32 Burst results for "Hellofresh"

WCPT 820
"hellofresh" Discussed on WCPT 820
"Think so. Get HelloFresh's chef created recipes delivered right to your door instead, and you can skip the trip to the grocery store so you can spend more time doing the things you love. HelloFresh now has 40 weekly recipes to choose from more choices than ever before, say goodbye to your recipe right and say hello to seasonal recipes packed with farm fresh pre portioned ingredients that make getting dinner on the table easy and enjoyable from fit and wholesome to family friendly and quick and easy. HelloFresh has dishes for your lifestyle and meal preference with options to please even the pickiest eaters. Plus, it doesn't hurt that HelloFresh is cheaper than grocery shopping and restaurant takeout, make eating easy and exciting with America's number one meal kit, sign up today for 65% off plus free shipping with the code Stephanie M 65 at HelloFresh dot com slash Stephanie M 65. Code is Stephanie M 65 at HelloFresh dot com slash Stephanie M 65. Hey, this is reverend Mitchell LE Kenneth Johnson inviting you to join me every Sunday morning at 7 a.m.. Yes, that's early. But when you get there, you'll find information education and you may just be entertained. Back to my community plan foundation hour Sunday morning at 7 on radio 8 20 a.m. because facts matter. This is an important announcement for anyone who wants health insurance, even if you miss the deadline. Right now, you can get the health insurance you and your family need from top insurance providers. Even if you have preexisting conditions or no insurance at all, the plus benefits health insurance toll free number has been extended to help anyone who wants health insurance coverage now or if you need a better plan or a lower price called plus benefits health insurance now at 805 three zero two four two three. The call is 100% free and that help is real. Fight three zero two four two three. That's 805 three zero two four two three

The Addicted Mind Podcast
"hellofresh" Discussed on The Addicted Mind Podcast
"We're going to talk about biomarkers and addiction, genetics and the roles that plays in how addiction manifests itself. But first, Evelyn, you want to introduce yourself and tell us a little bit about you and maybe a little bit about your story of getting into this work and wanting to understand this. Sure. So I was practicing in pain management, started 34 years ago in a rural area. And I was seeing a lot of people with the try this, try that method of getting better, right? There was no clear delineated way that was happening. And then 20 years after that, I'm practicing in an urban area, and we're still using the same model. So that didn't make sense to me. I'm seeing we're behind on using technology in this area of healthcare. And it was kind of a why. Personally, the story gets even deeper than that. I married an alcoholic. And we had a child together. About a year after my daughter, our daughter is born. We find out that he's adopted. This was never told to me and or him. Wow. I'm seeing his behavior. And in reality, he was addicted to more than just alcohol. But that was his main source of trying to get that fixed those dopamine receptors. We now know about, right? Right, right. Maybe back at the time we didn't quite understand that all the way. Exactly. I needed answers to why this is happening. I'm walking on eggshells every day, not know who's showing up that minute that hour. And in the healthcare field, you know? What are we doing here? That made me then go because I had a child. And I was a parent. I was responsible, you know? I'm like, I need a pressure. Sure. Sure. I'm seeing this behavior manifest. And I know what's happening, but I'm like, well, do we have a genetic link here? What am I concerned? There is modeling behavior after what you see. And then there's nature nurture. So I studied and became dual diplomat addiction compulsive disorders. My husband has since passed, he died early 40s. And I just kind of did the rest of my work to figure out what was the biological relationship to this addiction. Obviously, we have lifestyle choices, but was there something within the physiology that needed to be looked at? And that kind of thing. Something in our bodies that really drive this behavior beyond just, like you said, I mean, we know trauma and we know things like that. Definitely impact whether addiction is going to play out in your life or not. But you're looking at these biomarkers. And then I'm just going back a little bit. You also said you're in the pain management field, or you were in the pain management field, which I kind of feel like those things are really related. They are totally. You know, you look at someone who becomes addicted to whatever the substance is, it's either a trying to self medicate, a diagnosed condition, an undiagnosed condition or a trauma, one, two, or all three. Right? Right. So when someone is constantly in pain and reaching out and we're just doing a try this, try that. That doesn't make sense. We're in 2023. You know, we should be using all we have to advance this area of healthcare as well. And it's almost like we stopped, you know, in like 1980. And we just keep on doing the same things expecting different results as we both know that's the definition of insanity. And kind of there's an inequity in this area. For sure. Well, you see that in addiction treatment in general, like you're saying. You're doing the same model over and over for the last 50 years. Right. And kind of not getting much better results. And when we start to really look at the outcomes, we're like, wow, this maybe isn't working as great as we thought. Correct. And if we see somebody go to treatment once twice three times, I mean, I've had people in double digits and more. It's because, you know, you learn the tools. We consider addiction a biopsychosocial model, but we don't really look at the bio part of it. You know, it's retraining the brain as far as behavior goes, but even when you see someone white knuckling, they're sobriety. That's because we never looked at the physiology. And that's tough way to go through life. Yeah, absolutely. And I would imagine your experience you witnessed that. On a daily basis, I witnessed it on a daily basis. And then, like I said, having a child that's kind of like, okay, what part of this do I need to be concerned about? Yeah, so let's jump in and start to talk about some of these things that you started to see when we look at the biology part of it. Sure. So I started with looking at neurotransmitters and hormones and seeing what the relationships were there. You know, when we see somebody that's been on an SSRI drug for ten, 15, 20 plus years, first off, SSRI drugs were not meant to be long-term. They were for an acute situation. We've now gotten to a lifestyle. You know, and I am not anti pharmaceutical whatsoever. There's a time when it should be used, it saves lives, but we tend to abuse them in this country. We really do. So people are on these SSRIs just for years. Absolutely. And then I would do labs on these people and say you've been on an SSRI drug for 15 years, your serotonin is in the tank. Obviously, that wasn't the problem. But we were diagnosing someone based on vocabulary. And what if my vocabulary is not your vocabulary? We all have new year's goals and a big one for many of us and myself is eating healthy. And this is where our sponsor comes in HelloFresh, America's number one meal kit. With HelloFresh, you get farm fresh, pre portioned ingredients and seasonal recipes delivered right to your doorstep. No more searching around the grocery store, wondering what to get for dinner. HelloFresh makes it easy to cook healthy meals for myself and my family. It takes to stress out of providing quality food. HelloFresh makes it easy to have a fantastic and healthy tasting sit down meal with my family. And what I love about HelloFresh is the HelloFresh market where you can find over 35 weekly recipes and you can add additional snacks, appetizers, sides, and desserts to your meals. Super easy. So if you want to eat healthy this year, stress free, go to HelloFresh, dot com, forward slash addicted mind 21 and use promo code addicted mind 21 for 21 free meals plus free shipping. That's HelloFresh dot com slash addicted mind 21

Business Wars Daily
"hellofresh" Discussed on Business Wars Daily
"So no more arguments over chicken breasts versus pork chops, huh? The company's also laser focused on improved productivity and investing in automation to improve service. Competitor blue apron is keeping customers hungry for more with a few new offerings. The company's new ready to cook options do all the prep work for you. Every ingredient slice diced chopped and portioned, ready to be thrown in a pan or a pot to cook, blue apron is also offering more meal options like heat and eat meals that are already prepared. In June, the company stirred things up by becoming the first meal kit service sold on Walmart dot com. As inflation pain has customers looking for bargains at the grocery store and people have mostly returned to their busy lives. It's probably not a surprise that meal kit services are a struggling a bit. But as The Washington Post reports, meal kits may have also contributed to their own demise. As the report says quote, give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to cook a fish, you feed him for a lifetime, and he probably doesn't need step by step instructions on laminated cards anymore. In response, meal kit services are enhancing their convenience, customization, and other creative twists. They're hoping to find new customers and keep them coming back for more. And while the appeal of meal kits is clearly their convenience, time is money after all. It all boils down to whether paying a premium for a box of ingredients is something customers can continue to stomach. From wondering, this is business awards daily. I'm your host David Brown, written by Gwen Moran and produced by Jessica yarmosky. Our executive producers are Tino Rubio and Marshall Louis. Business wars daily is supported by Hulu ad manager. Are you a small business owner looking to advertise on a streaming platform with some of the hottest shows on TV? Well, Hulu ad manager lets you get your brand on Hulu for as little as $500 per campaign. You can choose your audience set your budget, upload your ad and track performance all in near real time. It's simple. Go to Hulu ad manager dot com slash stream to get started..

Typology
"hellofresh" Discussed on Typology
"Was there a common theme among all the people who broke up with you that they said you heard repeatedly like the reason. I'm breaking up with you ex. You're like oh my gosh. I've heard this before. Was there a repeating theme yeah i definitely sink. It's more towards like the second point. You made where i needed to do that. Inner work and i hadn't and it's funny because i don't think my unhealthy tendencies have been because of a fear of commitment. I think they were so linked to my trauma of wanting to be loved and feeling abandoned. That i was like way too much because i didn't love myself i because i hadn't healed and i just wanted to be married and love so bad just smothered them in so yeah i think it's more like just not doing the work but not it wasn't ever commitment. I don't even think. I had time to think about if i actually wanted to commit or not because i just wanted to be loved so badly and like just have my person and not being banded and less than i would just do whatever had to do to keep him around and it was so like just so unhealthy so that sounds like a seven. Who's codependent. yeah very but it's funny. Because i'm such an independent person but in relationships i was just so like i didn't have a person like just was it was love like i had to be loved and wanted a needed. And you know codependent on the other person to want me and need me and you know do things like that. Some yeah well. I'm glad you're getting. You're you're doing some work you know and and you know because codependency regardless of your type if you're struggling with codependency it's it's a really life limiting affliction you know and that whole idea that i can't be okay unless you're okay with me you know and Or i just can't be okay unless you're okay. I was gonna say isn't it kind of a theme because we've heard this before that the because the sevens in so so You know paints the sunny pitcher of everything so much so that even when someone's trying to connect with them about something serious they can't you know or something that might be a little more sobering and then they finally get to the point where they're like i'm out of here and the sevens like wait a minute like when did we talk about this or went. How could this have happened. Isn't sometimes i think That it's hard with sevens When they're not very self aware there just haven't done their work that They denial is really easy for them. And it's it's like Sometimes you have to let your hair on fire is where like to say with a seven and relationship to get their attention but when you have again. This is the complication of of the human personality. You can't just say okay. Someone's a seven. they're always going to do. This are always going to do that. People aren't built that way. So you know you people say oh. He's anxious therefore you know he must be a six. And i'm like no actually that's a two with an anxiety disorder or that you know or you know the person's really depressed. They must be a four. It's like no. They could be a seven wrestling with depression. Great right so. It's complicated so here we're talking to someone with taylor who's a seven who by virtue of trauma in life experiences bringing she's talking very codependent themes if in it's possible that an inexperienced person who could go. She's a tour nine right right. Because that's more typical of twos and nines have those codependent features is like no. She's a seven who's wrestling with codependency. But would it be fair to say taylor that you know for a lot of your life that addressing trauma painful stuff in your life would have been difficult because you shied away from dealing with distressing emotions and feelings and thoughts is like end was always on the move. You know trying to stay five steps ahead of the pain. I don't i just don't want to look at it. I wanna stay happy. I want everything to be fun. I want everything does that. Does that describe your experience tape friends. I wanna take a minute to thank our sponsor hellofresh as america's number one meal. Kit hellofresh cuts out stressful meal planning and grocery store trips so you can enjoy cooking and get dinner on the table in just about thirty minutes or less and i have to say the meals are delicious and i have been able to break out of our dinner with. Hellofresh is quick and easy meals. Fifteen to twenty minute dinners anthony man breakfast on the go and more easy options. There's really something for everyone. Anthony yeah you use hellofresh right. Absolutely we started using hellofresh love their high quality fresh ingredients. I make these meals with my daughter's there source directly from growers delivered from the farm to our doorstep in under a week. I now ma'am same thing for anne. And i what i really liked them is how flexible hellofresh is to home. It's easy to go online and change my delivery days bhai food preferences and even skip a week. Whenever i need right right now anthony. Yes hellofresh is giving our typology listeners. A special offer go to hellofresh dot com slash typology fourteen and use the code. Typology fourteen for up to fourteen free meals. That is amazing. Plus free shipping plus free shipping. That's hellofresh h. e. l. l. o. f. r. e. s. h. dot com forward slash typology. Fourteen one four one four. That's fourteen meals folks..

What's Good Games
"hellofresh" Discussed on What's Good Games
"This is an interesting game to watch. If you guys are into battery. Als and you're looking for something kinda got a fresh take. I've heard good things now. You know from some sancho from some other people who showed up in the chat to said that they had played And now it's going into early access on september seventh so not that far just a couple of weeks away if you guys wanna check it out on steam. It was a lot that was a long show prop suggests the energy was hired the whole time he has such a good time hosting that and putting together you can tell it shows but i was definitely getting very sleepy towards the end not because it was born to not great but i'm just not used to watch to conferences ladies not used to it. Yeah it was. It was a long show but it was packed with media. I don't feel like there was really anything in that show and we obviously didn't cover every single announcement in opening night live. But i don't feel like there was suffering that show that felt like it was like super boring and super belabor because jeff knows how to put a show together. I think that all of his experience doing you know the video game awards and then creating the game awards. And i'm working on summer game. Fest has kind of showed him what people want. And there's so many different ways to track data now with livestream technology about when people are clicking away from the tab when people are interacting on chat and then using hashtags to tweet about specific moments. You can really see what kind of content gets people excited and use that data to then create programming for the next thing. That's going to be even more exciting than i think. That's what's great about. Having a guy like jeff produce a show like opening night live that he cares about that stuff and it makes the content better. And i get that people like the producers at xbox are beholden and have an obligation to highlight feature all of their teams right. They can't say well people only want to hear about halo. Who cares about. Learning about tribus is in age of empires right. Or it's like who cares about watching a ten minute forza horizon five demo which actually looked really beautiful by the way you know so. I think it's tough when you wanna make sure that some of your team members get their time to shine on stage. You have a bigger obligation as a platform holder than clearly. Jeff does as an entertainment producer. So just my two cents on them. Yeah any who. That's enough about opening night live now. I want to tell you guys. This episode of what's games is brought to you by hellofresh..

