22 Burst results for "Hasso"

Huge number of asylum seekers at US-Mexico border as COVID-19 restrictions end, new rules begin

AP News Radio

00:57 sec | 2 weeks ago

Huge number of asylum seekers at US-Mexico border as COVID-19 restrictions end, new rules begin

"Starting today there are new rules for asylum seekers. More migrants are continuing to gather at the U.S. Mexico border. Human rights advocate Adriana hasso tells KG TV that last week it was mostly men, but now families are coming, now that title 42 has ended which allowed the U.S. to quickly expel migrants to Mexico during the pandemic. We are seeing a lot more females with children. But now there are new rules the Biden administration is denying asylum to migrants who arrive at the U.S. border without first applying online or pursuing protection in a country they passed through to get to the U.S. Mexico border. Families who cross the border will face curfews and monitoring the head of the household will wear an ankle bracelet as her cases are heard within 30 days. I'm Donna water

Last Week Mexico Today Kg Tv Title 42 Adriana Hasso Donna U.S. Mexico Border U.S. Border First Pandemic Biden Administration U.S. 30 Days More Females
"hasso" Discussed on Out of Bounds Podcast

Out of Bounds Podcast

04:24 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on Out of Bounds Podcast

"But didn't compatible boots and certain And especially if we're talking about touring market too. I mean it's The same types of people but the conditions over here are just so much different so The alps being so steep and relatively exposed. I mean it's a generally along steep hike. Ski stuff The valleys generally at very low elevation with good snow up top. Meaning you're often. Packing are going through some real ships now at the bottom through mud and whatnot whereas in the states i mean you've got a lot of side country. Let's all righty lift up and and skiing out of bounds. You got a lot of sled skiing. I hope to see a snowmobile in europe. Impact country like the way. I'm used to seeing so That also impacts quite bit of the product choices of weight becomes more important than skiing performance. Just because you're hasso focused on how. How many vertical meters. You actually need to get up. Yeah that's that's very interesting because like people here. Don't even have that concept. They don't even really understand with the exception of some areas in like the whites and where people really get it. I think most people here. Like oh no i wanna go tour. But i don't really give a shit about the ski if it doesn't ski well going down like that's the priority is down. I want it to get me to the top right. So it's interesting to hear that like okay. It is really important to have lightweight gear. This why it's really important to have that lightweight gear. And i think now you're starting to see a little more but become popular in new england and in in north america. In general because ski touring is growing. It's a growing market. I think for for many of the ski brands that are out there right now. And fishers kind of positioned itself. Well because you guys have all the offerings especially boots. I mean you guys have one two three four pin boo like. That's that's great. Nobody has that. I feel like other than like the true tour only companies like. You're not seeing nordica blizzard. These kind of companies are not offering four different types of boot four different and more specific aspects of ski touring..

skiing hasso europe new england north america
"hasso" Discussed on The Dystopian Republic

The Dystopian Republic

05:29 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on The Dystopian Republic

"Ball trick looked intently into a portrait of burr Croix junior 1913 to 1917 while Marcos Mauricio and catalpa respectively did the same two walpole Castillo 1917 to 1920 Hamilton Rosario senior 1920 to 1925 and Kira hasso 1925 to 1934, both presidents were known as the four horsemen who brought poor media out of its isolationism and onto the world stage. The four saw a bit of themselves in their ancestors nationalists who did what had to be done to make the nation the best. It could be in the world resorting to any measure necessary to get every single thing they asked for. Who burr walpole Hamilton and Kira were and what they did secured their places in the yellow crosses history. Before carefully removed their portraits from the wall just in time for the troops to raid the hall throwing, stomping, tearing and trashing all the others, all the studying they did on their ancestors awoke them to the sentiment that gregorio was going to bring the gray hay, Castillo or Rosario and hoso names back to their former glories. Speaking of whom he looked over the quick rundown of the labor policy, Linden, mendi sabal, Alexis, saviola, the third and gabino palacios junior crafted as per his request known as the three amigos Lyndon Alexis and gabino were liberal legislators who defected to the yellow cross on the promise that their collectivist program be realized. On the surface, the free men were of a kind gregorio hated with all his heart, the reputations, as socialist, hardliners, long, proceeded them. Yet beneath that surface, their idea of socialism was in sync with gregorio's concept of nationalism, a meritocratic collectivism where diligence is rewarded and slough is made.

Marcos Mauricio walpole Castillo Hamilton Rosario Kira hasso walpole Hamilton hoso gregorio mendi sabal Kira saviola gabino palacios Lyndon Alexis gabino Rosario Castillo Linden Alexis
"hasso" Discussed on Consider This from NPR

Consider This from NPR

07:30 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on Consider This from NPR

"Welcome to consider this from npr. And w amu. After the top story from npr. Stay with us for a look at what's happening here in the dc metro region from the w. amu. Newsroom one. School in delaware is offering to pay parents to drive their own kids to school. That's the incentive east side charter. School in wilmington is offering. Parents will get seven hundred dollars for each child. They drop off and pick up. That's for the whole year. It's an incentive designed to solve a problem. Many school districts around the country are facing. They simply do not have enough bus drivers. The pittsburgh public schools are putting sixth-graders on port authority buses. The city already delayed the start date administrators. Say they needed extra time to adjust to a school bus driver shortage of more than four hundred drivers. One industry survey found eighty one percent of school. Districts are having trouble finding drivers and that's just one example of how the pandemic is still being felt in all kinds of economic sectors mining companies are struggling to hire underground machine operators. The tsa short on security screeners and ports don't have enough workers to load and unload shipping containers. We feel the importer and exported pain. No doubt about it. Gene saroka is executive director of america's busiest cargo port in los angeles. Where today vessels are waiting a week just to get into port the impacts that all of this has had is noticeably hurtful to these men and women who are trying to do their jobs in the supply. Chain consider this. It's not just bars and restaurants. All sorts of businesses are still struggling to hire workers and the delta surge may slow the recovery even more from npr. I'm ari shapiro. it's monday. August twenty third. the following message comes from. npr sponsor. We work escape. Work from home distractions with we work access memberships find convenient workspaces by the day or month starting at just twenty nine dollars a day. Plus applicable taxes sign up at we work dot com slash. Npr madison by here. Host of shortwave. Daily science podcast from npr. Listen for new discoveries everyday mysteries and the science behind the headlines in about ten minutes every weekday. It's a great addition to your daily listening. Whether you're a science nerd or you know just a little science curious subscribe. Now two shortwave from npr. It's consider this from npr earlier this summer. Dozens of states cut off some federal pandemic unemployment benefits governors hope. That would push people. Back into the workforce but economists say those states have only had modest employment gain since the benefits stopped in june. So where are the workers with a stop going. Well i mean all of a sudden. I looked at my 401k and it was like oh wow i have a bunch of money. Sixty two year old. Norma hasso retired from her job with san diego gas and electric. She told npr she wasn't planning on it at first but working from home just got old. And she had a new grandchild. She wanted to spend time with you. Know at this point. I have lived two thirds of my life. I have one third to go. What do i want to do with that one third. I want to prioritize family and friends in my community during the pandemic. many people made the same decision. Two million workers retired earlier than they planned. According to researchers at the new school some made the call on their own others lost their jobs and didn't get new ones and some left the workforce out of fear. I quit. I just quit seventy four year. Old giovane grace. Anderson told npr. She didn't feel safe at her job as a cashier in florida. Grocery store now. She's living with a nephew in rural alabama getting by on social security. I wish i could say that. I could embrace retire but it scares me not being a part of something. Early retirement only explains a fraction of the worker shortage. Another reality of today's economy is that workers can be picky now and that's made it difficult to fill some jobs that are hard dangerous or lonely. Npr's camilo domino ski reports on one critical job. That has all three of those things. Something unusual has been happening this year across the country colorado iowa the pacific northwest scattered. Gas stations have run out of gasoline. They weren't big shortages or long shortages but hit up in something so essential can be worrying not to mention odd. Why would there be a shortage. We we available of gasoline. That's brian milne. Who tracks refined fuels for the data analysis company in to find the answer. Look behind the wheel of a big silver tanker truck. This is a job that requires special training and a lot of qualified drivers left the industry when demand for gasoline dropped last year. There wasn't work for them now. Companies have been scrambling as demand roared. Back all these companies you know. We can't get enough people in seats. It's just people. Just don't wanna do it. Dave samuelson lives in chattanooga tennessee. He's relatively new to fuel hauling and he knows exactly how much demand there is for workers like him just last fall. He went to school to get his commercial driver's license. When i was going through school i had. I had ten or eleven job offers before i graduated right away. He was hired to haul fuel. That's almost unheard of companies typically look for experienced truck drivers to train for the specialized work. Then there's what happened with his pay. It is really really jumped on our pay where i'm at not about forty percent since january forty percent. Now he's guaranteed at least seventy eight grand. A year and other companies are also offering big raises and incentives. That's remarkable because for years now companies have struggled to attract and retain drivers. They mostly didn't raise pay. Certainly not like this. At this point you might be wondering wait. Is that going to push gas prices up. Patrick dehaan is the head of petroleum analysis at gas buddy and he says not by much but it does have an impact. Or we're talking about you. Know something that would be negligible less than a to send a gallon impact but certainly there are a lot of other factors keeping gas prices high right now especially the price of crude oil. But there's another question to will these pay raises be enough to attract. new drivers. samuelson is very happy with his new gig. He says the pay is great and he loves that. He's back home on his farm. Every night but hauling fuel is dangerous. Getting licensed is a hassle and the hours can be rough so even with higher pay some experienced drivers. Just don't think it's worth it couldn't afford me. Let's put it that way brad. Zeilinger has been trucking for more than thirty years. He's hold fuel before but never again. He says frozen food is more his style now and.

npr Gene saroka ari shapiro Norma hasso wilmington camilo domino tsa delaware pittsburgh brian milne dc Npr Dave samuelson los angeles america
"hasso" Discussed on DSC On Demand

