35 Burst results for "Hoppy"

Effectively Wild: A FanGraphs Baseball Podcast
"hoppy" Discussed on Effectively Wild: A FanGraphs Baseball Podcast
"He traded, he traded Logano hoppy, who is a really good catching prospect who was never going to play in the majors for the Phillies because they have signed JT Realmuto to the contract that he has. And they treat him for another young player who just better fit positionally and Brandon marsh and I know those people who do not did not like that trade at the time and still don't like it because they felt like that the Philly should have gotten more for a hobby, but it was a trade in a sense. It wasn't Nebraska just like unloading a prospect for an overpriced veteran, I guess, right? I mean, it was him getting a younger player with 6 years of club control or 5 years of control to a better fit positionally and will be an everyday player on the 2023 fillies as well. So I mean, look, he's held on to their top prospects. Like Andy painter, Chris mcgarry, mccabe, their top three pitching prospects are still here. Johann Rojas, probably their best prospect, still here. The best prospects he's traded really since he's taken over the Phillies have been Logano hobby and I can spend Brown who is kind of a pop up guy. They traded him for Dave Robertson last deadline that was a deal that I don't know, I guess it was okay. I mean, they won the national tenant, so whatever. But he's how long to his guys. And I think he's willing to see that through. I don't think they're going to trade any of those pitching prospects in the near future. I think they want to see those guys through. Well, and one of them who they absolutely did not trade and who looks like he's going to have a big role in the big league club this year is Andrew painter. So, you know, we want to give credit when the prospects do get held onto. What should Philly fans expect from painter and do you think that he is going to crack the opening day roster? I'm trying to be careful in the way that I write and talk about Andrew painter because he's 19 and he turns 20 in mid April and it's not fair to overhype prospects. It's not fair to put huge expectations on a picture, even if he's the best 19 year old ever, he's still going to have some growing pains because that's just how it works in the sport. He's every bit the real deal. And there is a clear reason why they're pushing him and why they are, you know, have left the door open for him, not just left the door, but I mean, they've really just are holding the door open for him to win this 5th starter spot out of camp. And that's crazy. It's absolutely crazy that they've reached this point, but I wrote a story in the athletic earlier in the spring about the relationship and the trust that has really built because a coach that he worked with when you was 14 years old at crusty sports over on the other side of Florida is here with affiliates. These are director of pitching development. He's very highly regarded, Brian caplan. And they've spent a lot of time thinking about how to treat Andrew painter and whether this is right for him right for the franchise. And after all these meetings and these thoughts and they really came to the decision that that they want to see if you can do this. And whether or not he breaks camp with them, he's very clearly going to pitch for the 2023 Phillies and have a role and have some sort of meaningful role, I think, on this season. I can't wait to see what it looks like in a gratefully game, even though it's not even the biggest stage. I'm in close to it, but I can't wait to see it. I can't wait for other people to see it. It's not just because he throws really hard and he's really tall he's 6, 7, throws an upper 90s. He just has such polish for an 19 year old both on the mound and off the field. He's been able to handle everything thrown on the spring and there is a lot of hype and there's a lot of attention on him. It's been remarkable to watch. And there's been that affiliate 700 teenagers from our pitch for them in a game since 1980. There's only been four since 1992 in the majors, which is crazy. He's in rarefied territory right now. And I understand why. And we could maybe save Noah sang for a second and ask about him next. But other than the intrigue about painter and whether he'll be a part of the rotation. There's not a ton of unsettled spots on the roster entering the spring, so other than that 5th starter battle. I mean, there are always bullpen and bench spots up for grabs to some extent. But is there any other intriguing positional battle here question about players who may or may not make it? Hot really been? I mean, I can't ever remember the Phillies going into a spring with 7 locks and their bullpen. And they have set a box and they're open, which is crazy. They really have two bench spots open. They're going to rotate the DH price Harper is not going to be healthy to start the season. When he returns in June or July, he'll be the DH.

Mark Levin
The Hill: White House Incivility Is What 'Lost' Sen. Joe Manchin
"Joe Manchin Yeah he's been saying the same thing about the cost of this thing and about how it's going to kill the energy sector in his state of West Virginia and it balloons the power of the government up bigger than it was and all that stuff He's going to say that But when it really came when push came to shove when they said why now Why didn't you just play this out Why didn't you keep talking Why didn't you keep negotiating Why didn't you keep trying to fix this thing so that you could give Biden a win here and his answer Because of the incivility Have you read this He told the hill this he told a radio host in West Virginia I love this radio host name by the way Happy kirchhoff Hoppy Happy in the morning I do morning radio I might change my name to hoppy Hoppy is a great radio host name He said here I'm going to quote him He said talking about The White House He says it's not the president It's the staff They drove some things and put some things out that were absolutely inexcusable in civility he said A civility is a trait that mansion values He has his entire he talks about it all the time We need civility and politics and party It's a good West Virginia Right Good young man I suppose So now he has to do with the snot nosed jerks at The White House Ron klain Jen Psaki Susan Rice all the ivies right All the ivy's who know so much better and they treat him with the same old know it all disdain that they treat all of us with We hear it dripping from their voices every time they're on television talking down to us to meaning us They talk to mansion that way and you know they did and they unleash the hounds remember the people who would follow him around from his car who would stalk him at his houseboat with kayak screaming at him that incivility And so why would Manchin do them any favors