The Angry Therapist Podcast
"hellofresh" Discussed on The Angry Therapist Podcast
"I'm going to give you a discount. Code in this is for a limited time. So if you're listening to this you could join the lab for only twenty dollars. It's like a drop in fee for three. Months is twenty dollars a month go to tat lab dot app. That's tat lab dot app and the discount code is live better. It's case sensitive so all our case one word live better and i will see you in the lab. This episode is brought to you by hellofresh. What is hellofresh. Hellofresh is pre measured ingredients and mouth-watering seasonal recipes. Delivered right to your door. So you can skip the trip to the grocery store and count on hellofresh to make home cooking. Easy fun and affordable. And that's why it's america's number one meal. Kit hellofresh cuts out stressful meal planning and grocery store trips with less. Prep less effort and minimal cleanup. So you can enjoy cooking and get dinner on the table in just about thirty minutes. Hello fresh produce gets from the farm to your door in less than a week. Which means fresh high-quality ingredients. I've tried many Meal delivery services and say hellofresh is the best. It's easy and the other thing i do. Is i use cooking as an activity to be mindful and to connect with my partner and so hellofresh is like date night in.

The Angry Therapist Podcast
"hellofresh" Discussed on The Angry Therapist Podcast
"Going to give you a discount. Code in this is for a limited time. So if you're listening to this you could join the lab for only twenty dollars. It's like a drop in fee for three. Months is twenty dollars a month go to tat lab dot app. That's tat lab dot app and the discount code is live better. It's case sensitive so all case one word live better and i will see you in the lab. This episode is brought to you by hellofresh. What is hellofresh. Hellofresh is pre measured ingredients in mouth-watering seasonal recipes. Delivered right to your door. So you can skip the trips to the grocery store and count on hellofresh to make home cooking. Easy fund and affordable and. That's why it's america's number one meal. Kit hellofresh cuts out stressful meal planning grocery store trips with less. Prep less effort and minimal cleanup so you can enjoy cooking and get dinner on the table in just about thirty minutes. Hello fresh produce gets from the farm to your door in less than a week. Which means fresh high-quality ingredients. I've tried many Meal delivery services. And i gotta say hello. Fresh is the best. It's easy and you know. The other thing i do is i use cooking as an activity to be mindful and to connect with my partner and so hellofresh is like date night in a box. It's couples therapy. So here's what you need to do. Go to hellofresh dot com slash therapist fourteen and use code therapist one four for up to fourteen free meals plus free shipping hellofresh dot com slash therapist fourteen and use that code therapist.

My First Million
"hellofresh" Discussed on My First Million
"How do i market this product. Dev try was a really interesting in of that. So i was in toronto. Recently am at a friend's house and they're like wanna drink. And i'm like yeah. Sure what do you have. And they're like open the fridge and i look and there's just like a dozen plus of different types of drinks but only one of each and i'm like alicia like why do you have one seltzer one cider. When type of beer and she goes oh it's try try. I go no and basically really really simple acquisition tactic. You give them your number you get. I've tried your phone number. And then the text your own. Some texts list where they say. Hey do you want our next alcohol drop and they literally just show up at your house and give you free alcohol which i was like dinner. Like this can't be true a paying for this or they like selling your date and she goes. No they're just like just give me free alcohol and i'm like how many times done this like they've done it like four times and basically it's similar to something like a block fi where you can even work your way up list if you start referring other users so i think they have this massive list of users. The reason i find this one especially interesting is because one. I think they actually get the alcohol for free. That's why it's all like destroyed and you're not getting a six pack. You're getting one new drink that some brand is launching But i also think it's really interesting because they have zero product today as in they as a company. Bev try so far are not selling anything. But you can kind of see little glimpse of of it in the app so you. She opened the app. And you know. I was like let me see this and you can see that. They're going to add new products. It almost looks like one of these super apps that you'd find in southeast asia or something you know they're probably going to sell you. Some food probably gonna come up with their own alcohol brand. Who knows what they're going to do with this but again thought it was really interesting because most of the time you create a product and then you market the hell out of that product and for some companies like uber hellofresh splurging so much money on acquiring these users and i just thought this was again a really interesting inversion where hold up. What if we just figure out the easiest way to attract a large mass of people and then we're going to figure out the product. After so i don't know if you have any thoughts on that but that the best story. Yeah i think there's some good and some bad in that so there's some good is usually. There's a lag time while you're waiting for your product to build or takes time to get your formulations rider..

The Angry Therapist Podcast
"hellofresh" Discussed on The Angry Therapist Podcast
"We all struggle with jealousy to a certain extent. And i think the feeling of jealousy is normal. Right it's not. It's not bad. I kind of like it. If my partner Get feels a little jealous to a certain extent like that. That's to me i Now i don't want them to suffer or internalize repeat themselves up but if they get a little jealous because of whatever reason I think that's normal unhealthy. I it's not. it's not a bad thing. It's jealous behavior that can be toxic right so if my girlfriend is going through my phone if my girlfriend is telling me what to wear if she saying that my shorts are too high which which does not a thing that would never happen but if she says You know who. I should and should not hang out with or how i should act in front of certain people like all that stuff right. Jost behavior is lined with control and that is grabbing in that can be toxic that can make people feel trapped It could make the relationship feel claustrophobic and that is how you that's how you suffocate. A relationship is by Allowing yourself to Participate in jealous behavior. So if you have a partner that is jealous. I know the difference. No the difference of someone being jealous and expressing that with you which is okay. I think expressing any kind of feeling or state is a healthy thing. As long as it's not buying with control as long as he or she isn't saying. I'm jealous of your friend. And i don't want you to hang out with him anymore right. That kind of stuff is not good so no. What is jealous behavior in. What is The feeling of jealousy and so if your partner is struggling with jealousy. I think it is okay to express that with you and it gives you the chance to validate or remind him that the relationship is good and that you're happy and that you find him sexy attractive and all of that

The Angry Therapist Podcast
"hellofresh" Discussed on The Angry Therapist Podcast
"I'm going to give you a discount. Code in this is for a limited time. So if you're listening to this you could join the lab for only twenty dollars. It's like a drop in fee for three. Months is twenty dollars a month go to tat lab dot app. That's tat lab dot app and the discount code is live better. It's case sensitive so all lower case one word live better and i will see you in the lab. This episode is brought to you by hellofresh. What is hellofresh. Hellofresh is pre measured ingredients in mouth-watering seasonal recipes. Delivered right to your door. So you can skip the trip to the grocery store and count on hellofresh to make home cooking. Easy fund and affordable and. That's why it's america's number one meal. Kit hellofresh cuts out stressful meal planning grocery store trips with less. Prep less effort and minimal cleanup so you can enjoy cooking and get dinner on the table in just about thirty minutes. Hello fresh produce gets from the farm to your door in less than a week. Which means fresh high-quality ingredients. I've tried many Meal delivery services. And i gotta say hello. Fresh is the best. It's easy and the other thing i do is i use cooking as an activity to be mindful and to connect with my partner and so hellofresh is like date night in.

Double Toasted
"hellofresh" Discussed on Double Toasted
"You can learn how to run a show and mike. Wow that might be the next step. Let's do that. So i call him to ham cool. It's come over. I got my notepad. I got my glasses ready. He's gotta take the dog to the vet. Haven't heard from since. Well i just got back. He's not saying anything. Are we too might not. I'm tired stealing. No of course not actually two very good on the trivia show. I'll watch them of it. You and you accord about got along pretty well that guy. He's upset that you won't look inman. I ask such a weird dynamic. Show them so. You can see what i'm talking about. I haven't done that. You should come in and do trivia. sometimes i will. Yeah that'd be that'd be pretty fun definitely yeah. I don't know what to be prepared for him. He goes fat chairs fair than you might not not taught him about that. That was not nice. That was nice. I feel personally. It was no it was and that was that was wrong and i and i did have a talk to him about you know. Some things are just too far too far. I'm sorry about that. i'm i apologize on his band. You beautiful plus all the nimick of like where people you know all right. Let's see we got here. The the ad done let me see here. Oh excuse me y'all me and we're getting ready to get on. We're getting ready to get on with the review. Y'all talk about suicide. Squad is not so much review as it is just sort of an opinion piece. I guess reviews our opinion pieces. But it's not a straight up like. Oh my god this is terrible. But now there's an issue that happened with this dodge respect retrospective. I like that. Thank you sir. thank you sir. But before we start. I wanna let you know that this review is brought to you by hellofresh and hellofresh. Why do you want hellofresh. Because look i know. Happy other. watch this so happy. I'll listen to what we do. I don't know how to cook. I don't know what to do with that kitchen point zero. You don't know what to do. In their the hellofresh eight takes stress out of all that they send you meals and recipes. That can be prepared in thirty minutes just in thirty minutes and they send you a lot of things that you can keep for yourself. A lot of recipes that you can use for future meals. I have about three of them right here tonight. What we've getting chicken but tonight we were going to cook this one. Right here The crispy buffalo spice chicken recipe. My sister hellofresh hellofresh. I use it all the time. I mean i've learned so much it. It's quick and we always have leftovers. Even though the you know it's gotta teach you different ways to cook that you would've thought of you don't techniques yemen. You came and talk about it talking about the other day. I was like manna hyping. This up i can actually live up to you. How you built it up love here. Y'all know hamburgers. Manny sent me a a hamburger disney like damn bringing it that hard to make. Well they sent me one of those fancy hamburg man. Gouda vibes burger. This sounds delicious. Yeah it is. I had it and i made it is. It is awesome man. Another thing about hellofresh. It's sexy man. Like i say doing the kitchen but all the bachelors out there you know. Invite your date over makes it look like you know what you're doing in there man. It looks kinda hot. you know. Hellofresh decide the packages hellofresh make. So you'll keep us. I fresh date though. No i don't think that that. Would that would definitely impressed me. Hellofresh at.

Open Loops: Conversations That Bend
"hellofresh" Discussed on Open Loops: Conversations That Bend
"I'm making this about myself. But i don't know how people can relate to this. It's so easy for me. Just go okay. I'm starving right now Well there's all these delivery apps out there. Let me just get that. Same chinese food again. And it's because it's what i've always had and all this stuff and this process of learning what is a healthier alternative is very daunting. It's daunting daunting to learn how to cook and had standing and it feels as if this generation maybe it's the millennial generation. I mean look at it. Blue apron these companies that are catering to laziness in some ways of people that don't know how to cook up themselves so they'll give you a subscription and you put it together yourself. I mean. I feel very lost all of it. It seems like it's a big thing i mean. What would you say that someone like me in terms of what is the easiest way to not do the easiest way of eating. That's funny because it can be daunting to cook can be like there's these asser i'll do the. Yeah the blue apron. The hellofresh league totally. Yeah you don't really have to cook but the easy whether it's a millennial largest lazy human jets yes i mean. First of all..

The Overwhelmed Brain
"hellofresh" Discussed on The Overwhelmed Brain
"I just wanted to. And i knew that if i stayed i was either going to scream. I didn't know what i was going to do. So i decided instead of just losing it on. The spot is just walked away. Because i wanted to protect her. I wanted to protect myself too. I didn't want to get into that situation. I didn't want it to blow up in my face. But i definitely felt like throwing a lot of negative energy toward her and because of that i had to walk away. I told myself. I'm walking away. I don't want this to accelerate to the point where i blow up then only happened once in our relationship and it was probably during cova it. Sometimes things are just crazy on earth and you just have to deal with it as best you can but it was the right thing to do because i needed time to allow the energy to cool inside of me. I couldn't allow it to continue. So i i feel like that. I had to step away to not hurt. The person i love. This isn't something regularly. I'm not saying that you should do this every single night or every single week. You don't give someone the silent treatment you don't walk away. I mean you should try to work everything out but sometimes when you know that hurtful behavior is going to come out it might be best just to take a break. Move back step back. And i'm not saying it's going to be easy for someone with adhd who might not be able to process a fast enough. I'm just talking to everyone in general. This is what i mean by not exposing someone you love to hurtful behavior. It's on a think the person who wrote. I definitely care about your well being. I definitely want you to have the most amazing relationships. i definitely. you want you to find someone that does understand what you're going through. Can maybe even talk to you about it and figure things out together but often you do definitely have to travel the path alone just to make sure that you he'll bring the best version of yourself into a relationship so that the other person isn't tasked or has any responsibility to try to work things out with a situation that you're working on yourself because sometimes we can't help someone who needs to help themselves and i totally understand when it's difficult to do that and it's helpful to have someone else but it is important that you understand that tasking someone else with something that you're dealing with might be too much for them sometimes. And this person's mom figured it out. That is definitely a unique situation. She figured out how to do it. And i hope she's happy and if she is then maybe she can teach others which she does because she seems to have a grasp on it. Thanks so much writing and thanks for tuning into another episode. I'll be right back with a few words before my final words right after this book so like other normal people my girlfriend. I cook food. I say that because we sometimes cook food that is edible and sometimes we don't and sometimes I cook and then my girlfriend gives me a nice compliment. Which i don't know if she really means but i wanna say that. My girlfriend is a great cook. She cooks a lot of variety. And she's very creative. And it wasn't until i think it was like three ago. We got our first meal kit from hellofresh and we were just amazed how much we were missing in life. And how much food. And how many flavors you can put together and i thought all this time that my girlfriend was creative and She absolutely is. I'm not putting your down for that. I'm just saying that Once we got our first meal kit we realized that we were missing out on so much more and today. I wanna talk about Green chef which is now owned by hellofresh and they actually have a wider array of meal plans to choose from. There's something for everyone and we've now gotten meal kits from both green chef and hellofresh..