DSC On Demand

08:04 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on DSC On Demand

"I meant for sale in two thousand eighteen listed for six million. That was right around the time he was elected and moved to sacramento course. That could have been one million dollars five years ago so yeah. He bought it ten years ago for two point two there there. You go it's a five bedroom five bath. It has a dining pavilion a swimming pool and a spa. A large second floor deck covering the carport below inside they have an open floor plan with an indoor outdoor living room dining area marble-clad kitchen office playroom and sauna. He doesn't live in. The california governor's mansion. He has a home in fair. Oaks Three point seven million dollar property. Then he calls home instead so multi multimillion dollar homes. Yes but for him to be doing something right right right. I'm seeing reports that andrew. Cuomo is out of the governor's mansion but left his dog captain behind or told me he's living in his brother's basement. I wouldn't be surprised. All i thought this was a fact. This is a boy or fact and actual facts. Don't even live on the same planet. I don't know where he's he's moving to where he's moving. But i thought you told me he was living in The tv guys basement. If i did that was meant as i personally and entertaining a little joke. All right what else do we have the yeah. He left his three hundred. Three and a half year old Siberian shepherd mala mix behind what he left his dog behind. An ask the housekeepers at the albany mansion. If any of them wanted to take you loved his dog captain well. That's a dick move. The think yeah. I think he left his dog behind. He's done with the dog i see. He's one of those guys prompt. He's going to move now. He doesn't want the animal anymore. So the annual diskettes throwing on the heat. That's enough reason for a lot of people to vote for that guys recall. He's already out. Yeah that's not cool Okay what else. A lot of bars and restaurants are making people showed their vaccine cards to get in now. There are also digital versions of your for your phone that have qr code. That people can scan. I don't an app. I guess okay for. Qr vaccine the store for an app vaccine. Qr code app okay. Very good on the specific name for one well. Some twenty. Something year old in italy went viral after he got his. Qr code tattooed on his upper arm so that he can show that as proof. Now a qr code is pretty precise design. It is and tattoos tend to get runny and blurry in a fairly short amount of time so this guy is An idiot. I think if parents would agree okay. His parents told him stopping so impulsive. Knock it off or good. Good luck though. He tested out of mcdonald's and it worked at mcdonalds. What did his his cure code vaccine. Yes all right What else do we have kiss resumed. Its ended the road farewell tour last week. But without david lee roth and his solo band returning as the opening act. And that's when. Jean said that You know david lee. Roth really had his impact on rock and roll but his singing and dancing days are done. Oh goodness gracious bears. Noting that during dave's heydays gene talking. Nobody did what he did. He was the ultimate frontman. Not robert plant. Not rod stewart. Nobody he took being a frontman way beyond anything and then. I don't know what happened to him. Something and you get modern day day. I prefer to remember elvis presley in his prime scenario lips. Back in memphis. You know doing all that. I don't wanna think of blow to naked elvis on the bathroom floor. David lee roth. He doesn't know what He did to piss gene off but he posted a photo of a little kid flipping him off and said rock discipline on instagram. Some aaron rodgers the saint. Hey i'm still interested in hosting gig over jeopardy. Mr excitement definitely want that. If you know if you really don't wanna play for the packers anymore doesn't like anything job at all i'll take. He says he wouldn't have to give up football. He could fit the forty six days of filming each year around his football commitments Sony pictures is resuming. Its search for the permanent host after Mike richard stepped down last week. The former champion. Ken jennings has long been a fan favorite. And so now insiders saying it's jennings job to lose if they don't give it to him now They can't others are saying they wouldn't believe it if they don't some are calling for my my umbrella to be fired as well because they went digging in her past social media mine. They didn't link her thoughts on vaccines. Feminism today can't even have an opinion you can't just you know what i don't like Roses can't have an opinion People wanna throw you out of your job. i think. Cbs made a a wrong mistake by firing mike richards. Because now you've made yourself vulnerable to every crackpots opinion. Hasso all well mike richards. He made some stupid comments ten years ago. Fifteen years ago with some friend podcast. We've got to get rid of them. Now they've just destroyed the threshold for sensible decisions now ma'am bialokur dole. Just vaccines get rid of her. There will never be anybody and ken jennings had a bunch of old tweets pop up when he first is being talked about. I get that thinking. Chris borders logical thinking And yet sometimes it just makes no sense at all. They took the all star game away from atlanta. Because major league baseball disagreed with the way they were facing voter rights the state of georgia and they gave it to colorado. Which of course has its own dark period of unfair treatment towards black people specifically at the company that the baseball stadium is named after care right so they pulled it out one. St put it in another which had plenty of black is for itself and no one cared. That wasn't the story of the moment. It doesn't make any difference just decided we'll make a move we'll put it in colorado instead and everyone stopped caring after that and i don't understand it just like you i don't get out i but i think once you yield to the will of the kooks now you're always going to be yielding to the will of the kooks i think in this my point they yielded to the will of the kooks in georgia and they did not yield to the will of the kooks in colorado. I didn't hear any of the kooks complaining about colorado. I told you about it. No no i understand that there was the The laws regarding voting and colorado are more restrictive than those proposed in the ones in atlanta in georgia. But nobody made a big deal out of that. Major league baseball did they took the all star game away from them right not made a big deal about the voting restrictions in colorado. No it was a different severe. No it was a different Different complaint that they had. I didn't even hear that one. All i heard was the voting complaints about george. It is possible that one story escaped your attention. it is. Yeah yeah..

albany mansion david lee roth Cuomo ken jennings Mike richard sacramento mike richards swimming david lee robert plant andrew Hasso rod stewart mcdonalds bialokur dole football california aaron rodgers elvis presley mcdonald
"hasso" Discussed on How I Built This

How I Built This

07:58 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on How I Built This

"To me always has been meantime. You're really starting to become passionate about conserving and preserving land. Starting in maine And you've given away a huge amount of your money by buying land in maine and all over the country and giving it to the federal government to maine in other state agencies to develop parks. Yup i had been living on the land up there for years. So i knew it and with most beauty care companies that they generate goes into advertising. I've heard even that twenty. Five cents of every dollar goes into advertising so we didn't have that expense because we weren't advertising guerrilla marketing and grassroots. Marketing is not very expensive and we had put all the money we needed to into growing the business. It still had excess cash. And i felt like we needed to find a very solid investment and so land seemed to be rock-solid to me yeah and president obama named a new national monument in maine largely run the land that you you donate it to the national park service Katahdin woods and waters is our mountain in maine In two thousand fifteen burr schevitz passed away. He was eighty a remarkable guy. Really fascinating person. It was a film about him Which was really interesting in. I was a point where he said something that probably was a little bit hurtful. He said. I never want to see her again. But have you kind of made peace with him and in his memory and your relationship. Oh yeah i have. I was in love with bert. Yeah and we went through a lot of changes together. Had this child birt's b.'s. Together raised it up off it went. I still feel very very close to burton. I think about him a lot. He was quite an inspiration to me. Amuse yeah did you have a chance to talk to bert. Before he died in a certain way. Yes i was about to visit him and my girlfriend went up to visit him the afternoon before i was planning to go and she called me. Let me know that. She didn't think he was going to last much longer. So we sort of had a phone Correspondents and he did actually pass away later that day. So i did miss seeing him in person but i just remember him at his prime. Yeah some people have criticized you because they say well you got most of the money out of the company and bird you know. He didn't get as much. What's your feeling about about that criticism. I feel that. I was more responsible party for managing wealth. I could do the right thing with it And i don't know whether would have really used it. very productively. her. He came from a family that had some wealth and he chose not to use it. He didn't do anything to help the community with the wealth that he did have and i felt like that was something that i could do and have been doing. Do you plan to give away most of your wealth before you That's hard that's a lotta work. Isn't it figuring out where we should go and dealing with all the incoming pitches and all the people who want some of your money is it. Does it ever get tiresome. Well i have Both of my children each are working so a have responsibility for distributing funds every year to grant ts according to the mission. That makes sense to them. So i do have help. And i'm pretty spontaneous. About the way i distribute grants. I don't have a real formal system. I just you know either. It rings true to me or it doesn't when you see burke's today it's owned by clorox eventually purchased by clarks for almost a billion dollars and two thousand seven which is unbelievable. You see it everywhere to cvs. It's at walmart seven. Eleven is it. She beamed with pride is a wonderful to see that. I don't pay that much attention to it. I guess you know. I mean i certainly notice it when i'm at whole foods and i walked by the bird species schlaize catches my eye. But i think i've let it go. You know in many ways i just. It's something apart from me now. So the question. I ask everybody who's been on the show rock sam rescue which is how much of of your story and the success of this do you think is because of your skill in your intelligence and your hard work and how much of it because of just luck well. I was born on july eleven which seven eleven hasso. I have felt lucky for a long time. I mean you certainly have to work hard. But when i look back at some of the critical events that were part of the destiny of this adventure. I certainly couldn't have pulled those off that had to be locked or divine intervention. And there's been so many of those can the right people came to me at the right time so bad has got to be lock. That's roxanne quimby co-founder of birch bees. Do you do you use any of the products. The one product that i was using has been discontinued. Got some lip balm thank you. That's your recipe right. I hope so. Thanks so much for listening to this show this week. If you are not yet a subscriber please do subscribe or follow wherever you get your podcasts. If you want to write to us or email addresses each at npr dot org to find us on twitter. It's at how. I built this or at cairo's and instagram. It's at how i built this. Npr at guy dot ross. This episode was produced by jesse howard with music composed by ramtane arab. Louis who was edited by jeff rodgers with research health nor could see our production staff includes neva grant. Casey herman rachel faulkner. James delicacy julia. Carney elaine coats sarah safari liz. Metzger and annelise over. Our intern is harrison. Bj choy and jeff rodgers is our executive producer. I'm guy rise. And you've been listening to how i built this. This is npr. This message comes from npr sponsor. E-trade whether you're looking to put your money to work in the short term long term or somewhere in between e-trade gotcha covered. E-trade can help you with your finances from saving for a first home to investing for retirement. And they're backed by a team of financial professionals to give you support to get started today. Visit trae dot com slash. Npr for more information e-trade securities llc member setback. How i built. This is doing an annual survey to better understand our listeners. And how you use podcasts. Please help us out. By completing short anonymous survey at npr dot org slash built survey. All one word. We would really appreciate your help to support how i built this. That's npr's dot org slash built survey. All one word thanks..

maine national park service Katahdin burr schevitz bert birt federal government hasso jeff rodgers burton roxanne quimby clorox obama clarks burke cvs walmart jesse howard ramtane arab neva grant
"hasso" Discussed on The 2 Robbies