TNCnow
"hoppy" Discussed on TNCnow
"Gaze. Okubo nothing and laughing at eight seven seven bs loan guys. There are any plans to get a hassle. I sent her thoughts about on the bus. Gonna andrew accepting yes. No direct point again deckers. You mob scene Being is everything in sanath nationals. Enc's us watch us in some on the lower the they'll do exit But i mean for issue merimee. Entertaining shows belogonov Adding inspiring topics. And i am also would like to. Blog i'm renoir. Brokered services By imports exports we our own brokerage services number one east match. Many la snuggle reviews on youtube red wine multiple rainbow heads eimi way gaming cleveland after prices ego sham speeds up also visit us at mega q. Marcy amy meet. Lady i am we sell fresh meats all kinds of meats we often And also peaking how little you got sharp actions your online markets are up shop on the palanca in health and beauty charm. These are fees for. You saw abroad orders. If you want to be healthy stay healthy healthy cells and just take galen about with them but he are eight guys do though Speak on their next happy. We have a very special guest then now sober interesting. Double panta in your She or he is a business will mine businessman staff in multiple veto and how She became a successful on this business. It began in an audio news after they also don't forget to like insured. These episodes hashtag gobi ovid stories on. Emc we are streaming live saturdays at empathy. Am live on facebook in view to an guys in your new works talking. Neal's sopping venue the thank you so much music necessarily guys you just call. Call them at a macbook nap -pointment. I will listen to us. Apple podcasts at the dnc. Now office you miss adnan saleh in. Thank you so mind that you like you. coleman a young guy that get eugene. Hoppy bricky zambia month of iago. I'm happy being sentenced a night lows. z geneva. The plan nihilo law a bus in the moscow was falling lonza uncommon against thou- abby rugby. You say often is okay. Being due at these Meg of you mark. Thank you so much in Ago Episode in and orlan simpkin ours algosaibi episode almanac said let six change so much the same sense some love. Some are episode for the and don't forget to Pre and stacy's lugging e you face. Add paying for add these guys email the new channel dot com or thac zero nine three nine nine nine seven wise zero hashtag all things new school stories. I started but i buffet. Anybody about because news saying y'all Anyway inbound acting tool. And even when britain Stop seeing in adult as i know Jones throwing the wine again may deem Bengazi school Stories see simply episode thirty seeks. See exactly the guys..

Crypto Current
FTX Teams up With Steph Curry & Tom Brady
"Tom brady and his wife giselle whose last name i can't pronounce ages caught a bag. I got twenty million dollars or doing like a minute and a half commercial for. Which is you know. Major crypto exchange. But besides that steph curry was involved. And i think this was wednesday is when it was announced that he was going be partnering up with fda as well so to the biggest names in american sports right now. Hoppy on the crypto. Y'all crypto hype train and doing it with fda access has been making waves all year. Long as steve. If you remember. But the my hand miami heat's at arena. I guess arena stadium. Basketball arena will now be the fda arena A major east boards organization at tsn. They actually sold away their naming rights so their official name is actually. Tsm teac now. Now this is all within the last six months. This is the happening so wild times are fda and big moves as well.

