35 Burst results for "Gung Ho"

Awards Chatter
"gung ho" Discussed on Awards Chatter
"We decided to make a longer film, this stranger at the gate and this one is longer than the other films and it's a little more epic in some ways. And it's been a really, really exciting experience. Where did you learn this unbelievable story yourself for the first time? So believe it or not, we found it in USA Today university edition. And which is a very obscure version of USA Today. And when we came across the story, we were like, can this be real? Like, my God, you know, this to blow up a mosque, then he gets there and he meets the people and they embrace him and they're kind to him and he starts to question his plan. The bomb has already built, but he changes his mind and ultimately joins the congregation and becomes president of the mosque. It's just every twist of the story gets more and more mind-blowing. And I guess was there ever any, was it a challenge to get these folks once you decided to pursue this to participate or was everybody gung Ho to share the story? Well, the U.S. Marine, his name is Mac McKinney. He was already doing doing talks about this and sharing his story because he wants to educate other people who are like who think the way he used to. So he's on a mission. So he was very gung Ho about being part of the film. It was the members of the congregation who I think, you know, to them this was just their everyday life. They're very kind people and they welcome the stranger. They welcome people into their community and they show kindness and that's the way they approach the world. And so when I first came to them, I think they were like, what's the big deal? So we welcome this guy in and he was a domestic terrorist and we changed his mind and big deal. But I think once they saw the film, they understood how what they did and the magnitude of it and how inspiring it is. Especially in this moment in this time when there's so much division and hate and people aren't really talking to each other anymore. If someone votes for a different presidential candidate, then you do, you might stop being friends with them these days, right? And it's just, it's not a good moment where we're not talking to people who are different from us. And I think the message of this film and what inspired me about BB bahrami and Sauber bahrami who are the founders of this mosque that Mack wanted to blow up is that they truly embraced that that approach of just talking to we need to talk to each other. We need to get to know each other in order to, I don't know, save the world, perhaps. Now, I guess coming out of perhaps the anti semitism that you described, it seems like from the minute you hit the ground as a filmmaker, there's been a social conscience thread through the work, right? We've got orphaned Romanians, Emmy nomination at the age of 22. Through apartheid South Africa, it's very subject fascinating because my mom is from South

Bitcoin Audible
"gung ho" Discussed on Bitcoin Audible
"And our ignorance around money is very deep. So again, I highly recommend guys take 44. I think people have told me that it was very useful. So to kick off Bitcoin basics number one and to hit on the idea of what Bitcoin is, we're going to start a very simply and we're going to let satoshi introduce this by just reading the abstract to the Bitcoin white paper. So for the sake of people who are brand new, the white paper was just the announcement paper, it was released on October 31st, 2008, and it was satoshi revealing to the world posted on the cryptography mailing list that I'm working on a project and it's called Bitcoin and its peer to peer digital cash. There was not a lot of fanfare. Nobody knew it was anything interesting. There had been numerous numerous attempts at digital cash and digital cash systems previously. And honestly, a lot of people in the cypherpunk community and cryptography mailing list at the time had kind of become disenfranchised with it. And thinking that it none of these things were going to work, though there was a contingent that was still like gung Ho about it. How finny, which you'll hear about, who was the first person to run Bitcoin other than satoshi. Was ever the optimist and actually was interested in it from the outset, but satoshi posted this, and sure enough Bitcoin was introduced to the world. So the white paper is titled Bitcoin, a peer to peer electronic cash system.

The Jim Ross Report
"gung ho" Discussed on The Jim Ross Report
"The narrative immediately went from ROH's doomed to ROH is great. And you went on to do a trilogy of matches, which one in Chicago, the final one in New Jersey. Those matches don't get talked about or celebrated as much as some of the other stuff that you've done. Obviously, the WWE stuff is on a bigger scale. Talk a little bit about those matches in the mindset of walking in knowing you've got this company in your back and you've got to try and fix it and make it better. I don't know if we ever approached it like that. I really don't. Really? Yeah, I don't think me and Joe were like, well, this is it. I think we're just like, eh, fuck it. Let's just go have fun and let's tell a cool story. I really want to use the headlock a lot and you Joe is just like, great. Whatever. You know? I don't think we put pressure on ourselves in that regard. I just think it's like kind of like next man up thing. There was a group of guys who worked for TNA. I was one of them. We worked for ROH, and I remember we all had a bit of a meeting and we were like, we can't let TNA tell us who we can and can't work for. And we all were like, yeah, gung Ho. Let's do it. And then the next day, so and so cancel is offering of honor. So and so cancels love Ring of Honor. So and so cancels our Ring of Honor and Gabe looked at me and he's like, you're canceling. And I was like, no. No, I just can't operate that way. Like TNA told me you can't work for them and I was just like, yeah, I can. I'm an independent contractor, right? Like, no, but you have a contract with us. And I was just like, all right, but it doesn't say you can not prevent me from working anywhere. So, you know, a bunch of other guys said they were going to stay and they left. I stayed and then, like I said, it was like a next man up thing. It's what happens in sports teams. You know, so and so gets traded. So on and so retires. It's the next guy up and I was just to me I was like the next guy up. I don't know if Gabe ever looked at me like I was one of the main guys or whatever, but he kind of had to at that point, you know, like I said, there was nobody left and I wasn't supposed to wrestle Joe. And I'm the one who floated the idea of a 60 minute draw, 'cause I was just basically like, well, if Joe just beats me, then he just beats me and there's nowhere else to go. Who's he going to work with next? So I think the idea of the trilogy came based out of that. And it was almost out of necessity. But I don't know if me and Joe ever approached it like we were saving anything. We were just maybe thankfully too young and naive to realize that if we shit the bed, it probably wasn't going to be in a Ring of Honor anymore. I feel like you and Joe had one of the most celebrated wrestling bromances in that time period. You guys are like peanut butter and jelly. It just seemed like it was like one of those matches and one of those clicking of personalities that worked. I don't know how close you are to him anymore. I don't know if you still follow what he's doing, but what are your memories of working with Joe? Because I don't think you guys would have had success. But I don't think you would have had success the same way that you did if it hadn't been for that rivalry and that friendship. I think the rivalry had success just because of ideas, you know? I looked around. I would always look around at the locker room and like the landscape and I would always be like, okay, what's missing? What's nobody doing? What's everybody doing? I'm going to try to do the opposite of that. And I don't take credit for anything, I think those who were there know who did what who's responsible for whatever it is. I think you can see my fingerprints all over stuff. There was a rash of 60 minute draws after all that and I apologize for that. But I loved working with Joe just because it was, again, it was one of those things that it was easy. It wasn't always necessarily not difficult if that makes sense, but working with Joe is easy, but the dude would beat the shit out of you. You know? So not that that was a bad thing. It was just kind of like the style we worked. And he was a bigger dude that I felt like I'm not the smallest guy, but I'm not the biggest either, but I could get away with doing more with him 'cause he was a bigger guy and he was a better base. And I think that's another thing that made the matches so much different is because it was believable that I could stand up to Joe because he's not 390 pounds, but there wasn't such a drastic like Rey Mysterio esque size difference. Working with Joseph peach, you know? Hopefully whatever he's doing now is fun and good and I hope he's happy. So by now you know one of the things that JR and I feel really strongly about is the old cash and creative. Well, it turns out these chain

Code Story
"gung ho" Discussed on Code Story
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I tried resetting my password and it didn't arrive in my inbox for 17, 17 minutes. I can't talk about it. Have you ever experienced this nightmare? Introducing postmark. Let's face it, email infrastructure isn't the most exciting thing. Setting it up is no Friday night at your local disco. But it does play a critical role in most applications. And that's where postmark comes in. With postmark, email deliverability nightmares, they're a thing of the past. With industry leading deliverability rates in API libraries in every language, postmark delivers. When all else fails, their knowledge will world class customer support, is right there when you need them. Postmark is a partner that takes care of delivering your email so you can focus on what matters most. Building your product. Check them out at postmark dot com slash code story to learn more. That's postmarked dot com slash code story. So then you've got you've got your product working and then you've open-sourced Opel, right? How did you progress the product from there and how did you mature it? And I'm curious, you know, from that point where you're getting the acceleration from open-source, and you have MVP partners. How did you build your road map? And how did you decide, okay, this is the next most important thing to build or to address. In general, I'd say our go to market motion is really connected and really based on product led growth. I'm really gung Ho about it. And with developers, it's doubly so if there's so product like growth, maybe I should explain the term first. Product led growth means you put the product up front and you reduce friction as much as possible, enabling people to get a taste and interact with your product as early as possible. And you only layer sales on top of that. You start with the bottom ups motion, getting the product to the hands of people as soon as possible. With developers that's key because if there's one thing developers hate is having their managers telling them what to do. They want to pick their tech stack on their own. So when they adopt it and bring it to their managers to the decision makers to the buyers, that's a very positive motion. If it goes the other way around, it's a very negative function. But by the way, we also explore this initially even before our design partners, we talked to cisos. There was a period where you thought maybe this is a kind of a classic Israeli cybersecurity company selling to cisos, when we talk to them, they were like, yeah, we care a lot about this, but we're not the decision makers. The mons making a decision about this is R&D, we can only float requirements to them. So we really understood that this is about developers starting with developers and their impact on all the rest of their organization. To sum that up so we focus on product led growth and we decided that our market interaction would start with debt. So we initially did most of our growth through that open-source project. Opel doesn't include a UI, but it's quite often that we find that people ask about a UI for opal. When we thought that, okay, that's an interesting point for people to learn about permit. Maybe you would still provide some UI as part of local in the future, but we know that that's a point where more questions come in and enable us to kind of broaden the horizon and offer more things that we can bring to the table. But then really quickly when we move to self service, as I said again with product led growth, it's really about putting the product upfront. So we really early on built a self service where you can try permit IO on your own. And we initially onboarded people in a kind of a sort of beta program. People that sign up on our website, we would cherry pick or randomly pick a few of them and give them access to the solution. And then most importantly, we just opened it up as soon as we could for everyone. That's the main way we learn about how the product should evolve. Seeing people interact with it, seeing what doesn't work for them, seeing what they're excited about and what they're disappointed about. That really drives our strategy and our road map. So we automatically prioritize things that come from customers on top. There's like a specific Ashland within the road map that is dedicated to that. Then there's another astronaut dedicated specifically to improving the onboarding experience. So looking at how people interact with the product, even if they're not fully engaged yet, we constantly look at it and try to think how we can improve this. How can we reduce friction around those interactions? And then we layer more strategic flows. So adding more interfaces, adding more capabilities, connecting this better to get ops connecting this better to the open-source software and creating more open-source offering. And in the end of the day, if I have to completely sum it up, it's a balancing act between what we perceive as our strategy, which is constantly being updated before our interaction with the market. And direct market requirements that we get from our most important source, the users and customers themselves. Well, let's switch to team then. So how did you go about building your team? And what did you look for in those people that indicated to you that they were the winning horses to join you? In general, in an early stage startup, I think, at least what I'd want is people that can lead on their own. I was inspired by the cultural patterns, the culture of essentially in the unitary survey in the military. You really get a sense of what I call being.

ESPN FC
"gung ho" Discussed on ESPN FC
"The reason look at that printf 9 to one. The reason why this is a talking point is because of the lack of chances they created against ten man arsenal who have talked about a lot, have we no man ain't no Salah, is that a cause for concern? How much is that of course we concern going into this game? Well, listen, you can. You could hide behind the fact that sometimes when the opposition stick everybody behind the ball, sometimes it doesn't work for a year and it's really tough and the goal is the best man on the field. So sometimes you can hide behind those things. The fact is, they don't even score. And that's the one thing, as I said, it's one thing to have the opposition. We bodies clear things off the lane. And you go keep it being man in the mice. The fact is, the goalkeeper wasn't one of the match. The goalkeeper had nothing to do. So as a concern, the fact that they didn't create is a bigger concern to me than actually they didn't score. You know, they had one chance and that was minimal. And the problem they've got is that many men who are going to have to start again and there's no question when you can win a game with a last kick in a match and you miss it. You ain't just going home and forgetting about it. So he's going to be stepping on the field. So now he's going to be a little update. No, he's going to be thinking about things. For me, no, you're not looking for a minute to score goals. So basically, we're looking at Jota and my opinion and Brentford's Brentford and no easy pushovers. They will fight to the last breath. So as a can sell where are the goals coming from? Because if you look past the front three and I've just told you that I'm a little wadi, they can't get it done. Nobody nobody behind them in my opinion is getting it done either. What were you looking at then? I was looking at the, how did you know it was like how do you know I was looking up next to you? I could see it on your phone. I have a sneaky peek at something all right. I was actually looking for I was looking at Liverpool's games a couple of league games I believe when salon money away. One big brand for them as a league cop, and then the other league game is part of Crystal Palace. Here are this inside. But it's not two of the wasp games when you're one. Elite games anyway. When you pull it away, however, watch maybe we send it right. When you get ten men and they get mentality, arsenal highlight can be difficult. The one thing I'd say with Brandon, is the good thing is that they will not one of these Premier League cities that will come and just look to make a point. The last they come and try and play. And they'll try and have a goal of a poo. That's why I think the game in London was three three. But I think that's going to help live a pool because there will be a little bit more open because I say than the Thomas Frank that tries to go and play and tries to be positive. And I think from that perspective, it might just give Liverpool one or two more opportunities than the dead against a ten min arsenal that was basically part on the edge of the box. So listen, it's not up for debate. They need to end the game. They can't afford to drop any more points. So it's no one. I never feel. Science commotion said that today they are going to go and have a go at Liverpool. And from Liverpool's point of view, then that is no question the best thing for them because that means they're going to have more space. Going forward. The problem I think is that a Brentford going to get the possession and all the for them to do at the manager wants them to do. And as go forward because even arsenal 11 man had no choice, but to set deep because Liverpool would the ball would just way better at keeping it. No, they didn't get anywhere, but arsenal couldn't get the ball off them. And again, the Wally thing is Brentford won't be able to do that either, which means that they're from no choice of their own, be set and set in defensively. Listen, I hope I'm wrong. I hope they do gung Ho and go for it, because if they do, then Liverpool will create some chances. No question. What's your prediction then, Stevie? I'm gonna go two nil liver pill. Still it almost go like he did it with other game as well. Have you seen that as well? Go for three then. You can go to Neil as well. That's it Stevie. Thank you very much. Just a reminder, we'll.