The 2 Robbies

08:43 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on The 2 Robbies

"It puts a different looking chelsea mounted against because so against crystal palace and gets the job done again raw. Busy isn't efficiency is a dry. When you talk about pushing drive obviously at times aligned. Your considerable the money just He exudes jive focus on the importance of every football much. I call a soccer coach. He's a proper coach. Sure but i think he's. He's a big part of why. I think they could go all the way in and all my tips to win the permanent tight because of that incessant demands on his players from put a score on a goal from zero looking bright before he goes off with the a nasty shoulder eldery You know this goes in and around that front line without mkaku playing just yet. He guarantees you a good amount of goes my only concern. It'll be it's just With individuals the centrebacks tucker silva is another year on growth is an excellent defender. Is it christianson. They're trying to sign coming of his name. Though trying to sign a another severe traumas on a centreback this highly rated but defense data came in your goal which is great. they're strong. They're a strong side. Rob options everywhere. Midfield wingbacks attacking midfield players a now strikers. Comfortable comfortable three no victory at home again. The big boys like the home funds back is what is everybody out and i think we saw that and comfortable arena performance from. Everybody fit robin. Everything's in place in know some place for grabs. Who were the two one. Nathalie lucar through got substantial who were raised on the big days when he needs to put it out to who fills two spots further trauma habits. In for music hasso typical. I mean they go crazy amount because is probably good. Preseason i mean vern if you want pace is it going to be an lukaku. Mount could he play midfield. I mean i mean it's just it's just a lot if they go too much. I think they will again box. The way you get sick and hudson doing. I might be wrong. They can have that kind of potential attacking thrust as well. But that's what we're saying options and the size of the squad and won the championship kicks in september and all through the winter in through into the knockout stages. They've got a pre complete squad Yes so good stunt all businesses businesses just before we move on. It looks like coming Abrahams go roma chelsea by but close some eighty million dollars buyback close which they just you know if he goes into the kalki will superstar chelsea a clever enough to say. I'm gonna get you know. Got enough to go do that. Business problems around london and sydney Thing i'll i'll tell business chain church palacio because obviously a good friend of the show. Patrick vieira we both play against got to know a little bit when he was a new. Cathy typical one for him away. Chelsea him chewy knows he's going to be easy days the now full enough to be seen from project. What we From patrick's policy didn't see enough yet rob dense enough window whereas a million say time. It's really hard to focus on everything. A tough game and start with. The team looked a lot younger. We're expected to again concerns. Still be the same for awhile now. New manager new style nucleus at a couple of crystal palace in in the premier league. That's hard to pull off so again chelsea away note on bowels of course yet at this point writing so but we'll see over the next few weeks we're gonna know not moro in the next two or three four weeks of why. This club looks like the manager and some of these new players. The aloft minority proven primarily players and. Listen that there's still some good plays a couple of hundred right now. The i believe there will be enough in the end just to stop them in the league button. That's not guaranteed. And i still have a concern that they they could be looking over their shoulder. If you know some of these young quite pan out but listen. We'll say long long radio patriots you know. He's he's obviously. We need to put more buddies in some people now house so they might be a little bit about tippety between now and august. We'll help him out and then we're gonna have to say you know he's going to have to deal with what he's going i'll wait. We go maybe till he gets to christmas. Let's turn into the first game this season and it was the ramp community stage. Jim and i think it will just looking forward to a game. Brentford a great story. Small club in in west london of never been primarily before taking on all snow. And you know the guys at the side of me start. Seeing the finance committee will win a decent game. Not sure we all realized what we see. Brentford team dominated peak. Apostle defensively got the goals plagued decent football on. Did not miss phelan. Nab that is a mill babylon bells. Are i think for awesome in northampton. Let's let's just wanna just just to start with brentford rob before we to ask them. Yeah yeah everything's everything's been so positive on this podcast so far. Everybody's so a frederick after bringing down on his arsenal brentford. Yeah first of all. I think we expected a lively atmosphere. Little stadium i think it's the kasey seventeen hundred thousands of small club with a smallish stadium but still made a tremendous amount of noise and still managed to get the goosebumps in all of us. Who social scenes in the hey jude and the singing and yo- chat with tears streaming down. His cheeks look stunned by the whole situation. It was a brilliant for them. But the football thomas frank bright passionate connect him with the fans obviously already from what he's under the thermal club ivan. Tony brian and bomo handful affront to the out of out of all school football. This club is anything from old. School would not going down that road a pairing. That can do a little bit of both as a team that will try and play. Obviously they press. They're expensive that very much. The modern football scene with a little bit of that as well a little bit direct bars with a nil long thrones raw bill with a little bit that piece power and corner kicks etc on. I'm all in for long bull and long slows. You makes one that nobody return and what was interesting. It took for awesome. Was making these. W fifty million pound sign Could not believe bottle. I cannot. I've been tony in the air don't even dominate headed bringing his teammates enemies who in bomo Times willing to the mid building and it was really interesting. Thomas franck after the game. I mean they use obscene motion. He's obviously a great day for them and seaports also said. He was disappointed that we can get down and play better. He wants a bit more football out his team as well. It wasn't an opposite we muscles in with physical and one some had is in play. He wants his team to play as well rope. Does may be against other opponents on different days. We're gonna see moral fat. I'm of course like this. gobi calf. that's going to be kosher. Madonna try and play too much. You give the ball away excetera in this league but as an opening day while Just very very pleased with brentford football club. Okay how much niceness. On this podcast. Rob simmons positivist show last year. We tune northland turn to mika. Tata's face afterwards with the interview. A face like thunder call blimey a not a bad second-half to last season they wouldn't last five games in the primarily. There's some signings young players. Decent prospects into the football cup also finds need a one c low of course but a few sun is room like kind of like congress failed. It looks okay ben white a good play with i didn't mind the signings But you kind of take one step full with all those things. I've said that and then a couple of.

tucker silva wingbacks crystal palace Nathalie lucar lukaku football roma chelsea rob dense christianson Patrick vieira vern Abrahams palacio brentford rob soccer Little stadium robin Rob london
"hasso" Discussed on Sekeres & Price Show

Sekeres & Price Show

03:05 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on Sekeres & Price Show

"Email us info at go goat sports dot com poll question today ties into the baseball game last night in the welcome mat and i think we mentioned it yesterday as well which sport makes for the best movies baseball basketball football hockey voting at secure some price blog is your source of free casino games poker strategy and sports odds are we unanimous that it's baseball here in the blanket. Fort someone going to speak on behalf of another. Well it's happy gilmore. it's friday and they're cfl so you know that means to rebel decent on gulf. No i don't know going gulf but golf movies out there. What's his friday. I mean sorry. I thought you were talking about something else. You were talking about and what we should bet on. What are you talking about the poke. The poll question for me is is deaf. Golf should perhaps have been on. Their caddyshack is three time. I'm going hockey though. Because slapshot like i just as much as i love. Major league slapshot was the movie for me the hockey i own a lotta people screaming at me that i should have had boxing on there. Of course there's been a number of great boxing films over the years reaching ball rocky million dollar baby all of that. I'm getting yelled at. There's no Motor sports on a pole. Been great motor. Sport film afford versus ferrari was a terrific film Lovely rush film several years ago fast and furious one two three. Is that motor sports though or is that just probably not. yeah now. We'll shove that aside. I'm not familiar with the franchise. I don't know yet if they are licensed it on tracks but you tell me that never. I've never seen. I always thought that they just drift around street corners in down at three in the morning. But i stand to be corrected. I haven't seen films no Would days of thunder really cool documentary on days of thunder the making of days of thunder and then of course talladega nights hasso could shake. Yeah well that's it. Like talladega nights affected the culture. Low bit right like a lot of lines for the movie Parented even years later. Dog your source of free casino games poker strategy and sports odds boy. If you like governor dogs there was one there for the taking in english primarily today brentford making its premier league debut with a bang. Yes with a victory over are some made it. Look easy for heaven's sake Give me west ham tomorrow. Sunday notes sending gimme west. Yes i support..

baseball hockey boxing golf cfl gilmore basketball Fort football Major league hasso ferrari
"hasso" Discussed on Order of Man: Protect | Provide | Preside

Order of Man: Protect | Provide | Preside

07:06 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on Order of Man: Protect | Provide | Preside