The $100 MBA Show
"hellofresh" Discussed on The $100 MBA Show
"Showing us love on. I tunes hang onto the end of the episode to hear who won this week's free ride on today's episode. You'll learn why you should work on your pitch even if you're self funded even if you're not looking to get investors or seed capital our angels for any of that. I run a self funded software company. And i've worked on my pitch my deck i've presented to other people at startup hubs and co working spaces. I've pitched my business. Even though i'm not pitching to get investment having this is so so critical every business owner should know how to pitch their business as if their business depends on it as if they need to pitch to keep the lights on all explain. Why and how you can get started and work on your pitch. So let's get into it. Let's get down to business support for today's show comes from start your first online business. My all new ten part audio course on himalayan learning this is of course is gonna get you from zero to one. That's going to get you from thinking about your business to actually launching that business getting out of your head and into the real world. We cover things like validating your idea creating your first product pricing it marketing financing your business even creating your business website and more check it out and himalayas dot com slash nba and use code nba to get a fourteen day free trial again. The himalayas dot com slash. Nba promo code nba traditionally or typically. People will work on a slide presentation of slide deck to explain what their businesses were problem. They're solving the market there in the challenges that will face and the potential of their business. They do this to raise money. The pitch to investors the bishop vc firms. They might even pitch to family and friends to get their initial capital to get their business up and running. And that's awesome. But i'm here to tell you even if you're not looking to raise money even if you are happy to be self funded. This exercise of pitching your business is vital to the success of your business. Why because you are selling this is a sales exercise if you can't sell the concept of your business clearly coherently without rambling without scrambling for words. It's going to be very hard for you to sell your products to strangers to put together a sales page to put together a marketing campaign. But more importantly as you are working on your pitch in refining it you might discover your product. Your business is not good enough. You need to improve unique to pivot. You need to change it. Typically when you pitch to an audience or to anybody you will get feedback. They'll ask questions. Like what makes you unique while. When i go with you when i go this competitor. What are your profit margins. What's our market share. What's your market size. And if you know the answer these questions like you know your own name. You're in trouble. You need to know these things. You need to know the information. It's okay for you not to know but you need to get the information right cannot know forever and working on a pitch and pitching forces you to be in the position. Really you know what. I need to find these answers if i'm gonna pitch that's why i did it. I started webinar. Injure our software company back in two thousand fourteen. I started pitching about a year into it. I'd go to you know. Start of communities. I would go to co working. Spaces would go to pitch nights and our refine it. I wasn't great in the beginning. And i had a few slides missing and i was stumped on a few questions. But guess what immediately after that pitch. I found the answers to those questions. I wrote down all those things as stumped me. I remembered to fill in those slides. That are missing. In fact i used to record. These pitches on my phone so i could at least have the audio so i can go back and listen to a happened. So what are some of the benefits of doing this. This is gonna take you some time. It's gonna take you a bit of effort well number one. If i'm ever interviewed on a podcast in a video show for a newspaper publication. i know my story. I know my pitch. I know my business. I know my why. I know my market so so well because i've refined the so much i'm ready for any question. I'm ready to answer it. Clearly and concisely and immediately. I am able to make people feel confident in my brand because i'm confident because i know this stuff right and i didn't always know it but got to know it because i was pitching to one. I have to talk to clients especially high profile clients big businesses Logos that we wanna put on our website you know. I have to be the best salesperson in the company. I need to be able to go in as the founder as a ceo. And say hey you need to sign up with us. This is why one two three four. We've built it because of xyz and that's why we're better than the competition and within minutes. I'm able to close the deal. Where did that from. That came. Because i pitched it. I made a deck. I refined my pitch over and over. And i got criticized and i got feedback. Nobody really like made me cry or anything but it made me think made me think about. What are the answers to these questions. I don't wanna be stumped again. That's a great feeling to have like. Oh not good enough. I need to get better though the reason why this is important. Is you never know what's going to happen. Business is unpredictable. Life is unpredictable. You might be self-funded now you might be coasting. You might be profitable about the okay. And they're not looking for funding right now but things might change in the future. The best entrepreneurs are flexible to keep their options open. Maybe it's not funding. You're looking for maybe one day. You wanna sell your company. You want to exit you wanna ipo. Maybe or even. You're looking to hire a coo the takeover so you can enjoy retirement early. Of course they're gonna look for a great candidate to fill your shoes or to fill that role but the best candidates need to be sold on why they should work for you and this is where the pitch comes in. This future proves her business knowing how to pitch now. I want to say that you don't need to be some sort of master salesperson to be able to pitch. You just need to know your stuff. It's almost like knowing the speech very well. You're able to recite it from memory. It's like knowing a song or knowing set as a comedian. You don't have to be able to sell anything you just need to sell one thing your business but most of all pitching is about clarity. It's about being able to communicate clearly. What your business does and doesn't do. Most people lack this fundamental skill as the founder as a ceo as the leader of your business. This has to be a must. You have to know how to do this. If you become a snoozefest every time you talk about your business that's bad news right. That's not something you want to have any repertoire. Will you want you want people to get excited when you talk about your business to fully understand what you do to be sold on it to be like. Wow that's a good idea. I really like that. You want inspire people and that happens when you refine refine unusually what you do the pitch and was what i found is that you actually take away things you actually carve it out. It's like addition by subtraction. Right and you start to realize this is all i need to say for this pitch. Everything else is fluff. Everything else is a distraction and that refining that like widdling. Would you know like if you're like would lynnwood into statues or sculptures. It becomes a masterpiece. Becomes something you're proud of. I am more on today's topic but before that let me give love the today sponsor support for today's show comes from hellofresh as a busy business owner. I'm sure you would agree that the two things you really value is your health and your time but when it comes to cooking dinner we often feel like we have to sacrifice one of those we either rush and order something. That's quite unhealthy to save some time. Hoy laura effort and time in cooking something at home that may take us an hour plus to put together. A new has an extra hour every single night. And don't get me started on lunch either. This is why. I'm so excited to share with you. Hellofresh hellofresh cuts how stressful meal planning and grocery store trips. So you can enjoy cooking and get dinner on the table in just thirty minutes or less..

The $100 MBA Show
"hellofresh" Discussed on The $100 MBA Show
"Traditionally or typically. People will work on a slide presentation of slide deck to explain what their businesses were problem. They're solving the market there in the challenges that will face and the potential of their business. They do this to raise money. The pitch to investors the bishop vc firms. They might even pitch to family and friends to get their initial capital to get their business up and running. And that's awesome. But i'm here to tell you even if you're not looking to raise money even if you are happy to be self funded. This exercise of pitching your business is vital to the success of your business. Why because you are selling this is a sales exercise if you can't sell the concept of your business clearly coherently without rambling without scrambling for words. It's going to be very hard for you to sell your products to strangers to put together a sales page to put together a marketing campaign. But more importantly as you are working on your pitch in refining it you might discover your product. Your business is not good enough. You need to improve unique to pivot. You need to change it. Typically when you pitch to an audience or to anybody you will get feedback. They'll ask questions. Like what makes you unique while. When i go with you when i go this competitor. What are your profit margins. What's our market share. What's your market size. And if you know the answer these questions like you know your own name. You're in trouble. You need to know these things. You need to know the information. It's okay for you not to know but you need to get the information right cannot know forever and working on a pitch and pitching forces you to be in the position. Really you know what. I need to find these answers if i'm gonna pitch that's why i did it. I started webinar. Injure our software company back in two thousand fourteen. I started pitching about a year into it. I'd go to you know. Start of communities. I would go to co working. Spaces would go to pitch nights and our refine it. I wasn't great in the beginning. And i had a few slides missing and i was stumped on a few questions. But guess what immediately after that pitch. I found the answers to those questions. I wrote down all those things as stumped me. I remembered to fill in those slides. That are missing. In fact i used to record. These pitches on my phone so i could at least have the audio so i can go back and listen to a happened.

The Confessionals
"hellofresh" Discussed on The Confessionals
"Hang out but i think seems like maybe the best time to go to point pleasant when nobody else's there you can get the museum you don't have to wait for people to get out of your way. We were there. We had no place ourselves. That's nice a second and talk about our sponsor for today's show which is hellofresh. So hello good food. I freaking love hellofresh. Not only are they giving us great deals but they also give you jaw dropping flavor. Bust your mouth open on heaven. Goodness stuff right there on your kitchen table. Hellofresh is great because it cuts out the stressful meal planning that everybody hates. How many of you say to your significant other. Hey what do you want for dinner this week. And what's the answer back more often than not. I don't know. I hate the meal. Prep my wife hates the meal. Prep and with hellofresh meal. Prep goes out the window. The food arrives at my house. Ready to rock all guy do is put together and boom families eating good night. The flavors are amazing. I can't stress that enough. The flavor of the food that they're sending and the recipes are second to none not only is the food. Great and the conveniences there but hellofresh is twenty eight percent cheaper than shopping at your local grocery store and seventy two percent cheaper than a restaurant meal without sacrificing any quality. That i don't know what else to say other than what are you waiting for. And if you want to actually change your meal if you want to change your plan. It's easy because they have an app. You can do it within minutes.

DLC
"hellofresh" Discussed on DLC
"Like the the original space jam like that movie should've existed and now this new. I don't know how good this new one will be. But like i love stuff like that. I my head around it. I love it anyway. Space jam a new legacy of the game is free for xbox game pass perks right now and free to play at forever when later this month and i think it's well it's a great saturday afternoon in its players fired up with the kids or some friends in the embroil your way through it. It wouldn't take a second. Think our second sponsor which is hello fresh. Oh my goodness i hellofresh. I've been using it for years. I pay for it myself. I actually a a what i- customer of this product and a happy one. He devoted one. Why because it has made my life better. It makes my life better. It gives me more variety in the things that i eat. I eat better. And i have the joy of preparing meals for my family. Hellofresh gives you premeasured ingredients mouth-watering seasonal recipes and they deliver them right to your door. it's so convenient. it's so simple. Lets me reduce trips to the grocery store which is annoying that i have to even go to the grocery store or these days and it makes cooking at home and makes actually being a cook. Somebody something that i like to do. I never thought i'd be that person that enjoys cooking. But i really do. I've gotten better at it. I've enjoyed getting better utensils and learning how to chop things. It's it's fun. And it's affordable that is. Why hellofresh is america's number one meal kit. I get more variety in my meals. I. they have over twenty three recipes every single week to choose from. I do the three meals per week. But you can add in a fourth some weeks if you want and part of the joy of hellofresh is getting on the app and picking out my meals weeks in advance. It's so quick to scroll through and go. Oh my gosh that looks delicious. Ooh that looks really yummy. And there's so much variety that i'm not eating the same things over and over and over again..

eCommerce Fastlane - Shopify - Shopify Plus - E-Commerce - Ecommerce Business
How AspireIQ Can Help Companies Through Influencer Marketing
"Talk a little bit about your platform more high level. I like what does the aspire iq platform do and the problems that you're now solving for owners. Yeah thanks for that. Happy to go through all of those things. Obviously it's a it's it's a challenging world out there for a lot of people trying to get started and influencer. Marketing is happy to go through a lot of my advice there but at a really high level spirit. He was a platform for brands to build. Engaged communities of influential people and that ranges from social media influencers to customers fans experts and more we are actually one of the first influence of platforms back when we started in two thousand thirteen. And now we're fortunate to have over four hundred brands clients from bigger names like walmart and samsung to e com leaders like purple glossy and hellofresh and actually in our last few years our focus has really been tightly on ecommerce. Where over thirty percent of our clients are on shop by ranging from billion dollar market leaders to five-person companies. You know for shop by really if you kinda summarize it down what we saw for you is building an in house influence a program that drives real are y. And that could mean anything from for. If you're a novice setting up the and organizing the initial program helping you source the first fifty influencers and tracking promo codes and affiliate links to generate the first sales or for advanced users it community something as robust as customizing a complete crm solution with integrated workflows across hundreds of influencers generating thousands of pieces of content. That optimize your whole stack. And if you've ever run an influencer campaign you'll know that it's really challenging and especially if you've all you've got spreadsheets and email so i think the three biggest problems we saw for our number one finding the right influences to create content for you number two managing the complex workflow between your brand hundreds or even thousands influencers in your community and number three analyzing their revenue in the are y that your program is driving which shoutouts shop affi- is easiest. He do using our shop. Fine aggression in ethic where we really made our bread and butter. Is that second one in building

The Mason Minute
Cardboard And Paper (MM #3680)
"The with kevin mason. Many people are tired of being at home and want to get out. But if you look at the numbers that's not necessarily true because meal delivery food delivery services are on the rise they were growing before the pandemic and now they're growing even bigger and it doesn't look like they're going to slow down no matter if they leave their house or not companies like doordash and grubhub and postmates certain about delivering fast. Food meals all around town. And then you've got actual meal delivery services the kind that you cook at home. Companies like hellofresh and blue apron. They're out there too. But what all these companies have in common is a lot of paper and a lot of cardboard and i guess for that matter a lot of plastic to and that's the one thing i'm wondering about when all these delivery services deliver their in paper bags the big meal preparation services that they're delivering in big cardboard boxes plus all the plastic inside are recreating more waste. Has anybody thought about that. We're not talking about recycling here. We're just talking about moore cardboard paper and yes more plastic and that's very concerning.

The Mason Minute
Cardboard And Paper (MM #3680)
"The with kevin mason. Many people are tired of being at home and want to get out. But if you look at the numbers that's not necessarily true because meal delivery food delivery services are on the rise they were growing before the pandemic and now they're growing even bigger and it doesn't look like they're going to slow down no matter if they leave their house or not companies like doordash and grubhub and postmates certain about delivering fast. Food meals all around town. And then you've got actual meal delivery services the kind that you cook at home. Companies like hellofresh and blue apron. They're out there too. But what all these companies have in common is a lot of paper and a lot of cardboard and i guess for that matter a lot of plastic to and that's the one thing i'm wondering about when all these delivery services deliver their in paper bags the big meal preparation services that they're delivering in big cardboard boxes plus all the plastic inside are recreating more waste. Has anybody thought about that. We're not talking about recycling here. We're just talking about moore cardboard paper and yes more plastic and that's very concerning.

