35 Burst results for "Hagen"

Kurt Schlichter Shares His Thoughts on GOP Sen. Tim Scott

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:28 min | 8 months ago

Kurt Schlichter Shares His Thoughts on GOP Sen. Tim Scott

"Cut 40. I want your reaction play cut 40. Do you think the FBI do you still believe and trust in the FBI to do its job, even with a former president in a nonpartisan way? Or do you believe as a former president says that FBI is executing a witch hunt? Well, we've had the FBI before the judiciary committee just in the last two weeks trying to figure out why they do what they do. And there's been lots of questions before this rate about whether or not the FBI is doing their job apolitical. And we don't know the answer to that question yet. This is probably about the FBI. This is going to raise more questions in my opinion. We need to let this play out and see exactly what happens. Kurt? I like Tim Scott. I think he's a great guy. I would love him as a neighbor. If it was 2004, I would be happy to vote for his sunny optimistic view of empowerment. And he's got a great story as a wonderful guy, and he's not a wartime consigliere. Okay, Tom Hagen. Out of the room, the men have to talk about how we're going to make our enemy sleep with the fishes. If you come in there and go, oh, gosh. I need to see all the facts. You don't get that there are no facts. There's all a line, all a scam, get another of the attempts to frame the president to unlawfully and immorally retain power. I like Tim Scott. Nice guy, not the right guy for today.

FBI Judiciary Committee Tim Scott Tom Hagen Kurt
A highlight from The Living And Abiding Word Of God Part-1

Live Behind The Veil

16:50 min | 1 year ago

A highlight from The Living And Abiding Word Of God Part-1

"Welcome to live behind the veil and atmosphere where men and women of God speak his word to this age and bring his kingdom to this earth. Do you have ears to hear and eyes to see what God is doing in this hour? Let us join our host and the family's conversation as the Holy Spirit is unfolding. The word behind the veil is a revelation of the Bible in this generation that leaves us without the power we need to act on all the other experiences we have received from God. I'm Ron your host. And on this podcast, we are reaching in to a deeper revelation of the Bible. God's word. This is God's channel to speak to us and to impart his nature to us. For his word is living and active, sharper than any two edges sword. His word is awesome. The Bible is not just some story book, or some book you read to prove something, it is, in fact, the word of God. Until you see it as the word of God, you're not, you're not going to have a relationship with him in reality, you know, because this is where he chooses to speak to us. One man I believe it was spurgeon or Hagen, I forget, made a statement they said, when I pray I talk to God. When I read the Bible, God talks to me it is the lack of revelation of the Bible. That leaves us without the power, we need to act on the other experiences we have received from God. You know, the awesome thing about the scriptures. You can read them, and get something out of them. And then go back next week and read the same scriptures, and get something else out of it, get something more out of it. And that's the exciting part. That's the fact that it is a living word. It's something that's alive. It has authority. It has power it has all those wonderful acronyms, not acronym, wrong word. Sorry. It's the wonder of God's word. It is God's word. It's his method. He has chosen to speak to people on earth. It's not just something that contains a history lesson or a religious articles that you need to follow or the good the bad, the ugly and all the other things that everybody talks about. You know when people love talking about God, this is his word and he wants to talk to us through it. If you read it and you get a revelation of the lord of who Jesus is who the father it doesn't matter, then you're reading it correctly. If you read it any other way, you missed it, it's unbelief. That's how Satan uses the word to deceive people. Is because there is no relationship to that word to the father in the word, once that is real and living in just, you gotta talk about it. You gotta share it because it's that exciting. It's that amazing, you know? Take any scripture, get a revelation of who God is, in that verse, in the words in the little intricacies. I wish people would have that same excitement that I'm feeling right now because that word is so alive. It's something that's going to feed him and they're going to go, oh my goodness, I never saw this before. I think the one thing that God's giving us in this day and age is a deeper, appreciation for the Old Testament. Because we're beginning to realize some simple things, Christ, he was a rabbi, he taught, in the synagogue, and what did he teach from? He taught from the Old Testament. And in we get into the day and age we're living in now, there's been so much focus. On the New Testament, but what we have is appreciation for both. When God opens up something in the scriptures, he does it more than once. And what's need is is to see where he did it first. In the Old Testament. To where he began it, and it's amazing how God in his scriptures does the same thing. The miracles, he does it over and over again. And I think that that is important to recognize because. We're living in the day when he's doing the same thing. You can read the same scripture over and over and over again weeks later months later years later, and yet you get something different out of it. That's the truth. You read it out of the American standard version on this time, maybe the next time you read it out of the King James version, and they've got different words in there. There was all part of the same scripture, but now it means something to you because it's where you are at. And that's the important thing. You have to grow. And as you grow, you're not going to be in that same spot that you heard that word a year ago. Nope. So you've got to move on. And God gives you that. You get a re revelation of Christ. So that you can walk in that new revelation that's going to bring you forth into his word. We've already talked about, you know, the scripture is being revelation. We've talked about reading the word and it means something more to you next time and next time and next time, to me, those are little peeking in to the nature of Christ, peeking into the presence of the lord. The word of God is much more than revelation, its life, it's an impartial very nature. It's an open door to have a relationship with Christ. It's an open door to know the father. It's an open door to experience what we read about as far as Christ in the father, and I'm not putting down having revelation. Obviously, there's more to that. It's not these well, I read the scripture a year ago, and I saw this, now I'll read the scripture this year, and I see something different. There's nothing wrong with that. There are little previews, what we're talking about is the scriptures being an open door. To a relationship where the father is speaking to you, imparting his nature to you, it's beyond our minds to comprehend the relationship that comes through the scriptures. Their importation, the nature change that comes through the scriptures. We grasp a little bit, you know, we read the scriptures and we get a revelation of something. Again, nothing wrong with that. That's like a drop in the ocean. I believe that as we read the word and got imparts his nature to us, our capacity to receive from him increases. And so as that capacity increases, the ability for us to see and hear Christ in the father increases. So then it becomes more than just getting a new revelation. It's sitting down in communing with them. Communing with the father, communing with the spirit realm with the cloud of witnesses. Because that's what the Bible is. It's an open, living door. To the spirit realm. Right. He'll only give you what you can handle at any given time. And just like you're talking about, Ron, it is a vast ocean of things of God. You know, there is so much in there. Human minds can't comprehend what it is at all. It just impossible. But when you have the Holy Spirit teaching you and guiding you through it, it should be, just like yesterday, let's just say a 5 year old child's son had a time with dad, and they had a wonderful time and dad's teaching him how to write his bicycle, and then today he's with dad again, and dad's letting go of the bicycle, and letting him ride it. We progress in the lord in that same fashion, it's not like he's going to give us everything we die. We just can't, we can't hold it all. And we have talked about the upward spiral, unique God in one location, when you come around again, it's the same word, it's just different. You know, he's revealing more of himself to use, that you're able to take. He's so much more than just some God out there that is mad at everybody or if somebody has a revelation of the fact that he loves everybody, you know, is so much more than that. He wants to be dad. He really wants to be dead, and he wants to be dead to everybody, not just a few. You meet God, you go around and you come back and you meet God again, and he's more to you. Yeah. That is important because if you got a revelation from God, and you stop there, and you've heard of many people that they stopped and 45 years ago, God met me. What if he's done since then? God wants to meet you daily. Right. Not only does he want for you to see him daily, he wants to get to know you. And if 45 years ago was the last time that you connected with him, you know, it's not good enough. Not for God and not for you. People talk about reading the scriptures daily. And you read them until God speaks to you. That's so important. If you want to go doing his reading the scriptures and you're not getting anything out of it, like we said, that's unbelief. But if you're sitting there and you're getting more and more and more daily, then you have a walk with him. And he's going to continue and the more that you can take, the greater the revelation he's going to give you. Yep, of course, then it comes the responsibility. You have to walk in it. But you do that with such a joy in your heart because you're talking with dad. Yep. If you consider the communion, what did Jesus say when he broke the bread? This is my body. The scriptures are him, eat, right? Of the word. You know, we talk about masticating assimilating and eliminating, you know? You want to take it in, and then you need to let it assimilate, and you eliminate the old human nature, get rid of that. And do it again. One of the things that we establish over our walk with God are certain principles, one of those principles is we have been told that the Bible is the word of God. Yes. That's why we pick it up to start with. There is a drive and a hunger. To find out more about this guy. There is some type of inertia that we take even out of curiosity. To find out what's in this book. That curiosity is quickly honored. By at getting the idea that there's a lot in here that I could benefit from. Many people say that you can just about trace. A lot of the famous sayings to the scriptures. They were said therefore. Many of the laws of our society are taken directly from the Bible to ten commandments. There is a lot of things in our everyday life. That are governed by the scriptures. And so we have kind of built in knowledge and a curiosity to find out about more. God has guaranteed that if you give yourself to the reading of his word, that he will revolt revealed to you more knowledge. More truth, but the scriptures were so much more than that. And that's what we're trying to reach into. We're trying to reach into much more than what we see. In our culture, our society, and that comes by, knowing how to read. And you talked about that and I think what you said is wonderful. And it's important that we give ourselves to a daily reading of the scriptures, but it can't be a thing of self discipline. You should read the scriptures, as often as the spirit moves you. That in itself is an old saying. Quicken things to your heart, and he'll build within you a hunger for more. So, when you're hungry for more, go to the Bible. That is something that becomes a way of life. Our hunger and thirst for righteousness. And a second thing is, as we have to learn how to read it. And that's what you were alluring to add, read a chapter. Start out at verse one. And by verse two of God begins to speak to you about it, stop. Lesson. See what he has to say. And that comes through a gift of the Holy Spirit. Right. Yes. The Holy Spirit is that voice that can take conveys to you. The heart of God. No matter the situation, so you've got this chapter in your reading and you get to the second or third verse in God begins to speak to you. That's the living word of God. Experiencing the impartation of God's word through his family is life. As this time in his presence blessed you, then please subscribe to our podcast at live behind the veil dot com. If you would like to contact the family with questions or topics that you would like to discuss, you can email them to living epistles at live behind the veil dot com. Stay connected, tuned in and grow with the family as the lord unveils his word to us live. Behind the video.