"Is voting. We will be putting a term limits bill on the house floor. Congress has that what's the farthest to like that has has died for dr dead on arrival. Why would anybody vote themselves out alexander so we will be that on the house floor and like you said. Is it a conflict of interest. And i think he's probably twelve to twelve years six terms in congress and when we put that that on the house floor. I'm actually going to say to the people that i'm making this promise you. I'm not going to be helping you. So much is not gonna make urine idolize. Better that much ryan it really is. What is actually going to. Change is the last virtual because i think the only way to get people to vote for that and if you grandfather everyone is already in congress in to a their. Their clock starts that next election. They then have twelve more years right because the thing is nobody's gonna vote themselves out of course selfish. Why would they do that. And so i think that if we have a grandfather clause where they then get to be. They have another twelve years no matter if they've been here twenty or thirty which i i hate. I would love to make sure like. Oh hey no career politicians for but it's really far children right. How's that how's that you said you haven't presented yet. No i have not. I need to go get some more friends elected. I that's what i. That's what i was wondering is how that process works. What's the steps. How it's being received that sort of thing. Yeah so. I received this on a If we were to put this as a the country vote on this would pass right away. Almost eighty percent of american. I'm sure everyone recognizes but people want to do it because it gets them out of their power and so before we endorse anyone. That's a question we will actually ask them and say. Hey you know what. I will come i can. I can literally make a huge difference in your election. I was down down my weapon. He will be there. You will teach you or on ground game we will get your fundraising we'll read. What's your weapon. That's a that's manager is blake blake. He's right right across all best friend. Bronze my official office campaign office does it all. And he's literally. I mean i. You'd never want him on your podcast. Because he's just so robotic you'd be okay. Yes i think it gave you sufficient answers. I've done i mean he's he's got elaborate. No that's it. Nobody gave you the answer. Really good guy you can trust him literally when he says something that is the word and that is the truth right He's he's very robotic and he's he has little skills that i do not half but he's great at building systems building organizations. You know the reason we were able to win our election against a lot of career politicians and a bunch of people that do this reliving is because we played our game like moneyball. we're totally out of the norm. No one's ever ran election like this but what are some of the things you guys did differently. Hasso normally you know. I need about three hundred ninety thousand votes to my election. Okay not three hundred ninety three and so instead of because we have people after every speech. Hey man i love to help you believe in everything you're saying. What can i do if i walked up to your incredible your highest achieving human. Being if i said hey man. I need three hundred ninety three thousand votes. You say that's great. I mean i got. I got kids. I don't know if i can do that right. But if you to me. And i said okay. Cool what neighborhood do you live in. Then bring up an app that he designed then go through it. I would say oh. You live in a rugby nole. So that's a great great neighborhood cool. I need seven votes at that neighborhood right. Can you get seven people to say they will vote for me and election day. Call him back up. Make sure they've already voted and dependable. Sure yeah i know seven people of course right and so we. We broke our election down to bite size pieces and to where we we didn't just know our total vote number because a lot of people who run elections. They don't even know how many votes to win asked night. Yeah that'd be the first thing you would think so but a lot of people then some of them get elected and just like when i first got up here. I always thought to myself how that. I like to praise but now look at these people. How did they get elected seriously. But i endorse somebody we will. We will really back them in their locked. We'll send him down to the have teach their campaign team the plan. So you okay. Here's even get all your county maps. I'll teach you how to highlight of all right and then we'll teach utilize a volunteer force. This is interesting because when you're talking about Presenting this bill. This term limit bill. You're you're not just presenting the bill. You're thinking about the entire game plan which means that. I need to get other people elected. Who will vote for this bill right. Yes that's gotta be the fun part that strategy that game that's exceeding allowing to happen seeing it work. That's pretty so my plan is we will introduce this bill Probably one term before my last term And then you know lord willing to get reluctant people of western carolina so love me. Hopefully they could change their mind. That's their that's their progress but my plan is right before i plan to spend my last time. I will introduce it one term before that. Because then i expect it to pass that first time i hopefully all gotten a good contingent about fifty people left by the who can who believe in it And in the people who voted against it. I will remember their name. I will go to your district. I will beat you. And then it's so that that i think that's what it's gonna come down to but we will hope it doesn't because right now i make the most sense we you tournaments on politicians and bureaucrats. Sure people shouldn't be here but anyways when you're saying bureau kratz you're saying non elected non elected type. Humans who are not. It's almost impossible to fire bureaucrat. The strong united me it. Won't you fire somebody that they have to have the ability to go i apologize. I'm checking four. Yeah you're okay. Once these people get hired. I mean if you wanted to fire one of them then make they. They say they have to go see a specialist and they said oh. You know what my father actually yelled at me when i was eight years old old if they suffered a childhood trauma we have saved that into account so we actually discriminating against people who've faced traumas. So know you're big and they of course it's awful. The positive now blake is a political appointee people in congressional offices. The reason they work so hard because they're political appointees i can fire them with no recourse. No reasons sure. Serve the pleasure office. Yeah and and your Voters trust that. You'll make the best decisions. If they feel like he won't exactly yes right. Yeah and so but really. I genuinely believe the whole thing is to send the power back to the states. I you know. I think we chef fifty incredibly robust in different states and were. Some things are legal in some states. Were others aren't and so then. You can choose where you wanna live. And that's the beauty that's that is more available than any other time in history right. I'm talking about being able to move from california to maine maine in texas texas to north carolina. Whatever we've got the infrastructure you can literally drive there. And i think actually covert his enlightened us quite a bit as to. Oh you mean. I don't need to drive into the city every day and commute four hours a day to get to this job that i hate and people are realizing this is one of the silver lining of the reaction cove is that people have realized..

blake blake Hasso congress alexander ryan western carolina Congress kratz rugby blake maine texas north carolina california
"hasso" Discussed on Reality TV RHAP-ups: Reality TV Podcasts

Reality TV RHAP-ups: Reality TV Podcasts

01:30 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on Reality TV RHAP-ups: Reality TV Podcasts

"Well well. I definitely because like people are upset that it was so down the line that people could have conceivably chosen these paisley. We didn't even get the full chaos out of it and liking baxter case and they definitely don't want you to choose your repairs because they would just encouraging them to make it. Restrictive hobbling on biz and not go in that chaotic way. Which is at that point. Really what is the point other than just speeding up a goings making it more stagnant and just like splitting it hasso. You would just be telling them to do that. Because everyone's going to their allies instead of making it four point. Eight percent of getting all alliances. You'd be getting one hundred percent of it being all alliances which is something that i think people enjoy like. I think people thought either. I drove into swiss at all like me or i do like it but i would have liked to like really go off with the fireworks and some really clear different opposite pairings and obviously if you get them to choose they were like you. Don't even get that takes away like a positively that some people wanted to see from it. I didn't wanna say taichi. Firstly leave and getting to the vote. But i do. Boundary thing is interesting. It probably is a little bit too on a board game on too complicated for grandma about that. About having a shared thing with someone that you earn has to seek to. It's not you're not completely constricted by that. You have to do it but you still might encourage different moves and people just hate different shot so this only funding now but i do agree that grandma's absolutely not following the bounty thing. But that's like a funding. Maybe for other games. I did want to say before we move on from this. I like this. they had loved about. It was the creative like.

hasso paisley baxter taichi grandma
"hasso" Discussed on Pop Culture Leftovers

Pop Culture Leftovers

05:33 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on Pop Culture Leftovers

"Old. A little love probably oldest runs ahead on the was when they were blind. Hotel room. bobby a me are back. How do you feel you feel. Good sir hasso relief. I like the some episodes. I liked to push it and i liked it. It gets to that point where you kind of kind of like. I think everybody had to go. I think everybody felt it. I was like. Brian is going to be the one to initiate break. You're waiting percents. Yeah yeah. I was pushing. It pushed it and jake jake. Can we take a break. Shared stone basic instinct crossing my legs. All right let's see. What else do i have to talk about with the suicide squad movie here. What did i. what else do they see. James gone explains the difference between working with marvel in dc. This came out from collider a day ago. What does he say. He was talking to the new york times and he says that he regrets not putting his thoughts across like this. Kevin feige is the producer on the guardians movies. Peter safran is the producer on this movie at marble. They serve the role of producer and studio really. And there's a studio and then there's a producer so it's very different in that respect and actually advance that question before and now. I wish i always answered it like. That's my regret because that's really the difference any idea. I'm stretching to remember how to answer that question previously. Yeah i don't remember really makes me want to know him saying that he regrets not answering like that. Yeah maybe he was a little bit closer being fired for marvel at that point and it was being a little bit less diplomatic about answering any regrets like drawing. Some shade gun said that marvel studios president kevin foggy gibbs more notes and his way more involved with editing than people are at warner brothers..

sir hasso jake jake James gone marvel in dc Kevin feige Peter safran bobby Brian the new york times kevin foggy gibbs marvel studios warner brothers
"hasso" Discussed on That’s Strange

That’s Strange

05:17 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on That’s Strange

"Also looked up that if you had a about a forty milligram alcohol content which i don't have the conversion to what that would mean for your actual blood alcohol level. It would take about two hours to metabolize alcohol. Those two numbers are exactly the same. Almost which is very interesting to me. And i'm wondering if the time that she was in there she may have metabolised a lot of that that just something that i wanted to look it up because it you know. It's it's definitely interesting and she didn't get to zero because you know she's in a freezer so it probably slowed that rate down but i think maybe it might have been a lot higher. Had she been found much earlier or found before she died But it was probably a lot higher at the time that she walked into. That freezers is really my point. Right yes hasso. She also was walking around for like an hour also true but she was still stumbling by the time she was in that you know kitchen right right right so so a lot of the stuff like that. We didn't necessarily bring up here there there. There's video circulating that. They think they see people in that kitchen. Oh yeah. I don't see anybody in that kitchen. I don't there's like the the dude with the blue jacket and the white hoodie. It's like desola- person it's like. I don't know what it is. But i honestly think it's just a simple case even all the video stuff that that was brought up the yes. She's walking weird but she's very drunk. You know there's there's portions where it looks like. She does get yanked back but she just takes a step back. I mean it's it's stuff like that and then like a hand reaching from for around the corner is very obviously something pixelated in the video that you're seeing this so and just to keep it very clear like we're not saying at all that you know..