The Mason Minute
Cardboard And Paper (MM #3680)
"The with kevin mason. Many people are tired of being at home and want to get out. But if you look at the numbers that's not necessarily true because meal delivery food delivery services are on the rise they were growing before the pandemic and now they're growing even bigger and it doesn't look like they're going to slow down no matter if they leave their house or not companies like doordash and grubhub and postmates certain about delivering fast. Food meals all around town. And then you've got actual meal delivery services the kind that you cook at home. Companies like hellofresh and blue apron. They're out there too. But what all these companies have in common is a lot of paper and a lot of cardboard and i guess for that matter a lot of plastic to and that's the one thing i'm wondering about when all these delivery services deliver their in paper bags the big meal preparation services that they're delivering in big cardboard boxes plus all the plastic inside are recreating more waste. Has anybody thought about that. We're not talking about recycling here. We're just talking about moore cardboard paper and yes more plastic and that's very concerning.

The Mason Minute
Cardboard And Paper (MM #3680)
"The with kevin mason. Many people are tired of being at home and want to get out. But if you look at the numbers that's not necessarily true because meal delivery food delivery services are on the rise they were growing before the pandemic and now they're growing even bigger and it doesn't look like they're going to slow down no matter if they leave their house or not companies like doordash and grubhub and postmates certain about delivering fast. Food meals all around town. And then you've got actual meal delivery services the kind that you cook at home. Companies like hellofresh and blue apron. They're out there too. But what all these companies have in common is a lot of paper and a lot of cardboard and i guess for that matter a lot of plastic to and that's the one thing i'm wondering about when all these delivery services deliver their in paper bags the big meal preparation services that they're delivering in big cardboard boxes plus all the plastic inside are recreating more waste. Has anybody thought about that. We're not talking about recycling here. We're just talking about moore cardboard paper and yes more plastic and that's very concerning.

Techmeme Ride Home
Unusual Trouble At Red-Hot Startup Dispo
"Remember despu that hot new photo social app that we were keeping our eye on as a potential next big thing despu basically made you wait until the morning before your photos developed in quotes was co founded by famous youtuber. David dark well. One of dispose. Major backers spark capital has suddenly announced. It is quote severing all ties with despu after claims of sexual assault against a member of dough bricks. Vlog squad arose last week. I suppose i need to back up and explain a bit david. Dobby has been called the jimmy fallon of gen z for his popular youtube videos which apparently focus on comedy and pranks and stunts and the like tens millions of subscribers. Nobody is one of those youtubers. That has one of those multimillion dollar mansions that is extensively the scene of a lot of his videos. He also has this sort of entourage of people known as the wlac squad who also star in his videos. It is a member of the long squad that is accused of the sexual assault though there have been some other questionable incidents lately that dober- himself has recently apologized for in video anyway without getting too in the weeds overall that last week mr dobric was losing sponsors left and right hellofresh dollar shave club. Ea sports seatgeek all severed ties. The very first link in the show notes can give you a rundown of all of that. Now normally i do tend to steer clear of these sorts of youtube star and influence or controversies but there is real sort of industry news here. Because i can't really recall seeing this happened before quoting techcrunch. In light of the recent news about the wlac squat and david dobric the co founder of despu. We have made the decision. To sever all ties with the company spark capital tweeted. We have stepped down from our position on the board and we are in the process of making arrangements to ensure we do not profit from our recent investment in despu and quote spark capital's decision to step back from the despu investment. Feels like a first of its kind. And if not rare it could trigger other investors with stakes in the company to do the same spark capital led a series a. in despu a twenty million dollar financing event that valued the company at two hundred million dollars less than a month ago. The current statement by spark does not indicate that the investment has been pulled from the company yet spark capital did not immediately respond to requests for comment in regards to what this process would look like and if the shares will be sold back to the company or to another buyer

Business Wars Daily
Hello Fresh Had a Great Year, But Microwavable Meals Did Even Better
"With on again off again covid restrictions keeping hungry mouths out of restaurants. It's no surprise that twenty twenty was a banner year for cooking at home. That's been great for meal. Kit companies like hellofresh and blue apron. Homebound customers tired of familiar recipes flocked offerings like smashed black bean to start as in meatloaf la mom already and under forty-five minutes hellofresh orders grew one hundred fourteen percent over a year ago according to a statement from the company as much as meal kits have shown during the pandemic though. There were no match for their biggest rival. The microwave twenty twenty was a record year for the frozen food. Aisle sales of microwavable ready meals in the us grew to more than twenty five billion dollars last year. Outpacing the growth of all other grocery items according to market research published by global industry analytics. This increased demand sent items. Like tinos pizza rolls. Marie calendar's is and trader. Joe's tikka masala flying off their ice shelves twenty twenty also saw gin hot pockets that came as a blow to military bases where the microwavable meat and cheese filled bread bars or a snacking staple so report stars and stripes magazine nestle owned stouffer is meanwhile celebrated its record year by debut in a shop where it showcased food themed clothing with slogans like cheese. Self care yeah. That one's a little debatable. Live laugh lasagna. T shirts aside. However microwaveable meals showed they could adapt to the times amy's kitchen which built a brand off organic and vegetarian. Ready meals enjoyed sales bumps up to seventy percent for some of its products as reported by food navigator usa dot com nestle. Meanwhile grew it's plant based offerings by forty percent in two thousand twenty on top of organic and meatless options. Healthy choices have been winners to namely the company's diet brand lean cuisine that is until december when pieces of plastic from a broken conveyor belt ended up in a batch of frozen mashed potatoes. I guess that means this time. At least the lou calorie frozen meals might actually tastes like plastic nestle recalled ninety two thousand pounds of their lean cuisine baked chicken and potato variety as we emerge from the pandemic. It remains to be seen whether pre-prepared microwaveable meals will continue their meteoric rise. Customers might be looking for a break from all that processed food. just ask allison robot celli. Who eight and reviewed thirty five hot pockets in four days for the takeout when recalling the experience she says nobody should attempt this without a note from their doctor

Clark Howard Show
The skinny on meal delivery kits
"Earlier this year. People who tended normally to eat out a lot have been eating home a lot more, and then as the months have gone on. People gravitated back to if they're not eating in restaurants to ordering takeout curbside delivery whatever. But that can get expensive in a time that a lot of people's incomes have really suffered. So there's something that was really hot back about twenty, seventeen, twenty eighteen, and that was meal kits and it was supposed to be the next great wave where you would. Get prepackaged containers with the the whole meals and then the step-by-step how to make them. See all the ingredients you know you had to do was cook them because they'd already prepared everything you need it. Well, it was like big hit at first and then amiss but these things are back. And doing stronger. Fact. Up Twenty thirty percent for a lot of these. And so. Consumer reports did a deep dive. On five of the very popular, most popular of the meal delivery kits. To see how nutritious they were, how easy they were to prepare how good the ingredients were and what it actually cost. To feed a family. And they found that these kits. varied. An price. Generally were very convenient. That the the kits typically had. Very good high-quality ingredients and the food tasted good. I mean consumer reports usually. Rights with a bit of a chip on his shoulder telling you what? The things that aren't that good was something. But they tended to. Like these kids. A pretty good amount. They were concerned with. The level of sodium. And a lot of the meals. But as a general rule, the meals were. Good to excellent is far as the kids. The Kit that overall. Consumer. Reports testers liked the best was home chef. The price per week one, And in every category. The user experience score was a five out of five I. Mean That's pretty awesome. and. So home chef was not the. But as a general rule, the calorie counts were very reasonable. And the variety of items, the vegetables, the grains. All of that very good There was one that was very expensive that also rated across all categories five for five and that Sun Basket where in the case of home chef hundred and seven bucks a week. Son Basket one, hundred and forty, four a week. Again the quality of the food. Good. The Calorie counts very reasonable. hellofresh. Hundred and one buck. So the cheaper so far of them. And did not get five out of five in all categories but did. Really. Well. Blue Apron. Cheaper yet. But The quality overall, the experience, not as good ingredients missing or damaged deliveries delayed A number of issues that people had using blue apron. And then the cheapest of all. was also more complicated to work with. Dennehy. Dinner Lee was sixty eight bucks a week, which was significantly cheaper than anyone else and people really liked the price points it but they found that it was more work to cook with the dinner kits and so if you look at that thing that people in marketing are always talking about the best overall value. Absolutely based on the consumer reports, testers and tasters and whatever else. Home Chef. When's the

The Frankie Boyer Show
HelloFresh recalls meal kits with onions tied to salmonella outbreak
"Has announced that food delivery service hello fresh has recalled onions in its meal kits due to a potential salmonella contamination. Hello. Fresh said it was informed by one of its ingredients suppliers that it's conducting a voluntary recall of onions due to the potential presence of salmonella and encourage customers to discard all onions received through July 31st. That's recall notice. Hello. Fresh noted that cooking the onions thoroughly at 165 degrees will kill the salmonella bacteria. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that there have been 869 cases of salmonella related to the recalled onions and that 116 people have been hospitalized. Last week Spokane produce We called various cells the products made from onions related to the outbreak, the CDC advises. If you have any onions in question, you should throw them away. You're listening to use

Rush Limbaugh
Tesla, Apron Holdings and Elon Musk discussed on Rush Limbaugh
"Tesla shares rallying, up more than nine percent. After an upbeat earnings report from the company though tesla lost money in the recent quarter CEO Elon Musk is predicting the, company will be profitable later this year shares of meal kit company blue. Apron holdings are skidding down more than eighteen. Percent lost money in the recent quarter and it's number of customers declined twenty four percent even though, it was paying more for marketing. Marketwatch says blue apron and hellofresh the two biggest publicly traded meal kit companies still, have not turned a profit, Taco, Bell, is, expanding, and, we'll be opening more Cantina restaurants the. Chain is planning three Cantina locations in. Manhattan by the end of the year the cantinas have open kitchens Compass menus and, free,.

Bad With Money with Gaby Dunn
Gaby Dunn talks Cryptocurrency

Bad With Money with Gaby Dunn
Gaby Dunn talks Cryptocurrency

Mike Rosen at the Movies
Apple HomePod sales disappoint
"Introduction nine weeks ago home pod sales have been dismal a new york post writer even called the home pot of flop one thing about apple never underestimate apple products both the apple watch and even the iphone were labeled as flops within their first year sales home pod strength is at speaker system it sound is superb and puts the amazon echo to shame but the home pod costs more than the echo so if you're buying it to listen to music it's definitely worth the money but another home pod week this is if you're buying home pod is a digital assistant the alexa is simply better so why by the home pod apple siri will catch up with alexa but the echoes poor sound system is just that at least for these models i'm kim commando i've got some big dinner plans for my family coming this week and it doesn't involve restaurants or takeout or even grocery shopping here on the kim commandos show each week i tell you all about simple recipes gourmet touches and flavors delivered right to your door with garden fresh premeasured ingredients just go to hellofresh dot com choose from a variety of recipes across veggie classic and family plans then your meals arrive with easy to follow fullcolor instructions with hellofresh you'll whip up dinner in just thirty minutes or less and there are lots of one pot recipes for speedy cooking and minimal cleanup after a busy day after two or three weeks of hellofresh you'll love your new dinner routine i know i do because of how simple and fun it is to cook and enjoy delicious home cooked meals for a limited time get thirty dollars off your first box at hellofresh dot com slash kim plus free shipping that's hello fresh dot com slash kim for thirty dollars off your first order low i dot com slash kim there's no question unido mega threes but which form should you take fish oil or krill oil scientists have debated this for years luckily there's a new solution to satisfy everyone it's called krill omega fifty plus it combines ultra pure fish oil and joint soothing krill oil together in just one tiny pill it's so powerful it can promote the health of your heart and your arteries and if that wasn't enough it can also boost your joint comfort entrusts days we're so sure krill omega fifty plus will work for.