Scripture Word Family Christian Love GOD RON Spurgeon Hagen Satan King James
Jan. 6 Committee Subpoenas Trump Jr. Advisers, Ex-White House Official

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:30 min | 1 year ago

Jan. 6 Committee Subpoenas Trump Jr. Advisers, Ex-White House Official

"His Liz Cheney, weaponizing this January 6th committee. It's a special kind of evil. Do you hear what she's doing? You hear what they're doing on that January 6th committee? They've sent a subpoena to three advisers to the Trump family, Andrew Charlie and Arthur Schwartz, who advised Donald Trump Jr. and Ross rush Worthington who played a role in drafting Trump's speech on January 6th. Each of them have been handed a subpoena. Now, one of them, he is advising the Wyoming, the Wyoming values political action committee in support of Cheney's primary challenger Harriet Hagen. This guy had, according to the Washington, the federalist, this guy had zero involvement with The White House riots or protest during the time period that the rally was being organized. This charade guy Andrew Serra was overseeing a super PAC in support of Republican Senate candidates in Georgia. Charade is a close friend, according to his attorney, charades a close friend to Donald Trump Jr. and is running a super PAC that opposes the reelection of one of the members of the committee. I'm talking to you Liz Cheney. That's

Liz Cheney Donald Trump Jr. Andrew Charlie Arthur Schwartz Ross Rush Worthington Wyoming Values Political Actio Harriet Hagen Donald Trump Andrew Serra Wyoming Cheney White House Washington Charade Senate Georgia
Florida student arrested for threatening to shoot up campus

AP News Radio

00:42 sec | 1 year ago

Florida student arrested for threatening to shoot up campus

"Hi hi Mike Mike Rossi Rossi are are reporting reporting a a Florida Florida student student is is arrested arrested for for threatening threatening to to shoot shoot up up his his school's school's campus campus police police in in Daytona Daytona beach beach Florida Florida arrested arrested a a student student at at an an aeronautical aeronautical university university Thursday Thursday after after receiving receiving tips tips from from other other students students that that he he was was planning planning to to shoot shoot people people on on campus campus nineteen nineteen year year old old John John Higgins Higgins was was arrested arrested at at his his apartment apartment in in Daytona Daytona beach beach according according to to a a police police news news release release officers officers found found a a folding folding gun gun and and hundreds hundreds of of rounds rounds of of ammunition ammunition in in his his backpack backpack campus campus security security at at Embry Embry riddle riddle aeronautical aeronautical university university contact contact the the Daytona Daytona beach beach police police overnight overnight after after hearing hearing from from concerned concerned students students the the Daytona Daytona beach beach news news journal journal reports reports Hagens Hagens confessed confessed to to making making the the threats threats but but told told investigators investigators it it was was all all a a joke joke I I might might cross cross yep yep

Florida Daytona Mike Mike Rossi Rossi Beach Beach Aeronautical Aeronautical Univ John John Higgins Higgins Daytona Beach Beach Embry Embry Riddle Riddle Aero Daytona Daytona Beach Beach Po Daytona Daytona Beach Beach Ne Hagens Hagens
2 men convicted of killing Malcolm X expected to be exonerated

AP News Radio

00:50 sec | 1 year ago

2 men convicted of killing Malcolm X expected to be exonerated

"Hi my cross your reporting two men are set to be cleared of the killing of Malcolm X. two men convicted of the nineteen sixty five assassination of civil rights leader Malcolm X. are set to be cleared Thursday according to their attorneys at Manhattan's top prosecutor eighty three year old Mohammad Aziz at the late Khalil Islam had always maintained their innocence a nearly two year reinvestigation about authorities withheld evidence favorable to the defense Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance junior tweeted his office will join the beds attorneys and asking a judge to toss out the convictions of third man Bushe he'd Abdul haleem also notice tell the chair or Thomas Hagen was also convicted of the murder in March nineteen sixty six Hagen who admitted he was one of the three gunmen who shot Malcolm X. testified either Aziz nor Islam was involved Haygood was paroled in twenty ten hi

Malcolm X. Mohammad Aziz Khalil Islam Manhattan Cyrus Vance Bushe Abdul Haleem Thomas Hagen Hagen Aziz Haygood
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

03:44 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"How did they get to hear like they're clearly so wrong. Free show there but they spent five years together. Spend most right at some point and it was not big question that you asked yourself. You know when you're lying on the floor breakup. Why why was with a person. Why are we even where we ever happy. And then the big one was it worth fish. Was it worth. This pain was was that. Were those few years worth when i'm going through now and is it a waste because now i'm five years older and i have to. We see it a starch ago to go find someone else like the point to life so all those questions were coming up for me. And that's why. I decided to tell the story backwards so The next chapter i wrote was the second chapter in. The book is called pissing on sticks. And it's about her taking a pregnancy tests which is positive and she started trying to figure out what that means whether she wants to be a mother whether they're in a good enough space in their relationship to even do this together the whole chapters Musing on on that on on motherhood and visiting her family and seeing her own mother in seeing the nieces and kinda just did that as a challenge to ecomog go backwards in time. Can i take it from to on what. What does that look like. And what does that lead. Look like and then the next shot job. That was the very last chapter which is the first jobs which is niece and fall in love So that that. I had this sort of our new. This is what they look like when and this is what they look like when they begin now i have to get into gear on the writing. Process was all over. The place. Like i didn't i didn't just go backwards or forwards. I picked random events from their time together on once. There was a skeleton of a story die. I wanted to fill in more and more than her best friend. Maya became a bigger car to my expected. And all these the characters that came out of the woodwork. And it just it's sorta Ganic process and my therapy Informed informed therapy and it really really interesting to kind of go through that A now actually on so fame released in the uk was released last year And it's been picked up by penguin random highs in the us amazing subsidiary out so yes in kabul In october it's october twenty six in the us. And we've actually kinda. I've done kinda version. Because i it was so rushed the first time i didn't get that time that stephen king recommend reported in a drawer for the long fit and having released it and take a few months land combat allies. There were some things. I would like to mostly odd to make a haven't changed it still store glove. People were scared. That i'm changed the engineers and but they said the training chapters in in the new version. I yeah just kind of a couple edits trial in a little bit adage to other chapters throughout. I felt like there was some stuff. I want to expand on chicken with maya on with angel and teo in their early days i felt like we had really spent less time with them being good. So i've i've added a chapter along those lines so new cover new chapter new launch goal. That supports here. It's it's kinda it's very exciting. It's particularly in a panic. It's nice that was already 'cause rising now has been so difficult. yeah. I'm glad there's a thing recite the big question. Though with his will seek will have to be a pre cool. I don't think there will.

Maya kabul stephen king us uk
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

02:55 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"That's been a little bit hard to believe but the bulk is yet. It's my career was kind of all over the place. Like i said you know i. I always love telling stories. I just love stories. And i guess it's a very irish thing you know. We have the His storyteller and you still kinda get this day. I think ours. Threes veterans on sars. Sorry every other nation. And i didn't. I didn't footing. I still don't know how shows in a way to do that. It's something that i love to do. I think for a long time. I wanted to be an actress I also love roy. Saying and i did didn't degree in journalism and i studied rising at the irish rice. Your center which was mostly short stories in prose. And then i start to. I worked at google for seven years. went fell by the wayside. A little bit in the next day. I started youtube on again. Just another outlet When people ask what my blogs were out of town stories like back bacne my life anecdotes stuff. I've learned just just like this. It's just talking just talking to the camera like you're talking to a friend. Bennett became sort of short films. Comedy sketches. I veered a lot into Just john's might crash logo alibi. Concept earned i. I couldn't really tell you how it got from there to here I just kept telling stories. In different forms scripts in on short franzen spoken word of poems. And and then this idea of the first doctor which is called muscle memory Came into my head Had been through several sort of big breakup than that experienced. Had been i think. Very big for me because of my Sebring kind of connection. I'm not sort of feeling of abandonment of loss with so much bigger for man. I didn't understand why. But i'm this story. Muscle memory came into my head. Just it's about a woman going through a break up on his happening. Dr he's coming to collect it stops. They are done there over. You know and it's about her going through the motions of coping with grief in those first few weeks months which we all not even. Who's been through it. It's just one of the worst things you can go through And i wrote that read. What is just a standalone story Maybe making it a buck. And is i are. It doesn't feel like when i feel like i've just hold the end of this on. I don't know where it came from. But at some point i thought what if we go backwards because that's what fascinated me damn this couple that i've created was. Where did they start..

roy franzen Bennett youtube google john
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

03:53 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"Keep them in the room and learning about the physiological changes on the detachment from your body in had kinda get someone back in the body exercise in yoga on his name but he was kind of one of the first people figuring all this. I just know someone's going like right in and be like actually a woman figure tonight thirty years earlier a-n-o-n-m-u-s jerk but a vessel really good work and a little later in his career. She was asked to go work. I guess a clinic I'm not sure. Have all my honest but he. He was working at a clinic where it was predominantly women who had been through some kind of domestic violence or sexual assaults and he found the symptoms. We're all basically the same and it was kind of kind of the first people to say hold on. This is trauma. this is exactly what i know. Trauma to be But in some cases it wasn't a singular incident. It wasn't an explosion that went off it was years and years of emotional Abuse and then sort of complex trauma became a little more understood than which is not a single incidence like a car crash Bosch years of of living in that states of being hyper aware of being scared contemplating putting to keep your guards for very long periods can kind of the complex trauma which is even more difficult to untangle so yesterday gotten off my now But i think what's really interesting for me is that sir changed What a trigger is on. I think what what he also talks about. A loss. psychologists are now talking about is that it doesn't always need to make sense like your brain is such a complex liberty like mass on. It might just be that a certain smell triggers you but you don't know why it's not that it was the smell that you smelled in the room at the time but at some point in your life your brain made a connection between a slight on assigned to a smaller Some how this thing has become tangled in a in a way. It shouldn't be. It's become intertwined in your brain with some kind of powerful incidents. Were time in your life So which is all to say that. My triggers are very specific It's it's been kind of. It's something now at thirty six muni really beginning to understand in a way that i can communicate properly to our friends and partners. I think romantic relationships have been the most difficult for me. I grew up in hyphen abusive. Father i in abusive relationship for eight years earlier on in my life Ways man who is not very nice i think. Now that's the role that's most difficult to fill a lot of the detrani. Minute drives developed if he gets great. But also it's it's you know it's not always easy on. It hasn't always been easy for me to sort of say. I can't sit down and say these are the three things you can't site or do because i'll be triggers because i don't understand it that would that's not how it is. It's it's a feeling it's you know you might say a completely innocuous thing that will lead to my brain telling you the story of of something else on the next thing. I'm complete trigger switz- it's hot to be more around understanding the types of situations where. I'm more likely to be sugar. It's definitely during sachs's is more difficult for me. So anything where. I'm literally naked and exposed and being intimate or vulnerable with..

