoni. Your son. It's all plant based. Everything on there is a salad, basically for human D o Day via the Great Hey, let's get a little bit of history lesson because we are do we do have a giveaway? You guys have a gift card to give away But we want to make our listeners work for it a little bit. Talk about wind Donatos open, Obviously, the grody family. What is the history behind it? Well, so Jim Grody started the company in 1963 1963 Remember that number? Okay, go ahead as a 19 year old. I mean, I can't imagine my 19 year old daughter like starting a pizza company that would now have 168 traditional restaurants. 57 years later, plus a partnership with a really good brand and red Robin. We have 79 locations of red robin restaurants that now serve our pizza. And most of those air more West Coast related. Yeah, I had no clue. You didn't know that. No, I didn't. Okay, So we added the whole Seattle market during the pandemic. And if you if you read the articles online or anything, the red robins that have Donatos pizza are the ones that are doing well. The other one's air, hoping to get Donatos pizza really soon so and they've said that, though, add another 100 locations in 2021. We would already have started into that if the pandemic wouldn't have hit. Obviously, they're a dining business, primarily, so it's It's been a rough year for them, but they're doing well. Their leadership is good, and we're looking to continue to extend that partnership That's gonna help us on the West Coast. We get a lot of people you know, from California and places like that that wants to ship them Pizza. And it would be a lot better for them to walk into a red robin and be able to just buy the hot, fresh pizza. But yes, 0 1963. Thurman Avenue was the first store. Still there. Still one of the top stores. It was second last year and number of pepperoni pizzas sold and so topped only by Bexley. Um Yeah, I mean, still just thriving. So I will say so. This salad That's basically a pizza that I just had so cauliflower crust plant based sausage. And I mean, Dave, I have had Kobe and I haven't gotten my full scent and taste back. But wow, it's really, really good. I mean, right now, honestly. For being real, like some of the aftertaste, I experience or not super pleasant when I eat pizza. I have not had that with this pizza. I don't know what it might be. But I don't know if it has something to do with a cauliflower crust, but This tastes like normal pizza to me and pizza has not tasted normal in a while. That's great to hear. Yeah, I'm glad you're able to enjoy that. So Yeah, she's she's got the caliph. I appreciate it. Today We have three other specialty pizza's on cauliflower crust. It's been super popular. It'll be one year since we launched the cauliflower crust A T end of January, and we launched plant based sausage at the same time. It was interesting because a couple months ago pizza had the big campaign about being the first company to have plant based sausage and Give me the opportunity to reach out to a few reporters and say No, we've had it for a year. I mean, we may not quite be assed biggest Pizza Hut, but we've had it for a little while and so competitive edge that you have. Yeah, and and we want to continue to do that on the healthy side as well. So you'll see some other things coming out soon. That will help.