Hawkeye Report Podcast
"hoppy" Discussed on Hawkeye Report Podcast
"Lindor bonnet center town. You mentioned offensive and defensive lines similar when you know we have been in linda bomb and And van valkenburgh. You know we have. And then there's just a lot of moving pieces a lot of moving parts random and when you move ahead to a game against deanna. That's that's something that's going to be interesting listening to curse tonight The it's a big offense of wine for indiana so the and vice versa With with the indiana wanting to put pressure on quarterback and and beyond attack mode Bech balata trenches against indiana. Obviously it is by every single game but it seems like this game even more so is is just super intriguing when it comes to. What do we know about indiana other hoosiers and other coming off a sixty one conference braun. Hoppy lost game six to their quarterbacks facts that got talent act and they've done a really good job reinvigorating report having a rebirth of a program. That's indiana's basketball school. So it's been an impressive thing to watch from afar. What they've done in india you. Tom allen's done a nice job in his ten years. Really kind of you know if they had a breakthrough last year for sure. So the intriguing thing with when when you look at iowa and what's going on with offensive line is their defense. Loves to put pressure on you. They're gonna blitzer lot. Mike mcfadden at linebacker is dynamite players. All big ten level player. They move him all over the field and bring him at different angles. So that's the concern you have from. Iowa's perspective is that let's wine. How do you get that cohesiveness that that comfort level with each other when he was seven guys in and out so they're going to have that challenge of divine nancy's at safeties another all big ten player They just loved it. Kinda create pressure turnover events. Seventeen interceptions last year. It is different though this year because came womack their defensive coordinator last year Is now the head coach at south alabama so You know womack out in. They brought in charleston warren There's really kinda from what i understand. Kind of minor changes. Maybe some terminology changes but other still gonna do consent saying you know were iowa's got like a cash they calling husky which is of a different word for everyone. Those guys a hero position. Or whatever it is on third linebackers. Some kinda hyped up safety thing And then on offense. Michael junior back towards a seattle in november last year. Nobody remembers the penn state game last year where he scores And wednesday game even though maybe he didn't score but they didn't know relet in the the video booth so but he's a dynamic. Everybody's tore his acl twice. He's not a. He kinda has a reputation as a runner but he's more of a mover than a runner. Just kinda buys time in the pocket more than just kinda taken often. Running with the football knows to extend plays with his legs The big arm likes to throw downfield In that makes dangerous because he can extend those plays and then you just lose a guy and he'll just launch down the field It kind of a. It's going to be an interesting game. Because what kind of pass rush. Can i get on him. Is he gonna be back there. Just picking away I think that's part of the cat and mouse game. That's going to go onto a wide. Receiver tied frightful is an all big ten player. Probably would be certainly would benefit an nba nfl draft pick glance. He decided to stay another year. He was the top wide receiver in the big ten conference over two hundred yards receiving against ohio state last year. So he's he's the legit deal. I mean that you know. The ohio state is pretty good last year. They also brought in a canadian car from you. I see who's running back and he's he wondered a starting ryan back jobs. That's gonna come jolt. Thorough run game a bit high sink At least that's what they're hoping that he kinda provides them with a bit of a spark I should also mentioned tight end Hendershot is really good to a shot really good player experienced guy Fifth year guided the came back so they have some channel Got some big offense lineman You know one of the guys is like greece. Seventy five or something. Kale jones. A six six three sixty two. And he's he's lost some weight to get the three sixty good for him The aso they've had their offense wasn't great last year. It will want pressure. So we'll see how they've improved it some interesting interesting Game on an island. Step their streak of twenty two games in a row where they've given up twenty four points. That's a big deal everyday arisen. Twenty two point two games in a row that iowa has given up twenty four points or fewer It also that's that's an impressive streak gets the longest in the country and It's going to be put to the test. The next two weeks for sure We always we don't always but you did send out a call for questions. Our good friend. John singer who thought he was late. I did realize that we're weirdos. That new these played at night you late said he wanted to know which matchup remorse orton saturday. I was defensive. Line versus dini. An of wine kinda talked about that a little bit or the indian defensive backs patriots. And the i will wide receiver so we talked about the offense even line a little bit for iowa's than the wind for for indiana We mentioned the wide receivers. How good is the indiana secondary. And i think really what you kind of talked about that. I think is the biggest factor in that whole mess is how much pressure spencer teachers hats. I think if he can stay comfortable may not rush decisions. That makes any sense. Ben than i think he can have a nice day and so i don't know if the if it's iowa's wide receivers peach versus the secondary as much as it is making sure he stays upright and and not rushed and and and not rattle your thoughts on those two battles between between in this game coming up johnson. Yeah i think. I'd still go with the the the line play. I just think that's so borton for iowa To be able to get pressure because in be able to stop the run. Everything iowa does when they're successful you just look it up there you know like last year. They limited opponents to. I think it was two point six yards per carry in that sets everything else up because you get people in second law and then you can kinda dictate the terms of Of play if you will so..

Everything Everywhere Daily
Clark Stanley: The Rattlesnake King
"Oil is an actual product that is created from chinese water snakes also known as irabu snakes. It's been used as a traditional chinese remedy for centuries chinese water. Snakes live in ponds and rice paddies. They're slightly venomous snakes under a meter that feed on fish and infineon's the snake oil which is derived from the water. Snakes is very high in the omega. Three fatty acid known as epa snake oil was and is considered by many people to be effective in relieving the pain of ailments such as arthritis bursitis and sore muscles. A modern study found that oil from chinese water. Snakes actually allowed mice to perform better on cognitive tests. Take for that what you will. The chinese workers began to share their remedy with american workers who are working on the railroad and the product began to grow in popularity as the demand for snake. Oil grew people began to figure out ways to meet that demand. Enter into the story. One clark stanley. The self proclaimed rattlesnake king stanley wanted to meet the new demand for snake oil so he created a product known as clark stanley. Snake oil intimate. Just knowing that the word snake was in the title he began using rattlesnakes for the product however a rattlesnake is not a water snake and they have totally different fat profiles eventually however he totally abandoned. The idea of putting rattlesnake oil in the product altogether for twenty four years stanley traveled around the country. Touting the medicinal benefits of his snake oil intimate he created a massive show that he toured with positioning himself Frontiers mun while creating an elaborate backstory. He sold the product at western shows around the country. He claimed that the recipe for his snake oil lyneham. It came from a hoppy medicine. Man the hoppy did not have anything resembling snake oil and at no point. Did he ever mention the chinese origins of the product. Moreover stanley made claims about the product which went far beyond with your original chinese snake. Oil was used for stanley claim that it would cure. Rheumatism sciatica lumbago a sore throat. Frost-bites tooth aches and many other ailments in one famous demonstration at the eighteen ninety. Three chicago world's fair he's supposedly the product in front of a live crowd science writer. Joe schwarz wrote quote stanley. Reach into a sack plucked out a snake slit it open and plunged it into boiling water when the fat rose to the top. He skimmed it off and used it on the spot to create stanley snake. Oil ligament that was immediately snapped up the throng that had gathered to watch the spectacle

ESPN FC
United States Advances To Gold Cup Semifinals With Victory Over Jamaica
"Well that was a dramatic finish. Yeah i give you extra time. So it's getting very late here on the east coast. And i thought we were steamrolling towards penalties Because that's just how things go sometimes. But no no no a hero emerges matthew hoppy scoring the late header by the way the i had Headed goal of his professional career. What a time. He chose to do it the. Us win one nil setting up a semifinal match for them this thursday at the much more amenable time of seven pm eastern time against qatar. You know you always throw the records out when the us guitar meat and a gold cup