Trauma detrani sachs
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

05:46 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"I mean i mean the worst is is here. You know what two minutes into the bunker. Where i mean. Obstinate worse is not wanting to be here. I saw Which i think more more more people than you know experience that so probably every every single person thinks ranch online That's obsolete rock bottom and the absolute best is the days. When you forget you have a brain. You know the days when you're not aware of yourself on your thoughts and your savings on your anxiety. Depression in all the Tango i just got up. And i i saw people ended up in an eventful. Day is probably the best so you say when you're not going to be very pedantic i think but when you say of your thoughts and your feelings yeah do you mean that you not in your head about it. Don't feel anything either one of those days where you always think things would you do feel them without having to have your brain trying to stop it da. I hear what you're saying. No it's not numbness. it's i think for me. Not my absolute worst. I remember. I remember a particular moment when i when i was at a period where i look back on my lowest and i remember i went to visit my mom back in ireland like just just to beloved after just trying kind of get through this horrible. I just been put on antidepressants. I was not reacting well to much all the daesh electorally. Just put me in the car and take out because just to move my body places to get back on. I remember like she was driving through rainiers. She opted off are just wafting. People go by. And i'm so jealous of them because they were just living their day on. I don't know if those people had going on. I mean in reality. It's funny number of them going through something very difficult but all i saw was people going back on seeming finding That's all i wanted. I wasn't asking world. I just want to not be my head not be aware of pain or suffering negatives officer any dot can stop and just unto be i guess aware of gratitude and aware of the beauty in the world. Not that you're not aware but Yeah to just not not be not feel every feeling here. Every soul out loud echoed. hungry pitched. Yeah that's what. I'm i had this realization where it was one of those. I woke up in a sense thinking..

Depression ireland
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

03:30 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"It doesn't always need to make sense like your brain is such a complex. Lebron matt's on it might just be a certain smell triggers you but you don't know why it's not that it was the smell that he's found in the ram the time but at some point in your life. Your brain made a connection between a site on assignment that led to a smell. And some how. This thing has become tangled in a in a way. It shouldn't be it's become intertwined in your brain with some kind of horrible incidents where time in your life did little Listening to the who had you. Pat cars sylvan. Jingle but thank you for listening to who had you an interview podcast hosted by me. Comedian and author. sophie hagen. In this episode. I am speaking to youtuber. Is a so-called that youtube personality youtube celebrity. Anyway life is short. Let's go with you to a youth suba author and filmmaker and a mental health advocate. We had a real dive into the topic of mental health. And if i know my audience away. I think i do. I'm sure you'll find it very relatable so please enjoy my chat with the wonderfully charming hazel hayes. How i am in my kitchen. It's little past noon. It's on the threats of much. It's the second sunny day of the year maybe the last senate of the knows it's the uk. I had that thing where you know when you've cried a lot the day before your eyes like puffy and so emotional hangover. I like that yes. I'm an emotional hangover. But i'm feeling fine but is one of those things and my feeling fine or just numb feeling fine around my feeling nothing. We'll go and what's happening in. The world was still technically still in lockdown but now we can meet people outside the silicon pandemic. I don't know if that boat in the canal has gotten loose or whatnot. I heard last night good for that. The all i know is oil. Prices started to to fix themselves. I do don't ask why i know. But if that's if that's on-demand boats from the get to know good to know so that was about second canal announce loose good for good for the boat here on On soon with hayes. Which is so exciting so hazel. Where are you at the moment. Both sort of physically and emotionally. Where am i like dispensing with reverse. I am in my kitchen. Living room which i think is very common for most people it's office work riley mentally and motion early on on gauge. I a bit overwhelmed by worker. Have on at the moment. On a little bit frazzled. I've just started seeing a new therapist so sorts of navigating the moment but yeah i'm on the scale of where hazel can be by. What's that scale was. The what's the best in the west.

Lebron matt Pat cars sylvan sophie hagen hazel hayes youtube senate uk hazel hayes riley
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

05:59 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"Oh and for me it on beginnings understand how much of another system it is and how much it's to do with my psychology and how little i have existed from the neck down and just how much of that is being in concentrate flight mode and you know my brain all the time being ready to fight a lion right and it's just made me think about and i. I think i think women are socialized mall to doing spots or exercise a movement that is mole that encourages them all to be. Nobody's even from just like cuddling yet child or yoga or just hacking your friends so it all seems very sort of gentle and encouraging why i feel like men. It's fighting and like you know contact bolt. That's like a violin. Then i don't him and being encouraged to hug and do yoga and meditation feel themselves site beginning to think like is there. A huge is their biggest thing. Happening here with nervous system and gender i guess is is that way too big of a no. She's claiming they think if you'd be sport i haven't really guy but when thinking about it to all the male sports again be dominantly. Rugby football boxing. Even nice like physical contact is negative. You don't want get tackled. You'll get punched in the face that you should keep him. It's always keeping away and get away from that guy. And i guess to me up could of into more general understanding of how things work and yes. Let's i'm going to be said for that. I think this thing called the somatic makalake offices because in the next book. I'm doing it quite some detail in that that this idea of brain body divide is in your brain your body neighbors who share fence. It's much more than that is so much more overlap and this is one of the things that's way like emotions come from what starts them off and this argues that it's actually your body like when something happens to your body. Reacts with these certain signals again reacting this way this new agreement your heart rate goes up your stomach turns or so on zone and at least originally it was your brain thinking okay. So the body's doing this. That must be. i'm scared. I'm angry so rather than just being involved. The body was your physical body white about. He was the key instigator of emotions. And this isn't the most widely accepted it also flows In modern times. It doesn't really work as well as the Theorizes thought but it doesn't have to be part of that. Emotion expedience is which is a fundamental part of our brains. Minds are just general. Existence is heavily shaped by l. body physical reactions to things so the idea that the participants in the first place is kind of massive oversimplification. If not just flat out wrong we should be more savvy about body and stuff and by the end. The thing it's is. We help save. Because i know this is actually the next book soon. It's such a common thing. The default assumption is that many women have different brains. This little thing. We're talking about the old school some. She's been different brains. Why as dr ribbon pointed out that whenever there's a study about the differences between minimums brains or boys reasoning and if it makes the mainstream it's always reported as last the real differences between men. Women's brains finally revealed is everything..

Rugby boxing football dr ribbon
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

03:44 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"Anyway we go into because you want to find new things. We don't know the senate appointed sites. If i know things that we don't know says you know everything is unhelpful. I wonder if of that comes from the self help industry. Which have you know waved about. Because while i totally get up india books out there. People find helpful. Give him some sort of structure. Some clarity and biologic brain dead. Human rain is not a fine of uncertainty. So anything is uncertain. Tends to freak out a little bit more than things also We won't answer. He won't eat Understood we do want things to be consumed and in reality that but it does make us it calms so yeah. There is an instinct towards that but people exploited that. I think like the self-help stuff is like. I don't know you buried of can solve your problems. Everyone's problem to read. This is some money. And i think that's an audience. Somebody will with the brain in foul invariably is. I don't agree with that approach. And so yeah i can. Maybe understand comes from. But i i'm trying to go against us a i don't know nobody knows i. I don't know. But i know as much as the next person next betting folded person so it's okay to absorb information if you have different experiences to me. Great than new. I'd like to hear about them. Because becomes the brain and mental health. You subjectivity is a big part of it. And i'm just one guy and that's that's something imputed prophesying this thing. You can't ignore these things you have to embrace them. But that's my personal. They'll sumner has he said look don't necessarily share it but i'm gonna stick with an how. How much do we know you in the book you talk about. How of the the knowledge of the body is sort of like the romans at the same buddies as we do now so things that sort of easy to understand but i'll brain and the way we understand range change so with society and sometimes when i speak to my therapist about like my issues she will. She'll be like This very new and still not a lot of knowledge about this particular thing. And i'm not not arrogant enough to think that i'm have the most special issues in the world i can only imagine must be rally common and yet you know when i asked when she had to refer mitsu a specific type of psychologists therapists. Fol one of the issues. She was like Only two three in the uk who can deal with this. And i thought that's not that many. So where are we on the. Are we even in the beginning of of properly understanding mental health. Yeah well it's it's hard to say that because obviously we don't know the endpoint is so he could be halfway. We could be just getting no shoes on this one hundred mile. It's really hard to jump that with any clarity getting because it's like you say the point made was like the body is being consistent no at least ancient egyptians medicine stuff known to be wrong but they still had the idea that the body is looks like this can go wrong as very very old one easily understood not going to lead to it. The mind can go wrong. It is kind of relatively new new accepted. At least i mean there were things like melancholy in the past. People recognize that. This person seems beside a lot..

senate india sumner uk
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

03:17 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"We did everything we could reparation older classes all the effort having a child we were doing and then you end up in hospital. I know delivery room and then suddenly they punked this small in moms essentially said well. Then that's your forever now and it was like. Oh i am not this at all. Not so not ready. I can't do this but like all of this is suddenly suddenly tangible. This is a thing though to be intimately aware something's happening on davick experience. It said a marked difference between those things. Nothing got players load stuff in the charles most vivid emotional examples of that. Your life suddenly changes in a moment to go for all guarantee. Yes now all that stuff. I was thinking about is happening. That's wow let's drastic hot It takes a lot of the even the in the evolutionary level. We have evolved responding to infants newborns with such vivid emotional reactions that it takes time to process. This is my new things like postpartum depression. Also coleman Women especially if going through the ring a physically in stuck intensely physical by the way and all the hormones. involved. In ano-. Sally you've got child which also for forever reign takes time to process emotional experiences. It doesn't get much more emotional than that even when you're in physically tiptop shape you know when you've just had a baby you that description you you've had this happen to you and that's a massive physical team. So yes there's definitely a big change when this happens losing. Her father was extremely multi respect and it has changed hawaii. Operate how it work. Because i know what it's like to experience lost like this and it's not good. You know again. I knew that. Anyway i knew consciously now i know it on a personal tangible level this is terrible thing and i think it's given me more but he was and people are right to bob. People people go through the things. I write about the mental health stuff. And i don't want to get to elaborate couldn't function not saying that i won't them on. I'll say that that won't happen because the up. no. I haven't seen any of my family doing research because of the lockout so i wouldn't see my follow this diet. I know when we will get back together again. And not there may be that absence whittle suddenly strike me as more tangible. Maybe that's when will that'll hit me in that respect and could've crumbled and i don't know that's something i've got to quote unquote look forward to. But i'm awaiting that when i'm aware of this says a thing which is to be dignity accounting. I guess i'm a lot more weight of online communication salty owning. We've got right now. So cavaliers people can be when domed until just making the flip and comments and i have mentioned a few times of. I never liked the shock. It's the prophecy mongasutu say things retention but knowing saying things like a. Kobe does not even real. Frank is governance gaming. When it's a ninety statism annexing. I've just lost a father to your. This is the online equivalent of just fallen in position..