Game of Crimes
"gung ho" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"So were you wearing a helmet? Nurse Connie. Yes. Oh, thank goodness. Yeah. All right. So but you like, you also like to snow ski though too, right? We yes. Like I said, we found out we had a lot in common. We snow skiing. You know, he was, he was gung Ho on his career and I was as well. So, you know, that was easy to understand someone like that. At the point that you guys got married with Steve still on the police department or had he joined the railroad police at that point. I think it was somewhere in the transition between the two. He knew that he could never have weekends off, working as a street car. He had this weird Tuesday wind Wednesday after days. We were both working night shift and I said, I can't do. I work like 6 years of night shift. I said, I can't do this anymore. And I had gone on. Day shift. And he could see no way of getting out of that. So that's when he started applying, you know, other places, and then he worked for the railroad. I don't remember if we were married then or not. But then he moved away to turn Virginia Beach. And I went to Virginia Beach as well and got a job there too. So you say you weren't that interested in him, but you followed into Virginia Beach. Thank you very much. Thank you. We were, you know, we were he had worn you down enough, he just couldn't stand to be away from him, right? Yeah. I'm playing to Steve these Steve's ego now. There you go. I appreciate that very much. We had a pretty hot and heavy romance going. Oh, okay, well, since this is worth trying to stay family friendly on this one because you're the wife, so but what was it like when you moved down to Virginia Beach? What did you think of that? As.

Cinemavino
"gung ho" Discussed on Cinemavino
"I think that as a creative team, it would be incredibly boring to have Luke Skywalker be gung Ho positive upbeat, and then have him continue to be that way in the new trilogy and not change it. I think that you almost have to have you almost have to have the strength to take the different direction. You know, and I admire the bravery of that. We're going to take an iconic character in this series as big a movie series. It's ever been made. You know, for people in love with it. So that requires some bravery to take that. It's like, you know what? We're going to flip all this on its head. And make this completely different than what you're expecting. I respect the bravery there. You know that there's going to be backlash and you do it anyway. That's ballsy. And I like that. You know, it didn't pan out very well. But you know, I liked, like you said, I like the character array. I liked the ideas of a lot of the scenes better than actually panned out. It's like, I like the idea of showing ray and Luke training together. That could have been a really cool scene, especially like show him coming around and rediscovering his humanity and his need to do good. She brings them. It brings that out on him earlier than what she does. And gets him into the fight. And I think that could have been. There's a good movie in there somewhere. I would have 86 the blue milk. Yeah, having him drink an alien hit milk. I would probably cut that out. Yeah, that was. Directly from the tea, right? Yeah. That was from the teat. I don't know what the difference is between a tit and a teat. But that's tit for show you. The Internet later. Yeah, we're going to Google I'm feeling lucky that search. But yeah, I mean, the music was great. Special effects were great. I mean, I like that they're doing more practical stuff. Rather than what is basically an elaborate cartoon that George Lucas had in the prequels. Yeah, the whole casino Finn and rose go to was basically just a smorgasbord of people that wanted to do cameos. You see that blue skin guy over there? That's Daniel Craig. Yeah, again. I don't know if he was on that one, but yeah, I just didn't do it for me. I did like after they killed snoke and kylo and ray had a big fight with all the armed guards. That was cool. Showing Leia have force powers. The idea was greatly execution was a little wonky..

ACG - The Best Gaming Podcast
"gung ho" Discussed on ACG - The Best Gaming Podcast
"They'll be like at a base, you'll go in, they'll be electrically tethered. And when you save them, they're like, you kick them out. They don't say that, but they're like gung Ho again. And I gotta say that's very pleasant. It's very pleasant to not have them be like, I need a hug instead they're like, throw me a gun. They do die, but still they want to go out there. Instead of always feeling like you're the only one, you know? I can't speak about other biomes. There's certain things we can't talk about about certain past certain areas. So what are your thoughts on alien weapons? I think the alien weapons are actually pretty good. Have you guys done multiplayer? Jump to multiply for a second. No. No. Wow, I'm in. Dude, I'm the only one who's done well. So this week is snow. Well, yeah, you did. We're going to talk about Android games in a second because I did those as well. But yeah, no, the multiplayer multiplayer is highly enjoyable. I fucking awesome. It's awesome. It's got the worst progression ever. It sucks donkey balls. It sucks the worst donkey balls I've ever seen. They patched it once still not fixed and you can't even choose a playlist that you want. Like it's I've never seen a game that's so fun that wants you to have a difficult time playing it. It's like, it's it's so emotional. It's so teen. It's so everything that you've ever wanted in a game is there. You just have to poke it for an hour and a half until how much you love it before it finally lets you do what you want to do. So like that toxic relationship, we've all had where the sex is great, but so there's this mission called strongholds in it. And this is the worst mission structure ever. It's basically multiplayer with a little added shit to make multiplayer not fun. That's that is how strongholds feels. It's like, oh yeah, now you have to control and you jump in and I swear to God, I don't know if I'm unlucky, but every fucking game is strongholds. And I'm like, I jump in. I'm like, yeah, let's strongholds. I'm like, no. Please. So then you don't want to quit because I don't know what the rule is. How many times can you quit, right? 'cause some multiplayer games penalize.

What's Good Games
"gung ho" Discussed on What's Good Games
"And on my way to and from work. To be honest, it has to be excited to come home and play video games again. Thanks for all that you do. So fucking sweet. Thank you so much. Like, yeah. Those were the reviews that I mean, the funny ones are great too. Don't get me wrong, and listen, we love all of the 5 star reviews. But when you really read these ones, it really just kind of gives you a little oomph. On days like today, for example, when Andrea and I were lamenting before the show started that our children have been very meaty today. And we're like, oh, we're so tired. But then you hear reviews like this, and then it just kind of gives you a little spark. You know what I mean? So we greatly appreciate it. Thank you so much. Yeah, the little booth to keep going. And thank you to everybody who's taking the time to leave us a 5 star review. We do read every single one of them, believe it or not. And I just want you guys to know that we hurt you. We do. We're taking the time and supporting our little show. But for now, let's talk about Sony's latest state of play. So I want to take this quick moment to identify that they call this a state of play, not a showcase. So next time you see PlayStation announced something, you can kind of temper your expectations for what kind of announcements you're going to get based off. If it's a showcased, you know, the big razzle dazzle, or state of play, which is a little bit more kind of run out of the mill announcements. But I thought we got some decent stuff in the state of play including out the gate, this brand new game called death verse let it die, which is coming in October 2021. That can't be. Is that correct? I don't think so. No, I think that was just the highlight from IGN that I pulled, sorry. State of play was so sorry to put the little tag at the end. It's all Rebecca's coworkers fault. That's where something. I don't Google said. So much SEO, okay, well, let's see. I will look into it. All right, Brittany, let me tell you read this story and I'm gonna pull up. So we can take a look at this thing. Okay, so PlayStation reveal death verse, let it die, a new game set in grasshopper manufacture in gung Ho's free to play let it die universe. According to gung Ho, deck first let it die is a survival battle arena game where players will fight each other in PVP combat, obtain ridiculous weapons, customize your character and fight your way to the top in front of a bloodthirsty audience. So I've been getting a good chance to look at this trailer because my child was kicking me in the titties when I was watching this because he was very media at the time. But I'm assuming you two did. So what do you think about that? Yes. I had tweeted that I thought that it looked like a cross between dishonored and running man running me and being the wonderful 80s movie. Which is based on a book. So I think that this is obviously a lot of Japan written all over it. Now that I know that it's let it die, you can definitely see it. People in my timeline were saying it looked like near and really just kind of like a wacky like brutal hacking slash. What do you think rob? I thought this was the least interesting thing to me in this whole presentation. I don't know. I feel like there's a kind of cultural interest right now in these battle arena games one, but then also this concept of big group death games, right? Like squid game, among us can only name two at the moment off the top of my head. But I feel like this is a thing people like right now, I don't know, maybe hunger games started it. I don't know. This doesn't the characters are interesting. I think characters in the weapons are interesting, but watching them do things in this environment does not look interesting to me. I don't know. It hasn't grabbed me out of the pack of the many ways in which I can get together with large groups of people and do cartoonish murders. Yeah, I feel like the battle Royale genre is really hot right now and a lot of people are playing it. And this is just really kind of capitalizing on that in the weird and wacky characters and abilities. And you know, I think it's all going to come down to the gameplay loop if people are going to think this is interesting or not. Obviously, what the free to play mechanics are going to be is going to be interesting to watch as well. But I think there will be an audience for this. Will it have legs? I think, you know, we'll have to wait and see. Yeah, it kind of depends right on if enough big name streamers grab it early on, but also if it has a strong enough hook to keep people playing for longer because I think a lot about I think very rarely, but then sometimes it suddenly comes to me. Remember ubisoft had that battle Royale like a year ago? Hyperscale. That's right. And no one has spoken about it since..

The Experiment
"gung ho" Discussed on The Experiment
"Right now. Some justices on the supreme court are downplaying. The importance of the jacobson decision questioning why we're still turning to an over one hundred year old case in our current pandemic. They're certainly reasons to question the legacy of jacobson and how much it should apply to our lives today but wendy says she worries. If you throw out the opinion altogether that could be dangerous to it could rollback things like school vaccine. Mandates that jacobson made possible all remains a delicate balance. Pastor lujan had always seen this case as straightforward. Jacobson was wrong. Supreme court was right. He didn't know about the more complicated legacy of jacobson. Tell me about it. So jacobson's case was cited in this ruling. Basically it said that there was a state interest in cutting lopion tubes here about this. Yeah forced sterilization of people who had mental illnesses. I redo a supreme courtroom little excerpt from the supreme court ruling and says the principle sustains compulsory vaccination is brought enough to cover cutting the philippian tubes and then it references jacobson v massachusetts and then the pinion goes on to say three generations of imbeciles enough. Oh my goodness. He does heartbreaking. The case was used in one of the most infamous supreme court cases we've ever had. Wow i didn't know that that makes me see his case in a different light. Honestly how so. Because i think movements like eugenics that sort of deny the full dignity person hood of people who are different in any way is just so obviously for me against what society should stand for. You know. i'm from germany and so my grandfather's generation was part of the movement. That did just that to all kinds of people. Dissidents people who had cognitive disabilities jews. We see and in many forms of dictatorship. This pattern keeps coming back like you wanted to create this ideal world that doesn't have the undesirable senate apart of me. I'm speaking completely person. I'm not speaking for anybody here. But like pardon me my basic attitude would be like. I can see how in a pandemic as scary as smallpox epidemic. As the case may be the government would decide okay. Regatta vaccinate everybody. I can see that. I can see that case for public health being made i. Of course absolutely cannot see a public health argument for four ation of any group of people. And i'm appalled. That one could go from one to the other but i suppose i can see i suppose in a sense. It's the same question of personal liberty versus public safety but then the questions like who gets to say what public safety is. that's messy. that's real messy. I just wonder like thinking about him as somebody who had these convictions. Who stubborn about them. Who fought all the way to the spring court right. That takes a lot of energy. That quality is not necessarily a bad thing right. That's something that we value today. I mean looking back on that part of his life. What do you think is life can teach us about this sort of legal battles any battles. We're fighting today. I don't know because right now. We're in a in a historical and cultural moment especially in this country. Where a lot of people are taking stances and being quite intransigent about their stances. It's very popular right now to die on a hill as they say and to be gung ho about it and then have all these people online cheering you on as you do my goodness if haning was doing what he did today how many people would stand him online right. Like how many people would it be out there. Just like doing kickstarter fundraisers for him and all kinds of stuff. Almost kinda grateful that that wasn't possible back then because who knows that kind of stuff can go to your head. That kind of stuff can just totally changed the direction of what you originally intended to do. I want to make a case. For actually less gung-ho intransigence less dying on a hill lasts stubbornness and defending causes and more listening assuming the best about the other person's intention. Try to understand what they're doing why they're doing what they're going through and then try to make some sort of judgment.