On Air with Ryan Seacrest
Ziprecruiter, people and hellofresh discussed on On Air with Ryan Seacrest

WTF with Marc Maron Podcast
Brendan discussed on WTF with Marc Maron Podcast - Episode 858 - Lizzy Goodman / Dana Gould
"Y you know and i are you going to have your on tv show i'm going to be rich no not anymore still have to go out you ask me in minneapolis and do a weekend uh but on that but i am on executives over tv show yeah i know is no actually no but you should plug your the mc's comedy special goes he didn't get one earlier all you'll have a commie i have many of them you of another what what i found what must have you feel about this moment where like i did the comedy stars would netflixing was good i was glad that i got the opportunity sure yeah but then you hear about like you know sign fokker's rock and louis this is like the ah they just gave jerry seinfeld half a billion dollars thank god because we need who was learning it's not i'm not even jealous but it's sort of like give me like a maybe maybe like five percent yeah yeah i'm not complaining but if you're throwing money away yeah exactly i'll take a little no i was a you know i they were it was one of those things where i was going to tapered and then i was gonna do it with the company that i did my last russia with and then there were the dates were confused and then there were like well we can only do it on this date and i was getting ready to go into production on season two of the show and i you know you can feel the material right inning and reaching pugh tressens sure and you feel like dying yeah exactly and i was i was looking at some nick i was looking at a new products that list as they go i really wanted to get it down ago and i have a really great agent at william morris them silvio lund who's really a terrific guy and he goes let's just do novel and he called up this record company in damn nailed it and and get it in and i do find the audio lives longer than the video so people listened comedy on the radio they listen to comedy on their phone i it's rare that they will sit down and watch a special again that's true that's true i l walsh asif yeah yeah exactly but all listen to especially again all this shit you always in the comedy records i've heard before i listen to because because now uh you know you have that done than you're getting ready to go back on the road and yet you've got to frantically get new shit guinness shit yeah i mean i i'm not i don't believe it has to be one hundred percent new but it should be you really not believe that or you just tell you i really i know i really do but uh i'm i'm much lower than the percentage that it should be i think people want to hear one or two hundred families that you know like i i dunno i got the idaho 'cause i think you and are similar in that in that whoever's judging that whoever saying i this year from the record whoever saying that usually we make them up and you out now there are no there are a couple of those is ideal hit that twenty percent of the suv his new wave that why do we listen to that guy because he's the guy that hates us as much as we do he sees this is already just the way we are with a little disappointed with this was never the almost you'll has got it but not quite right but i i you know i probably saw george karlin i don't know a dozen times my life and i would always love it when there was a oh well he's going to do baseball and football great disease and you go this is great listen to this i sure i i listen i like hearing beats like he because this museum it is a form of music digitally form of music when you know like i hear who i can was due over and over again if it comes up in 'cause i got the shuffle gone on ma if schimmel comes up and mike because like the ear was such a master of this very specific type of timing kind of like morose jewish he you know who it's it's the disease descended joan roma jackie veronica yep that good good poll well he told me although yeah and you know who else was heavily influenced by jackie vernon let me guess who stephen wright sure that makes a lot of ads yeah i love jackie vern yeah jackie o'brien was amazing scr i saw he was the guy i saw my parents took museum when i was like eleven oh my god where that's what change to me because i saw him on tv do the slide show and then he came to albuquerque and i saw it in the paper at out in albuquerque was a lounge in the hilton hotel phantom my parents took me that's fist of it and that was what i was like that's when i knew it whenever you but what if he opened bush and soon turkomans should they would have been fine but what we were close enough just to see like you know he's a hold and he's like you saw all of it is in this and that it was not afraid i was like this is still good i have this conversation with somebody is really really interesting is talking about how much i love rickles yeah and i was talking to a a younger com we'll they're all younger and owes quoting some rousseau stuff and this goes help us us laura his own because he so unworkable because it has nothing to do with that yes all music i love the ud in the rhythm of the music and i remember seeing him sometimes he said things that didn't even make sense but because no i will give you a beautiful example i was with your friend and mine rob cohen at the desert in and they had just had a giant renovation of the desert in and it was sweltering in the show room when he goes out a forty milliondollar renovation they get a great airconditioning system two facts on the roof of the peace looseleaf paper glenn doesn't mean a gut dim thing he could have said tortoises zeroed onesyllable i tell you and could as a bear as you know i'm not laughing because i am straight and therefore i'm exerting my heterosexual privilege via in a derogatory way no eases thought of that of that part of that of that and that's what i have yet but the weird thing is we give you isn't something like schimmel who is usually the victim of his own joke yes in his life had the life of fucking job yeah and then the political whatever's politically incorrect about it itself offering a software threat and then i don't like he is the victim of every jew every joke has a victim and symbols act it was him yet in something somehow that can elevate ivan i agree i agree yeah i don't know if i have these discussions but like i for some reason i'm just able the separate i i don't know that you know revisionism is necessary just because times change in terms of what you you you feel personally attached to her what you like i don't i don't odds visa will difficult but but i can says it already owned for me i can still you know i don't do we delete all that stuff do we delete are emotional connection to right i i don't see how that's possible tackle and it's like when we damn my have hitler's paintings i have to separate you have that book on i have the coffee table excuse called raspberry lauda angles lot of hard angles not a lot of people but a lot of beautiful buildings oh i used to joke about that it's like well you know hitler was vegetarian but but yeah there's an i think i also in a lot of it is just being the soldier nostalgia for being too beating a kid a like watching rickles on the dean martin roast and every but it's a totally different school of show business than new and i grew up with golfway told me the story that when he worked with reckles rickles would would just roast him all day uh and then afterwards a poolside now you set a small lead money the eu is a very carrying well that lowvolume that's where my grandmother said she go see him in vegas and he has yet on everybody but he too she's she put it like this he apologizes very nicely renault but the only thing with bob did he couldn't understand is that that he wore jeans onstage right easily bob you can't you have to get the dress nice addressed and that's the general that's the thing that broke for that generation like these kids they they would do about those things that was karlin the kid he's talking gripe but what i'm saying is in that era in for us it's i think it's like we understand that he's seeking safe haggar he gets it whatever and it doesn't have any leasehold me we gotta shoulder that and if it's like a you can attack me for y'all still respecting somebody who is not of david his original like and that's in and that's and that's a that's a valid point that you do have to update in and he didn't he didn't need he i was watching him i went down it was yuri lewis rabbit telling when he died oh yeah and i was watching the jerry lewis rose from 1968 rickles was on it with the two things that but that it will rise rose that's not even the right the idea the one the first who the killer who's just like jerry i say this from the bottom of my heart jerry you're a jew his justly all right yeah but the other almost didn't he goes you know jerry's a clown and there are a lot of grey clowns emmett kelly that's about i will not give up the other baru hui was rose the is when the martin ones and j jim stewart was on the day is and he goes a jimmy i spoke to the family you're doing fine hosts one there was one where he was on it was his last appearance he was his last carson appearance because johnny was retiring on and then he may johnny lab zohar johnny got into a coughing fit careful john every time you cough lentils at home highfiving the life little good will and i love one and it's a real shit have you seen that one where they built him a club filled with just celebrities the martin there's a dean martin rose who was might have been the d martin show where they wanted to recreate alive rickles show i have that 'cause i signed up for the guide them the other demar the i never saw coming i had no idea there were so many but there was one that came it might have been the d martin show but they set up a club they mean on a sound stage and had people like pat boone in the audience all the celebrities kartal malta bar like he was probably nineteen seventy the early 70s mid70s yeah and and rickles just went up and did his club in insulted ever yeah it was great and as you sweating mid70s when the american flag had wide lapels warren ugly i go it's an interesting question though about because i had this moment where you know being a comic as long as we have you know you and i are old guys already yeah and and by the way just two i am fully aware before anybody jumps down my throat about don rickles and whatever i know i'm i'm i'm done i'm in i'm with this is not what is contemporary this is my view of it pete townsend was talking about the john entwistle used a bitch about wrap that he didn't get it yeah and he said it's not our job to get it it's our job to get out of the way and and i am aware of that yeah i get it i get it yeah well no i mean i you know i can it's becomes difficult with depending on what the transgression is here to stay supportive you'll have to be supporters somebody you can condemn somebody and you can you think somebody's awful but still say that second record though that sure you know and then you somebody said a really smart the genome our solar arguello should young new comic really really funny really funny and really martin somebody was bashing some on woke person new than apologize for it and she said you know you have to let people make their mistakes and grow in public he kinda led have to you have to let people grow catches white dot terrorise them into some sort of cultural siberia yeah the you know the my last special the one before this one um i had the whole thing at the end of boat the our word uh and how it's now relegated wizards see word and i tried to do on those bits ya ya and i wouldn't in i did i mean the bit was a boat the strictly the nomenclature of equating that word with the n word in this year oh it was actually addressing the that that whole thing it wasn't about like i don't use it that way no because then i did use it uh you know i know is that i would never do this and then i did i cheated all over the place and i you know i i said it and i said the n word in the sewer day and i say them now relish at home time mutter myself but whatever i would i would nothing happened but i wouldn't have done i wouldn't do it today i got i did a bit about it about defending you know the use of it in you know in a sense of like in a ended this style gic way um y yo how you know what i mean i grew up with that yeah right but then i guy the guy that igf someone i think it was an email the just said we you know i'm the parent and in and that was a you know i like i had a couple of swipes but in eventually i got a handle on it i i did it and then i met john mcginley lose of very on the forefront of of of all those issues and it becomes real via an and it's not about first amendment that's about though these people have feelings and their young their lives and you're okay i guess that's the thing hey how attached are you two that really need it have you read them of using that word it's not he's no one's censoring anybody yeah it's like you're hurting people's feelings and it's already hard for them yeah exactly brilliant yes i guess they have a rough enough time any and you can and that is truly you can say that will riggles talking about fragile new have enough to have enough they have enough trouble i my my feelings about that are like you say whatever you want the shoulder the uganda water take the take the burn yeah tell uber then handle it what the what's this new were the new season standard against evil what's it did you finish it's all done joey finished it premiers november first on ifc house a different uh it takes the story it takes us roy for the premise of the story is the whole idea of the shows was quite simple i love horror movies are my football so i just thought what if i did a horror movie but put a character in the middle of it that didn't belong here and it was basically what if my dad was an harm of has he wouldn't give it doesn't know just know does he does no he doesn't give fuck right and and we used to make that joke if you remember the indicating kong he's on the building in the planes are flying area my brothers and i used to joke did of our dad was in one of those planes that he would fly out of formation check the scoring the baseball game comeback shoot a little bit more go back and i just thought it would be interesting if like what if instead of buffy the vampire slayer it was just an old irish guy that didn't give a shit and and that was the the premise and i didn't i my mother is still alive but his wife who would have been my mother dies before the show starts and because i needed them to have a giant vulnerability or is just hassle oca them what john mcginley did with that was created this amazingly nuanced character is a good actor huh israel has been around for a long time ago he's not fuck in a row it doesn't seem age much either doesn't know he's he's good lives at the gym i mean is this arms are and i say this knowing he's listening to it his arms are terrifying um uh no easing these in crazy like an old irish boxer from like a poster for the he's like hundreds who was in the issue williams was like five over visas and wall street is a platoon he was in any given sunday but he's built like an old irish bar and how he's all upper body and but he created the he gave this character so much more than than i had give it it on the page and and i have to also give jet at foreign ego amazing kudos for the way she balances him the ballast that she and as such a strong actress the because john is done so much of this work that for the second season i had to right up to him so i developed a whole arc of a story line where there is a time travel element where he's going to try to go back and save his wife's life oh wow and as as always happens makes things much worse oh good and that's the arc this as the art the season and what's the name of the record that see the digital this is what did them i call it a record 'cause i don't know what else to call it how it looks it in a my doubt because my downloads sounds vaguely filthy ah mister funny men and this is what the kids on her the account how many you've done how many record seventy special uh i have the worst i proudly have the worst album titles fun houses fine yeah but it's an they keep up album and his version is albums much better uh let me put my thoughts in you i know what's wrong which was okay this is mr funding in screwed what i mean the bigger problem is really the art work generally yes like looking at what you can almost any comedy record in you know somebody who's like move was i think and yeah homeless every comedy record bullets every comedian gets to be a rockstar for that that one day we you get to look figure your album cover via i did all right like you know in retrospect i don't have any stupid once i ask you know the last don't try to be funny on your color exactly don't try to be funny on your cover that's it that's it iin the war here quad split headshot via the worst people from boston we both novaya the what were their different panels viking different hats and i can't say it on the air but i'll tell you what were probably sure have on those i remember seeing it becomes clear i like how there were different has i know they can play different jobs it would be a fireman and a chef who was a doubt i will good well it's good talk in the arabian sea all dana cooled the great dana gould so lizzy goodman who i'm going to be talking to next in just a second um she was very good friends remarks pits the lay mark spitz they david years ago and mark spitz was a a great writer in his own right of music writer and wrote a greg memoir and he was on the show and because he passed not too long ago that you can still listen to episode in the in the free feed if you'd like it was a great episode very personal very engaged and we missile marqui we miss him you know i think i'm a good cook when i make food at home but there's nothing worse than not having the right amount of an ingredient or leaving out a step or not cooking something for long enough i hate all those things but with hellofresh the recipes are simple and he get them on step by step instruction cards with pictures it helps with making things that i never thought i'd be able to cook on my own or that i would cook on my own in general you can scheduled deliveries when it works best for you and i'm really busy with my shooting schedule right now so that's a huge plus and if i need to pause my account for weeks of the time i can hellofresh offers a wide variety of shift curated recipes a change weekly including the classic plan the veggie plan and the family plan plus they offer kid tested recipes selections like a pena port noodle bowl with bell pepper and carrots over rice verma celli or the easy pz ravioli gratin on with spinach time and parmesan breadcrumbs look i like to cook so i'd be cooking at my house no matter what but hellofresh makes a convenient and simple and the quality is top notch so it's a no brainer for thirty bucks off your first week of hellofresh visit hellofresh dot com and enter the promo code wtf that's how of fresh dot com promo code wtf so lizzy goodman the writer is my guest and i met her when i met her with mark once but she put me in her book can we talked about it when she was writing then she sent me the galley and i didn't quite get to it then she sent me the real book and honestly i just skimmed it looked at my part but i have very little recollection i talk to her about this but whatever was happening in rock and roll from two thousand one to two thousand eleven i gotta tell you i think i miss most of it i don't know what i was doing i don't know where i was i mean the last time i knew i was really blocked in to root to rock and roll happening in real time was probably in the late eighties and then side some i just some i went away i don't know where i went but i wasn't i wasn't locked in i'll mocked back in but this the two thousand one to two thousand eleven i was just a struggling comic trying to figure it out i do i get sober like i