postpartum depression coleman charles Sally hawaii whittle bob cavaliers Kobe Frank
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

03:33 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"Probably not because there was already so many disabled people in that the uk freak ovid's and historically the government on the uk failed them time and time again. Like i think. And i wanna be careful how i say this. I don't think it should take an an able bodied person or sorry. Rather non-disabled person becoming disabled for them people to understand the barriers that disabled people face. Because by then it's too late to some extent Actually i hope maybe moving forward now means some of the kind of responsive or reactive support that the government. Even it's not much has put in place hopefully stays and then can be built upon the future to make sure that actually everyone in society is included Because what to some extent the democats done has put has given people like windows. Not necessarily even understanding. But you've been able to see what people have been faced in who had no choice but to be at home because the world excluded thumb wasn't a virus so yeah. I'm i'm hopeful in that way. But like this government's track record has just been unless unless they're removed when i could have hope because there isn't any hope with this current government didn't care about. They never cared about the people but a doesn't care about anyone. That's not in that in a sack. Who's like dots more than evidence. And so yes quite hard to have hope with them still in power but someone. Oh what did maybe it was. One of my carries it. Sometimes when you're feeling quite powerless instead of looking up to all the failings of the powers that be or institutions above. Sometimes it's helpful to look around like just just look around joy media your immediate communities and that's sometimes where you can feel a bit more hopeful that people making connections reaching out people are checking in on people That there is more. There is more support to be found in that. There's no hope to be found in the people around ethan in the higher ups the one of the when i feel really hopeless at a speaking of end of of at one point and i was just saying out loud. It's hopeless nothing. That's exam real fun to be around the everything's the west and this woman. Just ransom Aside i work full changed at all so every single day i see petitions getting traction and changing loss. She was like there. Are things happening that you might not see and it's happening. Every single day and people are finding things are getting better. And it's it's possible. And i was like okay hugging. I just keep thinking about that that obviously we're not going to be told about all they're all the great things that are happening cherry and then you can feel a bit of hope also not let that be enough that you'll go..

uk ethan
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

02:48 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"Yeah it was just wild and it never read so when so when some of my carris hat to leave Not really being able to recruit men than trying to manage a smaller team Which then means like my days on as structured as they used to be Which can sometimes make trying to work or do anything difficult. When it's like you know the ca the candidate they provided just like is the basic st- need just to leave let alone to work and stuff. So that's been like just yeah. It's just been stressful. And it's been lots of like hiccups along the way and there's not really been much support from Yet the council and an to some extent not really having a choice. The i had to work like if i didn't if i if i was like okay because i've lost this won't let me go and benefits some of those benefits cons di directly conflict with the support. I get so it was either choosing. Do i have the benefits or and risk losing some of my support from my characters. Or do i go without the benefits. And then just keep the cameras. And i went for the carriers because i was like i need more than i need the benefit because benefit. We're get me out of bed in the morning or make or get dressed up and ready and things like that So it was being some extent not having a choice in not watching in advance democratic Because this is not normal times and when your when your quote unquote like job is when your job is really like ashley not specifically writing. Everyone's job is linked to them into health. But at times when your job is creative and you need this. The mental space and capacity to create. It can be really hard if everything in your personal life feels like kind of an upset to fire like where do you find the how you about space and time and just peace to be able to then can create and i think i've also been struggling a hell of a lot. I think there's a this probably to miss the considering the world and the government but do you think the fact that some of the longtime Consequences of the virus seems to be that people have a disabled. Do you think that could end up being meaning that there will be most appalled that something will change.

ashley
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

05:56 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"That even got may even go seen. That sounds like it reminds me so much of how i feel about my work so my question has to do with that because my question within the same ability to be so cool about it when it comes to not work like working with people but not with what all trusting people being self critical in a healthy way or is it just. Because it's working. It's different from your. Yeah i think because it's work it slightly different Ya but i. I feel to some extent. I've somewhat been forced to be more trusting of people because my condition forces me to be more reliant on other anyway so actually. I'm having to put my trust in people at times. I've not met too long For support or care or assistance and said they're not forced to some extent forces me to like what the people that have been my life the longest. Why wouldn't i then trust them. Ole Yeah all or they wouldn't trust me kind of thing but I think the self critical thing aside when it's not were yeah. I'm still very highly critical of myself. And not something i'm working on. Maybe we'll forever be walking out because mental health. There's no destination when it comes to health. It's just all about the process like this. I've never going to be like. Oh yeah. I'm no longer depressed or anxious sitting more. Just gonna wake up one day and it never came back like it's gonna be something i constantly have to contend with and manage Yeah i'm trying to and to be kind to myself in ways that i wasn't in the post. Yeah i just want to ask you about everything all the time. So but before i answer the last question. That's yes that's make this the mass win on so much I hope i can have out temo things. Okay let's just quickly just pandemic.

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

04:56 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"Such a big moment. Where and i think that i think everyone has the moment of when you have to realize that your parents human. Yes the like. I don't think anyone's parents. I don't think anyone has parents. That didn't fug up in some way and then it's just about the spectrum of which how fucked up and it's having to having to see them with empathy also allowing yourself to be a bit angry but then also working towards forgiving and such a balance. Yeah like my sister said something really. will not profound but just like a reminder to me she was like i get ch- My youngest decisions. Like i get the i'm i. I'm a sibling to disable person. But that doesn't mean. I will ever understand what that's like like as much as i've seen so much and grown up with you as having you know having an older sibling who has ability. I still like. I've seen so much but i still weren't ever know what that's like and having to kind of to some extent a little bit turn around my mom and say the same thing that i get that you literally birthed may have carried before nine months. I'm trust me. I'm not ungrateful trust but I live with this not you and like you know being could say no being told i'll be healed is telling me every day that i'm broken and some days i don't feel broken So it was kind of. Yeah just yeah. Let's see seeing how flawed our parents are and that they will once young and naive and also the great thing which i'm very grateful for the for the kind of mom that i have is seeing someone say grow and learn. Learn from the mistakes. That actually okay. Yeah i would say that kind of stuff around you anymore and things die knowledge that that can have an affect the way you feel about yourself and see yourself and shanley wants what's best for me. So yeah yeah parents Parents humid's wild. Like i have friends who have kids and when they sold joking you talk about things that they accidentally did or actually said that they with joking. Oh he'll need therapy someday. But if i think about my mother having had to have those conversations with someone. When i was four years old i furious now. Oh you're joking. About how therapy you have any idea our expensive this. Excuse god what did you. When did you stop seeing a therapist. So the fest therapists. I ever stole was in two thousand eleven on so i would have been justified uni so i would've been either eighteen. Nineteen i think. Yeah nineteen and that was the first time someone had ever asked me what living condition was like not what my disability is or. What's wrong with me but what living with it was like i remember the first session. I dislike at least for the concessions just crying for for forty five minutes of the fifty minutes and then a very patient like we're going to try again next week. The words out is that. I mean i i wonder about..

shanley
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

01:52 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"I hope you don't think that i'm moaning. It might be easy to at this point. Think all right. Jesus christ like you don't have to do this if it's so shitty but i really hope it shines through that. I really really love this. When i have the capacity when my brain isn't existing in a black cloud and i just wanna disappear like now when i'm sitting in my kitchen and i'm about to record nine more interested in how throws and send them to dave who will release them to you. I am excited. I'm elated. I feel creative. I feel productive. And i feel like i'm giving you something that no one else. Could i love when it gets to interview people. I love interviewing and i love you. I mean i feel like. I'm so incredibly lucky to have the listeners that i have and followers and whatever fans look but i have and i want to keep talking to you like this on my produced pet that i can be proud of so thank you for staying with me. Here is how it will work regarding patriot from now on. I'm going to try and make it simple so listen carefully. I will also send a message to all patrons so you will get it in writing too so do open and read that email when it comes at the moment there are two patrons one is patriot that comforts schmo pot. From now on. I will post the episodes of this. And if you are a patron of this you will be charged episode. You will no longer receive the extra bits. You will no longer get your name. Read out loud. You will just be charged. Every time i released a new episode. No extras so if you just want to support the podcast and you don't care about any of the extra bits and bobs feel free to stay on..

dave
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

05:45 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"So i heard that's nice pair I'm very lucky. I have a very very kind and supportive partner. Who i think has made has made things on dating easy for maize easy to do things when he's got someone on your side so i think that that not everyone has a partner one has partner who is the same as mine by would be. The mr not acknowledge that that is not the image i have in. That makes my life easier to think it's much doing this. It's speaking to you as well. Also i love said. Hey consignment even by Respect once before very briefly. I what did you learn to cook in lockdown like like i n became later in my life i always been quite control would fit in person yet and i think you provided that much value to my life without you at the Think i should tell you thank you. Oh you're you're changing lives and now you've changed my day. It made it a lot better to. Where can people find your staff. I literally just. I should have done this before literally. Just bought the anti-racism ally ship but there's so many eight can't do a which is a arriving today. Some very excited about that Where else do people find you and support you and get to know you can find me on instagram on at itumeleng. You're black. you can find my first book onto racist ally Ambition my new book legno black and anyway the books and so i would encourage you to support an independent bookstore or latin bookstore..