Babes and Babies
"gung ho" Discussed on Babes and Babies
"But we're gonna be here right. Yeah the the hard thing That just kind of sucks in the united states because you see a lot even if you look at the ingredients in catch up here versus the ingredients of ketchup in europe. They're different ingredients because europe has banned certain things in their food that the us has not and if we would hold the same standards to ourself then things would be more affordable because sometimes buying everything organic. A lot of people can't afford to do it so they're having these other options that are full of processed foods and so it's hard to know what to pick and choose. Where where can we like you know. Spend a little bit more or where. What should we really focus on if we can only buy like Our our food budget can only afford so much organic Because that's that's one thing that i see a lot and it's just it's frustrating when you like i said you see the ingredients and foods and other countries and then you see the ingredients of the foods here and it's like why can't we have the cleaner ingredients here. Like how come. Our system is allowing these things that cause inflammation that caused disease to be in our foods. I mean that's i agree with you your health and but then you have a situation out. Most people are on a budget in. They have to have That week of do do the best may encourage encourage. I encourage people to read the label instead of just Just grabbing knocked to shelf actually spend the time and get to know your product that you're putting into your body regal label. Read it before he either. You know. I have three sons with eating if you can't pronounce it. It's not food it before you eat. It tastes good. Spit out so now. That last one's not true. Eight a bunch of watermelon last night and it was so good. One thing that you talk about that. I i love the saying and i'd love for you to talk about the differences between eating to survive eating to socialize and eating to thrive. So you need to survive. We all do it especially Young family Near that was on a budget that i did it throughout school. I mean that's what led me into my health crisis. Iras eaten survive. I grabbed the. I figured i calculated. I bought a thing. You're costco must muffins. That had twelve in their night had river that one. Save me time. So i can go back to studying into. It was so expensive down. I could Get away with it in thought fires for five years and and everything before medical school and all that i thought his filthy. I thought that was destroyed in will in so much pain and and i tried self diagnose myself and made it into the er they took care of me but that leads me to a whole nether podcast on what actually happened but i was eating just surviving. I think a lot of student. We don't really in the time to read a really pay attention to invest in the most important thing which is yourself and then once we get through the cycle we like we had a little bit more. We can span. We can go swear so. We socialize without even understanding restaurants that we eat at in the food. We eat it. Gung ho more. Our meter hurts. We know week later. We get sick. you're Whenever you travel it's kind of interesting fact when you travel Tell you what you made. So people like oh manicaland New work from second so a socialize. There's a price to eat the try. You can have all three just. You're aware of what you're eating. You know the quality of foods yogurt quality of the water's not taking the fluoride in your eating the fresh air you're eliminating the five g. your laminate now as little You know this this world. We've been mom mahmod by on the cell phones wifi and goes along with eating a lot more to than just eating but to eat tried you. Actually mike lost to. When i retire which i probably never will because i love life out but i want to two hundred twenty five still walking and talking to nine hundred twenty five the number. But it's just a that's a goal of mine so right now. Currently are not any medication. So i have free in. Freedom is the ability to move the ability to think ability to do things. You wanna do Right yeah i mean it's health is important and like you said i mean it does give you the ability to do what you wanna do. And i got part of mine. My husband's motivation right now. Is that we have a daughter. Who's turning one this week and and it just changes your perspective like we want to be healthy not only for ourselves and for each other but then for her and we want to expand our family and it just it does make it but it's not like just about me because if it is just about me i feel like it's easier to not like care as much but when i think about wanting to be here for jovi for my daughter i feel like that's definitely motivation to to give them more thought. No what i'm putting in my body. And what i'm doing i can say this. I have four children myself and When they're young and data learning. This what i learned is that you know especially in the common cold seasons comes through the flu season. I mean. I think from the end of october to march. I go on Diet but my lifestyle at that time we'll be chicken soup there's something about chicken broth soup that That one helps eliminate colds congestion and to prevent it. So now you put little ground around rice into that and then you get the good sugars which helps to boost your immune system and You know you eat little chicken soup brown rice. With a couple of days it'll knock it out Putting in concentration That element in there It's it's hurry incredible.

Mother, May I Sleep With Podcast?
"gung ho" Discussed on Mother, May I Sleep With Podcast?
"Years terrified. Jason no i love i. That's the sweetest thing i heard. I also met like your son. You're very that you don't wanna get divorced for the very sweet reserve you So genuinely love and live for your wife. But i'm saying like i feel like guys like this. Don't wanna get divorced because it's going to cost them a lot of. Oh yeah yeah yeah. Yeah that to no totally that to like. This is about asset loss prevention. So we're going to cut to him talking to the police about monica's disappearance thirty three. Oh six to thirty five. Monica whinges runoff. We have children. She's a devoted mom. I understand but these are questions we have to ask. You're wasting time. You put out an all points bulletin. You even have that down here. we do. We know how to do our jobs. Authorities in gung ho take any issues with visitors. Very seriously i assure you find your wife. She went shopping. Maybe tracker credit cards. Find out where she went. As your wife know anyone else in the city anyone she would have gone through now. We don't know.

The Film Buds Podcast
"gung ho" Discussed on The Film Buds Podcast
"Besides besides that has a lot of other issues. Yeah is is just truly deranged And like a pathological liar like a almost a gas lighter at times literally goes through like every kind of bargaining. Yeah to give what they want. I honestly see why. Why elliott page took the part apparently Rain wilson gave the script to To and he went through wooden apparently absolutely was like gung ho for doing the punish area. I completely see why it was. It was completely the reversal of everything else. That that elliott done at the time for sure you know going off of that rain. Wilson is also fantastic. He's fantastic and everything. I think like everything. I see him. He's just so young. I'm this is definitely been pretty notable performance and He said apparently that he really wanted to make sure that. Because this was right when the office was popular for him and He apparently wanted to make sure that no one was feeling like this was dwight sh- route and i doubt that he hits that mark. Pretty pretty crazy movie. you know. it's it it ends on like a sentimental note. I to me. I don't know how much of that is earned. I feel i feel parts of it are feeling a parts of it are in I don't understand the live tyler character that much. I don't understand how kevin bacon like occur away because they kind of hinted. I thought the story was kinda. Be one of those like oh yes to learn the harsh lesson like she'd legitimate doesn't want to be with him. They show like absolute Legitimately like the is. I guess she was kidnapped. Flint is like kept drugged. So i think what happened is like she did legitimately leave him but then she was getting. I think that he realizes that she did have a sort of weakness for drugs and alcohol and was kind of exploiting mad and using her as a tester of certain things and so then what ends up happening. Is you know even though they were still together when The guy comes at the end. Since he wanted her kevin bacon was willing to give her up for the deal and so then Of course the things proceed from there But that's kind of what her overall like thing is. I guess in the whole thing is you know she's a she's a former addict and she still does eventually like leave and leave him. But i agree with you. I think unsentimental lending really comes out of nowhere. Yeah especially after how to range. The finale is before the end. I know that like that. That kind of link swing can work. I don't think does as effectively as it could in this. No i think that for me. This probably had some of the issues that you had with nobody where it feels like.

Decoding Obesity
"gung ho" Discussed on Decoding Obesity
"You know you should really consult your doctor before. Starting any physical activity regimen. You know this is important stuff because people who are suffering from the railway or are suffering from obesity before taking on eastern was from nineteen ninety s very strenuous so any strenuous activity even moderate intensity activity. Really it puts stress on your heart and all of your body. And we have to make sure that you'll ready for starting a rigorous exercise routine. So that you're not hurting yourself. You know obviously wouldn't would you not want to be starting that with the intent of hamas but we just need to make sure that you don't end up doing that unintentionally so it's always better to start slow and build upon it also and it's not great you know just go gung ho in one go and start with something very very extreme because you know this is a journey really is not a one thing that you do and that's the end of it. You really have to gradually build up on whatever you're doing. So how has that changed for you. Now how has Your routine change or has it remained the same throughout its has remained the same. I've been still working out six days a week. And because i also found out that my work out i don't have as many autism meltdowns i might still get periodically annoyed at something like google breaking my website. Because it's totally uncalled for. How much power does company need right. So i decided you know. I want to stay with this because i like working out. And it's an idea. Three days of kickboxing and analysis three days of beach by on demand and might not daring Their new one of their new workout programs called ten rounds by jill freeman. And it's all a bunch of boxing. I i must have a really big thing with boxing..

Gamer Talk Podcast
"gung ho" Discussed on Gamer Talk Podcast
"So. They want to develop this base to where you can go and explore anytime line or whatever timelines at they're providing and get the full experience on a multiplayer level and then come back out to the main lobby and you know like maybe they do time periods instead of you know for each season is a time period or each location is a season. I don't know how they're going to do that. But that's what they want to do. Is they want to build on that foundation that fortnight and gt online have already done. so yes microtransactions. Yes seasons possibly battle pass or you know whatever shit that they're gonna do chris. Is there any information on that. About how many players will be teaming up together to do assassinations together or anything like that. No no they said it's it's years away okay. So it's not clear on whether between now and then more traditional games will appear or not. You don't do assassinations and assassin's creed anymore. Chris just go. Gung ho is a viking. Kill everything yeah. I mean i i guess if you're all hauling do involve stuff but i mean rewinding back to thinking about unity and how the multiplayer worked in how like we were playing unity together and you know doing the multi-player stuff in assassinating. I don't know how that's gonna work if they're doing it. Because you're gonna be able to do those different time periods. So maybe they'll have like a viking time period where we can just go all out or some shit. I don't know. I'm hoping that one that they don't have p because for honor is already up and running right so if they wanna add assassins create deal. See two four honor. Do so don't make an assassin's creed infinity. Vp battle royal type game. I don't think that that would benefit anyone I don't know what do you think do you guys think would you play of cre- about a royal game now propping up really but on the side note i just want to say i really don't wanna see these games to mainly co-op because pleaded out raiders and repeatedly playing missions..

Unspooled
"gung ho" Discussed on Unspooled
"Documentary still. Don't make a ton of money or get that much attention as great as they are. Although now that we're talking with us. I want us to do. We've talked about like a documentary section because there are so many great documentaries and here you now as doc ed fantastic. Yeah i mean. I love it and i and i feel like this have been a tough movie to talk about in a way because it's very rare to feel like i respect something without enjoying it. Yeah that's really scared of failing. Yeah maybe this means that the greatest movie of all time is titanic. It's true so much energy fi okay. Here's my excuse for thinking. About titanic in this film okay so kind of like i said that gary busey reused align from point break here There's a bit of an echo in the scene. Five seconds dante interface. Gentlemen it's been a privilege fine with you gentlemen. It has been a privilege play tonight. So is the conspiracy. Theory that james cameron saw apollo thirteen and was like. Oh that's a good line. I should put that in. Titanic or is it that ron howard a new that the titanic musicians said that i think they did a fact. Check that and it was like. That's a great line. I'll put it in my film like where did this privilege. Where's the origin of this privilege. History i mean. I don't know. I don't know you don't know all right. Well there you go. I mean look obviously. We had issues with this movie. There are people out there that had a different opinion. I mean or no people out there that agreed with us. I mean where. Do people fall as i mean. Obviously it's critical darling. I will still say that. I liked this movie better than you. But here is a pan one of the rare pans that were not many fans of this movie from ever. Goodman of the san francisco chronicle wrote apollo thirteen may be handsome ernest well acted and admirably executed but it is hardly a heart pounder. The problem is the story. They tell is not sufficiently cinematic. Somehow the movie never grabs. You never becomes the white knuckle. You expect the heart of the movie after all takes place. In a tiny claustrophobic capsule in inherently static situation that inhibits action. House direction is so gee whiz. And gung ho and james scott harness scores so calculated to pump our adrenalin and impose emotional response on us music as bully that apollo thirteen recalls one of those jingoistic tv specials. That celebrated the statue of liberty's centennial. There's no sociological or political subtext..

Fantasy Football Today Podcast
"gung ho" Discussed on Fantasy Football Today Podcast
"I'm a little worried about gerald ever taking a little bit of work away from them. S krige taking a little bit of work away and do they really really really just go. Gung ho on the wrong not worried about estrogen everett. Come i targets that lowers the target volume for tyler lockett. Then yeah. I'm a little bit worried about it. But they can have ever exceeded them beating overturned. Sorry to cut you off. it's okay. I do think like the reports that we're getting from their. Ota's the things they are doing with the offense make me want to rank lock even higher because if they're running a fast pace offense in getting the ball out of his hands quickly. Those are more tyler. Lockett routes than decay. metcalf routes. Funny you say that everybody listen a fantasy football today and five on saturday. We'll ever did. But i just recorded decayed metcalf. A breakdown. Preview with jacob gibbs and i did bring that up this new offense does it seem more suited for lock than metcalf We talked about that Solicited that the good news is he. There is no way. We're going to have to draft tyler. Lockett at your ranking. So you know. Because he's going twenty four th at wide receiver fifty seventh overall. Nfc adp in the last month so you could be wrong about him and still and still win. Eighty p is he the player I'd be curious it would take some work to figure this out his. He's a player who at their position is being ranked drafted the furthest behind where they finished the past two years. If you remove last year which was injury plagued than it would be golladay because he's going just after lock it. I think well who is finished higher. The last two years locking her dollar. It's pretty close right in nineteen golladay. Beat lock it by. Like he was ninth in lock. It was thirteenth than last year. Obviously right this whole group of fantasy points per game. I think lock it was ahead. Feeling lock at golladay going twenty second twenty fourth twenty fifth to march chases twenty-third. But all of them feeling tana touchdowns lock it. Had one hundred catch is he got hurt. But they're they're all drafters. Seem worried about them. And that was that the answer that the three of them deal unlock golladay probably wide receiver for sure. I don't know if we're just looking at last year. Then it would be david montgomery running back but the shoe and then once you wanna hit us up with juju. It's kinda the same thing except cheaper. I'm not even going to ask how you feel. Chew podcast with you before. But what are you worried about here. I'm worried that dave's right and that they do give more targets to chase claypool in that juju came back. On this one year deal to rehabilitate his image and get a big contract next year in the salary. Cap goes back up and the steelers didn't have the same plan in mind now. The fact that ben roethlisberger was allegedly lobbying to bring him back the fact. That juju says i'm not going to play in the slot as much next year. Those things are encouraging to me. I'm still pretty happy. Drafting him as a number two wide receiver. I still think what he did at a young age and what he did even. I think we did efficiency. Last year is crime to four. I'll say so..