hasso
"hasso" Discussed on ESPN FC

ESPN FC

07:28 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on ESPN FC

"Because you yourself towns me. I want to challenge. What do you think throw. That's how they be saying that can play both ways. That's play antony robinson on the left. Brian reynolds on the right. The kid who plays for roma k. Who gregg berhalter has brought in a camp doing green luke. Del toro plays eric lewis in the era harrison ford against barcelona on the left in the center. Do you remember him. Do you remember people man timothy league champion. This is the bt. I didn't with zero major league soccer players now when you look at this. Ct my just keep in mind. Twenty seven major league soccer and not the best reputation of what could be. I didn't pick put in their holding out alpha. Who's undecided i didn't put indicating clark. I didn't put in a kate cow. I didn't put in their ricardo pepi. I left major league soccer out now. Certain would you agree a. b. that leaves us to the sea. No i would. Not one thing i will say. Is that aid team is scary. Maybe outside of josh. Sergeant is the number nine. He probably doesn't scare you right now. Is the number nine. I know his situation could change. Maybe by the time we get off the air but that a team is very very scary. And i'm i'm shocked but also i'm happy that you somehow managed to do this without. Mls players you'd make a point of it let me Okay so let me just make a point for some of the gold cup guys that we've left out and kind of you've you've picked over them you got eunice moose over sebastian legit. You know who doesn't have unicef over. Sebastian berhalter yes because he had them both available for the nation's league final one of them played the other didn't correct. You got brian reynolds bro. With one cap over reggie. Canon again educated. A player that played in the nation's the final. Just let them and that you're stretching so hard to your layers over the gold cup players. Look you got jesse's artis behind p folk the other day on the show you said. Artists was guaranteed to make the world cup. You ready to say jordan. Fuck is guaranteed to make the world cup. You're asking me to put up a in bt. Can't put up two separate rosters with limitations of not using major league soccer players now per year logic. Hold on hold on. I'm not done onum. No go ahead go ahead. You got luca. Dilatory with three cats and jewelry three year. Julian green telling a cost up over kellyn ecology. Dan hold on different position concede in a player. He started the nation's league final. That's that's the best metric that we could hasso for one when it comes to the cost of doing this homework this little homework session. You provided cost. If tomorrow there was a flight to qatar would be honest and if tomorrow there was a flight to guitar in the world cup was going on with tyler adams. Would you say injury. Worries and fitness worries. Over the last couple of seasons he may be a de facto started. This is what i learned in that. You're absolutely right there when you go. The majority of these players thirteen of zero minutes on the senior national team team. Okay and a rosters comprise compiled a twenty three players. That's over half already. We don't have any national team experience. You want me to concede that this is not a c team. Do the law of averages yourself look at the eighty team you could probably sebastian legit. When all these european players are there. Maybe is coming off the bench maybe killing a cost. But is there a clear cut starter here by your by your own law of averages other teams that actually beat mexico. My final of that eleven players. I just gave you matt. Turner had how many cats before this tournament. Don't look at the final outcome sev- around those guys. I'm talking about legit. Ken and a cost don artists. Those are the guys that i'm talking about. The point here is that for you make it an eighteen. What are we doing here. Not of the eleven players half of them are arab players. That doesn't make it a c team. It may not be an eighteen at somewhere in between which is a be the bottom line. Here is the bottom line. Here is what westminster where you went to school. Donate shots at my college. I won't take shots at yours. Look the bottom line is that we're yes thank you. She did point of view of the bottom line here. Is we're arguing semantics. It's very very petty and small. The difference mutates seating if you're a mexico fan whether you're eighteen lost to a team or seating really shouldn't matter that much it's humiliating either way. It's a huge embarrassed from a fan perspective. So what. I'm curious as to know from you is. Why do you think this like struck. Such a core because i'm not on twitter as much as you still people. Usa in mexico fans going at it back and forth and my mentions right now twenty four hours more than twenty four hours after we were talking about. Let me give you a lesson for the longest time. The mexican fan base had the superiority over the american fan base because the nineties and before were owned by mexico then come to thousands and the us gets competitive not only competitive. They kick you out of a world cup thousand two and for the better part of almost two decades. They're competing with you. Then all of a sudden they don't make the world cup we're back but what happens the. Us's exporting players at this incredible rate and now they beat you in two finals in forty days and you're not exporting these players. It's going to sting because it's that devos's because major league soccer which they know. They think they shouldn't say they think they know lee is better than so. That's why it stinks. And it's one of those you'll never get back. Us will always be able to say just like the world cup and we said this before that we got one over on you and we got one over on you with our beat team which i will say my friends in the text chain. That's what they were saying to me. So i get it. I get it absolutely for sure before before we get to the next thing shouts to at. Usf thoughts on twitter. They did a great job with like a total depth. Chart of these players did and i think helped helped her quite a little bit with his with his homework. Not that in case you missed. This is actually something. We were trying to get to the lascaux but christian pulisic courses in pre season with chelsea. Where they're playing the spurs. most recently. He did a sit down interview with chelsea tv and interestingly enough in that interview he discussed mental health specifically his approach to his own mental health. Listening this this is a tough time for a lot of people. I think and just included. I think For me the most important thing is to just having a good support system and people around me that that i can always rely on and have a chat to Me personally living alone. Over here in europe You know it's it's tough being alone at times and having someone always there to talk to is Is is extremely important for me. And it's it's carrying carried me through this time. Her good message. Brave message from crave elicit brave. And it's empowering see this new generation of athletes simone biles christian pulisic landon..

sebastian legit soccer antony robinson Brian reynolds gregg berhalter ricardo pepi eunice moose Sebastian berhalter brian reynolds Julian green eric lewis hasso tyler adams harrison ford Del toro mexico barcelona unicef reggie luca
"hasso" Discussed on Pat Gray Unleashed

Pat Gray Unleashed

06:10 min | 1 year ago

"hasso" Discussed on Pat Gray Unleashed

"Just don't have it. We just don't have it good. Triple eight nine hundred and thirty-three ninety-three also pat unleashed on twitter. The you know the. Here's what i love about. What's going on right now. With the covy nineteen situation and the fact that we're supposed to get vaccinated near. They want every single living human being to get vaccinated. Or you're a killer and a moron. Meanwhile people continue to pour across our southern border with in nineteen twenty to forty percent of them have covert nineteen. And you don't think that has a little something to do with wire numbers going up the thick in texas and elsewhere because not only they're not just stopping in texas. These are being bussed in and flown all over the all over the country to relocate them. I mean we have the department of justice now telling our governor abbot that he can't do anything about it. You know. it's not up to write it. Is i mean job to keep this state in our citizens safe. Nine hundred percent increase in sick migrants crossing the border through the rio grande valley sector. You don't think that's gonna have an effect on us. Of course it is and of course if you mention it why. You're a racist. Xenophobic hater right. But here we are in the midst of this pandemic. We were just getting a hold on a grasp on bringing those numbers down to a level where it almost felt normal again and now they're shooting back up and one of the big causes not the only one but one of the drivers of this real legal aliens come in here who are sick and unvaccinated. Well the good thing is is that harrison. Thank you you were coppola. Harris is gonna fix this. I mean she. She's on it and she has issued she just she didn't do it. Prescott adversary things that you just went ahead. Issued her five pillar plan all. She's got five pillar plan addressing The the border crisis do these pillars correspond with the pillars of islam. Are they say though. I fly thicker different. You think different. Phyllis pillar one is addressing economic insecurity inequality oh okay pillar to he was addressing it in one way interested in what way i don't know i don't know if it's going to be addressed though it'll be addressed. Somebody's gonna talk about it. Yes essentially pillar to combating corruption combating pinning democratic governance and advancing the rule of law. Hasso all right. That's power foul. Good do you feel pillar three. Yeah promoting respect for human rights labor rights and free press go k. pillar four Countering and preventing violence extortion and other crimes perpetrated by criminal gangs trafficking networks and other organized criminal organizations so so pillar five. Okay number five. I mean if he didn't think it was going to be already. This is the one that drives the nail into the coffin of the situation combating sexual gender-based and domestic violence Okay so sexual gender-based and domestic violence we're going to combat that that's correct. And then that's gonna stop illegal immigration land while the pillars the five pillars some strange billers to combat the border crisis. How about this biller Put the military at the border and Seal it about that seal. The freaking border dad. Good idea about this. We instead of spending all our money in germany japan and south korea. We take those troops and we bring them home. We bring them back to the united states of america and we station them along our border. Not all of them wouldn't take all of them but many of them can go to the border and and stop illegals from crossing the border about that about the ceiling about that shot it. I mean we haven't shut down the southern border at all. And we've got the attorney general saying that Abbott can't do anything to restrict the transportation of these migrants and yet we are capturing and sending back people send back them Who are trying to get here from cuba on. Didn't they just do that too. Dumb seven of them to be exact. Yeah five of them. Were fifty miles away on a raft we put. We'll pick them up with picked him up and took them back to q piggyback. We're we're gonna. I'm sure they're safe all they'll be fine. Don't worry about. And i've missed the pictures of cuba welcoming them with open arms. I bet they had a parade. They'd probably they probably had a parade celebrating the return of the twenty seven people who were trying to sneak across and float. We just went for a boat ride. We're you know we're all water almost to the. Us thank god. They saved me. Yeah right unbelievable. Really amazing truly is the different way. The cuban refugees are treated compared to anybody coming from mexico central and south america. Unbelievable triple eight nine hundred thirty three ninety-three gray return da. Thank you for returning with tripoli nine hundred thirty three ninety-three pat.

Phyllis pillar texas Hasso rio grande valley department of justice coppola Prescott twitter harrison Harris biller south korea cuba united states of america germany Abbott japan
"hasso" Discussed on RADIO GAG - The Gays Against Guns Show

RADIO GAG - The Gays Against Guns Show

03:28 min | 2 years ago

"hasso" Discussed on RADIO GAG - The Gays Against Guns Show

"Gag. I remember seeing gag at the very first resistance at pride raid. I got to work on all risers hispanics for that year so those were the giant yellow queer basher posters at probably resisting rainbow postcards. We went all but gas was just everything. There are signs were ryan. Still the people were in costumes. It was just this angry beautiful humorous statement and then. I discovered seeing louise which is an outgrowth of his scions. And there's so much hasso in those groups between is resist is an scans and found. Sing at louise. I thought this is it. I've found my home and so we so often saying a gag events But then i found them just as they were launching into their own. So that was my entry to meeting these amazing creative fierce warriors. That's the joy of sing at louise at artisan general. But we always say that it's building community and it's increasing awareness to what's going on in the world from a political standpoint but by doing it in a creative and engaging and fun way it's not threatening and so there are more people who come and sing with us and then listen to the lyrics of whoa. I didn't realize i could say that out loud because it was joyful and because you're not alone and because we could find the humor while still talent a powerful story sharing an important message. It really changed the landscape of activism. from me. So eliza what would you say to students and to people who want to get involved in art of ism finds that you enjoy doing because there's nothing that can't be used in a world of activism whether you are a singer or songwriter or a painter or a designer is always a space for people who create in the world activism. Because really what we're trying to do is share a message and put a message out there through visuals and art and music and dance and performance. Those are all ways of expressing. What's inside of us but also engaging a community of others and so when you use your self your skills your passions to spread the word that becomes the most powerful of of protest to me. Well thank you so much less for being with us today. It's my pleasure. Thank you so much for highlighting this really important part of activism for people to know that it's more than you went into your senator or being out screaming in the streets that there's a role for all of us and sometimes it can just be as simple as taking what you love to do and bringing it to the table..

hasso louise ryan eliza
"hasso" Discussed on Metro Christian Centre - Bury & Whitefield