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

04:42 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"Oh i was trying to build a community. And the fact that a post about ally. She is the post that when viral. Which again to say meant that. My entire perception of who i was going to be speaking to pass thrown out because that audience that primarily white american woman was not the audience. I was trying to grow or trying to reach during gauge with for the project. I thought i was working. And so i really had to battle with that. Like had to worry like at my centering whiteness. Am i covering the my during actually more damaging to the group that i want to be helping like a really to fight it out intently and with people who would come to me and say you'll you'll pandering to these people you'll your doing the wrong thing essentially and i had to be really self effective ally doing the right thing and i think.

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

04:29 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"And i'd imagine that being quite a happy wherever like celebrated next mike woman would the intersections nuances of that and then after the murder of george fluid omitted radha Without people being might after george Died mike no actually coincided. The murder of george it made post and that sort of really went viral. Which is so strange. Today because things don't go viral Keep cats and it was a format. That shouldn't have left because it was a site not of text on a on a background. Historically instagram has had a twenty percent textual anything. That's more than that. Just not walked so i did that not thinking anything. I thought like two hundred people he saw me would he followed me was set and i ended up getting mike off million likes I was seeing everywhere. And then these people who come to me and i started following me. Said they had two hundred followers than i had like. Nine thousand bolivars like oh going to be able to do a swipe up soon not seems cool and it just didn't stall and it ended up being like almost two hundred thousand followers in an incredibly short time at it so weird. I think this will to gauge things by with numbers. Mike all of that such that could be such a vanity metric. But what. I was seeing people coming in that saying as gone on my last ever protests. I've signed my petition. I've made my first as a donation. And i felt like if people were coming to me in doing something. I had a responsibility to try to keep that going on reason. I'm willing to do that. Is i'm back women by many credibly privilege that women. I have an incredibly fast scan. I have lied. Is i am able my books not to whiten..

george Died mike george radha mike instagram Mike whiten
"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

05:45 min | 1 year ago

"hagen" Discussed on Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

"I'm a black woman by men incredibly privileged black women. I have incredibly fast scan. I have lied is my books not to whiten us. Means that my day to day life is easier than someone who can't have any separation from not like being a dark skinned. Black women is harder than my life being a dark. Skinned trans person is harder than my life. Being docked skin quotas Order these things are harder being docs in with all of the rest of my life thing exactly the same identities being drafted the same. Still just harder still. Don't have jingle yet. So i'll have to make myself. Who do you podcast with me. Your host so vegan. i am back. I'm back after a longer. Break the longest. We've had on this podcast. So far and i will talk to you about this in way. More after you hear my interview with anti-racism advocates soapie williams. What i will say is that at this moment. it's july eleventh. Two thousand two thousand and twenty one. That's how you say it. It's july eleventh twenty. Twenty one and i am staring at ten files on my computer. All with names of people that i have interviewed over the past full months interviews that i have not yet send to my editor dave interviews that i have mostly forgotten the context of the short version of the reasoning behind. This is mental health issues..

soapie williams dave
The 3 Magical Benefits of Tea Tree Oil

Allure: The Science of Beauty

01:05 min | 1 year ago

The 3 Magical Benefits of Tea Tree Oil

"Present-day research has validated. The long held belief that tea tree oil can help heal and soothe our skin. Here's dermatologist. alex rosen hagen. The three most important features that make tea tree oil beneficial for our skin are one. It's anti inflammatory. Meaning can help reduce redness irritation and swelling to its antibacterial antiseptic meaning can prevent or treat some infections and three it can work as a solvent which can help break up buildup of oil dirt or debris clogging your pores all that in mind. It's no wonder tea tree. Oil is often used to help. Treat breakouts as dr. An agency said tea tree. Oil is anti inflammatory meeting. It can help. Shrink pre existing pimples on the spot in twenty fourteen duchess to be meghan markle total lord that she always carries teacher. You'll with her when she travels saying quote. It's not the most glamorous thing but if you get a cut a mosquito bite a small breakout no matter it is. It's my little cure. All

Alex Rosen Hagen Meghan Markle
Janmark Has Hat Trick to Lead Vegas to Game 7 Win Over Wild

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | 1 year ago

Janmark Has Hat Trick to Lead Vegas to Game 7 Win Over Wild

"The golden knights finally eliminated the wild on their third try earning a six two victory in game seven Mateus yeah mark registered his first career hat trick to help the knights earned the right to take on the avalanche in the second round Max patch ready made his series debut and snapped a two two tie seven forty four into the second period Nick Hagen Zac white cloud also scored for Vegas and Marc Andre Fleury made nineteen saves in his eighty fifth playoff victory Florian's now three playoff wins shy of tying Billy Smith and ed Belfort for fourth all time Zachary saying Carrillo capris I've scored for the wild I'm Dave Ferrie

Mateus Golden Knights Max Patch Nick Hagen Zac White Cloud Marc Andre Fleury Knights Avalanche Mark Ed Belfort Florian Vegas Billy Smith Carrillo Capris Zachary Dave Ferrie
FBI arrests Arkansas man from photo inside Pelosi’s Washington DC office

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:34 sec | 2 years ago

FBI arrests Arkansas man from photo inside Pelosi’s Washington DC office

"The FBI has arrested in Arkansas man who was photographed sitting at a desk in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is office following the storming of the capital on Wednesday. Richard Barnett was booked in Arkansas, where he remains pending a court appearance. FBI spokesman Connor Hagen says more arrests will be made across the country. Are people who instigated violence and destruction at the U. S Capitol, and we'd like to identify them. So we're urging people take a hard look at those photos. Take a hard look at those videos and give us a call. The 60 year old Barnett faces trespassing, disorderly conduct and theft

Richard Barnett FBI Arkansas Connor Hagen Nancy Pelosi U. Barnett
Trump makes multiple false claims in first rally since election loss

Weekend Edition Saturday

00:57 sec | 2 years ago

Trump makes multiple false claims in first rally since election loss

"Is expected to return to the campaign trail tonight from member Station W. A. B in Atlanta. Lisa Hagen reports. Trump is rallying in Georgia on behalf of two GOP candidates for the U. S. Senate. Georgia's Senate run offs in January could decide control of Congress. The President Trump's insistence that widespread voter fraud cost him a second term has complicated these crucial Senate races. Republican incumbent senators David Perdue and Kelly Leffler have struggled to walk a tight balance. Politically, they've backed Trump's false claims that Georgia's election system is compromised, will still trying to turn out Republican voters to participate in that system. Recently, pro Trump lawyers have encouraged Republicans in the state to boycott the runoff. Since losing the election. The president has been attacking Georgia's Republican governor, Brian Kemp, for not intervening on Trump's behalf in the recount process. For NPR news. I'm Lisa Hagen.

Lisa Hagen U. S. Senate Georgia President Trump Donald Trump David Perdue Kelly Leffler GOP Atlanta Congress Brian Kemp NPR
Emily Gorcenski - Making Nazis cry

Made Of Human with Sofie Hagen

06:19 min | 2 years ago

Emily Gorcenski - Making Nazis cry

"People might not know who you are, which would be an awful shame because you one of the coolest people ever. Would you introduce yourself. Sure My Name's Emily Sanski. I am. Anything say work as a data scientist. But also activist and as many who? Studies on tracks modern white supremacy in hate movements. Technologist hockey player. All sorts of things. So I don't know what is what does it mean to be something where somebody? Wow, that's big. That's big from the from the very beginning. I think one of the things that when I was reading about you. A lot of places at set that you're a person who is known for making that cease cry. What does that stem from? That is true so As a little bit of background I'm from Charlottesville Virginia. or at least I spent. Ten years living there. And of course, Charlottesville was the site of the infamous neo-nazi rally in two thousand, seventeen where. A terror attack happened in the TIKI torches and all of that stuff right so sort of. Stuff that we've seen all around the world. And one of the Neo Nazis that was there marching at the rally was a man by the name of Christopher Cantwell and during Tiki Torch Rally, he pepper sprayed me. Along with several other people. And? End You know he was also at the time filming a documentary with Vice News And so what happened was after the rally in the? Vice and HBO. Race to put out this documentary about what had happened they had some very dramatic footage and. Christine was featured very prominently in in all of this and talking about. How he wanted to kill more people and you know showing off his guns and all of these things. Well, the thing is I knew who can't was and I knew that he pepper sprayed me because he posted a picture of himself pepper spraying me as his facebook header the next morning. So I went to the police and made the decision to rest charges against him. and. When he found out that there is a warrant for his arrest. This was shortly after the vice documentary came out with all of his bravado in his you know McKee's mount all of that. So this. News of this warrant comes out and he records himself in a hotel room somewhere in North Carolina or somewhere. Crying. On on this like stream because he's worried that he's got this this warrant for his arrest. And so this sort of very poor. Poorly intentioned little video that he produced. Of himself like sobbing, not quite sobbing but definitely sniffling. Earned him the nickname of decrying Nazi. So he became in within the span of just a few days he went from being this. You Know Big Bold Neo Nazi to this reduced hulk of a man. Who is crying because he you know got caught doing violence. And so that became a sort of a worldwide mean. And this happened because I was one of two people to press charges against him so. I've earned the reputation for making Nazis crappy, and since then I've also made several other Nazis cry for various reasons. And so I guess that is just now the reputation that I have. It's it's funny. You should say he was caught. Doing like very much promoted himself doing the line. You know it baffles the mind. This was such a bizarre sequence of events right because you know here he is somebody that went on camera and talked about how he wanted to be more violent. He was trying to be more violent. You know all of this stuff. and. Then when he acted violently, he bragged about it, you know Oh look at all the you know he calls everyone communists, of course, but all the commies that I guessed. And then he gets caught doing it and then he's like, oh no, there's consequences for my actions. Any cries. But it didn't end there right because. Sensible people when facing forty years in prison as he was. Would Shut their mouths but he did not know he started he continued recording his podcast from jail. And then when he was let out on bail. Despite having literally admitted to pepper spraying me. He then sued me and my co defendant or CO complaining rather in Federal Court. So there is a federal lawsuit against me. For claiming that he pepper sprayed me. Of courses lawsuit eventually went away. It was fine. But it I mean the tied up year life and as a result of this and as a result of his. Many. Attempts to to silence and intimidate me and I actually had to leave Charlotte. So I had to leave the country. In fact, I now live in Germany And so you know the sort of. End of the story or the maybe it's not the end. But the chapter that the story is now on is that Chris can't will plate pleaded guilty to. Two counts of assault. He was let out of jail. So he didn't get the forty years in prison. You got you know basically. Slept on the rest and sent back to his home but he was banned from the state of Virginia for for five years. Well, he didn't make it five years because now he's sitting in a New Hampshire. Jail. Awaiting federal charges where he is now facing thirty two years in prison for extorting. In violently threatening. Another fellow nutmegger.