Mom and Dad Are Fighting
Should An Older Stepchild Never Have To Babysit
"Are your thoughts on a sixteen year. Old step stepchild. Being asked to watch a step sibling we their parents wanna go out for an evening. But the older sibling doesn't want to babysit. Is it reasonable for our sixteen year old to never have to babysit just. Because they don't want to. Rebecca what do you think all right. So why would you want someone with your kids who doesn't want to be with my first question. It's just not a good. I mean so. There's a couple of things going on here. One is the way you're making it sound. It does not sound like you're planning on paying for this babysitting time. It sounds like you need to watch your younger sibling. And it's just going to be a thing you have to do just like emptying the dishwasher mowing the lawn or whatever so that's one thing which you might want to reconsider putting money in the equation because it might help second. There's a a a step dynamic here which is one of the reasons why i think this question is interesting. Because there is a sort of built in expectation. I think for older siblings to watch younger. Siblings in non blended families you know but even then sometimes the older kid is like. I don't wanna do that. And i just have to be honest with you like if they don't wanna do it and it's a step it does add a layer there whether you feel like your family is fully integrated or not. There is a layer sort of inherent tension with kids and their step parents and step siblings. And you know. I don't know if you're sixteen year old might be thinking like hey i have other stuff i wanna do. I wanna be playing video games. I wanna be chatting with my friends. I wanna be secretly watching porn or whatever it is your sixteen year old. Wants to do or if they're thinking like this kid isn't my responsibility like i don't want to do that. I didn't sign up for this so the thing that you should remember either in both situations the non wanted family blended family but especially the blended family is that it's not your older kids fault. You had more kids to the expectation that they will want to do this. Labor on your behalf needs to be set. You know a little bit differently. Needs to be negotiated. If they're not all gung ho about it you might want to pay them. You might wanna make it the same kind of extra work incentive the same that you might do if if you normally hire someone to mow your lawn and then your kid does it one week. Maybe you'll throw a few bucks just because you have established that that work has

The Business of Esports
Is chess an Esport?
"On this. Podcast we've said chess is definitely any sport it's so cool to see you know Gm ichuro streaming for tsm and playing chess and chess was invented. Today would definitely be any sport. you know. we've we've sort of back that narrative collectively. And then i saw this article and i'm like wait a second. Something's not right like this doesn't feel right to me as much as i believed streaming of chest feels like a little bit of any sport is magnus carlsen is he. The top e sports earner is this really as good for the sports industry as a whole to sort of make this kind of call Or are we sort of now trying to include too much in the definition and we only hurt ourselves like. Where are you guys on that on that on. That thought lindsey. I'll let you start okay. I talked about this on twitter a little bit earlier. I think it's great. So one of the things about these lists especially. I was looking at the top ten team earnings to i mean the amount of potential earnings that are out there are just around fifteen to twenty percent of what they were last year. Because of the pandemic so part of it is that chest was super easily translatable in a pandemic near still able to hold tournaments. It's still very familiar. People still wanted to watch it whereas some other tournaments games. Whatever with the line element. It's not as exciting. So we'll see his carries over into next year that would be an interesting trend but the other part is that. I still don't think it's necessarily a bad thing for this is a little bit. I mean this is where it gets a little bit to differentiate between these sports gaming and top earning streamers as top running eastwards competitive on and the the delineation between all of those is really murky unclear. Obviously he's not the most popular Twit streamer and i wouldn't expect him to have the most money made off of that or most money made off of endorsements or whatever. So when i look at it from that lens. I don't think it's a bad thing that he's leading in this. Very narrow niche category called e sports. Where we're only looking at tournament winnings that have been decimated during a pandemic so but like even non pandemic like even. If you go back he probably still would have made the top ten and half a million dollars. You're weirdo doda to the winning team. Each guy makes you know couple of million bucks. He still would be up there. And i think the bigger question is you know everyone seems gung ho to call chesini sport right but then you see a list. At least i saw list like this. And i go wait. A second at maybe. Have we gone too fast. Here right like manx. Carlson to me has never been an east sports competitor right and so it started trending downwards though if people kind of us chess has an introductory way of getting into it because it is familiar international and then got for like league of legends. Like watching chess. Yeah i i. I very much think that that kind of strategy play that people get into is easily transferable to other games and that it could be a way of just doing that choices. I mean just. Chess has the advantage of longevity. It's been around for thousands of ears. So i don't think it's a bad thing right now. Maybe in ten years. I would think that this would be a bad trend. Maybe even five years but for right now this year it's point even stronger. I feel like we're using chess at this more rate like being used in the dirty version of the word right like we're using it for sorta like clout right because it's cool to have chess as an e sport and chest is massively popular internationally right and then as soon as as soon as you have. Magnus carlsen at the top of the list. Everyone goes oh. No no not any sport like i feel like we're using it a little bit and chris brings up a good point here. Jeff maybe you want to comment on like when do we call poker any sport. Yeah that's a good point. You got a slippery slope at some point. Can you call you know anything. That's being played electric. You know it's just this other point at some point. Can you just call anything you play like you know like if we're flipping a coin and betting on the outcome is that an e sport if it's filmed than like you're in one place at other place i don't know

Jocko Podcast
Guidelines for the Leader and Commander
"Is Jaakko podcast number two, fifty two. With Dave Burke and me Jaakko willink good evening. Dave. Good Evening Echo Charles is taking care of some other business. On the last podcast. Number two, fifty, one with Leif and we started getting into the book guidelines for the leader and Commander by General Bruce Clark but we only made it thirteen pages in two and a half hours, and it's one hundred, seventeen page book. To, recap a little bit, this is a book that I searched for for over a decade I originally heard about this book in my favorite book, which is called about face by colonel. David Hackworth. Finally, found a copy a month and a half ago. and. So here we are just a little background once again on General Bruce. Kark. World War One. World War Two Korea enlisted in one thousand, nine hundred and up going to west point colonel in World War Two. Then a general commanded the Fourth Armored Division in Patents Third Army. Battle the Bulge Distinguished Service Cross three silver stars forty five years. Of Service? And then spend a bunch of time not only leading troops but also training troops or overseeing training commands so. Awesome Career Hackworth talked about him glowingly in the book about face and That's where that's where the star took me a long time to find this book. Who did somebody texted me about it. And said, it was the white whale. that. It was definitely hard for me find this book, but we have it and that's it. That's what we're GonNa do where do you go back into this book? So here we go back into guidelines for the leader and commander by Bruce General Bruce C Clarke. This section starts off with administration some thoughts for the commander. And he says inflammation, I would like to point out the close. Interrelationship between training programs. And Sound. Overall management. So this is something you know when you're that young gung-ho leader. That just thinks, hey, where you're operate whatever that operation is whether it's shooting machine guns or whether that's out selling things or making things and you think, Hey, I'm I'm on the front lines I'm going to make things happen and you think all the administrative stuff you shouldn't have to worry about. That's not me. And I know many individuals that are like that I know one individual in particular like that whose name is Jaakko. 'cause I was definitely like that. Many commanders. I should say I. was like that when I was younger because I absolutely I realize this and you can hear. We'll talk about the paperwork drills that we had to do and how. Life. Came to me. We shouldn't have to do this stuff and I said Oh we're going to do it and we do a better than anybody else. So I figured this out but it is it is definitely a learning moment that people have and so why not learn it right now many commanders are defeated by poor administration. Imagine that just that statement many commanders are defeated by poor administration not defeated because they were tactically unsound not defeated because they made bad decisions not defeated because they couldn't come up with a good plan they fail because their administrative losers. Without. Sound Administration at Commander CanNot Succeed in his training and maintenance programs. Good. Administration is nothing more than applied common sense. I'm including here a number of items that may well be considered a checklist of indicators of sound. Administration. Number. One. Importance of time. The principal coordinating device in the army is time. Learn the proper time space factors. So you can be on time and make reasonable demands of your subordinates. So. So that's number one by the way, which is probably why you hear a lot of talk about time management. Just think about the idea that the first thing he's GonNa say is time this is someone who clearly understands that have all the resources in the world that we have. That's the one that matters the most because we just can't produce more of. I was GONNA say it's the it's the one that matters the most and it's the absolute one that we have the least control much control. You have time you zero you cannot stop it. You cannot bring it back. You gotta say the power curve. I hate that fewing. I hate that feeling and let me tell you what. I realized this a while back. So when you go to the airport if you show up at the airport late. In now look TSA doesn't care that you're late the baggage handler doesn't care that you're late the uber driver does not care what time your planes leaving they're they're doing what they're doing, and so what that does is it takes you have no control. Over that time once it started to commence, what do you have control over going to the airport a little bit earlier? That's all. That's all not that big of a deal. Go to the airport a little earlier, and you won't have to worry about TSA. You won't have to worry about baggage you won't have to worry about. How long it takes for the Uber driver or the left let's give proper. Credit or lift driver to show up and bring you to the airport. Not so so how'd you get control? You can't control time once it's unfolding you can't bring it back you have to you have to plan for appropriately. And there's a there's a sense of urgency and I have a pretty good sense of urgency and you you may have may or may not I know like at the monster especially the earlier musters when we weren't. When the backside wasn't quite the well oiled machine that it is now certainly as a well oiled machine now the early musters do. Not a Well oiled machine. So on the on the front side, people would know that when Leith and I were walking out on stage at eight o'clock in the morning, we had two hours sleep because we had to do whatever we had to do behind the scenes and that's just the way it was. I can feel I can feel. When the shortage of time in fact, I think I feel the shortage of time every single day single waking minute.

Plant Strong
Interview with Daniel Shoeman
"I'm sitting here with a gentleman named Daniel Schuman pronounce that crackling corrector, Daniel Shuman and actually Ganal reached out to me several months ago after hearing the plan strong podcast. Because he had a friend who was suffering from I believe it was some krones or else right of colitis and you were wondering if I if I had any advice or recommendations and I and I sent you a a whole protocol. It was based on a woman out of Columbus Ohio doctor Dr Pam Popper and did anything ever come of that. So you know one thing I've learned in this whole journey of mine is that I can't change people I could try my best I try to present as much information as I can. It's much. That's backed up by science. Ultimately. It was up to my friends who make decision I think. Obviously. He's in his own journey and he's going to have to figure things out and unfortunately I haven't been too successful within thus far. But I, believe in laying the groundwork at least and hopefully giving him some of the tools to come to his own decision one day and maybe See, some relief that he can get because he really is suffering a tremendous amount and the and you. You mentioned a little earlier that. So you you've had some phenomenal success and we'll get into kind of your story and your journey. But when you had that kind of success, you WANNA scream it from the mountaintops eight and. Because it seems so obvious that Oh my gosh I mean this is going to cure everything that ails you. And yet, people tend to push back a little bit right and so what have you found is kind of the smartest tactic as far as with friends, family co workers, and trying to impress US lifestyle upon them. So I think the biggest thing that is an individual canoe is to lead by example to show, and it's pretty obvious anyone who's seen me who's followed me the last couple of years has seen a tremendous improvement in my life in every aspect of it and if they can see. Especially, someone who knew me well, beforehand, they knew I was not a fitness guy I was not someone who Generally worked very hard on himself. especially when it came to nutrition health fitness and if they can see that someone like me can do something like this and the positive impact, it's had on every aspect of my life. Medically. Socially emotionally, my relationship, my children, my relationship with my wife, my intimacy it's really an unbelievable. Thing to see and. I think was a little bit guilty in the beginning of being a little bit maybe to gung-ho and trying to because as you said, it does seem so obvious it seems that there's so much science. This. Isn't just a fad this the way I see it. Hopefully learning throughout my whole life and I not I'm not a scientist. I'm not a doctor. I'm not gonNA pretend that I have all the answers to everything. But it seems pretty clear to me that this is something real and I know you've seen it. I've seen it so many times with people who have. Not, only prevented diseases but reversed it and have regained their lives and have become empowered to do something and to really change their lives in the people's lives around them. So. Yeah. Just being that example showing people this is something to do you know when people talk to you about protein and you know that's a sure you get that all the time where's your protein come from when you're eating a plant based? Diet. And if I could lead by example, say, Hey, look protein deficient you're not could show the my numbers from when I get blood work at the doctor's office. And that's that's where I'm at right now I was just trying to be that example China show hey, this is an alternative I'm not going to. Have the Hubris to tell you, I know all the answers to everything but this is at least an alternative if you WANNA go down. So many of the popular roots these days. This is a way to do it mindful way to do it. Really. Isn't I don't think it's not difficult honestly at the end of the day and. Just, it's possible as an alternative. So let's let's talk about that for a SEC. So you said you don't think it's that difficult what? Let's. Let's discuss your journey a little bit show. Where were you not mistaken? You started this journey into how April two thousand seventeen is that right? That makes it able to thousand seventeen I was twenty nine years old what inspired it? So I mean. It's a good question I. I was obese most of my life morbidly obese most of my life and every day was really a struggle was there's a lot of discomfort when that big you know my my biggest I was about three hundred and fifty five pounds. Not Comfortable way to live. So right off the bat, just being that big I don't believe I was ever complacent with a something that let me ask you this. So you say it wasn't comfortable being that big. What are some of the things that somebody that is? Three fifty and what are you? Like six, one, a non five ten okay. Okay. So three fifty, five, five, ten, what are some of the things that are uncomfortable almost everything just being in public being taking the train in on a normal day squeezing next to people you know at its most extreme I went on a family vacation to universal studios in the in Florida and I was very excited to go in this Harry Potter I. They have their this isn't in big castle. We waited online and get to the ride and we go to sit down and the harness won't close on me substitute big to fit in the.

A New Direction
Re-motivation of the De-motivated Employee Drs. Cathy Bush & Tara Peters - burst 01
"The question. How do I motivate my employees and I've had a lot of guests on the show. Between the time that Tara was online and and today we're every psychologist psychiatrist I've had on the show said, we can't motivate your people. You're just not going to motivate them. And I. Give Them. I of fact, since Tara I have given them this answer. You're asking the wrong question don't ask the question. How do I motivate my people find things that are D- motivating them and remove those. CASIO'S W. Yeah it is. You know. Like to talk about the basket analogy. So if you think about people showing up to do a job or for the first day of task they tend to come in let's imagine they have a basket We think it's empty. We think it's our job as managers leaders to put stuff in the basket call that motivation and if we do that right, then they're going to be Gung Ho and productive. But the truth is that they show up with a full basket they have all sorts of. Things already motivating, and so our job is to prevent the stuff that gets in the way and causes the basket to start to leak if you think about it that way and so right on what you said to the people that you just mentioned is accurate. It's like if you could figure out what's poking holes in their basket and not do that or repair that quickly then you will have highly motivated people. You don't have to put motivation in you have to keep the motivation that's there. So, this this this is this is an interesting thing because I think what happens is for most leaders Tara I think what happens for at least the leaders that I coach and have talked to is they have a hard time dealing with removing. What they're doing. Because, they want me to come in and you probably like you they want you to come in and do something to jazz their people up. To make them. Happier brighter. I don't I feel I feel like sometimes they think magician I really do I think. I feel like they think Oh, well, you're you're you're the psychological professional come on in and just go inside their brains and do something. But. Really is the removal of the crud. Right, why do why do you think that leaders have such a hard time? Letting go of the things that they've put in place that actually stop. Their employees from being motivated. So I think one of the things that that's at issue is that. It requires S to be. Reflected in the figure out how we might actually be contributing to the problem and that isn't necessarily our first inclination to think that I might be doing something. May Be to blame you Jay. Everybody. We might as well. Everybody else does. So you might as well blaming. Housi-. I WANNA share responsibility onto yet in. Back in the UK apart of this situation to if there's something that I might be doing that might be contributing to the situation you know that the Jays Capping we start from this. Is that okay first of all, when you hire people, most of us say only hire only the best and brightest. Bigger. So you had a good group of people coming in right and they were they were ready to go in then something's happened. So you can't just blame the people I. Mean we're really trying to force leaders say, okay. Let me take a step back and let me say, okay what's really going on here and is there anything that I might be doing? Is there something that I'm not understanding about the situation where I could actually address it with the with the employees and so I think that that's the hard part is people actually being it'll take ownership and that they might be a part of a the issue. So