guess was right after i got silver that might add something to do with it but i just wasn't keyed in to the new york music scene i was just keyed into the comedy scene there was some crossover we we hammered out lizzy and i hammered out and i talk a newer the book is called meet me in the bathroom rebirth rock and roll in new york city 2000 a one to two thousand eleven which apparently are my lost years but that's not true i did i did radio did air america away way i got divorced a guy they'll get married got married and divorced in those years that would have something to do with it so i was listening to music but it was like twelve to fifteen songs that i put on a fucking mix after my wife left me that letter of that a lot of those twelve to fifteen sok unita heartbreak mix i got one how how long you've in la i have a real problem here really i just i've been here for three days where he frazzled you not a dry did you drive i know you drive here i'm from new mexico i know how to write weaker of your friends with i keep i always forget that i wanted to go i'm going you i i think that's a great idea it's great there had to how long did you stay in new mexico till like 14 seconds after i graduated from high school which highschool albuquerque academy i don't i didn't tell me all this now probably not i don't know you went to the academy here how do you i'm two thirty seven twenty five i don't know i just had a birthday and i have been i realize that i've been telling people my old age for at least the last couple of weeks because i forgot the elderly seven i was born in 1980 what was your old age thirty six turns out are you've and you have a goto no no no i just i have this joke with my friend rob sheffield that might ages is 26 forever i have not really evolved pass that i may i'm moving i think i might move i have to me become hear a lot more now what's happened and so i'm thinking don't use drop that i will vote will that but at one of my biggest or i've been thinking about where i to live show alana's neon it seems to be happening fedronic yeah in what way but i will tell you but just my biggest concern is that i'm gonna miss winter and one of my friends his out mean half my friends that i hear one of my friends his lobbying been lobbying me for an ally move for a long time was just suggested to me recently and i never thought of this like you go to new mexico for winter go have winter new mexico's eventually just go have a mild winter well i mean it's cold it's not new york coal i live in upstate new yorkright now oh my god where high falls new york it's what are you doing up there i was finishing a book this book yeah that embassies different one who one of the one of avoiding talking about on your wedding efficient probably hate it which is fine this not hate is not the word disagree with no italian a disagreement thing i missed it of course i miss this if the it's called earth and rock and roll in new york city two thousand one or two thousand eleven i know none of the bans in the really would you like some help well that's why we're going to do but not down yeah yeah so yeah i like the idea spending the casual winter's in new mexico where he here in the higher or some parka whitesnow nodded loom area the luminary of i've in kerala's is awesome when you get your health through in the lights now no known does the candles anymore you can't go said i know they are good they one hundred percent you it's the real thing all right some people still do the rules of very traditional place kerala's new mexico we what we think about living here i'm not admitting that i'm thinking about overweight now i don't lie echo part will people i i don't like them i don't wanna be near them like i don't wherever the williamsburg of la is i don't want any williamsburg valet thank god is not because here it's like bloctobloc you know williamsburg maybe i don't know it's different i mean i want to live by the beach but every night if that he can't live vitamese because yield you know fall off well why show business quarter year because of the book a real yeah marks like oh that didn't even occur to me what an awful idea i have i have to tell you were important which can into serbia but do you know some people like it so is known and i i know it's people love it and i understand that not being yeah i'm very sure there's no i know you and i'm totally teasing you i this book is about a period where you could actually get most of the people to play themselves as their younger selves and it'd be pretty quiet pretty close he added in various no it's going to be there like documentary and and narrative at like fictional adaptation series ideas around that's great i'm excited about it i mean i want to do more of that stuff anyway and always have or have in the last few years and so it's like fund to think about how to make the i mean people i've just felt really gratified by the kinds of ideas that have been a you know because as skeptical that the whole hollywood here at it so far than the people that i think we're going to be working with are awesome well we're did you how'd you start out where'd you end up you went to the academy graduate you got brothers and sisters yeah i gotta younger brother take that's a good name yeah he's get he lives in nigeria really he's a foreign service officer he's a diplomat o good for him the state department and cut them loose yes no um now not yet that's good maybe maybe nigeria this sort of like what i stand ninety he got there he just got there and it's funny we're talking about luminaries he's going to have lumina or something he's having he's getting married in december in england here on dan and he's going to have all this new mexican stuff we've been talking a lot about the new bringing the new mexico to the new mexico christmas vibe to london thoughts nice yeah so what would you go to college after you can ran away to fill it i mean i wanted to be on the rules like right away it was all about new york as obsessed with new york and with the idea of lake eastern urban magic get the eu's when he grow up in a smart household in new mexico you i i want to go to where really happens i like all this cowboy cowboy intellectual shit i that's exactly how i felt i mean it is disturbing to be talking to you about this there there's basically no one who gets out of new mexico so those of us who do all have the same kind of like course spirit about that if you go back they go back oh hi tonnes tons yeah i mean you're going back now i've been thinking about it yeah it's drawing i think about it to the way on wife yeah my heejoo like i don't i like i i don't i'm done with new york i'm almost down with la whereas from argun go this is how i feel you say i'm too young to feel it this is literally the conversation i've been having while i'm here i'm like i will always feel like i live in new york that i don't need to live there anymore and so therefore where do i feel good well that's only corral us exact cheese like me literally only corral starting to feel that it's the only play me for me is not quite corral but i always romanticise prowess but i'm a couple of miles away how you i think would i very close to corral but a all right so dan study what english and classics and your girl at the plan was only good was to be a writer now what a crazy idea what idiot would do that you can't be a writer what was the point of in new york and what just like hang out no the plan was to idea you know i was eighteen i didn't have i had a i had a homing instinct not a plan like i'm gonna come to college because you have to go to college like i'll go as close to new york as they can go and i was really good student and i cared about being gets you now i love school and great china japan but no the plan what it what happened was and this is the right call like i now understand this in a way that i can articulate and didn't at the time that i advocate for it it's like i had to put myself near stuff that would so i could be in a position to have what should happen next revealed to me brian what i mean later that's what new york is yet it's a no to be you know for me and and for others that that's kind of what the books it out here at sense of i don't know why i'm going here i'm just going here because it seems something's telling me to do that and i can't tell you why and i may not even know right away or for years but it's where my next myself is going to emerge on the oddly e know it's because the place it new york holds in the cultural unconscious yes for years since the 70s yeah specially if you're groovy artistic you know literary it it's like it it's grooms large yeah it means something to mean something it's an idea and hand but there but still to this day there's nothing like it i mean you you know you can i can't live anywhere unlike well but do you did you find always at like i was just in new york and for the first time in my life i went over to jazz at lincoln center as fiftythreeyearold and it's have always been there and i was there for for fifteen years on and off and i did nothing like oh yeah hey like all this stuff veiled me like people you go the museum of modern art i did once twice here but i am now like i feel like i'm ready to do that stuff in its fortunate because now i understand new york pretty fucking while i can get around and ought to do what other so if i go in for three days on my show again see let's do it but that's okay that is exactly why my i feel like my current relationship with new york is among the best that i've had which is like when you leave you are able to to be a kind of the it's almost like the first fifteen years are investing in understanding the place enough that you can become a named formed tourist when you go there so now i do that too like i go in from upstate you know every week or so every ten days and i do three days of city staff all my friends i gutted restaurants i do all these things that i had no energy to do because those so relentlessly overstimulated by the time i laughed at that i was like i can't even like i just want to hide and so now there's this the slate has been cleared and it's like new york it's fun again but that i don't ever feel when i was nineteen and started coming to the city from philly all the time i felt like mm i needed it too like kind of worked on me in order to help me figure out how to become myself and now i know how to be myself how did you go there were year ranked ninety eight i moved to philadelphia and i was in school my dad is a new yorker semi dagger opens in status in town via and my grandparents unawares there for a while a who's going to get that apartment come on you tell me about the survivors adel got your grandparents of art okay it's on has pink walls the who is getting that next ruth good men lives there she she's you know she's she's it's her place man here i mean no one's it's a rental it still like i know rentcontrolled renzo deeply rent controlled rental yeah your eyes are like glinting the cia is the new yorker area edge rooms juve everyday that have what's the kitchen like hallander yeah it's the last of the rent control listen everything you're thinking is true it's your fantasy come true it's like the per it's an it's walker they've this would be good always is when you've when i was there you like the idea of control was i i'd rent stabilize but that doesn't mean something i and stabilise to that that's like they're like it's not as brutal so really when you move to new york in earnest this is when this book starts yeah i mean i started coming to the exactly like i started coming to the city from philly to see show i love the story is it's in the introduction to the book it's basically like i i moved to new york the first summer that idea college says after freshman year i i moved to the city i lived in my grandparents apartment i worked at murray yeah and i got a job in a restaurant you worked at sesame street i had an internship at sesame productions or whatever that it was the production company that pretty sesame street that will you write in turn shed you're gone for showbusiness i was not go i was like this is the justification for me being here that's the one the ethics as all i i didn't pick it it was like available and we really i was like i need to go hang out in new york city trash camera oscar with no no they never let me near it wasn't a coup it was like i don't even remember what i did i wasn't near actual sesame street it was the production cut it was it you know is a midtown office building that was set not no would you how could you work for sesame street nakos he were seriously streets production company produces a lot of shows sesame street the crown jewel i was a lowly turn we love the you're acting like this is my choice yet one day they rolled in and they were like do you want to go to the sesame street sat and i was like nath no that's not out having no anxieties me i was i was i you didn't meet ernie organiser continued i wanted to meet rock voice mark i tend not grow her no grown all right grover and the guy with nights in serious who you're like all right yeah he taught me how to ride the subway right are you there you're working says mystery not going to not doing all of the things that i know i've disappointed you deeply and just i got a job in a restaurant 'cause i needed to make money because i wasn't in school and i had to lake support you know i had free rant that i had to lake right pete or whatever you run by close i guess whatever i cared about at that time records and so i got this job at this i got this job training to work at this restaurant crossstrait from grand central station said they were opening any day now and they are hiring up staff i got this job and we end of course it took much longer for them to open and they had anticipated citybased they had hired this staff of kids board hot city kids who went there every day for like four hours and got paid this lowly amount of money and did things like practiced waiting tables and learned the wine list and stuff like that and my coworker was nickel anc who was the guitar since strokes and he was in this band like hit with his friends called the strokes of now the portal opened and you're well no i mean no it was years that was nineteen that was the summer of ninety nine and it was i mean it was a couple of years before like albert the other guitarist had not joined the band yet they weren't they it was my friend nix like ban nick i was nick was like halfheartedly in college and they were just city kids and i was i mean the portal that opened that summer was not rock and roll it was new york like oh nicholas cool in in that he grew up in the city and understood how to sort of like wander wale and how to get into bars and how did you set just it was sort is it was what like i had been learning i it with training wheels in philadelphia that as a new mexico kid like how do you how do you orient yourself in urban life and let these places kind of lake you know wash over you and expose you two things you're supposed to be exposed to how to get the rhythm down and that like nick and i would just hang out after after pretending to wait tables and you know lake wander round office parks and smoke weed in office park teller fina behind off sparked pillars and sort of like just wander around midtown it wasn't and then sometimes i would go downtown to lake st mark's and sneak into bars and do stuff like that beazley it was like that was what was pal 99 summer here that must that summer was those were my marriage was falling apart that was the other big thing that is happening for every avatars you knew marc maertens mary and who's out more a yeah and then he got thrown out of that house in the other find to subway weighed down us instead it was way chiller than what you are dealing with try and dukan redo one man shows that was that are that is i was the best theater oh my god the west bath yeah that became significant for me later really yeah because all the artists where had their studios in there and still do it's still let me extra to yes rate on the west that the west village became later after i finally moved to the city in two thousand two became like my spot because i don't like coolness like i don't like i didn't like i do not want to be on the larry cider off that city will whites places for me when i when i moved there i guess was eighty nine the first time and then i went back in nine the four remember you saying that yeah but but you know and i talk a little bit in the book about the you know what happened then but it really wasn't the only put i was just a little weird historical artifact you put that this from the guys from the generation before radio exxon giuliani for two minutes well i needed that i've might do i thought i was well represented good you were i agree um so this is all just before nine eleven yeah and the you've you found your place on the west side where it's not hip with artists that are well no i mean i went back to philly for like that so what i'm saying is that the that's why it's this is an important about the book the s not bands like i wanted to be a lawyer or something i thought it was gonna be a lawyer i was a school kid but i was pulled towards this sense of magic and misery about new york city that is the idea that we are already just talking about and he hadn't yeah i loved writing but i didn't work from my school newspaper i didn't it wasn't like what what it was was it was like i'm i i i was being drawn to some expression of culture that was related to my generation that i that had not happened yet and i did not know that that's what i was being drawn to you that i during the next few years in the part the four nine eleven were all these bans interpol yesterday as strokes and in you know white stripes and other place like around the world there all the stories that converged in the book all of those people were feeling similar things like assent this basically the same age as i was and feeling a kind of like i wanna make something that i don't entirely know what it is and like the world is not really receptive for this kind of this kind of vibe it's not supposed to be about urban call right now it's not supposed to be about notions of near and what was it supposed to be about in a music industry is supposed to be about dance music erica in you know i i mean in england it definitely was about dance music or was about like postscript popstar th i mean and in my business it was like i mean in the writing what became my business it was like it wasn't that exciting to imagine yourself as a rock journalists because there wasn't a lot of cool rocked the end so that's right it was sort of submerged in jam jammed asked you for a little while they're right i didn't think oh i'm going to be a music journalists i thought there's something about the way it feels to wander around manhattan at four p m on a really hot day in the summer where everyone rich has left the at they're making me feel like i'm getting somewhere and i can't really tell you why and so i went back to college and i studied and an ice kept in touch with neck and a couple of other people that i owe you and he would come and play shows and then i would see in philly and i will go see him and i had friends in philadelphia who are starting to lake want to go to shows so it was like it was a thing to do that had enough in it for years it was a thing to do that had nothing to do with aspiration of any kind and that was really important and it was also like it was like traditional rocking aware coming back it was not necessarily art rock punk rock was sort of finished in a way and and i guess wakeham sort of 'cause like some of the bands in the book i was given like for some reason at that time when i was there in late 90s in then like i left by two thousand two yeah but i was given cds and stuff for iced up for some reason i have the jonathan fireeaters he shot up i do that's awesome yeah they were so amazing i listen to it and i was into it but like what you're with that have been have 90s yes okay so okay so that