The Bone 102.5
"hoppy" Discussed on The Bone 102.5
"I blocked the guy for saying that because, like I'm just you can think that's funny, and that's awesome. I'm not here to entertain jokes like that. And I'd rather and sometimes it's protecting me from me. I'd rather block you then say something and get dragged into something. So I'm going to stay out of that. And by doing that, I'm probably going to block you. I'm sure there are people listening right now have been blocked by me. You feel like what the hell dickhead you're absolutely entitled to feel that way. Yeah, it's interesting. I always battle with blocking because I feel that most people just tell me if you block someone, you're almost giving them what they want. So I really don't try to do that. But I have probably most respect for those that just block people for barely any reason or for any reason, because you're just kind of creating your own universe, which I think That's kind of that's what social media should be when it comes to things like this. I understand if you're looking for your news and other things like that, I'm not talking big picture. But when it comes to something like Twitter, where you're looking to pretty much interact with people, you know, talk about the show. Promote the show things like that. Like, why do you want people? Just trashing you. Why would you want to look at that? And why would a person who trashes you? Booth. If those thoughts are true, why do they feel the need to be included in the things that you having to say on social media? I'm really glad to hear you say that because that's exactly what it is to me. I have cultivated An environment that I enjoy interacting with. I know when I wake up, I'm going to tweet something that I find inspirational and some people hopefully get inspiration from that. And then the ladies with whom I am friendly. K dubs Doe eyes a couple of others they will frequently the dear Bobby don't wanna leave anybody out Always, bitch, even though she's not, uh, they'll they'll tweet me and in the morning it's It's a pleasant interaction. With people who I feel like I know. And it's positive. One person can come along ago. Hey, remember when black Bean jumped you and, uh Hey, you're a lousy father or Hey, you're this You're allowed to feel that way and I get it comes with the territory. But if I have the power To remove that. Why wouldn't I? And again I can't speak for Ryan Hoppy. But if I bust my ass to put out a podcast And you want to weigh in on something You heard? There is something you heard on the air in. I don't like it. Why would I want to hear something negative. Of course I'm going to block or meet you to gobble. I've nothing against you, Penguin. I would never do that. I'm just explaining why it might have happened Not to him. No. But others definitely drew. Grab alive. Hello? Who are you? Hey, this is Wally. Hi. Hi, Wally. I just wanted to say something really nice about Mike. Oh, he sent me one of those Champa Bai shirts. Um, that his daughter made. Okay, and it's got the 813 on it and that he didn't even ask the dying from me. Not anything. He's a giver. That's cool. A great guy Super. I'd like to meet him one day. He's a great guy. He's a good guy to know He's strong to you ever try to take him down or manhandle him or anything like you're in for a rude awakening cause that man is solid wood. You use one man and I would not like to physically trifle with You go up alive. Hello? Who are you? Hi, This is Bobby. How are you guys? Hey, what's up, darling? Oh, John standing Hello. Hi. Um, I am calling about Ryan Hoppy. Alright. WSB At W. S. A woman got fired a weekend DJ got fired because she cut down one of the news anchors at WSSD. Blacks came out real strongly and said that they are firing any employees. To bad mouth. Another coach employee Well, that's a so how am I unhappy? That's going really far. But you know what? Grow up, Ryan Hardy. Oh, no. Oh, no. Oh, no. One afternoon drive. I mean, you bet our number one you build up whether they hate you up or not, You know, it's like, come on. Well,.

ExtraTime
USMNT Announces Gold Cup Roster
"Right into a charlie. This is this is what we like to do. This is only like to think about. This is what we're looking forward to this summer after that. Big nations league victory from the us. Mnt the gold cup. We knew that this was not going to be the same roster. That went out competed oakley one that nation's league tournament gregg berhalter has been saying it for a long time. We're gonna have to separate groups. There might be a little bit of overlap and likely that overlap is gonna come from mls players because it is the summer and you've got transfer window open you've got guys going into preseason camps trying to earn their way like for instance. He said brian reynolds not here because joe's marino doesn't generally play younger players so they want brian reynolds to beat at roma from the jump with the new manager to make sure he has a chance to get into the team otherwise he's going to be working From behind a couple other names in that scenario where cameron carter vickers gotta figure his cup situation. Eric palmer brown to figure out his cup situation. And greg said admitted our centre-back cool is a little bit light. So here is the roster for those of you who haven't seen it goalkeepers matt turner the likely starter. Funny story there. We'll get to that shawn johnson. Brad gazon defenders george bellew reggie cannon shack more. That was a little bit of a surprise. Donovan pines another site. Surprise but again center back a little bit thin per berhalter miles robinson a starter says greg james sands sam vines and walker zimmerman the other presume starter at center back in the midfield coma. Kosta general kabuchiko stand up kansas city especially jet criminal. Don eric williamson. Who was my must have on this roster injection you'll end up top paul arriola gerald decay. Nicholas keeney matthew hoppy. Who's in for the first time. Jonathan lewis josse artists. Give me your initial reactions. You saw this. Twenty-three you're thinking about the summer you're thinking about the task at hand which is both to win a gold cup but also develop players to push into the first team to get to the world cup. What are you thinking right now on this thursday morning for me. I'm thinking there's not any anyone that i'm particularly surprised about. That's one too. I think this group is is has enough quality to win now if mexico brings. They're a team. That's going to be challenged in especially with mexico hungary to avenge that nation's league loss.

Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"hoppy" Discussed on Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"Just a couple minutes left here on brute. Talk we We you know we had a good beer thirty. When we're going to push one beer over here to the last segment We have been working our way through the voodoo ranger hobby pack. And we have the last one that juicy hayes here The that we're working through So far it has not been grand reviews on this beer by chattan i Chattan for grammatically correct people out there. mean chad. Whatever tom fuse myself anyhow. y- eighty-five thoughts before we get to the ratings I don't think it's going to be the highest rated beer here tonight here. Very correct on all right. I'll go first on this. I it does it taste. Taste like a watery. Mimosa and i'm sorry. That's kind of what i'm getting there. A watered-down mimosa which i don't know why you'd ever have one of those. But maybe you left your ice cubes in there too long. Maybe i don't know what did i give. What did they give the I won the experimental six. Something six to this is about that too only goes. I'm gonna go six four un. i'm gonna give it a six point. Four chad what do you think in here. I'm probably right there with ya. Six four definitely the six four. This is my least favorite beer of the four down. It's not brew talk. Approved thinking along the lines of no tv and no beer. Make homer something something though. I might be happier without this bitten. Now that's a lie. that's a lie So what do you think final thoughts on this voodoo ranger hoppy. Pack underwear we. Yeah a little underwhelming over all know week. Finish week beginning but stronger in the middle. The rain and the The juice for those are the two really strong winds chad we going on at the tavern. you know always gearing up for mother's day coming up here soon and we got our trivia every sunday night every sunday night. Check it out. The tavern at saint michel square for ryan. Kelly do the production containers twins. It's knickknacks coming up next northern voice. Thirteen ten camp k. cheers..

Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"hoppy" Discussed on Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"The nose strong. Yeah exactly but i think it's different hops. So i think the hops used in the are definitely going to be different than in a hazy. So brimming with citrus. Aromas this hazy. I a as devastatingly devilishly adeptly. What is definitely mean devilish lead juicy. This juice juice for And the other by the way the other the voodoo ranger. Ip ages the dry hopped ipa bursting. With notes of guava mango and pineapple. Didn't get a ton of that on there and everything but there's a little citrus But the dry hop is definitely why the aroma. Yes right away. Yeah so this. One again brimming with citrus. Aromas this hazy as devilish -ly juicy definitely get more citrus on the nose of this. One than though avis for sure and and on the on the palate as well i can definitely getting citrus towns. That are you know what you expect from a. He's this is what i don't really like. About the hazy. Ap's though i'm not getting alcohol this is seven point seven seven two. We would we there. I said that wrong. Seven seven seven on this one. Yeah so again. High alcohol. Which i don't get that burn on the back end or you don't know on which is a good and bad thing. I guess you don't know what to their and it could sneak right but i think and this is where doc would correct me if i feel like the juicy. Ipa's tend to trend higher on the outcome. I think just for my just from what we show. I see that as well as it tends to be a little bit higher on on the juicy. I i don't know. Is that how you get the haze. I don't know i think it's probably comes from the hops in the way to help drive up alcohol a bit but i think the other good beer especially if you're juicy fi fan. Yeah hazy hazy juicy fan..

Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"hoppy" Discussed on Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"Ma- you that a lot higher than. I thought you were going to sorry. I was no i just i. We've we've been. We've been doing this long enough. That i kind of thought i had an idea where you'll drinkable. I'd sit and drink it. would you buy it though. No but if somebody bought some and it was sitting on the table. I i would drink it. It's just it's not memorable after today. I'm not gonna remember this beer and think about accidents biting in and be like i was not a good beer I'm not going that high. How many oh with a six point. Two on this beer. I don't enjoy it. it's bland it's coming in every way possible. And it's.

Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"hoppy" Discussed on Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"That's awesome that the that's ca. I didn't know i hadn't heard that hadn't heard that story. So how long did you do that for time. We actually still do it. Really know up until everything. Shut down you know. Not very many people are leaving their cars anymore. No but you know now that we're starting to be open later and you know we'll get if we get more of the bar atmosphere back then. We'll probably will for sure be doing that. He's going to pull up their early early on. Because i know what time you get up some we get up early early. Just sleep in the back. And then see if i can get a very beat me up. Yeah well. I'm not going to beat you up chatter going to beat me awake. You just won't go to bed. Yeah that'll probably be the case. I just probably won't go to bed. let's take a break when we come back on the other side beer thirty. We're trying the hoppy. Pack by voodoo ranger forgot hop head in store today. So.

Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"hoppy" Discussed on Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"Into brew sock on this wednesday evening. Thanks for being with us. We are live from the specialist studios. I'm tina shorts Chad young michael square joining me as well. So we got some crazy conspiracy theories out of the way there earlier. Did you think of any more That that you buy two. There are plenty out there there are. Is there any that you like. Believe the ever come up with a conspiracy theory that you convince yourself was true. No i did that once. Talked about radio show. I did do you remember that. It was a borderline. It was between the the day the meat out day with governor police and jbs that was all a conspiracy theory. I think think that governor polls when did. Jbs back when they had to shut down and he's like hey guys just to favour shut shutdown. All you want and like okay. We'll shut down air quotes as a smack the mic and then Then you get into the time of year that it's the catholic lent lying on a lot of people don't eat meat and jbs calls and says hey you know who hates you. Meat lovers this year me out and then he's like our right and now he's like. Okay what do you want me to do in the polls or tells governor and just come out and do a meet out day and they knew the contest that they would more people go out and buy meat. That's a conspiracy theory. That i talked myself into good. You don't buy it not even a little bit. You don't see any any way shape or form that that's true. I think the governor signs hundreds of those proclamations a year doesn't really pay much attention to what he's signing and normally it doesn't isn't that huge of a deal until that's why weld county comes and blows morgan county. I mean there. There's a lot of counties that were pissed off about his wyoming. Joined in and i don't know i think it makes sense to me. That's just one conspiracy theory that i talked to him. He's not one of the five families though so now it's on a smaller scale. It's a smaller scale conspiracy theory..

Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"hoppy" Discussed on Brew Talk 1310 KFKA
"We had in college. And we're sitting in the basement doing bong rips and listening to pink floyd and grateful dead. Man birds aren't real man. I'm telling you it's the government man it could be. It could be. I don't know but going back to where this all went off the rails. Look how many states marijuana's legal in. Now i'm telling you man. I let's go back to all this went off the rails No that was. That was my full talk. Yeah we'll come back into brew talk. That was we went down a a rabbit. Conspiracy theories We're talking about is this. Is this supply chain supply and demand. Is this a designed system. Now that they're going to is profitable enough to keep the payroll down and still provide what they need to do or will it just or will you take the opportunity and say okay. Well they're gonna have half blank this then we're will come in and do it the right way like i think that's what would happen if this is so. I'd only gets a bulletproof plan if it is even a plan but wendy you expected to be back. When do you expect this. Apply to be back. You know. I think it kind of varies on on what kind of products we're talking about I think now with breweries and things opening up and that and people get back to work in burris and restaurants and and things like that. I think that the beer in the liquor supplies all you know start opening up back again But again that's they can find aluminum but alert. The aluminum shortage was kind of an issue. Even before all this happened right because so many neighbors canning and and things like that. In fact odell brewery in fort collins went back to bottles because they were having a hard time finding really so. The i don't know i think it. Just kind of varies on what the products are and and if it was something that was re purposed to do ventilators and things right what. I don't know what it takes to research battery. Switch it back well. In a lot of it's going to be getting people back into work to an end with a vaccine distribution going on and i it is. I mean there's more and more people that are able to go get those shots so once he can get a workforce back in there. You know that should expedite the process as well but but you know this too in weld county dealing regulation right now that you would have to follow the statewide mask. Mandate according to the welcome. The commissioner's Right now with the state giving it power over to the county You're not a at one hundred percent. Why is that honestly. We're having a hard time finding finding the Help really yeah And i think there was a who article in the denver post this weekend. Kind of addressing the a state wide issue restaurants are. There's kind of employees employee shortage thing..

Our American Stories
Manchin rejects Biden's corporate tax hike
"Administration's infrastructure proposal to build this today needs to be changed the Democrat telling the hoppy Curse of all podcast. He won't support jacking the corporate tax rate back up to 28% talking about raising taxes other than I think corporate should never been below 25. That's the worldwide average day at the White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki.

The Bone 102.5
"hoppy" Discussed on The Bone 102.5
"Hoppy hoppy. This is happy hour. Good. What's going on? This is happy Hour on one or 25 the bone. I am your host, Ryan happy hanging out with you for the next five minute call the show it 7 to 75791 or 25 and 1 807 71125. Tweeted Me and Ryan Happy radio and nets about it. So everyone's talking about Britney Spears this week, and Maiko is not very happy at me that I didn't do my prep by watching the Britney Spears documentary, which I feel very out of touch, but not watching it. But I have been the absolute authority on this Jennifer Lopez and Alex Rodriguez relationship where the media's pretending that Alex Rodriguez did not cheat on Jennifer Lopez. Here is the news clip as she says they're in Therapy sounds healthy. Jennifer Lopez is opening up about how quarantine made her and Alex Rodriguez even stronger in her new cover story for a lower the In the morning songstress talked about the extra focus. She and her fiance put on their relationship during their time in isolation sounds about right, because if you put in all this time and effort and his focus into a relationship, you should be in a better position where there's not news reports that he's cheating on you with some talentless person from some show called Southern Charm. Second thing. I'm very happy and my relationship things. They're really good, but I'm not trying to manifest it going down a bad route. But let's just say it did. Even though it's not going to. I would not go to their shrink. She told the magazine. It has been actually really good. We got to work on ourselves. We did.

Pantheon
"hoppy" Discussed on Pantheon
"<Speech_Male> <Advertisement> <Silence> <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Music> I do <Speech_Male> believe it is not <Speech_Male> the <Speech_Male> original there <Speech_Male> anyways. <Speech_Male> Those meet mike europe. <Speech_Male> No air in europe <Speech_Male> shuffle twice. <Silence> I've got <Speech_Male> my <Speech_Male> mirror. No longer <Speech_Male> reflects me by <Speech_Music_Male> poisoned. the <SpeakerChange> wells. <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> Nice <Speech_Male> that's pretty mentally. <Speech_Male> Well <Speech_Male> well anything pop up <Speech_Male> on your Your first <Speech_Male> one. <Speech_Male> Sometimes it's like. I most <Speech_Male> interested in hearing <Speech_Male> the ones you <SpeakerChange> guys. <Speech_Male> I only skipped <Speech_Male> one song. <Speech_Male> Press play <Speech_Male> oh. that's not <Speech_Male> true. There was a <Speech_Male> song. And then i skipped. <Speech_Male> I <Speech_Male> had a song by any follow <Speech_Male> and a song <Speech_Male> by no doubt that <Speech_Male> i skipped. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I got rattling <Speech_Male> rust <Speech_Male> by poli <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> twelve twenty <Speech_Male> three ninety <Speech_Male> three <SpeakerChange> by poison. <Silence> The well <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> no joke. Jesse <Silence> <Speech_Male> i got <Speech_Male> an amos <Silence> lee song. I <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> that's crazy <Speech_Male> that's really <Speech_Male> crazy. <Speech_Male> And then the second <Speech_Male> song is a <Speech_Male> major classic <Speech_Male> to me ruinous <Speech_Male> theme <SpeakerChange> <Silence> by longfellow. <Speech_Male> That makes me <Speech_Male> think we should play <Speech_Male> out this episode <Silence> with something <SpeakerChange> by aimlessly. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Yeah sounds <Speech_Male> good. Jesse <Speech_Male> and i. <Speech_Male> That's that's a <Speech_Male> wrap. So thank <Speech_Male> you to everybody <Speech_Male> for a <Speech_Male> spin in some more <Speech_Male> time with us this mike <Speech_Male> please <Speech_Male> hit us up. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> We love <Speech_Male> hearing from you guys. <Speech_Music_Male> This is aaron. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Be <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> good. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Take care of this jesse <Silence>