Mckee Christopher Cantwell Charlottesville Chris Emily Sanski Scientist Hockey Facebook Assault Federal Court Virginia Christine New Hampshire North Carolina Virginia. Germany Charlotte
Andy Samberg on New Movie 'Palm Springs'

Popcorn with Peter Travers

02:32 min | 2 years ago

Andy Samberg on New Movie 'Palm Springs'

"Visit Popcorn with Peter Travers. This is N.. December who is in. You're not going to see a more fun and more well. You can think about things that happened in a two ident palm spreads. This is you at your very best buddy, thank you good. Yeah! Thanks, even if you're living the life of misery and a pandemic. People are loving you everywhere. that's the hope you know. Obviously when we made, it was did a very different spirit, but it has somehow Hagen this new meaning with everything that's happening code and quarantining. You know having to live with yourself and figure out. What to do with life when you're kind of limited in your options. Very Limited, but you know you have your wife and dawn rights. You're not alone in this world. True I, much better off than my character Niles in realize. So I want you to before we start this. Explain to people what comes springs really is about. Their. Did you alive the movies basically? Tell you this. When I when I received the script one of the main reasons I wanted to make it was so. We could shoot in Palm Springs. And I was going to be able to bring the family up there and staying love. You know rental home. In hang their go to Melvin. Go Dancing, and I love Palm Springs. It truly was a motivating factor and then. You know the budget was the budget. In the end we got the California tax rebate which makes it so if you say, it's an La production. At you can't leave the thirty mile zone and palm springs outside of that it became. Story all perspectives listen to you obstacle. Yeah, I know I know storing. Wow. I'm scared for you, my friend. You've got the jargon. How it's over. I'm hoping to just you know a out and just produce. That's right. You have a birthday coming up, so that will be. Down its own my thought we want to consider what I know. It's going to be a quarantine vide.

Palm Springs Peter Travers Hagen Niles Melvin California
Dragon’s Lair movie coming to Netflix, with Ryan Reynolds starring

Geeks Under the Influence

00:56 sec | 3 years ago

Dragon’s Lair movie coming to Netflix, with Ryan Reynolds starring

"Reported by the Hollywood reporter Net flicks has reached a deal to attain the rights to adapt dragon slayer the hit nineteen eighty three video game that combined the technology of the laser disc with the Arts Islands of Don Bluetooth net plan the adaptation for a live action feature linked take on the property a company in talks with Ryan Reynolds to not only star but helped produce it so long as the talks keep going. The plan is for Reynolds to produce with his company maximum effort with widely Trevor Angleton. A Gary Goldman John Prom Roy and perhaps most excitingly to get fans of the game is Don blew himself is on board Produces well the script will be written by David Kevin Hagen? Their work includes the lego movie crews to and scary stories to tell them the dark so to good

Ryan Reynolds Don Bluetooth DON Trevor Angleton David Kevin Hagen Gary Goldman John Prom Roy Arts Islands Reporter Hollywood
A thrilling naval rescue off the coast of Nova Scotia

The Big Story

10:53 min | 3 years ago

A thrilling naval rescue off the coast of Nova Scotia

"When things start to go wrong on the open ocean sometimes they go really wrong really quickly. We make really good boats. We have state of the art navigation systems and we have all the emergency measures in the world to prevent disaster still. We don't belong there. The Sea is not our turf. And if you've ever seen a movie about a nautical disaster it's not that far off from reality about a year ago off the eastern coast of Canada. Things went really wrong really quickly. And all that state of the art technology wasn't working when that happens the boat and its crew can't do much outs but put out an emergency distress call and pray that somebody answers it and that those people are close enough to help and if they're really lucky at the ships that answer. The call are part of the Royal Canadian Navy and are prepared to undertake one of the most dramatic. Rescues that you'll hear about outside of a Hollywood pitch meeting. This is the story of that rescue. I'm Jordan he throwing. This is the big stars. Nick Taylor busy of Maclean's chronicled the whole dramatic tale. An hello first of all what is the McKenna McKenna is a forty nine foot yacht. It's called the Hanse four ninety five. It was on the inside of beautiful boat. I don't know a whole lot of boats but I saw some photos Of the cabin and it was decked out you could wash dishes on that thing you could sleep very comfortably and you could sail the high seas. It's a fairly rich person vessel. Yeah I mean it's the kind of you buy when you have some money to buy a boat. So what happened to her well The owner of the boat was named John Hagen. He's a surgeon who lives here Toronto. And he asked a broker who is in the area where he should by boat so John and the broker whose name was pat sturgeon Had A few conversations and they found the McKenna in Greece. In this Mediterranean port called left us their mission was to buy the boat and then find a way to get her to Canada. How do you get a boat to Canada when you buy it overseas? I mean I guess. There's an obvious answer to that question. Well Yeah I mean you you usually on the water but there are a few options you can. You can bring a boat over in a container ship shipped almost package kind of thing or if you want to maybe save a little money depending or have a little more flexibility you can hire skipper to get on that boat. Hire a small crew and take it where you want. And this is what he did. And that's what he did. So tell me. But the the captain and the crew and and I guess what Rupert Mondro does because this is a job that I didn't know existed. It's an unbelievable story. How he started doing what he's doing he was born in South Western. England in Devon Place called barnstable. He was a trained actor at one point. He had his own company. He went bankrupt. He told me at the age of Twenty Eight. He was Drifting around I think thinking what do I do next at that point and so he got on a boat and loved. It started sailing and eventually he started delivering goods because he was very good. Skipper and so twenty five years. He did that until the he was he was hired to bring the McKenna across the Atlantic But he he's just a natural born c fair when you talk to him about it You know it's it's like he was born on the water and the way people talk about him is a remarkable. They say it's almost as if he doesn't need instruments he he can sail the seas just by sort of you know putting his finger in the wind and saying little now the waves are gonna come this way so we better go this way and You know he has autopilot. And all the fancy instruments but He's he's been spent the latter half of his life Just having fun sailing boats around the world and he's gone almost everywhere so he captained the McKenna taking it. I guess from Greece to Canada. Yeah he he brought crew And a cook And in October of two thousand eighteen they they met in in Greece and they spent a few days. They're getting ready Inspecting the boat making sure everything was in working order. It was by all accounts. A beautiful boat the McKenna was in very good condition and And ready for the voyage. He said By text to John. The surgeon Looking wonderful we're GONNA get going and so. They sailed through the Mediterranean. They had to stop in Italy everywhere. They talked with scenic about away but they stopped in Italy to fix a a steering problem fixed. It kept going. Stop at Gibraltar for a little while whether stopped them from going much. Further few days finally got onto the Azores which was the final stop before the Atlantic crossing Weather stop them again. There's a lot of weather in the late fall in the North Atlantic relatively treacherous waters so They were waylaid for for a while and It it took them quite a bit of time to get from Greece to the stores But then in November they set sail for Halifax what happened well. A lot of bad things happened relatively quickly The the treacherous weather caught up with them again. Rupert had this satellite phone that he borrowed from another sailor and he was able to get weather reports on sort of four or five hour delays. So he would check the forecast and based on what it said he would. He would steer the boat in a different direction. There was a big weather system coming in a big low pressure system from the South who was moving north and he and his crew. We're GONNA try to beat it to the north and they almost got there when you when you look at some of the screengrabs. They have of the of the weather patterns but they didn't quite make it and we're caught in this little arm of what they all refer to everyone involved in this as a hurricane. It was not a named hurricane but it was hurricane-force winds and it had this little arm whipping around and got caught in it and It for twenty four hours totally ravaged the boat crew was hunkered down The waves were were roaring. The wind was ripping through the rigging of the masks on On the on the boat and they were I mean they were they were rolling safely but quite violently through huge waves the kind of waves that you would see in big bad blockbuster movies you know. Not Maybe not the biggest of the big but huge so The weather data and they and they survived that The boats survived intact. They didn't capsize anything. Like that. But When it was safe to emerge in sort of inspect the damage rupert who Never saw probably couldn't fix came out and saw problem he almost couldn't fix because Man It was. Just it was torn. The steering was broken. The rudder was at a place it took some real Seafaring ingenuity to even get the boat. Operable again he and they kept going well. The steering quadrant was broken. The the the sort of mechanism that connects the rudder to the autopilot into the anything you need to actually change direction in the boat. He had to flip it around and turn it one hundred and eighty degrees the steering quadrant and then welded into place. Not Welding really. He had a cables and whatever it was at its disposal that would keep things together and worked. And so he I think the cruise airing macgyver. I got yeah he really was a seafaring macgyver and I think the crew was stunned They they were texting as well back to John. The surgeon who was a little helpless at this point in probably starting to feel a little guilty by boat is in the middle of the North Atlantic Middle North Atlantic. And his crew. That I sent. There's with it in. Oh my God we can even do and so. He was getting texts. They're saying we're pretty sure Rupert Scott under control because he's a pretty you know stoic. Man and And he did and they kept going and then well and then I hit more weather goodness. It never really stopped. They were chugging at this point as fast as they could to Halifax where the boat was gonNA spend the winter before coming to Toronto in the spring but more weatherhead This time the forecast racist dead wrong it. It misled Rupert and And his crew and they found themselves overtaken by a storm that I don't think was hurricane force but was nevertheless the kind of thing that would damage a boat. That's already been that's already damaged it just. His ingenuity was Was unfortunately Somewhat beaten down two to nothing by the storm so they found themselves once it had calmed a little bit and they were able to assess the situation adrift at Sea. What do you do in a situation like that? Well in this case what you do. Is You look for boats in the vicinity of your of your boat? Anybody who can help. You is a savior and fortunately for the McKenna. There were two Canadian navy ships. Who happened to be coming home from a mission a training mission in And War Games in Europe and they were only about eight nautical miles away from the McKenna. When everything went Super Ri- so rupert the captain got on the radio with Peter McNeil the captain of HMCS glaze Bay talked a little bit and Ships turned towards the McKenna it was glaze. Bay and HMCS summerside two coastal defence vessels. Which are two of the smaller ships in the fleet? But by comparison to the McKenna they were quite large and probably looked a you. Know a welcome sight to about adrift without any ability to really go anywhere on. Its own power and then they rescued them and it was no problem. In the story is over everything's Peachy The ship came and they just pluck them out. No it was really difficult. The story of this rescue is the stuff of a movie. This podcast will be right back after a really quick message. Can you guess the average dollar amount Canadian households have in savings according to the most recent data? It is just eight hundred and fifty two dollars now. The recommended rate of savings in Canada is ten percent and traditionally Canada's historical rate has been around seven point five percent last year though. It was one point seven. That doesn't sound like a lot because it isn't it can be hard to save today for people who are often carrying debt. It can be even harder in fact thirty nine percent of Canadians right now of all ages. Don't think they will ever save enough for retirement. So how do you save when there's not much there to start with? You need a plan