The 3:59
The DNC and RNC are going virtual. What can we expect?
"So actually the coronavirus pandemic everything has gone virtual. We covered all digital conferences like Tho- launches, apples, WDC. In DNC are completely different animals Taco bell expecting to see well I. Think it's GonNa be a very, highly produced. Event just like it normally is but it's GonNa be really different because you know when they. When they usually do this, you've got like thousands of people in a huge arena you know you have people talking. And they're they're mostly talking to the to the people, the viewers and the audience. Sitting at home on their couches. Anyway. But you have that vibe you have that you know the people cheering it's it's like being in a live sporting event in a sense you know so like that's going to be lost a bit. Yeah. We've we've had instances with like the the NBA right they put up digital boards with with people that are virtually in I've watched the most games. It's definitely not. It doesn't really replicate the feeling of being at a game where the ambiance there I imagine a lot of the energy that would have been in those conferences have people been there. Is really kind of sucked away, right? Yeah and you know and that's really political conventions are basically like cheerleading events right? You know it's like the party faithful as there you've got these delegates from all around the country they're like really Gung Ho for their party and their candidate and they wanna like. You know just cheer their heads off and it's you know. So you know I think that energy is going to be a bit different but I'm also curious to see like what creative things they come up with right like like you mentioned the NBA thing like like are they going to do something like that? You know I mean? It'll be interesting to see how they approach it. Yeah. Have you got any kind of indication on on what they might do to create that excitement that is would be missing from having all those folks there. Yeah. So the the DNC they they have been, they've definitely said that they are going to try to involve people like regular everyday people. So I'm wondering if it is going to be something NBA like right where they have screens. Right there. But we'll definitely be having some like. Some people getting beamed in from all across the US whether it's you know. Politicians or or just SORTA your regular everyday folks who are like either live on video and a lot of like these pre produced videos people have been they've had this campaign where people are able to. Send in their videos like with prompts like I know Joe and talk about like why they're excited about Joe Biden and that kind of thing. So they're going to have that SORTA interspersed throughout the program. So it'll be interesting to see like how it all Kinda comes together. To DNC specifically, what what is that? GonNa look like will anyone actually be in Milwaukee? So there will probably be like a skeleton kind of crew in Milwaukee like I've heard that that Tom Perez, who's the chairman of the DNC was still planning to go to Milwaukee to gavel in the convention officially. But the big speakers you know like Joe Biden, who's the presumptive nominee he is not going to be there he's going to be somewhere in Delaware. Now, they've said he's not probably going to do it from his basement. So some place else in Delaware. In the Wilmington area where he lives. So that'll be interesting. I wonder how they they might dress up whatever venue he's in. You know like he was speaking with. Kamala Harris. You know the other day they've had actually a couple of speaking engagements and they've got the flags everywhere but like the backdrop didn't really look all that interesting to me. So it'll it'll I wonder how they're going to you know jazz it up so that it looks cool. How's the Brokaw can work? Yeah. So the roll call and by the way like I got to go to the convention in two, Thousand Sixteen, the roll call is pretty cool. Just in general when you're there in the room, there's like this vibe all the people stand up and they say, you know I'm from South Carolina and they were the whatever state and we pledge our ex delegates to. And so it's like an exciting moment. So it's going to be totally different this time 'cause they're all not going to be in the room but I you know they've said they're. GonNa. Kind of pop around all all the states and so you're probably going to have people from those states. Doing their call and I'm sure they're gonNA do something jazzy about like. You know I'm from Delaware. So it's like Delaware the first state in the nation. Allah. Probably say something like that I don't know. So it'll. We'll see. We'll see what about the NC I know there was a lot of back and forth about where was gonna be in whether it was go digital What is that GonNa was so that you know I think that's still to be determined right? Like they're still they haven't put out a whole lot of information about like what it's GonNa look like exactly. So I mean I want I wonder if some of this might change in the next week but. So far they are. Going to have a very reduced crowd in Charlotte. President trump will not be there to accept the nomination. In they're gonNa have like something like you know three hundred or so delegates there. So you know I don't know I don't know if they're going to try to do some things kind of like in in the arena although I think that would look pretty. bleak. If it's people, you know space really far apart. So I think that's still Kinda to be determined with what they're going to be doing it wear for folks who are watching these where can you check out the streams? So the DNC they've announced a whole bunch of places like you're gonna be able to stream, it live on youtube and facebook and twitter and And then the convention is officially you know airing from nine to eleven every night and all the broadcast channels will have it for the last hour. And and then they're gonNA have it on like TV and Roku and so they were going to be a lot of opportunities for people to stream it or. Even, to SORTA catch it on the networks got looking at some of the other challenges I mean we talked a little bit about the lack of energy. But what are the potential pitfalls who going virtual? Yeah. Well I mean we've all been watching. You know some of these cable news shows lately right like in sometimes you get like the guests who are like pixellated or their screen freezes. You know so I think that's going to be a challenge. You know you don't want somebody to be mid-sentence and all of a sudden they're face completely frees up. So that'll be a challenge. Yasser. Don't want it to look like a really boring call. With. With everybody with the bookcase in the background. So I think they'll have to figure out ways to to make it look interesting and you know. And not have any sort of technical glitches.

Chicago Tonight
14 people fatally shot over weekend in Chicago
"With more on proposed solutions to the spike in gun violence brandis. Paris by any standard June has been a brutal month for gun violence in Chicago this past weekend alone fourteen people were shot to death in Chicago, including two young children one year old, sincere Gaston in Inglewood and ten year old Lena, numerous and Logan Square this morning. Chicago Police Superintendent David Brown spoke about the weekend's violence. are struggled to make sense. Of the reckless gun violence. That continues to take the lives. Of Our young people. Throughout the city. The guns and the cowart. These evil bastards. Behind those guards. Caused the senseless loss. Of Life of life over the past weekend. Tonight as part of WTO firsthand initiative exploring gun violence in Chicago, we take a closer look at what's happening this summer in the city and efforts to curb the violence and he'll communities joining us are Vanessa Perry to reef director of training at the Metropolitan Peace Academy, which trains street outreach workers, Mauricio de as a west side street outreach worker for. Chicago and Ramon Hooks a southside street outreach worker for target area. Development, corporation, Mr Hooks, and Mr which say just graduated from the Metropolitan Police Academy last week. Congrats to the both of you on that and thanks to all of you for joining us. So. Let's let's talk a little bit about the difference in. The some of the numbers from June. Twenty, nineteen to June twenty twenty, so comparing the same time period, June first and June. Twenty second there were two hundred twelve shootings in two thousand, nineteen, compared to three hundred and sixty six shootings in the same time period this year, that's an increase of one hundred and fifty four shootings seventy two percents, if percentages helps, which sounds very significant. Ramon. Let's start with you. Please you do street outreach work in the communities that are most affected by violence. What are your thoughts on why this June has been so violent? Besides the fact that the pandemic that we all been locked down and don't say it has a is. There's no one thing. The fan damage being locked down the social media people been on now making up these coming up with different types of our, no, saying Argh, with people might comment on somebody's Beige, and they don't like it, and you know what I'm saying in his old historical beefs. You know saying India's newbies when someone is shot now. You got a whole nother B is is there's no one thing you know what I'm saying is like we find it all fronts right now. You know what I'm saying. We are here at dawn. Best can and I'm telling week. Is A new. Every day. What are what are your thoughts on why? This June is so violent? Ramon pandemic, just having just these speaking, you know whoever it is. The quarantine the current teeth, keeping people. You don't secluded their. You know their thoughts running you. Everything's. You know bodily. No put them there. WanNa go out, so it's the same thing with the social media. Everything at all comes together because. On the social media especially right during this foreign team is exceeded of past I mean everything goes for one somebody CDs not on I'll reach workers. We try to do what we cannot social lead us to the best of our knowledge, and to get information on there, but one fantasies are part. We can again no more than that so when they come outside especially right now through this space forward. They're getting Tacoma side just a little bit and get the taste of this warm air. People just don't know how to act and then DC one or not in the street and all. This! And we'll have a number. A number of children have been among the victims this month. We've all covered this journalists for some time. was there not code at some point you know between you know for example if you're out on the streets, and you see a member of the opposition with family members. To with hold your fire until they are alone. Did that code not exist and what happened to it, Mauricio. Along generation after generation kids and you know they came about to where they just don't. Like I I look at it, you know they don't respect the code. No more. There's no more law. There's no more respect for the families for children very now it's just about being gung Ho, and whoever's went you? They're going to get shower too, and I. Don't know where it is wh. Where did he? To shoot anybody which you know like. As a former gang member, it was like you didn't do that. You couldn't do none a day couldn't do nothing night. Then you know, and that's breaking respect, and now it's just it's just

Thank God I'm Atheist
Americans are Uncomfortable With Going Back to Church
"Survey. Oh. Good survey from taken by the American Enterprise, institute, has shown that sixty four percent of American churchgoers. Were somewhat uncomfortable or very uncomfortable with attending in person worship. Sixty four percent sixty four percent, in fact, what they found was basically only one group is Gung Ho on going back to Church and that's why evangelical 's. Right no surprise there if you know the news. Yeah if you add up there somewhat comfortable, and they're very comfortable's. It's. Sixty one percent of them are all about. Thirty. Four percent of them are very comfortable with going back to. Yeah because they because not only do they get to engage in the worship that is so important to them, but also they get to pony lives. Show us. What idiots we are. Yeah, Yeah so apparently. Even those who reported that their congregations offer actually offered. Worship last week, Fifty, six percent of respondents said they chose not to go. Yeah, and you know. I mean obviously like one of the hotspots repeatedly everywhere this Cova. Is seems like Church's just keep popping up like that was one of the first stories coming out of South Korea right was there was a church like a crazy colty church, but nonetheless. I think that's. Probably. But that was one of the hot spots, and that that was one of the big spreaders of Covid, nineteen and obviously we're seeing that in the United States. We're we're. We're just seeing it right like this is operatives These are the kinds of places that people who care about their health and their communities health. Should, be staying away from and a lot of Christians actually do agree with that depending on their denomination if you look at Black Protestants. And add their numbers up. Sixty eight percent are. Either somewhat uncomfortable or very uncomfortable. Well. Yeah, because it's because this thing is killing them in disproportionate numbers so. I can see why. Hispanic Catholics seventy three percent are are on the uncomfortable side. Really Yeah, yeah, that's that's. That's a number that means something. Yeah, and you're white mainline Protestants. It's sixty at three percent well. Yeah, I mean I'm you know talking to my mom hi mom, if you're listening. The other day, and she was saying that you know she. Attends, a free often attend an Anglican a Canadian Anglican Church She goes there mostly for the for the. For the free coffee I think anyway And music, doesn't she really liked the? It's the Camaraderie and the people. She loves the people there and I don't blame her for that tall any who? She said that they're not going to be going until like late in the fall at the earliest. Really. Yeah fantastic. That's not even an option, so I I mean they're. They're doing it right up there i. don't know about what what the Anglicans are doing down here, but. Well Lake. PISCOPO, here, so yeah. Definitely not Anglican. We broke off from that country. Diane exactly. Anyway. Yeah I just think it's kind of interesting. To contemplate re where people's this raises an interesting thing right like it does ask people where their priorities are right and this is something that is really supposedly really important to them going church right right and their belief in God and one of the things that they're God requires them to be active participants in their religious community. I would assume that's why they go right right and because why, like honestly, I mean God bless your mother and everything I guess friends. Get you there right like I can. But. Those people I think are trying to earn points in heaven. Right sure. And, so anyway, where was my? My point was my point. That's that's the new memoir. That's the title of your memoir now. I. Don't lose it that often. So my point is that. You know when you look at. Where these where people are putting their priorities, right? They're having to do this balancing act between their health. And God right and they're and they're and him parole needs for most people they're proving. They're proving that they are actually rational actors. They're choosing their health their choosing the tangible. They're choosing what is right in front of them over what? I mean the Evangelical. Christians there, the Rangers in this in this game right there. The good ones because they're not letting some dumb disease getting the way. They're God demand of them, and they're going in there doing yeah, and if they died they, they go to heaven and God's. Right and I heard that I've heard that quote. In meet. Why haven't I in articles I've Read I've seen that quote where people are just like like. Yeah, you know like if I get. It gets God's will. God's will be done. You know and it's like. Oh. Yeah, it's pretty. It's pretty