Pantheon
"hoppy" Discussed on Pantheon
"Yeah most of the things that i like. I like them. Because i like them. It's pretty common theme amongst things that i like. I like all right. Well i think that might have been a wise wisdom's you said it wasn't but it was. Should we just call it. That was it that was i. Don't think i don't think so. No wise right now. Anyways reasons put out a new album a year ago called anthems and it is awesome. They talk about a lot of things that i love like anti authority in nonconformity. Pretty much any album. That i on here. Those two things are going to be include noticed. We've all noticed so remember there. I'm not sure if this is a story that that should be that should end up here. S but a new year's we did quite a bit of music and we had a little little gathering of our little self quarantine. People and i say karaoke on that night because that was one of the main things we did. Yes and one point. We had to microphones but we need more and so i found some potatoes and passed out the potatoes so everyone could seeing into the potatoes for the karaoke. You were very excited at one point. we had. Yeah at one point. You did a little bit of a roll over the back of a couch into the room. Whilst handing out potatoes which were not rotated there are actually baked potato so there are soft and several of them. Bro and there is no mash around in my house. So i think the next thing. We're supposed to talk about is like again once again. We are looking at each other on a screen but we all have a beverage sitting next to us or in our hand. They all look different. But let's let's go. Let's go backwards. It's running back so aaron. Aaron go i what what do you. What do you got there. I am sipping on a beer called like riding a bike. It's a west coast. Ip a. i don't know if you remember those exotic. They stopped getting made when everyone started. Making hazy. Ipa's but this is a west coast from urban routes brewing in sacramento my sister-in-law. Got me this along with the glasses end and like six other beers for now and drinking it on the podcast looks good. Jesse what about you. I've got a heady topper From the alchemist in vermont. And once again. I'll just describe it a but not reading from the back of the can. Obviously heady topper is an american double ip also. You're reading the damn candy. No it's hurting off. It's pretty obvious you're reading the can okay. Tremendous amounts of american hops will creep up on you and leave you with a dense hoppy. Finish in your mouth. Oh my god. Are we allowed to say like sensual aggressively sensual. That is my watering on. So really that was me describing mikes good heady topper. I did not read that from the can once again. Not at all right of course not of course. Great jesse wonderful words. Thank you so mike. What is your mouth consuming this evening. I m first of all. I'm pulling my beer. Out of one of our fancy schmancy. The punk tree bureaucracies label. Says i am having a beer. Called lachey gone gone which means i'm awesome in very aggressive words From four corners brewing. And the funny thing about this I has this Guy oh kok kok on the fan and and it's it's it's an it's like a strong ip and it's pretty good sometimes and it's pretty bad. Sometimes i just. I had one earlier today. That was very not good and this one tastes totally totally fine.