was that times out yeah yeah they were the yeah they were round is great ho right i have my buddy john daniel was involved with music so i was sort of up to speed on something yeah okay will and 90s wealth that's all right i mean but like like jazz it only o good if you were there i mean that theoretically lay the thing about looking at the book and reading through some of it is that like when i read please kill me that was the those were before me and i was when that was what everybody was going to new york to find was that that's what this is about no i get that with moscow eyes were going to find that for sure and you kind of right about that yes like that's we're all looking for that thing that was like just it was just the the remnants of it and the and the people that were involved with that you'll first wave of whatever made new york cool were just kinda droopy greyhaired dudes walk around in their weather payments that don't fit any more with somebody going like that guy used to be something yeah if that if they are even living there anymore but i i guess i just think that that's the continuum i mean it's not like every winning please kelme weren't weren't polling on i see the continuum of that notion of new york identity as much much 70s as going ponca much further i mean i think much scher further back that than just whole idea it's it's it's i mean this is later but it's fifty yeah and it's jazz it's it's fucking ellis island man it's like come to it's it's in the american identity of new york gonna come here and you're going to reinvent yourself and the culture all potency of that has is almost as old as you know as the city in some way and so but specifically in the world of the arts yes you know what what you know what came out of new york and and what sort of defined it is you had a wealthy people who were willing to kick in to make she had happened yes right yeah and a lot away sure to reject the of a lot of the factors but then i mean you know that for us because this is my taste in i i i think yours too like the punk the 70s punt seen in cb jesus just like i meaning please county was my total bible i'm obsessed with everybody and napa i love that music that's my stuff i came to that late you're now the earth your specialty is more material for the business card wait to the partly to the party on air safety and wrong kinda leadership skills doesn't look good for any of us march mirror merit love martin on but you know i mean obviously there's also the whole greenwich village like i mean dylan for most people dillon is the touchstone for this and it's so the idea that new york is this place that's constantly polling on a previous constantly kind of coopting and borrowing its own past self via to reinvent for a new group of young people essentially the a new for them version of the same thing how are they related to turn all right they can still find the space there if they can still kinda save their which is the question now but like for my for this book for young in the bathroom like i don't see it as a see it as just this sort of the the the chapter in the cannon at that new york cultural story it's just rose right into the bookshelf right there you know after police kelme and after madonna and light up before whatever comes next but it's just it's a stop it's a stop on the larger train i think that and what comes next is going to be a a prominent either chinese or russian trend do you have that i'm good authority seems like it that's the vets me speculating that summer noncash catastrophic start i have is not catastrophic at all as i say that so so when now way what starts to drive when did you meet the the the way great mark spitz i met the late great mark spitz pretty early i i assume he he served as some sort of guide to whatever the fuck happened to you while yeah i think he'd really like you putting it that way well what mark would say is that i thought he tommy everything i know of on so he would want me to say it that way i tell you this bright i've kid from new mexico through philly who's looking for a rock fantasy and that dini and blames outta some yes he's like i can help you out seles ruin your life and i was like great and say it's the glare sorry yeah he talks in his memoir about how i was wearing flipflops for spammy and he's like they're not shoes zia like he was very my new mexico vibe was pretty united wearing makeup i didn't like i was still kind of like fresh scrubbed girl that point and i think mark with space mark dea like you know bad bad asrat girls with lake peroxide blond hair and he was sort of like you are entirely to clean for me basically and i was like okay but you like me no no as a recipe for disaster who's gonna win well that's where it's later and he would say things to me like yes chased me you know and i was like hot can you do the thing amassing unity or what he writing for spin when you met him yes so the way i'm marklevinshow sara louissant who is also a great character in the book and one of my best friends was my roommate in new york when i first moved there so i graduated from college and by that time it was clear that like the city's music scene was happening and i felt i was like dare to it i was inspired by all of i was inspired i was inspired by and have sudden a there was something to write about nato i then was like i wanna be a writer who writes about this but i i taught secondgrade frontiers first 'cause like i can't be a writer thought that's nice i taught at an allboys private school on the upper east side uh glazer's no really has a double life for awhile we were real like fullon teacher major oh yeah misguided men secondgrade whether in how what how did that and why did that and it a two year and it's like your estate teacher and then you either maybe you kind of the carrying on of that would have been to go get a degree in education and like stay in school and would stop you from doing that oh you know i'm are on that cya now now he loved at he he would talk about how wake up in the middle of the night and i would go 'cause i had i talked to my sleep and here go boys get in line and you'd be like jesus who is this girl and is scary she's like yeah so now okay so now you're you're getting you're you're getting involved with the rock senior roommate is what is she says sarah was marks like little protege at spin so i met mark before i graduated from college actually at coachella the one of the first coach as i went out with sarah to see if we could live together we went to this rocked festival together to lake try it on here and on she introduced me to mark who is i mean it's it's in the book their their meeting is pretty awesome like he was he didn't understand instant messenger and because and he's mark air sarah i was like this sort of protec savvy little jewish girl in new jersey who is who liked his writing it's like high and i'm also girl he had like why is this window coming up and they can eventually she wore him down in the house and so she introduced me to him and we had you know a serious series of battles for about a year and a half that then got together and yeah i mean mark was my tour guide through he was writing for span he was a hot shit writer writing cover stories about all these bans and how'd you manage not to get all fucked up i don't know my i honestly i i think it's genetic i i really do i just i don't know may just have the thing i'd die went out and drank every night like everybody else and reich you know there is all kinds of drugs around in yet but i just didn't care that much about it for you but it's not good for me that makes it sound like something i get credit for and it's not like i get credit every not be compelled by that like the like to just a drink in smokes from we'd and just enjoy the music you don't have to go you know you i mean i like you don't have to divert alliance but it's it's it makes it sound like it's a matter of sort of will and it's not it that's why are saying connecticut's like i don't have i'm compulsive in other ways right now i get it i get it that's why i'm saying you're lucky unlucky yeah so that's how okay unlucky so let's talk about you know the the bands that define this thing and the ark of this book because yeah like i just i i think i got my first walkman album like six months ago okay i'm larry liking it so okay i think i got that guy so record i thought that was get those good singer yeah so the strokes you knew that you saw them become what they want us in then and then like the the white trips our guests were coming in from detroit occasional yeah but i didn't the white strips were not like sort of first generation in new york of that were like any who has that were the strokes interpol yay as an lcd soundsystem feel like the whole lcd soundsystem thing like people are like you got your view murphy guy got your mike i don't know what he did so i had to get quite catch up with dfa miyazu jonathan the guy over what is the aga he sent me all this shit yeah i like that the prince worn dance called record yes good first record i love okay maharidge starting went ahead to go find me that record like i said you have one of them around their way it not be you know we have one ring laying around here we were using as a as a as a like a a map for when you eat your time castle your way into this that's you will love james and y'all that's i listen to a no it's great it's great i watch the movie and i i actually narrated a short documentary five lcd thousands of heavier like who the fuck is this no anyway script evaluated out but like i know he something because he mental i too a lot of people like i can see how they met something that people can also see how they kind of like you know kind of like well there's a there's a gap pure that was once occupied by the talking heads yeah that we should climb in do totally the talking heads said that i mean that's what i got no problem that kinds of sending okay i am not jane so you're not to defend now i understand how music work tell me more i understand you tell me my understand that there is now out of new she it yes and that you just keep inventing the old shit i think i mean yeah all right sure i think the thing that all the judge the the period that the book covered with the book is about is not music it's about all the things we i talked at it's about it's about new york it's the central character it's about what it feels like for this group of people at that period of time under to do a thing that is eternal as we just described which is to be young and to feel on scene and to get together with certain friends serendipitous lay that you meet who unlock something in u n two in the shadow of lake at theoretical anonymity make something beautiful that makes you feel alive i mean it's pure that's like that's art that's young people that's new york city that's rock and roll that the but it's important for the book that the context is also from my generation are these people that we're talking about it's happening in in coincidence with all these other major global events like napster we just 2000 and nine eleven which is one hundred percent you know a huge part of this story obviously and it's about and then the reinvention of brooklyn and the commodification of brooklyn and the exporting of that via the internet the newlyborn internet to the world as this sort of notion of how to live like a lifestyle brand to be earth to by going to interview james he said i was trying to dip into that like the brooklyn idea in williamsburg and all this stuff in kenneth ease my way in he goes oh yeah that's all our fault like cool thanks scott and it's that's what so this story is about that but it's about that through the lens of paul banks and carreno and yes you know later jack white or the kingsley on guys or whatever and then off to england and off to the killers in vegas and around the world but that record we should nikola pile of what you did have it'll be about three hours them sti no than i i know i the jonathan firefighter that's a hall in allied it yeah that's a you know you get points for that that's a big crowd point the area the i like one thousand out is great i thought it was pretty good but those bans i mean to answer your questions such as it is it's like there's no like yeah there's nothing new under the sun and this is a retaliating of a generational story there will be i i believe that people make things new i i'm not one of those people that yadav a problem with appropriation i don't have a problem with with the of the evolution of music and he because like if you really look at rockets the people that really make something completely new or generally misunderstood and you may be years later people like i think i get it and somewhere they're like nato the other but there's a core group of fans that are sort of like worthy the only one said get it yet that bullshit any basically the story of the book too i mean if this is mark says this in the book i mean he's one of the greatest characters in it where he's basically like look i was 28 and writing for spain or whatever less was thirty something his thirty already and writing for span and like mark who had an encyclopedia harry say that pete accent encyclopedic thank you very much sandy pratt thing music and film knowledge and all that stuff of was sitting there in new york city loving york city's sort of but just board and that the thing that this that this that there's the sort of beginning of the book that everyone had in common energized boredom energy everyone was bored james murphy was bored he did not know carreno carreno was bored she did not know julian julian was bored gillian didn't know paul paul uh the interpol paul was bored and it was like in their own independent corners of this town at that period of time they all did something about that board and then mark spitz or sara or any of the other sort of non musicians but journalists future bloggers a and our people like all the different sort of um i don't know contestants in this in this like road show here all had in common that sense of what we have here right now is really not enough and we need to like build something cooler and no one else is doing it so we're gonna do it so when spits heard like i mean he says this hilariously in the book where he's just like you know when i heard the white straits it took me a minute to figure out that i was being saved because it was my job to write about mark mcgrath every day and like there it was boring it oh yeah loaded orient and that's the story idea like i get it i get it it's like well boredom mikey to classify all those artis as board i understand that but i think that if you in the history of of what happened with punk rock in the sort of like you know kind of strange angry apathetic posturing that happened is that what it comes down to though anybody who surfaces with any consistency may be board but their workers oh right well that oh totally i mean and that's also new york city like everyone in that town has to labour via the i got a want it yeah and you've got to keep pushing two two to sort of break away from the pack of garbage because in any city especially that size you know for every one may be original band there's going to be like twenty guys just tooling through rehash especially in an era where i mean it's hard to in it's hard to overstate this and it is crazy now but i mean it really seems crazy now that like being in a rock band i loved the guys and dumped than fired or talk about this and later the walkman they talk about how like telling your friends that you were in a band was like now i take us that late yeah it was like really didn't elettronica music kills janjaweed could do we have to go through this aid rallies yes on thursday is at sad than you know like you're gonna make us do that you'll biased drinks rate i mean it was like the least possible cool thing to do and and it was like lame and and kind of an opposition on your friends to ask them to conceive lesser so this whole the it's hysterical because relatively quickly people would be dressing across the country and around the world like they had just been thrift in on the lowery side but not when these bans formed but that's interesting because that whole thing you know that thrifty thing has reinvented itself with every generation of people yeah it's like the now like their thrift in 1980's clothing and i'm like no i know i now i'm feeling that to it's weird like his when i was in high school we were thrift in shark skin yeah not a better yeah yeah and then i had ended at kinda the whole for you know that rockabilly kind of boos like whatever the fuck it was going after the suits in any time we speak to someone about this like can we address this with the culture in general that we just nominate certain erez as as as take as as out of the loop of of going to be rediscovered some ambitious ivan around anymore like fortunately for now everything is made so badly can i know that will never happen you'll never never be thrifty 2017 they should is not going to hold up maybe we've inadvertently solve the problem rallying stealing the fascists that were previously thrift it yeah this is not even making shit that will hold up to be so maybe we just need a generation a cycle through that in like twenty years people will actually have to create new stuff because it will literally going at all disintegrate and have to create outfits said will withstand the heat of there i'm sorry i've taken me right out of there i did it i'm sorry for him you're not enclosed outfits with of'short new mexico's supposed to fair relatively well i mean waters going to be a problem but waters going to be a problem but we have the mountains we aquifers dory right on an akko yeah we give a lot of as i understand it no no eight i think we give a lot of water to california so mother fugger's he had one of the california's thirsty mansour okay so like i know owner free burger this one again with a list of names like oh i show you read all your quotes first come on of course yes okay then you looked at the list through an area in and i kinda poked around it like you know the chapter headings ps but a vote like i don't know grizzly bear the national i came much really lay to and i understand why they're good but i i don't know that i go back to the records up much tv on the radio maize i listen to their first and second record i'm like holy shit this is the media their incredible yet the a as the first couple of records i listened to her i had him the hives i had that record i remember liking so what is your problem nothing we're just get vampire weaken don't think i've ever heard him all right we'll interpol i think i got a recent record with like their back in a mike i missed it the first time pretty good we've routines just gotta whoever teens rokaya feeling about pretty good yeah kind of punky right yeah yeah i hope we will come on something and you'll be like you really have to go and do that is that what you're looking for ya well i buy a records i'm i'm mike i mean i mean a renaissance had music appreciation i'll send you a list i need i don't know like i have your book i know yet we'll you do though actually 'cause you can't start gone mouldy reaches yeah amazing did you play who's got the crowd i don't have it all right we'll play who's got the crap by the multi pages is just one song well that song in particular is your gateway drug for them dave across comedian i know him with his worse are you hold steady i like that guy greg gregory great right yeah he's a good talkers if thinker is good the killers i like that okay kingsley on first who records and crime what happened well y but okay that that's another alternate title for this book sure is where's the staying power while they're all still making albums and touring and dura al like literally all of these people yeah so like you okay let's talk about them what happened what did have well it's up first talk about like the whole that you know a nine eleven left in the world in that like in terms of near all over that chapter see that's