The Economist: The Intelligence
Swearing-in of new Israeli government delayed by infighting
"As both prime minister. Benjamin Netanyahu and then head of the opposition Ganz repeatedly failed to form a coalition. The political deadlock is over tonight. The pair will inaugurate a new unity. Government Mister Netanyahu will be prime minister for eighteen months before handing over to Mr. Gaunt's swearing in late by day after America's secretary of State Mike pompeo broke a travel hiatus to fly Jerusalem and meet with both leaders there. He discussed joint efforts to counter of influence in the region campaign that we have been part of To reduce the resources that the ayatollah has to inflict harm here and Israel and all across. The world has borne fruit. It has been successful. And we're GONNA stay added. There's still work to do what wasn't publicly addressed or Israel's plans for the West Bank mister. Netanyahu campaigned on promises to annex parts of the Occupied Territories. That's just one point of contention between his Likud Party and Mister Ganz's blue and white coalition as the long-awaited government gets down to work two political rivals who've been swearing in their campaigns not to trust each not to allow each other to be prime. Minister are now basically going to guarantee each other as prime minister over the next three or four years feffer. It's our Israel correspondent reporting from Jerusalem. Any guns in the parties supported him in arranging. This government will receive an equal number of ministers in cabinet ministers of Likud and the other parties which supported and it's supposed to have equal footing INC cabinet and both their prime minister and the ultimate primates and into the our against who will have those titles and swapped those titles eighteen months. Both of them have the power veto over the government's agenda so that's the basic framework of how this is supposed to work but obviously almost any kind of government decision policy could lead to a crisis one of the things that's lingered over this question for sixteen months. Is this corruption trial of Mister? Netanyahu faces how will that work under this unity government ten days from the swearing? Elvis new government now is scheduled to Face Jerusalem District Court in three charges of fraud one charge of bribery and now of course is denying all. These charges doesn't seem that he can evade his day in court and to make sure that the court system does hold to account the Justice Ministry has been handed to one of the many guns his allies. They're saying is going to ensure that the case goes ahead but we can expand to try and find various ways to erode and undermined the case against him. We're already seeing from various Internet proxies in the media very vicious campaign against the Attorney General. Who decided on the charges against him? And this will continue to be the undercurrent to the new government's first few months so assuming that this unity government can get past the corruption trial and get back to governing. How much faith do you have in them? Being able to stick together given how much mistrust there is between these guys. Well the distrust within this new government is endemic. And there's no question about it and gets into narrow. Spent sixteen months slagging each other off so suddenly beginning to work together. Maybe have a daunting prospect. But yes I remember. That guy has in the past. Been the commander of the Israeli army underneath also. He does have a history of working well together with the Asian. The new ministers in this government will be eager to get down to work and they really sick and tired of campaigning. For the last sixteen months is really politics has been in limbo so I think that despite the distrust of there is amongst them that they will get down to governing these over the next few Muslim tried to overcome whatever obstacles and dislikes they have for each other and another big question in Israel. Recently is the plan for annexation which seems to be going ahead of the coalition agreement between the could against his blue and white party does include the clothes that the issue of annexation as it appears in the peace plan proposed by Donald Trump back in January will be brought to cabinet and the parliament from the beginning of July. So that issue there and we know that gaunt's and some of his partners are not very enthusiastic about going ahead with annexing large parts of the occupied West Bank and that certainly is a potential minefield for this new government. But the real question is is now himself really eager? To Go ahead annexation. He's used this last year or so as an issue to rally his right wing base over the election. Campaigns is very risk averse leader. Despite his gung-ho image he doesn't really like to endanger the status quo so why go ahead and jeopardize that by pushing on annexation? I think we'll hear there ten hour continuing to promise on accession to his supporters but finding reasons to delay and then lot will depend on the outcome of the provincial November if Donald Trump news is the next administration is much less supportive of annexation than it. May Well Happen and is it that accession push the tacit approval of the trump administration. The reason why America's secretary of State's Mike Pompeo was in Israel yesterday his first trip abroad in nearly two months. So according to sources in Perez enter our that's not the reason he flew halfway around the world and his first international trips since the beginning of the pandemic according to compels remarks. What we've been hearing from people both on the Israeli and the American signs were in the meetings and main issue was actually Iran and the various concerns Israel and the United States have about escalations of tensions with Iran in the region and the other issue that compared brought up quite pointedly was China and America's concerns over China's lack of cooperation regarding cove nineteen and America's reservations with various projects. That Israel is cooperating with Chinese. Big Infrastructure Programs. Won't that they'd ministration. Wants Israel to freeze choices out of putting all that together. How likely do you think that this government will serve out its term as written so I think for the next year or so as the government staying together because nobody really wants to go back to election campaign mode again? This people have really exhausted. Elections at the same time is just beginning to emerge from corona virus shutdown. So I think for these at least twelve month period now the government will somehow stick together. The real question on this government's future rises towards the end of twenty twenty one when Netanyahu gates have to swap places and gates becomes. The prime minister would only be the ultimate prime minister. I think then we'll We'll see whether they can actually contemplate relinquishing power. But probably the next year year and a half Israeli politics will be relatively

They Call Us Bruce
Jeff & Phil Discuss Parasite's Historic Night at the Oscars
"Fans of the show know that we are. We are huge fans of the movie parasite Peres parasite parasite and this having this three weeks ago. Right but we are still feeling the glow off of parasites Huge died at the Oscars. The sweep it was. Yeah it was parasites just Night to shine in every major category was nominated was the story. I mean it was like the it was like this year's like every every Oscar. Your this is the story that comes out of it but it was like it's about this movie from South Korea coming and just blowing everybody away. I mean that's It's it's just an undeniably good film. And so I think it got. It's one of those. He's going Oscars where you know it. It was up all these major awards and certainly would get the foreign language or whatever. It's called the national feature right. Everyone's like that's you know that's a foregone conclusion but a lot of people were like. It should win best picture. It should win best director probably like maybe to invest director. But if there's probably not GONNA win best feature. That has never actually happened before right. We're going from never having seen a Korean film nominated for anything. Yeah right in the past and then all of a sudden having this one film win best picture best director best screenplay best original screenplay right and then also best or national feature and every single time the build continued with bond coming out again and again to thank everybody and probably get increasingly drunk. Charming is held by the way this guy I mean. He knew how to do award season like that whole circuit right but then every time we got up on stage is like through another charmer. Zinger at the audience. In Your Life. How can you give this guy all the awards you know? He's like unaffected. He's got a quirky sense of humor. I wanted to also shout out his interpreter and his interpreter. Sharon Choi is now the toast issues. I mean yeah she over. The course of the award season became also like a sort of minor celebrity in her own right right and so gained fan following. So I'm a fan. I'm if anybody else knows her we'd love to have her as a guest on the show hundred yet honestly I'm a fan of like just pretty much. Everybody who would anything into that movie? Yeah parasites key grips. Yeah best graphs. You know it's like it was. It was an end to end. Just glory of a film in so many ways and I think the thing that that it's most staggering for me is the degree to which I did not believe this was going to occur degree to which I was already pre apologizing on behalf of America and this this local awards show the Oscars because it seems so likely that the you know decades and decades of racist exclusion of Asian and asian-american stuff was going to continue and It just blew my face my skull. You know I I also was like I don't know by the time. Oscar night rolled around. I think people were pretty stoked about it about parasite a fever kind of hit the town And I'm speaking of someone who live in Los Angeles. So there's I mean like we marinate it. There's a there's they say that They're all these different. They're only there. Are there many seasons? But there's a war season so I was I was I don't know but I'd love allowed myself to feel like maybe this could happen. And then yeah and this probably setting myself up for complete crushing disappointment. And then I'd have something to complain about at the new Oscar but holy shit you know like at the end of the night and you're like Oh my God. There's a whole giant group of Korean setting on Stage Roy out. This is amazing. I believe Koreatown was was lit I mean my understanding is that bong the rest of the cast and crew did not make it to the Designated Party. That was until like one forty six. Am or something like that and then hit creatine afterwards. Yeah reporting is reported that they they shut down a restaurant and basically was there till six in the morning and well you know they deserved it and every every since I obviously was not an entirely undiluted moment of joy because you know it's something we talked about before but The awards went to Bong and went to the movie. They did not go to the actors deserved across the board. And the ensemble is so incredibly good and such a huge part of making this movie work yet. None of them were were recognized with a nomination individually right right right. I mean that's and that's been A. That's a trend. I mean any. Somebody pointed out that any any film that has been had nominated for multiple awards at the Oscars almost all of them have have been devoid of nominations for the actors right from Crouching Tiger to everything back to the last emperor saga millionaire life of Pi. It's like this is not. This is not a coincidence. Know what I mean so there is. There's something here where Asian performers Asian bodies are sort of like are invisible. Actually when it comes to sort of be recognized in this way I totally agree. I feel like there are a lot of reasons for it down to the sort of feeling in some ways that Asian films genre right even disregard. What kind of films are they actually are the the idea that Asian film is Genre? Not just Korean film or Japanese film attorneys when whatever but the Asian the relegates them to a category and a specific category that essentially flattens out the contributions required to make the film film right. Now I say this in part because I feel like the biggest reason these actors were not being reckoned. They're two huge reasons. Right one is that they were unfamiliar to Hollywood. Yeah as actress themselves we know. Hollywood is kind of a clubby place. Yeah if you've been nominated before you're more likely to be nominated again if you know. There's just a whole sense of expectation in the game right which is just like a crime considering someone like so gung. Ho is like you know. He's a national treasure. It right yeah. He's got a huge cannon of Eric shows an incredible amount of rain and yet I think the way they they see him as he did a great job in the sort of supporting actor role as part of an ensemble right like his own. Individual performance gets flattened out again. It's GonNa it's GonNa be funny because a lot of people are going to start like sort of discount on their path of discovering Korean cinema. Right this dude is in every movie for twenty years. But it's too late at least for for this award season but the other reason frankly is. I don't think that people know how to pronounce. People's names I or or write them properly and they've as a result and also frankly they don't speak English fluently in some cases loonies other people and it means that it takes more effort. You can actually give them press i. It was easier. I think for for Neon to sort of hype the film overall as a phenomenon. Then it was to actually try to do a serious effort to to get you know acting awards and I'm not putting it on them. Yeah Sort wasn't it wasn't a neon Yeah it would have been so you know. I'm not putting on them. But the way that the press works is Kinda need to be fed and if it's not easy for them to eat if they have to actually shell the shrimp Kinda pull the meat out of the crab legs. Then they won't eat it regards. How great the buffets metaphorically but they did walk away with the SAG. I mean they on some the Tom Board. Yeah but that's I recognize as actors. I mean it's recognizing their good actors is not recognizing collectively. That good acting happen right right. But it wasn't recognizing them as individuals being this stripping their individual Surv- identities outright. Yes it was applauding the Asians. Yeah and again. It's great and you know. I'm glad that they actually got that recognition collectively but let's also acknowledge that it's not just them but there were many performances by Asian actors in predominantly non English speaking films that effectively went right under the radar for the Academy Award

Motherhood Sessions
Imposter Syndrome
"Today I'm talking to a woman. We're calling harper. She's in her late twenties and lives in Virginia five years ago. She married her first husband but shortly after he died in a car crash a few years later trying to move on she joined a support group for other young widows. It was facebook group of all things. Young widowed and dating is that it was called through. This group. Harper met the man who would become her second husband a widower with a five year. Old Daughter. The little girl was three when she lost her mom to bring cancer. I think I say this jokingly but it's really serious. There are a lot of people in our relationship. There's you know my dad spouse. There's his dead spouse And then there's the little girl in the middle of it now harper's trying to embrace the role of step mom while also honoring her stepdaughters loss. I think that I always feel so uncertain. I question everything Whether or not I should be the one to tuck her in or whether I should be the one that is disciplining of behavior Or even giving affection like my the one that jumps in when she sad or she falls down Like how much. I don't WanNa overcompensate for me not being her biological mother for me having this new role in her life yet. I also don't want her to feel separate from to you. Know much about her mom. Yeah I've tried really hard to learn about like personality in her quirks and what she didn't didn't like because it means a lot to me to keep her alive. are stepped or my stepdaughter. Gra. Would he know about about this woman that she was fun and joyful That she could be very stubborn but she was always ready to Kind of what? They always say that if she wanted to do something she did it. So whether that was like booking a cruise out of nowhere or like going on a trip to Disneyland like whatever experience it was like she just kind of grabbed a life by the horns and brought the people she loved with her and she just kind of had this infectious happiness at mean. You know I know that. Like no one's perfect memories. We share like the ones who passed on Lake. Gets a little like rose-colored sometimes you. She was not without fault but like I do wonder often if she would be proud or happy that I'm the person who fills this role now Sometimes when I'm you know losing my patience Lake would which she be. Impatient right now is. It is a truly a hard moment owners. Because they don't have this natural maternal bond and that I'm like I feel that I have to fight For that connection and for me to like want this life with her family that she should have never left you know So that's part of the impostor fear. Oh Yeah like I. I am being loved in the way that she is supposed to be being loved and You're filling her shoes and you're not sure if you deserve it. I feel sometimes that in filling her shoes and I I struggled to assert my own personality. Maybe Or that I like things differently. You know they even things like football. I don't enjoy the sport and she made an effort to learn to enjoy it. You know with my husband and they have great memories and I you know. I don't see myself being that gung-ho ever and even little things things like that are enjoying wine you know having a glass of wine at night. I don't likewise makes me tired. But that was the thing that they shared and You know we share different things in. It's it's hard to sometimes figure out what is equality that I would really like to emulate from her mothering. Her her time as a wife and like what is what is my particular stamp Does your husband talk about her ya all the time. And how do you feel when he's talking about her? I think most of the time I'm just kind of there to witness it you know and I'm there to learn I think there may be moments when I fall a little jealous or isn't floors if I was in a shadow and I don't think there's any way that I couldn't But he's had the strength and the emotional ability to sit with me through those things and to give me the space to work on it on my own but I also understand that I do the same thing like I share memories of my first husband and I have surprising moments of grief. That just out of nowhere that he has to sit with me through and How did your relationship with your husband kind of linger in your mind as you were starting? This new relationship is very hard. Especially in a physical sense to Inara to cass or to be more intimate like it was Not that I felt that I was cheating but just the difference. had a filter from I was just so accustomed to his body. Even like a hand my hand on his shoulder. sometimes grab my husband shoulder like grays against him. I expect to feel like the wiry hardness Linke -ness of my first husband's body and then his is completely different. Yeah and it can be shocking. Like sometimes that's devastating to feel the difference in all of a sudden like I'm just thrown into this moment of grief We didn't fall out of love with who we lost Lake. We're still in love with them. And I think that's a hard thing for people understand like we didn't move on. We kind of decided to move forward together.