Metro Christian Centre - Bury & Whitefield

03:10 min | 2 years ago

"hasso" Discussed on Metro Christian Centre - Bury & Whitefield

"And how he feels about being royal and lots of lots of the problems in the royal family at the moment arises because he and his family have a different idea of what being royal actually means in practice. Now i'm not gonna make any and say tall. But what i do know is the royal family. Feel that they are in a privileged position and that requires instead as a behavior and ethics. And as we've seen through the is often the royal family don't live up to those standards. The we assume that they should meet in various ways but should be even more referrals win sentence creighton elizabeth wade of the king of kings and the lord of loads cari. Temu said god has no grandchildren. We are all that. We are all direct descendants. we got has no grandchildren. Each person has to come to christ themselves so where enter way representing him and the values of your kingdom. That's what we do. We don't stop being royal even on our day. We don't stop being royal even on our day on a good back days. We are still that royal priesthood. What else does pizza say. He says that we are holy nation. We brings us to what to to what we were talking about. Before about what adrian. Whilst the whole law was sexwale by god to demonstrate the second partners of god how asia i was to operate was so different. The people around him think about it that referenced reverence for god you shall have you shall worship the logic god with all your hasso mind strategy but it was a paraphrase refusal to where she bibles you should have known god's before me that trusting god to supply the needs reflects you'll keep the sabbath day and whole value in the people around him by tree in them as they want to be treated. You shall not many should've commits adultery. You should not cool at your your neighbors possessions. That should be our call to those values into everything we do because we are a holy nation. They should pay in everything. We say everything we think they should go in our relationships with each other and those we come into contact with on a daily basis it israel was called to be distinctly different. I'm peter says so away. What else does say pizza says that we are got special possession. We saw exodus the israel with to be treasured possession..

peter Temu Each person christ second partners asia israel elizabeth adrian creighton cari
"hasso" Discussed on The Propaganda Report

The Propaganda Report

02:59 min | 2 years ago

"hasso" Discussed on The Propaganda Report

"What is the ninth one that this is not an exhaustive list of rights. This this is just an itemized list but all other rights are are reserved by the people vaguely exactly so basically states. Welcome to the people. The federal government is on the bottom. So they're not anymore now. They're on the top. So and reno back in is kind of the point where everything seems to be the legitimate so called legitimate functions of government have been outsourced to wear now. You have mercenaries so you can't look into the behavior of soldiers you have. Private security is going to emerge in these kind of third rolling of america with gated communities. You're going to have. The same thing is socialized medicine. Only the really rich people. We're gonna have that just like it's already true for education. I feel like varsity blues. Was targeting the private schools. That middle america could still may be accessed because of the generosity of the upper classes. Kids can't make it into harvard. Whatever so it seems to me that there is this fascism. That's just descending over land. that's just a two way street and brinkley's brought up so much of the world economic forum stuff that it's they they are completely out now with their plans but you know if we they obviously care what we think or they wouldn't be fighting so hard to suppress your. What your pursuing formation here pursuit of okay. I've got this great reset like it started before the election. The election was part of. It is starting to see that sucker berg and the facebook money and all these other big tech companies having so much exercising so much control over the election system at article last week that we talked about on the show that was like the secret conspiracy. Kamal got together to save democracy. It's great that they they colluded with the biggest things is just as the great reset admitted it. Basically they don't be a dog's body says something. I find very interesting. We should be living in groups. Small enough for everyone should know everyone. Else's business and hold them accountable. I totally agree with that. The government as it is the constitution did not scale properly to the amount of people who are now represented by this tiny handful of hasso called representatives easily corruptible and that if we could keep an eye on each other. I think it's like as many christmas cards as you send as many her. You know something like that. Like i said one hundred twenty five christmas cards. It's just that's how many people you can hold in your head. You really know you can know about one hundred people or something like that. I think it's a great idea. We are really moving towards a change in grew a bifurcation of society. And i think. I think it's intentional. That's why when. I was a little bit skeptical about the video..

facebook last week one hundred Kamal america ninth one christmas two one hundred people harvard middle twenty five cards third government way brinkley
How to make your podcast stand out

Podcasting Q&A

04:47 min | 2 years ago

How to make your podcast stand out

"In today's episode you'll learn what it takes to stand out in a crowded podcast category. Walk into podcasting cuna. Were you learn the best tips and strategies to launch. Grow and monetize your podcast. This question comes from trevor. Hail trevor here from one pd. And i'm wondering how to stand out when there's a quite a few podcasts. In your category for example when pd is in actual play podcast where we play dungeons and dragons and there's quite a few of them out there i'm wondering for inspiration to set ourselves apart Find a way to prove that were not just another. Dnd podcast hasso any recommendations you have. There would be very appreciated thanks much. Thanks for your question trevor. Now it is true that as podcasting has grown over the last several years certain categories in certain types of shows have become more saturated. But that doesn't mean that there's no room for anything new that you can't build a meaningful audience talking about something that you love so in this episode. I'll talk about three ways that you can separate yourself from the pack and really stand out so you can grow meaningful audience. Even if you're podcasting in a very crowded space the first thing that you'll need to focus on if you're trying to differentiate yourself from other podcast in your category is focus on quality if your listeners have a wide variety of options to choose from when it comes to your subject matter. They're naturally going to go towards the ones that are the most pleasant to listen to. And so you want to focus on making a high quality. Podcast and quality really comes down to two things audio quality. And how well you edit your podcast episodes when it comes to all you quality. There's not a lot you have to do to produce a well recorded show. All you need to do is use a podcast microphone correctly using good microphone. Technique makes you record in a well-treated environment whether it's a walk in closet or a home office. That doesn't have a lot of echo in the background. And then when it comes to editing your podcast episodes a cleanly edited episode will typically win out over a freeform unedited podcast episode long gone. Are the days where you can. Just turn on your microphone. Start recording for two hours. And then upload your podcast host. That's not really doing it anymore. If you want to really grow a meaningful audience this is just a hobby. And you're doing it for fun. Absolutely do your thing. Do what makes you happy. But if you're trying to grow a meaningful audience you need to be editing. Your podcast episodes second thing you can do to really separate yourself from the pack is put more of your personality into your shell. It doesn't matter what you're talking about. The only thing that cannot be replicated. Is you your personality your sense of humor your little quirks the more that you can add your own personality your own touch to the things. You're talking about the more. You will separate yourself from other podcasts. Because the information for the most part is widely available for all of our podcast that we do here a bus route whether it's podcasting q. And a. or bus. Caster how to start a podcast. That information is available in other places other people talk about these subjects as well but the reason that our podcast to exceptionally well in our category is because we're very personable. You know we we talk about the things that we love talking about. In recent episode of bus cast talked about a mystery of why a bunch of people were getting podcast in lake stevens. And you know had a lot of fun with that segment and that was one of the most talked about segments in the entire history of that podcast and we just had a lot of fun with it so the more fun you can have your podcast more personality you can put into it the less likely someone else is going to be able to steal your thunder third thing. You should focus on his collaborating with other podcasters in your space wo travis or are you saying i should go on other people's podcasts. And share my knowledge my expertise with them and help their podcast grow. Yeah because what's going to happen is when you collaborate with other podcasters. Some of their audience is gonna come and check out your show as well. This really is a situation where the rising tide lifts all boats. So people subscribe to podcasts all the time people are subscribed to more than one podcast in your category typically and so. You're not competing apples to apples with other podcasts. If you go and your expertise on somebody else podcast and then they come on as a guest on your podcast. That's going to help. Both of your audiences grow. And here's the cool thing. If you're in a crowded podcast category. That means people wanna hear what you have to say. So the more that you can leverage those existing by collaborating with those podcasts by being a guest on those podcasts by interacting with those podcast hosts and getting to know them and building relationships that is going to help your podcast growth significantly as you continue to put episodes month after month. Thank you so much for sending us your question

Hail Trevor Trevor Lake Stevens Caster Travis
"hasso" Discussed on News Radio 1190 KEX

News Radio 1190 KEX

01:42 min | 2 years ago

"hasso" Discussed on News Radio 1190 KEX

"Places this'd is Oregon State Beaver basketball. The tip is moments away now toe Course I The Arizona Wildcats control the opening tip and go to work. Thanks for joining us A. Kinjo the transfer from Georgetown to Christian Bolocco at the free throw line. Out of Terrell Brown junior transfer from Seattle. You puts up an air ball beams. Try to dig it out, but hitting the deck on what should be a 32nd shot clock violation. Two players for the Beavers. Maurice Kalu and diving onto the floor for the Arizona Wildcats is foolish to Bela's 6 11 to 45 of freshman from Vilnius, Lithuania. And the Beavers either will have the basketball on a held ball or perhaps a shot clock violation. But we have a moment now, with the officials coming over to the scorer's table to take a look at the Wild action at the end of Arizona's first possession, which should result in the Beavers having possession the officials tonight by the way, Verne Harris, Kevin Brill tossed the ball upto open. The games were in Harris, Kevin Brill. And Bill Vidovic and as the coaches get an impromptu time out 45 seconds into the game that gives us an opportunity to pause and let all of our network stations identify themselves. There's Thursday night of Gill Coliseum. Let's pause, 10 seconds. For station identification is it may not be Tuesday, but it's still the perfect night for tacos. So grab some old up Hasso standard stuff, taco shells and portables. Older passes, flat bottom shelves and bulls stand in place, so they're easier to hold Phil and eat perfect for big.