Mckenna Mckenna Canada Greece Rupert John Hagen Toronto Halifax Hurricane Rupert Mondro Royal Canadian Navy Italy Jordan Hollywood North Atlantic Middle Atlantic Rupert Scott Azores Mediterranean South Western
Shady Deals at Trump Properties

All In with Chris Hayes

07:40 min | 3 years ago

Shady Deals at Trump Properties

"President surrounds himself with criminals? His campaign chair. His deputy campaign chair is former national. Security Adviser you. You get the picture and as a rule if you're a politician that kind of thing isn't generally a great move but it does offer one surprising benefit when one of those folks turns turns on you you can point to their own shading dealings and say what anyone trust this person and as the president has defenders go after Parnasse repeating the same. You can't trust him line or I don't even know him remember. We have seen this all before with the last bag. Man Who talked about President Michel Com for about a decade Cohn was the Executive Vice President Trump Organization and Donald Trump's special counsel in September of two thousand seventeen profile of him appeared in Vanity Fair entitled. Michael Cohen would take a bullet for Donald Trump. The piece points out cones extreme loyalty to the president quote cone has been described as the sixth trump child. Or as Tom Hagen in this twisted version of the Godfather and sometimes as both Michael Cohen was the president's fixer but that relationship started to fall apart in early early twenty eighteen as news leaked out of illegal hush money payments made to women ahead of presidential election by April the FBI had redid. Cohen's office and hotel room in Hatton seizing recordings electronic devices. Initially the president was supportive of his longtime attorney. Michael lawyer who. I've always liked him respected. Most most people will flip if the government lets out of trouble sorry. I don't see Michael doing that. Despite the horrible which hunt and the dishonest media but on the day after Cohen pleaded guilty to do eight federal crimes including campaign finance violations. Implicating the president directly as an unindicted co-conspirator individual one the president trashed him quote. If anyone is looking for a good lawyer I would strongly suggest that you don't retain the services of Michael Cohen burn months later. Cohen found himself before Congress delivering a warning. I did the same thing that you're doing now. For Ten years I protected Mr Trump on for ten years and I can only warn people the more people that follow. Mr Trump as I did blindly are going to suffer the same consequences suances that I'm suffering. Michael Cohen pulled back. The curtain. On trump world in two thousand eighteen and live parnasse did that last night telling us what an absolute cesspool of conflicts flicks of interest corruption and shady characters around the President United States. We'll talk about that next today. The the FBI showed up at the home of Robert F. Hide just days after the house. Intelligence Committee released text messages. Provided by indicted Giuliani associate partners in which hide appears to be representing sending himself as actively surveilling then. US Ambassador Ukraine revanche high was told NBC News. He was drunk and unserious when he sent those tax. The question you have to ask ask yourself is how did someone like Robert. Hi gain access to the United States and the answer to that was laid out by himself told Rachel maddow how easy it is to get. Close the presents inner circle just show up at the trump international hotel in Washington DC. That's how Parnasse himself met Robert. Hi You met him where I met him at the I think the trump hotel yes trump hotel. He was a regular at the bar because it was like a breeding ground that trump hotel so it every event would be there so everybody would hang out there afterwards. Everybody all the meetings would be there. So it's basically you would see the same people every day or the same congressman that supported the president would be there and nobody else so he was a fixture on site he was always there and but he was always drunk. What you got in the stands where the trump hotel it's like one a big Cesspool and there's really hard to keep any secrets for more on that Cesspool joined by independent journalists sack efforts in the last two years staking out the trump hotel and writing up what he saw in the eleven hundred Pennsylvania newsletter and an article for Vanity Fair titled Power Tripping the swamp how trump's DC hotel swallowed Washington Zach. This is your beep deep probably more than it is anyone's beaten. I'm curious how is description. Squared with what you've been reporting over the last two years it's spot on. I mean Robert Hyde was on my radar Ariza early as April e. You look at his instagram. And they were pictures of him with the president pictures of him with the vice president all sorts of important people and for him it actually transcended ended the trump hotel. I think he was at six different trump properties. But if you want to project important you can just go hang out at the hotel and take some pictures one of the things that has struck me about about this where we are right now. The impeachment is usually it is very hard to get to the present United States and and and that's for that can be really maddening for people when you're trying to if you're working in the in the staff of the White House and you want to get the president something on his agenda. It's hard to get to him This president seems remarkably easy to get to buy all kinds of people with all kinds of agendas and it seems like his properties are the nexus of this this kind of soft corruption absolutely. I spoke to the president at the trump trump hotel. I was staying there researching one of my articles in for the cost of a nice steak dinner I was able to chat with the president which mix for really good social media posts there so if you you just you know hanging out there take your pictures with your Kevin McCarthy user Mike Pence's as they go back and forth now they're usually not upfront in the bar they're usually going back and forth from the entrance way way to private rooms but see them coming and going you can collect enough pictures and you look like you're really important and then what do you do with that really important the look like you're really important. Well well I think with Robert Heidi. He's using it to run for Congress and there are certainly some other people who are running for Congress typically Republican challengers who seem to be collecting pictures of themselves to the trump hotel. But I've seen some people move from the lobby where the lesser swamp. Thing's hang out to the back rooms and I. I don't know exactly what they're doing to get back there. But looking on social media it almost looks like that they are puffing up their importance with a lot of pictures and then all of a sudden they kind of get to be important That's interesting what. What do you mean by backrooms described it because at one point apartments talking about a private dinner with the president which I think happens there in the hotel room? What is what's the sort of distinction between the the the lobby bar in the backrooms actual important power players are so there's really two tiers if you go out in the lobby? That's where you're gonNA find you not even Fox News host but like Fox News guests are going to be hanging out there. People who really wanted to be seen in need to be seen to kind of project some sort of importance but they may not actually be that important example. Corey Lewandowski is somebody. You'll see it there rudy. Giuliani was the exception to that. But it's the back rooms. It's the trump townhouse which is where if died with dined with the president. And it's the Franklin study in the Lincoln Library where they had those private events. And that's where you'll see the mingling with special interest groups that have flown in lobbyists. Anybody can see them coming back and forth though to the main entrance which is where some of these other interactions come from and is that final question here like do like my understanding from the reporting we haven't from the disclosures that special interest groups if you're trying to get a rag changed if you're trying to get a piece of legislation like they we know that's the place to go and that's where those back room meetings happen. It can't hurt. There's absolutely no downside to booking the trump hotel now. I spoke to lobbyist obvious really early on when it was clear that hotel was going to stick around. said they're going to go there to try to influence them in response was of course they are. Why wouldn't they yeah? Search efforts in who's been covering this beaten his newsletter. Thanks a

President Trump Trump Hotel Donald Trump Executive Vice President Trump Michael Cohen President Michel Com United States Vice President Vanity Fair FBI Parnasse Giuliani Congress Robert Washington Dc Robert Hyde Rachel Maddow Special Counsel Cohn
No. 3 Clemson tops No. 22 Virginia 62-17 for ACC title

AP News Radio

00:42 sec | 3 years ago

No. 3 Clemson tops No. 22 Virginia 62-17 for ACC title

"Clubs it continues to get mileage out of perceived slights by the playoff committee Virginia the latest to feel the wrap this the Tigers finished an undefeated regular season with a dominating sixty two seventeen win over the Cavaliers it's Clinton's fifth straight ACC title Trevor Lawrence was stellar going sixteen for twenty two for three hundred and two yards and four touchdowns in just over three quarters and he admits they're still playing with a chip on their shoulders this survey is both of one more season will be our best T. Hagens cut three of those touchdown passes to finish with a hundred eighty two yards both ACC championship game records Travis ET and rushed fourteen times for a hundred and twenty five yards and a touchdown Remick Millen Charlotte

Virginia Tigers Cavaliers Clinton Trevor Lawrence T. Hagens Travis Remick Millen Charlotte Hundred Eighty Two Yards Twenty Five Yards Three Quarters Two Yards
Actor Robert De Niro: Trump must be 'held accountable' with impeachment inquiry