On The Ledge
plant health, herbs and sustainability with Maya Thomas
"So before I forget Hoyas Hoyas who is the one I forgot is the lovely Hoya Australis. Lisa how Oh gosh forget this plot while he was sitting on my kitchen window sill where normally don't keep toys so I think it just got a little bit hidden in forgotten when I was pulling those plants together. Four my tour But it's a really nice plant. My one is a fairly spokesman that I picked up. I bought it from North One. God Center Regular Listen. I'm a bit of a fan of that particular shop so this was bought their last year. Some time I can't quite remember when there's a smallish plant I think it's actually to cuttings in apart thought and so far it's going up. The stems haven't got long enough to the point where they start to drop down but the foliage on this plant is he's really lovely. If you can imagine a leaf that starts out its margins in the darkest darkest possible green and then in any regular random patton becomes ever lighter to move towards a Pale Green Line Green Center. It's glossy it's leathery. It's a lovely Hoyer leaf and the nice thing about this plot also is that the new leaves come through this rubble of carmine. Mind pink color and you do get flashes of carmine pink in the League as well and in the stem depending on how much light the plants are in so this is really really nice. Hoyer I can't wait for this to get bigger and start trail. It's an easy one I would say it's as easy as you regular Konno's is and so I think it's also fairly easy to get hold of now so it's one of those kind of entry heuer's that will really get you into this particular genus of plants. So I apologize. Lisa forgetting Getting you or do love you very much and yeah if you've got a lease bigger and more developed with lots of pictures so I can see what my plants GonNa turn into so then we go. That's number thirteen. I don't think it's going to be long. Before my recollection becomes even bigger. I just discovered a website in the Netherlands. Is that sells loads of rooted and unrooted Harare. Cuttings there's also somebody in the UK who sells on Ebay so as soon as the weather warms up. Yup Yup I think I might be getting my collection somewhat. Yeah I'm Gung Ho crazy right now but I just can't get enough these plants

The Big Story
Why Gen Z is being labelled Generation Anxiety
"So it's twenty twenty. We're officially in the next great decade. But I won't lie to you. It's hard to be optimistic. About what the future sure holds a new report says home. Affordability is a growing problem for the average Canadian families. A new study of wildfires around the world from the Amazon rainforest to California says human activity is raising temperatures and adding to the threat. Job Market is tough and it's especially tough for college graduates. A huge number of them are actually working at jobs. That don't even fire a college degree if you're a millennial or a boomer or one of those rare rare Gen xers you might be able to get away with blaming this pessimism for the future on your age and life experience but the same can't be said for generations the young bucks of the future. Today's teens and young adults they should be excited about the next ten years keyword should in reality party they aren't instead they're being labeled generation anxiety anxiety is nothing new among young people but Gen Z.. is worried about vote. Much bigger and more pressing issues than previous generations. So how much of it is justifiable. How is it affecting young people right now? And what can other generations due to be more helpful and understanding I'm Stephanie Phillips in for Jordan Heath Rawlings. This is the big story. Johanna Chisholm is a digital. It'll producer at the Toronto Star. She looked into why Gen Z.. Is being labeled generation anxiety. Hydra Hannah. Hello how are you Stephanie. I'm good thanks so when we first reached out to you to get you on the show you said that this topic you know really interested you What about this topic interested you so much for sure I'll admit that it was assigned to me by an editor. So I don't WanNa take full credit for it But what I was given the opportunity to sort of dig into this topic. I was Gung gung-ho because partially previous reporting that I had done kind of focused on Internet culture in youth and so I had come across bits of anxiety in teens in adolescence revolving mostly around like self harm on social media accounts but when I was given the opportunity to dig into why it is that the more broad generation is experiencing anxiety at such high rates than other generations. I thought this is an awesome time to go on. This and I had the space to do. It hadn't hadn't editor support to do it so that's really why I was really interested in digging into it so you wrote that Gen Z.. is going to be remembered as this. This generation anxiety. So what is the reason. Most recent data tell us about the levels of anxiety for this generation. There was a lot of really interesting. Thank studies that came out about this. The one that I thought was most relevant to our readers that are you know Toronto Ontario focused Cam each study. That came out that she saw a fifteen percent increase in youth. Anxiety between two thousand thirteen and two thousand seventeen and that was in the Self reporting so again. There are problems with that but but this huge jump to see just in five years. That teens are self reporting that they themselves are suffering from severe psychological distress which is characterized as either depression or anxiety symptoms and then there was an EPA study that came out from the American psychological association that sort of mirrored that data in Americans Americans students that it was doubling from two thousand ten to two thousand fifteen which is in that same sweet spot. We were talking about with the two thousand ten being this sort of anxious decade So that that was confirming in the numbers and then the part that I was assigned tasked with really doing was going to the kids and the teens and actually speaking speaking with them to find out what's going on with you guys not that you can really contrast it with the before but just to get their takes on why they're feeling anxious and what's going on there air so so who did you talk to And and what did they tell you about their anxiety So there was a large group of teens that reach out to me. Initially Ashley. It was kind of hard getting you know. Anxious people to come forward and talk about their most intimate feelings about things but eventually I was able to get a hold of Some teens from ages fourteen to seventeen who are in high school and junior high to get thirsty takes on it from more to less inside of things and then I was able to get teens. Who are in the university level? So twenty two twenty three because Gen Z.. Cuts off twenty-three. In most situations some people push it to be twenty-five five. I think but I think most people agree like Pew Research Center Says Ninety Seven to two thousand twelve. Is Jesse because you had to be. I guess like sentient went for nine. Eleven for that event to be characterized as millennial and yeah so I spoke with a bunch of different teens all who were experiencing different kinds of anxiety Heidi and kind of different levels of awareness about it so once I spoke with he didn't even really characterize his symptoms as anxiety because he didn't even really know that it was anxiety he was just looking out at. What are my prospects after I graduate and he no? He's an ECON student at the University of Toronto. A student and really good and pretty sure. He's good for for jobs after graduation but even he was looking at job banks Canada every single day and was like my heart just feels heavy. I was getting Migraines at the library and couldn't really like put into words why he was feeling these things and then when someone asked him like hey do you think it's anxiety he was like. Oh maybe I don't know whereas other students I spoke with reveal airy capable of putting the words to what they were feeling so I think that also speaks to level of awareness ernest. That's out there for young people that previously wasn't there right and I spoke with a climate activist in high school. who had some very powerful awful things to say for seventeen year old that I quite honestly was blown away by but she was sort of just experience or explaining how you know she would talk to her dad about it was like for him growing up and the contrast between what she's looking at and what he was looking at? which was you know? Buy a home get a job or get a job by home. Live in the suburbs CBS. Pay Off your mortgage and she's looking at it like. How am I going to afford school? I don't even know if I can with all these. Oh stop cuts with all of these different stressors in the economy. Hey how can I even think about getting to the point where I'm getting a job or so much even buying a house There's a lot lot in there. Yeah those are big issues. Yeah complicated issues. What is research? Tell us about the world that these young people are well. There was a lot And part of the issue had Haad reporting it was like I'm packing it all into one article because you know you look at the world that these kids are walking into the world is on fire quite right literally at their feet. A precarious work is a huge issue. For them one in ten Canadians I believe stats candles. Reports that are part of the GIG. Economy and precarious work isn't just GIG. Work present as contract work or part time work but there's just an increasing amount of this non secure lifestyle that these other parents have There's also also the retreat of democracy that we're seeing fake news You know just social media technology all of these different things it's the cacophony of things. Just being shutdown these kids throats. So it's it's a lot that's To unpack for someone. Who's you know this vulnerable age group? Who are now between the ages of eighteen take twenty three to accept just digest and be like okay? Well maybe I won't be able to get a job and maybe I won't be able to afford a house and all those things that basically secured cured having good quality of life aren't going to be attainable. Well I I was talking about it. With other producers on our team and a lot of them expressed russell. They had feelings of anxiety when they were in high school or university. But it wasn't about these like big issues news about things that were kind of in control like their friendships or short term goals. Like you know. What University am I going to go to our? What job am I going to guide? Or what skill am I going. Go into that kind of thing. So what makes the situation for Gen Z.. So so different. Why are they concerned with these big issues? I will say that I think technology definitely is playing a large role in it. Part of the the Kwanza have with like pointing our fingers right technology to be the thing that's causing us is sort of a knee jerk reaction to say. Oh you know. Phones and cell phones and social media are causing all these woes and our youth because that sort of rationale has been applied to previous generations. When you Komo TV was causing it? We always point our finger at exactly social media digital world share But I definitely think it plays a role and I was speaking with a a researcher in the United States who sort of studies the role of technology and family life. Okay and she was explaining how not just technology but the way the information nation the sheer quantity of information that is just constantly available at your hip and just a moments away versus previously when you could kind of choose to not be turned the TV on and you could choose to have the radio off. That's not an option so much for teens The other thing that I'll point out that in some of the feedback that I received from Just readers who are of those generations you know the the boomers the Gen xers they were pointing out the stressors that they

Planet Money
The Energy Bar Revolution
"So if you've recently watching the energy bar section of the supermarket you might be surprised rather overwhelmed by the number of choices for starters there are hundreds of different types of energy bars which is kind of crazy if you think about their protein bars and paleo bars whole thirty in vegan and gluten free and cake how infused with much of patter there is probably in sheep are out there for each and everyone of us in that whole revolution it really got started in the nineteen nineties with clif bar and if you for previous episodes of the show you might have heard our interview with Gary Erickson who actually invented this cliff bars well in the early two thousands I can came up with a pretty simple concept that shockingly was really out there in the world it was an energy bar made from two or three Ryan gradients like almonds or cashews all bound together with dates no armors may not seem like a big deal today right you can get them for any much anywhere any seven eleven but back in the day they were kind of revolutionary and how she even came to inventing them to building this brand well was no direct path Lara never intended to start her own business or even to sell a product she grew up in the Denver area her parents ran a pretty successful high end clothing store and water was really into sports she was actually good enough to make the UFC women's volleyball team after she graduated from college with a degree in psychology she wasn't really sure what to do so she came back to Denver and got a job as a social worker and she started to work with kids and teenagers who needed help it was hard I mean just emotionally difficult job it was intense it was always chaotic we were on call every six weeks I'd cut this is at a time right to carry a pager around remember the pager days and if the pager went off at two in the morning because somebody ran away from our tree but facility you had to answer the phone call but it was it was intense work and to see you know fifteen year old girls for actually thirteen year old girls with kids and I had to manage their care with the judicial system I went to court a lot I made recommendations it was one of the most stressful jobs I've ever had in my life and I was in my early twenties how long did it take you before you get burned out like a year and a half so survey your half you're doing this and you just decide this is not this is not for me I'd I knew I needed to change what the landscape look like so I wanted to help these kids but I wanted to do it in more of a recreational component I didn't want to feel like I was the police all the time and so I became a community involvement leader and I got these kids involved in the community it was really fun I mean to this day I still think about these children I wonder where they are what's happened what they're doing so during this time that I was being a social worker working as a social worker I was also cultivating this passion for natural foods how did that happen well so let's go back to college college volleyball ours our coach had a rule of no sugar and no red meat so at the time I was totally in the junk food I was eighteen years old you know my favorite place to eat with any fast food restaurant you can name and then I also have studied stopping eating sugar and no red meat it was really an interesting experience so I start feeling better so that was the first label that went off for me boom so then I started thinking to myself in the background of going through this whole experience and feeling better I thought I don't know I love natural foods this makes such this is common sense to me why don't people know about this why isn't somebody teaching us out the food and so my passion started to build so I guess it at a certain point you stopped working with kids and and did you find another job or did you did you kind of start just like she said think about what you do what you want to do well I knew I had an excitement and passion for natural foods I just didn't know how it was going to make a transition between being a social worker and natural foods I needed to find the courage to take a leap of faith and somehow some way I figure that out for myself and I left my marriage I left my job and decided I'm gonna go back to school and I'm the study I want to get internet traffic medical school and and that's about things like like natural like homeopathic remedies and stuff yes so I'm on my path of taking classes and I made a friend of mine at a different my now one day eating at the help local health food store reading lunch and he drags me to this raw food class and I have one of the most amazing meals I've ever had in my life for this class and I thought wow fast foods are kind of amazing and it just never had occurred to me and then I went back to Colorado over Memorial Day weekend to visit one of my dearest and oldest friends and I went hiking and I was just kind of eating a trail mix and thinking of food and raw foods and thinking about moving to Seattle and all of a sudden I'm on this mountain in this life goes out for me and I think why isn't somebody made something of fruit nuts and spices like something very just pure simple real foods but is portable and convenient but it tastes indulgent like you shouldn't be eating it like junk junk food I mean I don't know that day at that moment it was like this surge of energy I got a good feel this excitement over an idea it's not like I hadn't had ideas before every people are walking around everyday with ideas for whatever reason and that day in that time and all those little experiences that builds up I I just felt what did you like run home and and and and started like writing things down or trying pictures or mortgage just kind of Mull it over for old for awhile so I read other mountain I got it in a book and I started writing down ideas and then when we got back to Denver I thought how can I take fruit nuts and spices turn them into something really exciting and I would get ideas from highs and cookies and cakes and I think okay how do I take cherry pie it make it just get my Cuisinart basically a raw raw and processed food and make it taste like cherry pie apple pie or banana bread or what have you so I'm just imagining this because I do a lot of cooking and you're in your kitchen with your Cuisinart I'm thinking you put a bunch of updates and like that's in there and get the ball rolling on the queen of the sticky like like sticking a ball of a mass and then when you would like to take it out with your hands and like I would roll it out with a rolling pin and then I got a cutter and I would like a cutter and I would cut it out can you catch and and I would make samples I mean batch after batch after batch and did you have any of your own ship any cash just to sort of asking her to help you out in that year while you were not you know we're getting a salary how did you hear bells within about a week I realized I had I had a little bit of money saved up and then I thought start this business but I have to work I have to get a job you know yeah so foods opened their first store in Denver at exactly the same time and I started seeing the building go up in the in in the neighborhood I grew up in actually and I thought hi I'm gonna get a job with them I'm gonna work in their nutrition department doing what I love but I'm gonna figure out the business and how it works I I got a job in the new nutrition department doing what I love which was working around all the nutrition products and it was one of the S. decisions I ever made so at what point did you think yourself this is really going to be a big big deal like this is people gonna want one by these I'm not sure I ever thought that it was such a gradual progression so I first you know got my recipes together and I would give them out to friends and then friends would say I would buy this and that that little tidbit of asking me to buy it would make me feel so excited and motivated to get to the next place which was how in the world and in the manufacture these things yeah where am I gonna get dates and almonds and cherries and at the time I started questioning am I actually gonna do this searchers can work for whole foods they don't just do not and just just fine how are you just like sort of funding this business like finding greens and stuff this is we're just using your own money you know I had a job a whole foods and then I had a credit card and were you nervous or anxious I don't know I I would have moments where I would be really gung ho and I would all kinds of great information and a month would go by and I would find out about a piece of manufacturing equipment were just little things and I would be so motivated and somebody want to buy bars and I'd make them at a batch of bars in these little ziploc bags in a little Chinese takeout box and and I would they would pay me like twenty two dollars or something for a box of ours and I would think wow and then another month to go by where I couldn't get anywhere I felt like my feet were stuck in the mud and then I would just get really I'm motivated and nothing would happen and this went on for the three year period between my idea phase and when I actually launched this is your path in life and you have to go for it and embrace it and make it happen