Beavers Arizona Wildcats Oregon State Beaver basketball Kevin Brill Verne Harris Gill Coliseum Terrell Brown Maurice Kalu basketball Arizona Bill Vidovic Lithuania Vilnius Seattle Christian Bolocco Phil Georgetown Bela
Interview With Phil Penman

The Candid Frame

05:24 min | 3 years ago

Interview With Phil Penman

"When you decide to go into business for yourself, it's as much about your hustle as it is about your talent. Skilled and talented as you may be if you're hustle is not on point. You are going to struggle not only getting into the game but also staying in it. Phil Penman understands that which is why he's managed to establish himself as a celebrity street and commercial photographer. The links that he had to go to his Paparazzi could make the difference between getting the shot or not, but also more importantly the difference of thousands rather than hundreds of dollars. That kind of work is not for the faint of heart especially when it involves negotiating the streets of new. York. City on a bicycle. But as Phil understands, you've gotta do what you gotTa do this is Ebonics and welcome back to they candid frame. Jones, thanks for making time for me. I appreciate it. Thanks for your patience and finally getting round here. Thank you for inviting me I. So you're up you're up to like five, hundred, twenty, eight. So is man gets because you sent me your book months ago. I, talked to my wife who's that producer to try and make sure that we got you in somewhere but it can be quite the juggle because there's so many people that consider. Really I love the Book I love your story but one thing that's fascinating in before we get into talking to you about your photography is just like man you have held so many jobs. So many things. List as well. So it was just was just the the nature of being like a hustler that you were just like just did what you needed to do in order to get by that is that why you? or so many different at one hundred percent of house. So when I was in college I was studying photography and a box. If Alford like a hundred sheets for safe thirty pounds and that's a of money to a college student and you having to crank this week off the week. So I had I would study and I had to free jobs that I was doing waller's in college. So in the daytime, I would serve lunches to like rich preppy boy, Colt prep school kids at a nearby like boy school than a night I worked in a bar and unlike club four nights a week, and then the weekend I used to work even Lego land or Twickenham rugby Stadium. So I would literally our work all day through the night and then have like free hours sleep got a college study as. You did this casino the the bitch would be like we used to do five transparency. Not only will take was the chew to say, have to stop off and the fuck that's enough free. Way, worked in the bar and he go pay to twenty an hour. Like notes it. Hasso Hasso. When you're young. You don't need that much sleep exactly now I'm just like I'm Pasta by seven o'clock. So, when did you get the bug? When did you discover that you wanted to study photography in photographer it was my backup believe it or not i. was fifteen and I wanted to be a sports teacher. My Dad was like, well, you got to have a backup. And he was a professor I so I kind of I grew up with a darkroom and seeing prints in the bath tub being washed and stuff. So he's like, hello go for this newspaper, pick out the picture the you think and if if I agree with you then I'll let you study photography as a backup and I ended up being a terrible sports teacher so You know I virtually failed sports studies by a my photography. So I'm like that's the way man to find out that photography is your fallback. It's funny. Because most people it's like. Repeats the first choice, not the second. It's like my lap was always insistent on you always have a backup everything. So that was my backup and then. Studied like the next freeze I guess and then. Started working straightaway into. Work you started doing initially. I did a year as a local newspaper photographer where it was tree, we do a jobs today and it would be like they had us going every thirty minutes. So you're driving around hundred miles per hour from job to job walk in the room sheet the paycheck next job, and it was like a fos learning cup. So you'd be like sports, events, politicians, babies, presentations, and then I landed a job working for news agency where I was doing hard news but I'm still doing. I basically landed a GIG. She will the cool proportion shift for Microsoft and like I like twenty, one years old and boss was worked for is making so much money from that the it was great for him. So I did I did about six months with him and then I got the opportunity to work for A. Company in Los, Angeles and just jumped

Phil Penman Professor Hasso Hasso Jones Colt Prep School Twickenham Rugby Stadium Microsoft Alford Waller York Producer A. Company Angeles LOS
A Guide To Relationships on Lockdown