AM Joy

10:32 min | 3 years ago

Actor Robert De Niro: Trump must be 'held accountable' with impeachment inquiry

"Do. Now Is Academy Award winning actor Director and producer. Robert Deniro. I am trying not to speak out. It is so exciting to see you. Thank thank you for being here. I want to talk about the movie in a moment but I have to first start off by asking you because of all of the events that are happening. There's going to be live televised hearings for impeachment next week. You've been very tough on Donald Trump. What do you think? What do you think that impeachment could actually accomplish? Do you think that the American people at this point having lived through three years almost at this guy are actually soup. Still surprise. -able well I just think that he if we don't go through impeachment inquiry. We're letting him get away with something he can't get away he's just you just got to move forward and take chances tactically or strategically. Might it feels you know what happens. It'll give him more ammunition later but he has done something wrong he has to pay. Hey for that. He has to be put on notice pay for it. Even if the Republicans will not finally go through with impeaching him everybody else has gone on through the symbolic motions of he has to be held accountable period. And you want to talk about the two films that you're in and just sort of make a kind of a connection here you you know. Obviously you play the guy who the moment with the man who's becoming the joker the kind of pivotal moment where he fully embraces that sort of negative identity entity is with your character but he also is Egged on by other people to do the chaotic things that he's doing where people who are angry and feel disaffected and so they pushed him to keep doing more bad things. And then your new movie. In the Irishman this idea of donald trump sort of having a gangsterism around him of of behaving like a gangster or maybe behaving at the behest of gangsters like the leader of Russia. Those things do seem to tie to him right because it is. It's is curious to me why people follow him. I'm I am completely. I have no idea why they follow him. Because he's not even a good gangster he's he can't even keep his word about anything he's I think in the real gangster world he wouldn't last long he lashed long in his own little real real estate world where he's the boss because he's the boss and he heard it all that money and he's he's a fool but in the real world he who wouldn't last long that's my feeling. Yeah it's interesting because people seem to be afraid of him but it isn't clear to me why when you ask. Why are people afraid? They're like because he'll tweet at me. Yeah he what bothers me more. What concerns me more is that someone will come along this a lot? Worse Don trump. He's just a to He's done but when you get somebody who comes along who smart. Who knows how to work it and is more material and can be sympathetic? When they need to be sympathetic he has none of that? He has not one speck of sympathy empathy for anything or anybody. So he's just stupid to she doesn't know and in a way we're lucky in a certain way we're lucky because because we can see it so clearly but as I say I'm worried generation two-three from now this is going to happen again and he will be a bit of a teacher feature of what he did wrong. This other person will feel that they can do it this way. That's what really bothers me more. I want to ask you the question. I asked everyone that I interviewed for the first book that I just did and I asked everyone. What do you think the country looks like after trump? We have a lot of making up to do reparations to to do with countries because if we don't have a president who really can show that we're we're growing up and repairing sincerely the damage. That has been done personally. I think someone like Buddha judge would be a capable of doing that young but he's got all the qualifications even even Bloomberg I think he's a grownup he's run this city for three three terms. He's grown up and he knows so he's an executive he's he hasn't done everything perfectly but he's very very good. He'll get us out of this mess because we are in one because we owe it to the rest of the world to do the right thing and we're not going to do unless we can show them that we've we've got leadership not only in the next four years after twenty twenty but after four years after that and after that yeah as a fellow New Yorker I reached out to you for your support Mayor Bloomberg. No he has a little bit. We sort of touched on an he hasn't asked asked me for. We just talk because I wanted him at one point two two run I thought he should. I was disappointed that he finally didn't but I think he sees right now that he ask the jump in because he has to jump in. Are you concerned that the idea yet. Another billionaire coming in. And saying you'll say I mean that was trump's theme trump's not a billionaire he's a fake president he calls everything else fake because he knows he's fake it projects is a classic. I don't know what you call it. Everything that he says is that negative about other things. Other people is what he's saying about himself so he he's he's a loser he he is a genuine loser hand and get somebody who's real like Bloomberg who's worth I think over fifty billion or maybe a lot more and this guy he says he's worth three something billion billion. We don't even know if he's just a total huckster hustler. Yeah and he and I think one of the things that angers him probably the most people like you people from Hollywood which he craves to be a part of your world he craves to be a part of the world of the of the females of the of the people that are actors or athletes if he wants to be a part of your world and the rejection Shen from people like you I think is one of the thing that bugs in the most. How could you not want? I mean when I was in New York before before he was doing all we want to have anything to do with him. I mean I heard he's around. He wants to take a picture do nothing to do with him. He's a fool. Everybody knew that but I mean now he he'd call up the tabloids leads and say he's the agent he called Forbes magazine. That's crazy yeah and not bought it. Yeah absolutely last night before I go to the movie. What do you make Guiliani at at the I mean I you lost his mind I think he's he's what a shame because he had something going and he just prostituted himself to work with trump? Guys of how could he do that. I I have no understanding of. How could he was a guy who used to prosecute people the Rico Act this show on and now? He's part of a criminal family is. He's the Tom Hagen. It's an amazing turn for him. Let me talk about this movie. So the Irishman was just reading a little bit about it. One of the things that I think is fascinating and I did not realize you don't process it in your mind because you've been in so many incredible movies will be so many award winning winning winning films and you've been so hard for them you Deniro de Niro Pacino. Scorsese yourself Al Pacino and Scorsese had not work together in this way before. No we when we started doing this project Monday night talked about Al playing Hoffa and it was built. It'd be a great idea. So that's how that came about and Joe Patchy and so on is the Buffalo Lena character even Joe Patchy coming back because he hasn't been in a lot of films lately lately. That's pretty exciting. It was well it was the ideal situation that I felt. We felt if we could get it. Me Joe Al Mardi Directing and people people have been obsessing over this is on aging or aging. That people are talking about where they took you back in time. I guess you'd call aging Mardi sort of I think he made up the phrase youth of available considerable public. That's pretty cool and tell us a little bit about this story. Well it's about A. I mean what what happened. Just a little backstory. We had been working on another project for many years. He wanted to get something going. Finally we came up with something about an aging retired Hitman from the west coast so Mari was showing me Old Films Jan film in Black and white as looking for the style all that he wanted to do it in and I said well. I've got to read this book that I spoke with Eric Roth a few years about one I came out called. I heard Japan houses. And it's about a hitman and so on and maybe it'll be good for research and when I read it. I said Marty we got together. I said you gotta read this because I think this is probably more like what we would want to I do. Yeah I mean the idea that you know this the lives of these characters even touch on the Kennedy assassination and providing the guns that were used to kill Kennedy. I mean this is sort of expands beyond on just the sort of unique story that you're telling yeah had a lot of is have these characters like Hoffa even Joe Gallo and the Kennedy certain size historical size to it but a very not a small but a personal story about a guy who's loyal to both people. Oh who very powerful and the dilemma. That is in actually but to me said in a very real way I can just stop by the way. He wrote the book that the dialogue at all all the scenes and everything been some people said well. You know that's not really true. That's not how it happened. But as Mardi says it's it's a story that we tell title in our way and it's not it might not be accurate though. I personally think that there's a good chance it would be accurate and if we find out later that it was somebody else happened another way. That's great do another film that back possibly but it's okay. I'd like to find out what really happened. This isn't the way it did happen. Well I can wait to see it. It's at the Balasko here. In New York. The BALASKO was a theater theater. So this is a first for the Balasko gets over one hundred years old and it. It plays eight times a week. The way of play would play. It's called show. It's not anymore but it's another movie theaters around the city around the country. Then it'll be on a Netflix. Want Robert Deniro. It's so cool talking to you. Thank you so much for being here in the new film. The Irish is playing in select theaters as we just mentioned right. Now we'll be on Netflix. In on November twenty seven th and also go see joker it's so good as well

Don Trump Donald Trump Robert Deniro Bloomberg Balasko New York Mardi Hoffa President Trump Kennedy Netflix Joe Patchy Director And Producer Niro Pacino Mayor Bloomberg Forbes Magazine Scorsese Joe Al
Democrats win control of House and Senate in Virginia

Chris Plante

02:12 min | 3 years ago

Democrats win control of House and Senate in Virginia

"It was an election night for Democrats to remember in Virginia as they picked up at least two Senate and five house seats to gain control of both the house and Senate for the first time in a quarter century among the key races lost by Republicans the last GOP house seat in northern Virginia formerly held by Kim Hugo and the Senate seat vacated by retiring Republican Dick black Democrat John bell B. Gary Hagens to win that race high voter turnout in a late infusion of out of state cash helped push Democrats over the top but former governor Terry McAuliffe was quick to put the G. O. P. defeat at the feet of president trump for one point four miles from the White House in he could even step foot in the Commonwealth of Virginia it was a big night for us the first time in twenty six years you look at Virginia you look it can cut tacky and you look at the most we got in Mississippi it's a tough night for Donald Trump in Kentucky Democrat challenger indie Bashir beat incumbent governor Matt Bevin in Mississippi Republican Tate Reeves beat his democratic challenger by six point in a state where the Republicans won by more than thirty points four years ago in northern Virginia Democrats dominated there as well with victories for the board chair seats in Fairfax Loudon in prince William county Democrats won eight of the nine seats on the Fairfax board with long time GOP incumbent Pat Haggerty hanging on to win in Springfield the boards in both Loudon in prince William of also now swung from Republican to Democrat majorities among the winners Julie breast men the woman who lost her job after flipping off president trump motorcade in twenty seventeen she use that to successfully launch her political career and pick up a board seat in Loudon county what is this election tell us about northern Virginia it clear in Fairfax that the Republican message has failed to resonate and it is becoming more more problematic for the party with each election cycle Steven Farnsworth political science professor merry Washington says suburban demographics of change the suburbs of today I have a lot of young people and then they have a lot more racial and ethnic diversity that you saw a generation ago and that means a very different kind of politics arms worth noting GOP hopes to capitalize on the top Virginia Democrats scandals fell

Springfield Merry Washington Julie Kentucky President Trump Gary Hagens John Bell Dick Black GOP Professor Steven Farnsworth Fairfax Loudon County Prince William Virginia Pat Haggerty Prince William County Fairfax Loudon Tate Reeves Matt Bevin
Illness linked to tick bite kills former NC Senator Kay Hagan

Politics and Public Policy Today

01:36 min | 3 years ago

Illness linked to tick bite kills former NC Senator Kay Hagan

"Former US senator Kay Hagan has died the North Carolina Democrat unseated Elizabeth dole back in two thousand eight she herself was defeated by Tom tell us in twenty fourteen he's sixty five years old had served ten years in the North Carolina state Senate she fell ill here in Washington back in twenty sixteen was diagnosed with a brain inflammation caused by a virus described as a rare infection spread from text to humans in a C-SPAN appearance three years ago okay Hagen reflecting on her time in the U. S. Senate when I got elected we had at that time twenty women in the Senate so obviously we had hit that twenty percent threshold and when you look at what that means that that really does mean we were able to pass significant legislation because we came together they say women bring to the table something different an ability to compromise and ability to stay at it until you get the job done sort of the power struggles the boss mentality is put aside what's in it for everybody and that means you're not going to get everything you want otherwise itself a win lose situation but how can we compromise how can we come together understand what these prevailing issues are but at the end of the day get something done and I think that one is what our country wants and is demanding but at the same point who's doing it the women at the table or getting it done former democratic senator Kay Hagan back in twenty sixteen for C. span twos book TV she was talking about her book titled broad influence how women are changing the way America works senator Hagen died today she was sixty five years

Senator Kay Hagan Elizabeth Dole TOM Senate Washington America Senator Hagen United States North Carolina Sixty Five Years Twenty Percent Three Years Ten Years