another place right you would you but compounding the board white whatever that boredom was was that horrendous existential to terror sadness grieving like i think i talked to spits about that a bit did he ah but a lot of this came out of that well it didn't come out of that it riot it was positioned as gross that word is under the circumstances to be heard in a different way and buy more people as a result of it so lake nino none of these important records the first as record the first strokes record the first interpol record early dfa staff none of that had been was written post nine a lead and it was not a response to that ren before but it was about you know it was about all these themes that we are just talking about yet culture considered obsolete like sadness and anxiety and loud guitars as the solution to that as an expression of that is a response to being alive right it was like oh that's old news and then you know the towers came down and new york city is under attack and america is under attack and it makes you kind of return to the the sort of lake core aesthetics of rebellion and that's rock and roll so what are you want to hear you on here jack fucking white playing guitar you wanna hear the urgency of the first strokes record he wanna you want a kind of a manic toughness the that and i think so these bans who it's not like if nine eleven hadn't happened the strokes wouldn't have broken an englanda had already broken in england and kind of ignited this industrywide like doubletake towards new york before nine eleven happened there album was supposed to come out like the week after nine eleven the first one in the states so it was already kicking off but what nine eleven did is a couple of things i thank and this is argued in the book it it it animated it it increase the number of people who were immediately feeling the need for that kind of sound and it also turned the world's attention to new york city culturally in a way that it had not been it had not had the attention of of sort of like global cool hounds in that way in sense i dunno i also like it they were it was also the guy seventy hanshin for perseverance yes i mean ranked sympathy yeah you know you're bruce springsteen how to go to werleigh hurst tracy and got them back call tied to hit it and yeah and i think i mean all these bans talk about touring in the wake of that and being it off doing comedy in the wake of sure i and the but being cast is kind of emissaries for new york and again for this idea of what new york is about that the entire world on some level was either either loving your heating at that point in new ways it was it was interesting time because if you were new yorker and you did live there yeah you're like we're we're gonna fight yes totally and we're thinking about that now and and it and the other thing that it did i think for the purposes if this seen such as it is and tune day from tv on the radio talks about this in the book i think he when he when he said this to me it really kind of it was a turning point behind her standing as he talks about how the szekely he thinks nine eleven put a kind of pause button on the jansher vacation race there has already happening i mean the the sort of post the giuliani into bloomberg cleaning up of everything sure that would eventually result in the new york the slick anodyne near erni lives there no one does it's it's saudi billionaire's who have apartments for their homes yet they're summer homes that they like might go to it's me the ranch russian it's all yeah and it is it's well chinese i don't know what an honor i it's it's just feel like you've done it feels like it doesn't have a a cultural identity has architectural and the identity right now is money money has a bleaching a fact eventually on culture i think in right now new york feels to me like burnt out literate like whited out like nine i'm not saying that race i'll have her hands out in the way that it was burnt out was bankrupt brought down in the way back right that that like acid has been porn on it and it's it's blake bleached out like i don't know i mean i keep seeing you know i don't know what causes this but when a create is her your it has deadened yeah by capitalism yet money on and by people that don't that day they don't like it will be interesting to do really explore what is rooting there you know in the sense that you know it is completely antithetical that to what it used to be when it was i think the big difference was there was a time were always money there but the people that worked there could live this and now that central and what's funny and not ha ha funny but of course like the it's all connected to this era because that's way jane saying it's our fault is funny the in an again brooklyn brooklyn because it's all those people the new york became the kind of place where you would invest in that kind of apartment because of all of the culture that that re in live in debt and made it interesting and sort of buzz he and brand rival in that way and now all these people who bought their on some level whether they know it or not as a result of this this latest ingretation of that new york thing i live in a place where none of those people can be but this is also like in a way so boring because it's like no shit that's called the cycle of art madda called lake art versus commerce 101 i mean it's going to just play its that and held out over how they all moved out of the city like the that generation of their artist once they got money they all live here they orly or here or they live in new jersey or connecticut or are you not a lot of them keep sort of like i love this i understand this instinct i feel this instinct they keep places in new york like a little apartment on near the barrier rodal whatever lay in just to kind of be like no no i still guide of me i still have a place wrestle like this so this the the ark of this book front yo two thousand eleven sort of the ends in brooklyn beat becoming the like the the the wealth center of hipsters totally and the but also just that that did it ever have any integrity other than for sure but i also just think it's yes it did i'll answer that but also that the idea that that would have one of the things that's hard to see from now because it's so obvious that that is what took place is how unlikely that seemed that that would at the time if you had been sitting there in two thousand two and and sort of prognosticating that in twenty in ten years or whatever like williamsburg a place you could not get cabs to take you was going to be the default locus of cool for the globe for but it's weird because there was some would have been laughed out of that conversation what's really like i lived in the story i had an apartment in the story from 95 five hill like two thousand and two whenever they might sub wetter was just informed by the new known of the building that he now add the lease uh quick note with note under the door there were people like louis had a place in williamsburg there were people moving into long island city yeah and likes her was sort of happening but that was because you could get space fits dole rahab winning is that it's just like everyone move to williamsburg because it was cheap brand because in this to return to it ten days saying i mean it was like you could get free he indeed siddig met each other because they lived in the same converted loft and they were passing each other's rooms enough and seeing that the same shit basically was on the floor at each other's rooms and it was sort of like i guess we should probably talk you know you've got a same weird stuff in there and like loss and in that's not like it's so easy to be like wow that must have been so cool and it's like it's it's only romantic later at the time it's like i need to live somewhere and and and be able to paint place with that right but that's that's the story of the amine ripe but that context or that that framework of life has repeated itself yes generations generation totally though the yeah the law thathat's another title that we here but the thing about nine eleven that tunisia was saying that's important is that whole justification we're talking about in the money in the bleaching out or however you want a phrase it these are they his theory and i by this now is that that was coming much sooner and nine eleven pause debt because there was a sense i mean people thought no one would travel there anymore no one wanted to get on planes it was like leaving for a second it was like is new york's economy going to die this the is this really like are things you can get cheap they were rally are things are things going to you know plummet here is it gonna be russ 70s new york thing again because no one will tourism will dinro wanna live here and all that stuff is they're going to be because it was it was terrifying and it was like you know every plane that flew overhead it was i mean people there were a couple of years where and so what that created for the purposes of this book is this weird a period of uncertainty that was really a gift to these bans because there was a couple of years and this is my my hay day really of lake going out in seeing shows during that time it was two thousand to two thousand three maybe into two thousand four but fair li where it was like it was just wild everyone was like are we gonna die but hey let's party en route druggie and it got dirty and it wasn't that expensive yet rent wasn't going up really of sort of just like the whole the whole apparatus was trying to figure out how this was going to shake out and it was like kohl let's play the you know you should read boca for answer some of those questions behind the scenes what did you ever read that book securing the city on my god who wrote i like i like i recommend this book to so many people i did you secretly right it no oh could cover ominous yes it's a bow it looks like the beginning of every law and order old school lunch or episode is by christopher dickey who i believe is james dickey's son in the i still see him as a you you shows up on shows on cnn and stuff but it's really about how how new york had to create its own count yes i should read that it is to the injury yes 'cause it was like we had we're our own city and we ourselves yeah because federal government and the cia and the fbi were not talking real yeah there was in the federal government was not really stepping up so these guys know what was going yeah and it was it was with giuliani still who was like we've got to make our own counterterrorism force and we've got to have international alley yet ray kelly yeah food and this guy cohen associated irate ocala read this like and then i'll be like i should have talked to him for the buck this is my life like i wake up still at night is damage extradition don't even choke of add that why never writing another oral history ever again or only organized oh it made me move state to a cabin in the woods by myself because they had an emotional breakdown like it's so hard that organization is really a nightmare well you did it and people like it yeah and you know it seems to be all in their uae dill per is let's check it out they clear talk of what do you want from me i i think it is hilarious eiriksson i let my favorite people around the book art like that one of my favorite pieces written about the book was by my friend dan aasi who hates who does not like any of this music basically he's in the book talking about conner over since he loves turnovers but he basically doesn't he's a music nerd anna anna a rock critic and this it he's just like all his hand suck basically i mean not literally but it's not his stuff but the thing is like i have i like i i'm not a connor overspent but i have him in here handsome my best interviews with people who are mike i will that is why and say like i'm at that's basically i think i i enjoy the fact that this isn't your world i think that's more fun lagging learn the creator of service project to talk to someone like that then someone who's like julian casablanca's this my favorite rock star of all time you're like well you're gonna love this yet boy do i have a book free like the this is writing i take this this part of journalism seriously like it's not my job to write a press release for one of these fans its job to convince those who aren't naturally inclined to take this as interesting that there's something there well here's what i have to say i'm happy you kids had your okay are you gonna try to say that that was not condescending he has had a knock out of it is out of all right it's a joke it was it was it was a sarcastic coffin ha ha ha pa let's shift gears demar serious yet um you know i and then the private police state fire juliana of just personal stuff i mean like i i've and talk to you really since markelle passed away a eulogized him on this show thank you for doing and you know because i like the guy and i literally your text to them like would like a week before it happened here do you talk about what happened can you talk about it or not i can totally i talk about i liked talking that i think people are a little afraid understandably to ask me about him because it's france you romantically involved on and off your best friends he was on the up and up again it seemed yes 100 percent it's really tragic i mean the answer to what happened which is what i guess is like not known i suppose i mean i don't really know i don't know anything other than he died and then i i texted you too to say sorry but then i got no information and then you know you just sit there and go igor would have and what that you it's not he's one of those guys ruettgers bound to happen but he didn't seem like it was going to happen that way well a lot of people you feel like it's bound to happen and then it doesn't i mean mark was had a history obviously of drug use and i think most people assume that he died of an overdose and that's not what happens i mean he didn't he we don't know for sure because there was not an autopsy performed huh so there's no leisure a cause of death that attack i mean cause of death unknown as far as i know you ea yes so this is what you're not afraid to talk about we have no information kind of accept i mean they i guess they just think like i so i was here and you know we shared custody of our dogs for six so mark or seven an hour years together in from my 20s and then we broke up like 10 years ago and but we stayed incredibly close friends and he was my creative partner basically like that mark this book would not exist without mark he is the person on the other end of the line consistently throughout frame iin merrier well like naughty i mean sometimes like sometimes is needed grady stuff but more just all writers need like the the i'll people i guess that create the the sort of like hootie who is on the red phone was on it was like i don't know and this isn't working in what do i do and like help and also i just need to that it's like that was the dark we are really really tight creatively and he would do the same we would talk to each other about writing every day and our dogs and so i was out here and he had been in a period of incredibly badge oppression for a couple of years on i mean probably his whole life it had been really bad and um i was helping him in his his family was helping him you know try to get the right mental health care never quite came together for him and eventually and so eventually after a couple of years lake road than the month before he died he was better than i've ever seen and he may have told you that india he was like like running a little bit yeah he was taking better care lindo visit no no one he hadn't dan i mean i think i know that mark lied to me about drugs or the years he wasn't like here's what happened the night that he died he went to a bar on the night that i think he died he went to a bar because he i mean we don't know exactly when he died he went to of our on february second and he had a couple of drinks drink and a half with a friend and at six thirty something like that and he came home and he walked the dogs with this friend and he was inside his house with the chain on the door and the locks on the door and a bowl of pasta on his on his like coffee table they found him and i couldn't hear i didn't hear from him the next day and i was worried and i didn't hear for him the next morning and we he didn't do that with that i mean he the dog think mark loved dogs er that anything in the world and wouldn't fuck around if their howarth and knew i was all the way out in california i mean he was like mortar arctic about the doksan i am pia and that's how they a his eventually i woke up a bunch of people up in his super went into his apartment and he found him just slumped over on his couch with dinner on the table so like as i have never done heroin but my understanding is you get big bell right and also there was no drug paraphernalia in his house and no drugs oregon went yeah i mean it's an aneurysm or a heart attack or or what any he i mean the dogs were fine they were in that house with him for thirty six hours and they were thirsty and in america pasta here at left that here too viking luggage joni it in like pardon me asshole i'm hungry and like their sausage in that layer she's too short can get up to that just short short leg's well you know it's it's it's nice to know that it it probably wasn't some eur grisly relapse no i mean if fit you know i don't know enough about you tell me can you like have secretly donovan of heroin fight hours before and then go home and make dinner and then die from doing that i mean a dozen quite at up but i you know but it seems to me that he put himself and his body through and you not up to him you know you know and if you don't know what you're like i don't know one is less physical was i mean you could only had one he high made him go and get one with wh what was the informality all systems go but you don't i mean this is what the there's i mean i'm going to be dealing with moves it out over that out of my life by not heart stuff that well i mean right like this is if you have a blake blood clot if you've an an aneurysm is undetectable i mean you can't like you can show people and this we don't have any control over any of this in the illusion is that lake via if you take care of yourself and you get physical zinni's sort of like drink your green juice that there is a sense of of control over warding off death in it's just not like that and like mark abuse the shit out of his body but that's also no guarantee that he was going to die in that way and you can take really gets care of yourself and you can get hit by a but i mean you know or diet something undiagnosed it's just what happens and it's horrible it's horrible but the one thing we do know was quick yeah and he was there with the two people in the world that he loved the most which are those two dogs no good swear to god i i'm sorry for your loss and congratulations on the book and it was nice of you to dedicated to him of guel i my friend imran told a a really potentially off color but actually amazing joke about this on this happened because imran loved mark in knew him very well a lesbian he goes so that's what it took to get together because there was dedicated to my parents and they got for this is the only thing mark could have done and i mean you know you knew him quite well and you guys have a shared sense of real black humor and so do i and mark i mean i can hear and sometimes it's being like the biggest promised that book was there is not enough amee nso i had to be something that will yeah you've got to have the dark your mercy you don't you know so the bottom doesn't fall out was nice talkin united sock india that was fun those good those promotional in some ways don't forget if you're in now way you can join me and brendan for our only l a book event and signing this sunday october twenty nine th at seven pm go to live talks la dot org for the tour page of wto of pod dot com i can't play ktar tired and a little depressed boomer lives uh uh uh