Art Beauty
Everything You Need to Repair Summer Hair, Skin and Nails
"Remember your Selfie Bockel with the bless when you stayed at my house yes so I was trying to do a random act of kindness risk because one of the girls of the salon wanted to try as Makka Macho tea with Mac much so she was like all Gung Ho she wanted to try. Try was like all. I Have Amazon prime. I'll get it for you forgetting. You need a minimum order of Lake for free delivery. I'm like looking you like it depends on the item true. It was four ninety nine. I'll maybe what is it. What is the minimum. I feel like I think it's it's like this team. Maybe it's fifteen. You're right that sounds about right so I jumped and got some scrubs. Somebody's GRUBS and I found by accident at at whole foods these they're called Pasha soap company and its creamy whipped soap with calming arniko extract. That's as the calming one. It's it's whipped soap with exfoliating minute wait so you got it at on Amazon Prime at whole whole foods I was thinking trader. Joe's I was confused. Got It. Yes you got it through Amazon prime from whole foods totally get it at whole foods. You don't have to be a primary known to you know we love him. Okay but is one hundred percent knockoff of wet. You loved in my bathroom is while the lemongrass one. which is the charcoal clarifying sort here? Oh Dog Nas smelling right. Now is cucumber seaweeds taking feel so it's a little too little ready but when water hits it at ladders like unbelievable. Oh this charcoal lemon grass magic bliss Heiferman. Why would they call it charcoal lemongrass. Lemon Grass peppermint now lemongrass definitely Jessica Simpson moment like his lemongrass pepper may thing you dyed my hair brown otherwise people would know the truth okay so you can get this on at whole foods or Amazon Private Pacha so company and it's the we're we're smelling all they have to clarify one. which is charcoal lemongrass Intikhab more though the best was like six other sense six other? There's a law in the line this one Dead Sea mud smelling Dead Sea man. I'm excited because I think that was going to take my spray. Spray Tan off how you like that one. I think so I think I will because I think like this like I'm on the last Hurrah of the Spray Tan at the little blotch so it's time for me to a hack it off. Isn't it just like tumor. lovie immerse over so is this summer by youth by the way. Oh no forty four 401 happy birthday so great in fact by the time all listening to this I will be gallivanting somewhere between Mykonos in Florence so don't cry from Argentina. Yeah no looking so bad but forty so anyway. I'm going to talk about my shelf which I found from my other travels this summer approved by Ryan and I want you to know I really go to Ryan all the time and my can I use this this on my hair so I was traveling and I needed a curling iron but when you travel internationally even if you have a converter you need to have have hot tools that can take to the dual voltage so t to twenty volt or two forty volt depending on where you are my good old T. three curling. You're not one ten I already blew one of those out once and it was like one hundred and fifty bucks to replace. Oh Mama wasn't making that mistake again so I found this also so on Amazon it is by Medina M. A. D. E. N. I A. to one hair. Straighten are and curler travel curling flat iron duo voltage. It has the ceramic plates tormo lean. I was worried that it might find my hair Ryan. You gave me the okay yes but I said be careful when it all turned on by accident. If you turn a curling iron on in you go to use it as a flat iron and you touch the outside you you're we're. GonNa bring a so so I want to say that to basically it's not to areas that you turn you turn this thing on and probably if you had a more expensive one it would be but this was twenty nine at third 29.99 great by it gets my seal of approval so you turn this on the whole barrel heats up and there's like a little little switch on the side that you push one way if you want it to be a crawling arm with like the clip that locks and it locks it so that you can clip it and then if you push it the other way the curling rolling aren't splits down the middle and opens up and then is your flat iron. It's brilliant. I don't I didn't understand why they don't make all of them like this but I'll tell you girls else. You need to flat iron your hair from the very top. This is not going to be for you because if you think about a curled barrel when you open it up you have to leave a little space because the outside of that curling iron we'll bring you right so now for your hands they do make protecting gloves they usually come with the wands and they come with a crawling but you can get those on Amazon to Lampton voles glove coverage. I just got a silly wand at Costco on the go and it had like these cute little like finger gloves. I was like okay. I'm still going to burn my pinky when I'm looking at the at the pictures that they have is their display the grow with curly hair you can totally do that and I did that this girl with the straight hair you can't get straight from like an inch away from your head down because crime yeah but but it's great but a mini thought iron could still do routes it could but let's let's be honest when you're traveling or at least when. I'm traveling internationally now. I need all the space I can get either so this is a godsend. It's two in one and if you need your hair that straight like you pull it back in a ponytail out. Oh you sat your hair like an abundance for the first half of the days that it's straight at the root yeah also the the Carribean Express that you did for me. Yes die you love it really glad it's so great and it's part of the reason I wanted to talk about all of the stuff that we did over the summer yeah all of the negative if things to our hair to our skin all of the abuse it's not that it's negative all the abuse that her hair skin now body takes will. I will tell you I make so so much money sep- September because every single client now we jumped because of your birthday. We really did the Shebang on your hair so you don't till that way right now but everyone else comes in semi charon goes my hair feels like crap yep rights so oh. I have this like this overhaul hair thing and I think everybody needs at least two inches off yeah cut it cut it off two inches and then lowlights lowlights or rich in the tone a little bit and lowlights as a reaction to the highlights the brassiness talking about also your hair gets really bleached out from the Sun yes it. I don't care if you're a Brunette. I don't care if you're a redhead. I don't care if you're blonde it. Everything's light so laureen marine and or the saltwater exactly so runs ten foils of lowlights evenly spurs her head or just paint a few piece paint a few to pieces of lowlights through your hair and then conditioning treatments and continuing it at home for like two weeks and your hair will be back to normal. No we had done the Ola plaques yeah about that in an old episode I actually had it as one of my shelf is because I liked it. You bought it at Sephora. I think it was like thirty thirty bucks but they do an insulin treatment with that they do so. It's an oil base treatment. It goes in your color. Okay 'cause then you bleed. Chuck is if you're getting into the low lights is at the request of possible. Shore can absolutely request. Olo Plex in your lowlights and you can apps now. They have some take home treatments as well that are bomb right so they're a little heavy. They are a little bit goes a long way. I like to number three which is the number six which is like a new. They've come out with a seven yeah because six was not great. Well it was heavy wasn't good for you. Good for some okay. So what do we think about carrot and I was surprised when I came to you. Midsummer was like I want to. Redo the carrots and again and you're like girl. You were living your best life. If you're in the saltwater you're in the pool. That's not good for the Carrington at all what strips at the salt it yeah it. It's it's a coating on your hair. That's going to take the coating off faster. Is something that we might WanNa do again in the fall or is it like give it a rest. Give it a rest. You have a definite you have two coats on your hair the lousy personally but I'm saying like for other people do care to normally and you can do you can do a full cartoon treatment and you can follow it up with expressed. Don't don't do it again. Come fall chill out. You'RE GONNA break your hair off of it. You're like other people can do it amber back away from the Carrington model. Oh okay so while we're on the topic of hair. I do want to address hair removal because the fall the fall is the best first time to start your hair removal. How ever you have to make sure that your summer Tan has completely faded. Yes because when you're going link to do any sort of laser treatment the laser is attracted towards that dark pigment and if your Tan it's not going to be able to tell the difference between your skin and the unwanted pigment and you're going with Burns but we do know that it takes ten full months to have a full six treatment cycle of hair removal because you're going every six weeks except this is a good time to book for. Let's say act HCT one or if you're really really good and you didn't get any sun on you can start it now but if there's even a little bit and I know that because listen I wore SPF. I slapped it on. I was at fifty and seventy being in sunny locations. It doesn't matter it really doesn't so okay. Let's actually talking about the skin and the skin damage image. You actually look good though thank you. We're really careful. I am I yes. I'm I'm insane I I don't Tan I burn pink or get read and then so my tan is always sprayed onto always say I say here all the time so for me you turned on me onto super groups. Vail love it the invisible the invisible so I always do I do that that I do a little makeup that I spray the supergroup supergroup like makeup setting spray with SPF again. You told me that won't listen. I believe in layering SPF because when I went to Aruba I was using the super goop full disclosure. It says that you need to reapply it and I how reapply when you have makeup on so that's why did the spray because you know what the Super Group is. Invisible commands. You can put it on her makeup but I'm talking about over. I don't work to the beach to the ball. I had a hat on and larynx. SPF never about idea but if you are going to be in a sunny place you also need to make sure to

Hard Factor
Nuke Mars? Elon Musk seems serious about plan to terraform the red planet
"Future emperor of the world elon musk is up to his crazy antics again. Boys and girl on thursday ilan tweeted a simple but effective message nuke mars. Let's which i immediately re tweeted with common hell yeah but it turns turns out that he lonzo reasoning for wanting to nuke mars our neighbor to the right aren't the same as mine. I used to destroy it. I just wanted to shut down the aliens from getting any big ideas but he has some other dumb science reasons for one anouk. Mars and i'll get into your apparently mar mosk is really gung. Ho about this whole colony on mars thing which he thinks could be accomplished by unlocking the carbon dioxide trapped inside martian ice rock and soil so musk's theory is dropping one or more big ass bombs uh-huh on that red motherfuckers polls it would unlock the co two in the polls in the ice and <hes> it'd be released creating more habitable atmosphere

Talking Tech
Tesla and women - yes, they do love them too
"Hiring is challenging but there's one place you can go where hiring is simple and smart that place is ziprecruiter where growing businesses connect to qualified candidates try it for free at ziprecruiter dot com slash tech talk ziprecruiter the smartest way to hire hey everyone jefferson graham you're listening to talking tech really interesting new story in usa today about women and tesla cars some hernandez steam buying them because they feel these electric cars like toys while we just happened a happy female tesla owner without she has two of them michelle mall tae she's the consumer usa today let's hear her take on tesla in females well you know it it is a wonderful car i'm enjoying driving it ensures to some degree it feels like a toy but it's a it's an amazing technological tool you know that i have at my disposal now you but let's talk about the reaction of the story okay so you're you've been hearing from a whole bunch of women today oh boy have we been hearing from folks 'em you know there are very passionate owners of tesla plus end there's one particular group that i'm i am a member of the a facebook group that's called tesla divas it is exclusively women an there are some very a passionate views about what they interpret the story just say an and they feel miss casts 'em the appeal to them they do not fields of tesla toys they don't 'em you know just as gung ho an excited cited about the tesla is as men in these forums are you know women are looking at them in the same way as a some of the think it's a sexy vehicle some of them think it's more practical vehicle a the car additional trunk space in the front that is very appealing to a lot of folks 'em in fact one of the responses was hello off wrong 'em an andy assumption that women are perplexed by the technology or not drawn to it 'em some of them found untrue you know 'em and also the v the detail that cars may be registered to their spouses 'em but it doesn't mean there isn't doesn't mean they're not driving it okay so we should just closed by talking about these mess that women don't like games women don't like tack women don't like remote controls women don't like fancy tv's that been with us for years now that's really played out in the stories is very apps yes an end to borrow someone else's term that's fake news 'em as my recent trip to e3 proved you know girls game we women love are games as well as met as much as the men do 'em we love our cars as much as arm as much as men do 'em you know whether it's a tesla or truck you'll find women there as passionate as as the guys who wound up to just maybe with softer boyce's sometimes sometimes michelle multi consumer editor for usa today thanks for joining us here on talking tech i'm jefferson ram we'd love to hear from you i'm at jefferson graham on twitter michelle is at kimball k l h m h l t k i s up police described talking tech wherever you listen online audio and i will be back tomorrow with another quick hit from the world of tech hiring used to be hard it was and still is one of the biggest challenges businesses face before it meant dealing with endless stacks of razz amaze flipping through them and hoping the perfect candidate would jump out at you end the manual review process wasn't any easier but in today's high tech world hiring can be easy and you only have to go to one place to get it done ziprecruiter dot com slash tech talk with their powerful matching technology ziprecruiter scans thousands of residents to find the most qualified contenders for your job

The Jump
Anthony Davis will play rest of the season
"Got some breaking news on Anthony Davis earlier today. Pelicans coach Alvin gentry asks for eighty status for tomorrow night against the Pacers. And gentry said he's playing tomorrow, which I mean is on its face, except Brian you, and I were both so surprised by this the week before the all star break had gone so poorly for everyone involved. He did suffer a minor injury. Didn't you think everyone was gonna find a way to slowly back out of the room on this one? Well, there has been renegotiation over the last few days. And apparently they haven't come to an understanding yet. Look, nobody's happy about this. Anthony Davis unhappy the pelicans aren't happy, Adam silver, even said, this is a bad situation. Now, I think it's they think can can there be a terms negotiated where frankly everybody can save face. In addition to the fact that you want to clean up the situation. I mean, honestly, I'm just starting to Anthony Davis drama. Gazan are going to the play offs make up your mind. What you want to do with this guy? You wanna plan you want to sit in like make up your mind how the players on the team and the coaches through. Like, I'm telling you organization and Anthony date make up your mind that y'all wanna do 'cause y'all are messing with us to figure this out it he did say Anthony Davis did say we can half ago. We don't know how feels today I want to play a basketball player. I don't want to sit for the next four months, plus the summer, and everything how would you feel if you were him would all this drama? Make you want to just go play go home and play pick up there. I mean, if I'm healthy I would wanna play. I don't want to sit down for four or five months and just work out. You know that entire time. So I have to give with the organization and find out what is best for myself and for this team and moving forward, you could see though like the first game that this arrangement was in place. Hillock like thirty four points in twenty five minutes. He was all gung ho and then the games went on. It started wearing on him and you could see his production going. Crunch time game. He had three points is ugly