The Big Story

20:50 min | 3 years ago

A Guide To Relationships on Lockdown

"So. You know how we've spent a lot of time these past few months. Talking about everything, the covid nineteen has changed while. There's one big thing that we haven't covered yet. It's sensitive. It's intimate. It's not easy to talk about even when there is no pandemic, it's just messy. It's marriage. And living together and partnership for life with kids or without. If you're married or partnered, you haven't been alone throughout all this and you're lucky, but you've also likely spent the last few months navigating an entirely different landscape, adjusting to a new daily life, and probably fighting at least sometimes. Today, we'll talk about the unique stresses that these and I'm sorry here. Unprecedented Times of placed on couples who pledged to spend their lives together. Just maybe not this close together for this long. We'll talk about how to fight and how to divide household labor how to survive till death do us part, and beyond and I will try not to get myself in trouble at home by saying something dumb. Can I do? We will find at. Jordan he's Rawlings and this is the big story. Stephen Marsh is a writer and a podcast and his new show is called and I'm GonNa say it, and we'll see if the producers me. How not about your marriage too bad? Hi Stephen. How're you doing? I'm doing well. Thank you, I'm going to start because we're GONNA talk about relationships today I'm just going to start by asking you. How has Being together with two kids, homeschooling and working twenty four seven impacted your partnership. You know to be honest, a kind of love it I. Mean Like I'm a freelance writer, so I'm used to being at home alone and so for me. It's sort of like the kids are home from school. There's like a lot of activity in the house and I'm less lonely. That's really that's really the big. The big change I think it's a little harder for my wife to be stuck with me the. The whole time, and certainly it's you know certainly to be my fourteen year old son in be stuck with your parents for the indefinite future without being able to go to camp or anything like that is a bit of a nightmare. I mean you know. I think were were kind of lucky. Because like whenever wherever covid goes like divorce, rates spike like in Wuhan the bureaucracies just totally overwhelmed with divorce. applications the sames happening in Italy It's a classic relationship accelerator so single. Single people who were you know at home? Confronting Death by themselves unable to touch anyone are like desperate to get married and people who are married or like I need to get the hell out of here. You know it kind of it kind of works both ways on people. Do you remember at the beginning of this? When people were saying? Oh, there's GonNa be a covert baby-boom. Then everybody with kids said well. If there is, it's going to be all only children, Yeah I. I mean it's like the hormonal effective covert I. Don't think has really been written about, but like I I mean I knew there would not be covid baby boom. There were there were stories. I mean. You've heard stories. The early days of people who'd been on three dates shacking up that cannot work out well, so tell me about this podcast which recorded pre pandemic, but is being released now in the middle of one. What has cova done to the subjects you discuss on the podcast? It seems like it must have just put more pressure on all of them. Well, yeah, I mean. It's very interesting because you know not to be too glib about it, but the time like the timing of the release could not be better because you know the questions that we deal with in this show like. You know the physiological basis of fighting like. How do you fight better like suddenly? This becomes very very important to people who are jammed together all the time. How do you deal with money together? This is also about going to become very very important for a huge number of marriages how to deal with death how to think through divorce. Should, you schedule sex? How do you deal with housework? And suddenly all of these questions which we were dealing with which matter you know in the best of times suddenly, they've all come very much to the fore the it's the old questions I don't think the questions have really changed. Just their urgency has and I'm going to get you to. Well give me some of the advice you get to in the podcast and the listeners to because I'm sure we could all use it right now, but I. You mentioned at the very beginning that you think it's been great for you to be at home in also have company my honest question to you is Would your wife? Would Sarah say the same thing? No, I don't think so I think she you know she. She's a more social person. It's not really a marriage question. She likes being in an. An office she likes being with other people. She likes that space quite a bit and be denied it I. Think is actually pretty pretty rough. You know also there's the question of we. We have to educate our children and do our jobs at the same time, which is hugely stressful and really frankly not possible. Yeah. I think for me a freelance writer. Where like you? You find me in my office where I am every where I've been every day for fifteen years like tied to this table in the tower of song. It's not. It's not really that different for me, but for her. It's huge. What have you guys thought about during this pandemic I know you've fought i. you know what I think. I can't even remember the subject I. Mean I know that sounds like a capo, but I definitely have fought, but you know the subjects are really irrelevant. Because what were you know when when we did the fighting episode? One thing I learned was that you know fighting is now. Now is not really about issues. It's not about the problems in your marriage, and certainly never helps to solve those problems It's really a physiological response to Stimuli. It's about when you're when you're intimate with someone. Your brain naturally looks for threat and that and naturally response to threat and when you do that, you're you know the tends to build on itself very very quickly, and you know the conditions of covid really are the conditions that make us all. Very intimate suddenly and. Without escape, and so it's natural that you're going to have more fights is just. It's just part of your body. It's just basically a physical reaction, so yeah, we've had some raiders, but I don't think they've like. The subject matter is kind of irrelevant. So how do you fight better the topic of a whole episode? Yeah I mean it's complicated like I. Don't want to reduce it to a one point because you know like. We talked to Stanton. WHO's very famous neurobiologist and we talked to cloudy Hasso. Who'd who does like lifetime studies, couples, and how they fight, and how it affects their bodily reactions to? Overtime and you know they have. They have a lot of collective insights into it, but I mean I. Think the real the point the takeaway for me anyway like fighting is not an intellectual process. You're not going to solve any issue that you have through fighting. You're not even going to address. It and so the really when you get into a fight, which is natural. It's it's inevitable. There's no escape from that the. The health even to fight. The point is to get jet to safety as quickly as possible. What does that mean get to? Safety means to make your partner feel like their loved rather than threatened, and you know the simple ways to do that are just to look each other in the is for about thirty seconds, or just to leave and run and do a silly dance, or do something physical to get out the energy. And just returned to a where you feel like you like your your interest or mutual again. just get to that place as quickly as possible because you know, the other way just expands forever. Don't you not fix the shoes by doing that though? But you never fix an issue by fight. I mean there's no you will not find anyone like. That was the point. That's what I learned like. You Talk to these people and you're in there and they're like well. Don't you need to have fights in order to solve problems in lake? Well, no fight has ever solved a problem and I I thought about it. In my own case I've been married for nearly twenty years and I was like. Yeah, you're right. I mean like the way you solve a problem by sitting down calmly with a glass of wine and talking things through and being frank and honest about it, and we're and we're talking to a therapist or D- But. That's not fighting. Like. That's not that's not that's not. The fighting is just response to Stimuli. What about just living together in general, which is another topic of one of the episodes first of all I guess. What did you discover that either? You've been just doing wrong? The whole time or wish you'd known before you lived with your partner. Well I mean one thing I learned I sort of. Of knew already had written about before in the unmade bed is that there are no solutions to the problems of living together like the there, there is no magic bullet you think think when you're when you're a kid. When I was a kid, I thought Oh will drop contracts, and it'll make it all simple, and then we'll. We're reasonable people. We both believe in equality. We both want. Want to do the same things, and and and we and we don't want. We don't WanNA fight about dumb stuff like who's cleaning the toilet and stuff like that, so we'll make up a list, but that's not actually how it works at all. It's much more emotionally driven, and it's much more about the quest for recognition, and the truth is those matters just like never really get solved. Solved so then you then you come to the place of Lake Well. How do you? How do you deal with that irresolution I? Mean that is the one thing that I really learned from doing this show is that marriage is quite hard You know look. I wasn't an idiot I. knew people were in pain in their relationships, but I. Guess I kind of thought that they were. Met screwing things up, or they had their own problems or something like that, it's like no actually doing this is actually quite difficult, and it requires a lot of endurance, and it requires a lot of skill and tenderness, and it also requires a lot of luck, and so that's I. You know that was the that was kind of the takeaway for me like you know. This is actually a lot harder than you think. Yeah. You realize now that we're two men now talking about housework, right? You don't know how. Yeah, no, and it's really. I'M GONNA. Get in trouble for this, and so are you yeah? and. Also maybe we should be doing it like. Let's also take that into account, but anyway go on one of the reasons why I wanted to talk to you and to talk about this is because I think it often falls on. the woman in a marriage to to try to fix the marriage, and to try to have those emotional discussions and try to bring those topics up so I think like. Yes obviously There are probably things that we're going to get wrong and screw up by having this conversation. It shouldn't be left to wives to make the husband go to counseling and to initiate these conversations, and you know to try to save the marriage, so so that's what I'd say that but I. Wanted to ask you about recognition because I find when there are inequalities, it is the recognition that makes the difference between a fight and no fight. It's not necessarily the active. Okay. Well, you take the garbage out five days a week and I'll take the. I'll do the dishes five days a week and etc. It's the lake. I see you taken garbage out. That's awesome. Well. That's the getting to safety. Part of fighting. Getting to safety is like that feeling like I'm seen in you, know me and were together right, and so you always want to get to that as quickly as possible, but you know I mean I'm on the record like my about housework like my feeling about it is that? Every like everyone should do a lot less of it, and that the the long term trend with housework is not men doing more where it gets women. Doing less has been that. That's true everywhere in Western Europe North America. It's called disinvestment in some well known sociological category you know. My mother was a fulltime physician who also vacuumed the the drapes of our house lake. That's not it quickly realized. That's no longer possible, and but that whole debate around what housework is it so fascinating but it's also almost impossible to have rationally like it's it it it becomes. It becomes super emotional and. Layered with with norms so quickly, you know it's it's almost impossible to have those conversations. In general, although I definitely agree with you, that men do not do their fair share of trying to make marriage is work or Thinking through their marriages right, I mean like I, I think there's this this thing with men were they don't WanNa even consciously try and conceive of these questions they want to just push them aside and get on with things and I think that's really bad and dangerous and stupid and just stupid like there's there's ways to think through this stuff that are very can really improve your life and can improve your marriage, and they're not hippie nonsense, right and the and they're not you know snake oil salesmen stuff they're. They're quite practical. I WanNa, talk to you, but a couple of. Of the other episodes that we can may be covering somewhat rapid fire succession associated. You schedule Sex. What what are the experts say? Yes, I mean you know in this show we take all these questions and we we try get multiple perspectives on them, and you know definitely different perspectives and see how we feel about them. We literally could not find a single expert who said don't schedule sex. They all say schedule sex because you know the simple truth is. If you don't, you won't have it and you know the other thing is if you get to once a week. that is the equivalent in happiness terms of going from making twenty five thousand dollars a year to making seventy five thousand dollars a year so i. don't know about you, but when I went from that from twenty five to seventy five K that was like the most happiness that was the greatest increase of happiness that I could have so yeah. You do absolutely that one you know most. Most of these things, there's no AB testing for most the stuff, so you know most of the things we don't have as definitive answers that to these questions, but that one is a pretty straight. Yes, how about deciding who to marry? That's I haven't listened to that episode yet, but really fascinating. We talked to a a matchmaker traditional matchmaker who charges ten thousand dollars for a? A relationship and we also talked to a WHO works at NASA Jet Propulsion Lab. Who as a sideline has developed as algorithm for determining when you should settle essentially and so like we look at the math of you know. How do you pick basically and not nothing works I? Mean that's the that's the sad answer, but like when you get to when you get to like trust, trust your. Your gut doesn't make any sense, but also trust. The numbers doesn't make any sense I. Mean I think that's kind of a lesson in itself. When you're picking this, you're doing it with. It's very partial information game. It's an asymmetrical information game and you have to know that when you get married. You're taking a big risk. What about should we just get divorced? How do you make that call? Yet, there's a whole group again. See. This is the kind of thing that I think that there. There's a kind of practical. There's practical solutions to this like there's a whole group of scholars divorce ideation out there from various different political beliefs and very leg. They study how people get divorced, and I mean about forty percent of people in divorce proceedings. Regret it in court really. You know the lesson here is divorce is a wonderful thing. It's kind of the key. People underrate the power of divorce like divorce is key to modern life as In freedom of the press its that important because it means that we're not locked in these terrible relationships like there is a way out and super important for human liberty, but at the same time you won't understand that if you're thinking about divorce. Especially coming out a covert I, think take it slowly like to take take your time to do it because people get divorced for his bad reasons as they get married rate for emotional reasons that are really temporary, and they don't really think through and yeah like divorce slowly. The last one I want to ask you about is pretty profound marriage death especially now when you know probably number of long term, marriages have lost a partner. How does marriage survived death? In what is that look like you know we talked to? That was a very powerful episode. You know it was. It was a sign of its success that no one who dealt with it could actually get through the whole thing without stopping and crying like our executive producer couldn't edit it like had to keep stopping. The sound designer couldn't really get through it. He kept crying. I. Mean it's your worst nightmare. Anybody who's married well I don't know I think they're i. think are much worse things that can happen in a marriage actually certainly after doing this show, but I think the You know that we talked to a woman who texts her dead husband like three years after the thing that's so interesting is that the relationship doesn't really end. We talked to all these people for whom including my mother for whom they're dead. Spouse, you know. The fact of his death was just kind of one more fact in the relationship, and the relationship went right on. It's just without one person, and so you know what this show is really about the difficulties of marriage, which can be grueling like the housework, the money problems the sex problems like all this stuff, but that show really showed like it is worth fighting for like it is actually worth trying to work out because it can be incredibly powerful in life life-affirming. What did you learn about? Marriage is an institution and a concept while making a show well, it's very It's not natural. When we did the show about parenting leagues, the thing that we kept returning to the kept coming back was like love your children and express your love for them, which is actually kind of the most natural thing in the world really late. That's not a tall order, but with. Marriage even the best couples, even the luckiest couples. The most compatible couples are going to struggle. Because because it is, it is not a natural arrangement. It's not built into our biology to do this, and and so that means it's doesn't mean that it's not worth doing, and it doesn't. The institution isn't powerful. Because in some ways it's never been more powerful than it is right now, but on the other hand I like it does require a lot of effort and a lot of endurance. My last question is just did this podcast the process of making it make you a better husband, and as a follow up like I, asked before. Would your wife agree with that I? Know? Did and I I know she would agree with it for sure. You know I, think just the the fighting episode was a really big one. Where it's just like you realize like actually, there's no point doing this. If you really WanNa change, things like have a serious conversation about them. Don't get into these screaming matches that. End Up just backtracking on and nothing ever happens like and you know there was something there was some very serious sort of I mean not very serious, but I am medium sized family crisis and in the middle of doing this podcast, and because I did the show I was really quite a bit calmer than I think I would have been before i. was just like you know what it's like. I feel threatened, but don't, but it's just. It's just physiological. Just just let it go. Just let it go, and you think about it when you're when when sanity is returned I'm going to remember that advice when Rosemary gets mad at me possibly while listening to this episode. Well I. Mean I think one thing that's really important like you really realize that how much pop culture and media assumptions about marriage of created this impression like it's i. mean it's happily ever after whatever and it's just. It's nonsense I. Mean we all know it's nonsense, but you the figuring out how this works involves a lot of effort. It's hard to admit that to yourself that. That it's all nonsense, yeah, I think I think it's really shoved down our throats, and then we don't ask ourselves these questions like I. I actually assumed doing this I. Mean it's weird to think but I was like a forty year old man who thought that married people had sex three times a week. And then I talk to an expert and they're like no joking like. And it was like right. Of course, of course that kind infer even basic information is not really available even to married people. You're kind of just left alone to deal with it, and there's no reason not to know. There's no reason to be ignorant. Stephen Thank you so much for this and I look forward to listen to the rest of the show. That was pleasure. Give give my best rosemary.

Stephen Marsh Writer Partner Lake Well Raiders Jordan Cova Wuhan Sarah Italy Hasso Stanton Nasa Jet Propulsion Lab Rosemary Rawlings Frank Executive Producer Western Europe
Journey to $100 Million: Growth Update

Journey to $100 Million

03:03 min | 4 years ago

Journey to $100 Million: Growth Update

"And so i'm going to give updates on where we are as a company the hebrew awesome speed and sorry a little sick this week's my voice might sound a little crazy but it is what is so anyway when we started this podcast back in january anuary this year so january twenty nineteen we were at one point two million today august thirtieth two thousand nineteen. We've exceeded one point six million the awesome part is i just got some new financials from caccia. Who does our books in house here here. She's awesome but she sends us financials every other monday and this week when i looked at those we are actually at a hundred percent growth rate right now so armor that information and since we have a month left in the third quarter and then our goals for fourth quarter we will exceed our goal of two million dollars of annual recurring revenue so i'm really excited about that again. We have a whole month left in this quarter and that if we just hit our goal for fourth quarter we're going to exceed our goal and so obviously we're gonna push it hard to began to go as far as we can. Dan and to push the envelope. We're gonna probably be setting goals higher and especially for next year. We're talking about sending it pretty high again because we're we're read one hundred percents growth rate right now and if we can maintain that we're gonna be doing pretty damn well so i guess key takeaways here is setting goals <music> tracking those on not just a monthly or quarterly basis but again we get financials every other week then we'll review those and see where we are sales. We have conversations every day about where we are sales about deals. We have our pipeline stuff like that. So you know it's really a daily kind of thing to really you a set goals. You have to have a measure those goals. K._p._i.'s whatever you you know. Whatever's going to work for you but got set goals. You're going to track them or you're not going to achieve them if you can i would also make sure that you're getting some kind of financial reports on a regular basis. If you're the business owner and you're trying to do all that yourself those are things that you know you kinda. Keep an eye on but you're not really digging deep to find out what's your p._n._l. Your balance sheet cash on hand your growth rate <hes> an and things like that to know really where you're going. You got a project out where you're going and if you're going to get where you want to go so so you were pretty much on track pretty cited where we are in such a short amount of time but the real reality is even if we hit the two million mark this year we at the double year after year after year to hit that hundred billion mark is a huge task of big goal. If you don't aim high you're not gonna go hasso so those goals big bordered butts off get focused. Thank you for listening. Is it time for new website.

K._P._I. Caccia DAN Business Owner Two Million Dollars Hundred Percent