The Bone 102.5
"hoppy" Discussed on The Bone 102.5
"Yeah, let him get involved. So anyway, so I'm just like I'm married. Yeah s O. Tim and Kevin You put it on the same time. Hoppy dump on ready, Tim and Kevin both going for the gift card because they're on both together. Thanks. All right. Cool. All right. All right. Cool, Tim, where you're from? Stamp before Kevin, Where you from? Close to Gordon, Florida. Oh, that's way down south. Yeah, I don't even know if we have a p D Q close by was last time around the same Pete tip of Tampa area. Um, a while back. There was a party down by the harbor where my wife used to another. So anyway, so we're gonna do we're gonna play. We're gonna play. I'm gonna ask a trivia question. All right, And then you're gonna get your name. If you know the answer is going to Tim or Kevin. So if it's if it's or should we have a yacht should Kevin you locked in his name, and that's what I was gonna suggest that you start handing out random names. E. Ne s. So we'll try that. Okay. You guys ready? Shout your own name Shot your own age. Don't shout out the other guy's name. Okay. All right. Hold on. So are you guys are you guys? Football fans? Are you guys do you guys know football? Uh, football? Yeah. Yeah. Sounds so confident and put it there with that ridge around like me. The Grammys were supposed to be February. CBS. Grammys, Trivia or no. Well, No, I'm I know. I was baseball too. Are your baseball too? Okay, So definitely I'll ask you bunch of hockey questions that I don't know. Any hockey way won't be for our listeners. What is going on? This is the show is going to hell in a handbasket. All right, You ready? Yeah. All right. Who is big calf? Just kidding. You went over here. All right, honey bee friends. That is wrong. All right. Here you go. You ready? Yes. Super Bowl one. What was the average ticket price for the game? I'm gonna even multiple choice between the FLN, the NFL cancer the Chiefs were of the NFL. The Green Bay Packers were of the NFL. Was to take a price of the average ticket $10.12 dollars or $100 him. Damn God! $12 correcting ding ding. Day up. Shut out! All right. What We got over a little bit more Super Bowl to what Future Hall of Fame coach retired immediately following his team's 33 14 victory was a Tom Landry, Don Shula or Vince Lombardi guarding him. Who said Who said that, Kevin? Yes. All right, Kevin, You're not playing by the game. You gotta shout your name out. All right. Right now we gotta make this entertaining for the three lessons we have besides you two guys, So it's one. Kevin. Want him right arm doing three out of five or 473 and five guys office, quick, responsible for men flock to the show. All right. What quarterback? Guaranteed. His jets will beat the Colts. Kevin of Cheese. No name is his name was not Kevin. Always. Johnny. Yes. Yes, Kevin, Don't So Kevin to Tim one. All right. Okay. Ready for the win Kevin for the win. Yeah, it's late in the game. Dolphins kicker girl your premium, famously threw a pick six toe. Mike Bass after washing blocked his field goal attempt. Despite the turnover and score, the Dolphins ended up winning the game to cap off a perfect season. How many wins did the Dolphins have to cap that season? Kevin Cheese, Kevin? Yes, I didn't give you the visible choice answers yet. Well, 14. No, I was getting 14 17 or 20. So, Tim, I was thinking before they went that you let me finish it. Sam, have you got How many you have I'm in the pool doing physical therapy. All right, Very exciting. 14 17 or 20, Tim 17. There you go. It's too too okay. All right. We've got two minutes, Something show. All right. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers Alright, beat The Oakland Raiders in there only Super Bowl appearance. What player? Wearing number. 55 returned an interception for a touchdown him Damn guide. Mr Derrick Brooks 55 Double nickels. There you go. You know what up tips with dinner? Actually, he returned to know you're wrong. He did not return to Who said I was that timber? Kevin? Kevin! Kevin, Hang up on Kevin. He doesn't know what Serbia What you Samantha actually interception returns for touchdowns. Gary Brooks had one in that glorious game. Although Dexter Jackson had two interceptions and won the M V P still don't know how they came about that That was the silliest game and most random and off the seat of our pants and Out of left field day we ever played. So there you are. Thank you for playing our silly games. Now is the time. We don't just real quick. I have to go live life to the fullest. And he said he's go. Don't everybody to the bone fam party that works with both. Okay? No, no. Investing isn't just for Wall Street and don't be intimidated by doing just a tiny bit of carnal. Don't join to the movies or something..

The Bone 102.5
"hoppy" Discussed on The Bone 102.5
"The bridge from four straight on, Nikki, get off from the bridge. Figure it out. I'm sure tomorrow but on my way you don't have to go You through the causeway or through Gandhi Hoppy. What's your tip? Eat healthy. Take each day as it is, But you will notice that you feel better when you don't eat garbage. I agree that that's a great tip of you know the problem. Those little mongrels started selling their cookies yesterday. I just knocked on the door. Would you like to buy some cookies? Because it looks so happy and help him out. How do you tell a kid? No. What'd you get? They're trying to get like you know the price so they could get like, you know, a little plush doll from build a bear or something like that. What I got? I got like, three boxes of thin mints. I got like, three bucks a tackle homes I got. I think it's gonna wind up winning the contest. Just awful. What we ordered. They don't sell my favorite girl Scout cookie here in Florida. What's that eliminates lemonades was that So it's like it's like a shortbread cookie, but the entire bottom has like a lemon icing on it. That says Disgusting, Disgusting. Body switching. Appreciate six. Um, political anxiety is at an all time high. My tip is turn off the news. Shut down your Facebook and your social media, Maybe just for a day or so. You can do it and look around you. You know the reality of your actual home life and real world isn't so divided. All right? Cool. Well, my tap, Spencer stole mind replacing alike. Um, right on your bucks tomorrow. 6 40. Then the other tip after that to make sure you listen. Monday, two o'clock that might go. Radio show in for drug arrive alive. I don't know what the hell we're gonna talk about. But, uh, we're gonna come out. You give your life content on the day And I think what Johnny B and will and Hoppy and Monica are in Monday.

Goodbye to Alcohol
Goodbye to Alcohol - Series 3 - Episode 10 - Mary Anne Shearer - the Natural Way - burst 01
"It was his guys talking roland hydra one year and end the sky was the and he came up to me after he said like. I'm here to help me recover from alcoholism. I don't want to rehab. I've just come to detox. My buddy what. Can i do to stop caving. Alcohol acid right. This is what you gotta do. Every morning you get up and you have as much fruit and a nice handful of narrow nuts or seeds with just eat as much food as you can stuff. Your face doesn't have to be early in the morning but it must be a first meal of the day and eat as much as it. If it's a box of mangoes and eat the box of mangoes op done that. Eaten a box magazine taya watermelon. And you might do that for three months and eventually what happens. Is you end up eating one mango in. It's really sweet sausage. I into stuff your face. Full of lucas. In every natural glucose fresh fruits nuts every time. You crave alcohol. Just reach out for some dates or some raisins or even like a hundred percent pure grape juice or you know have sparkling grape juice. It satisfies your cells needs for glucose that craving will stop welcome to goodbye to alcohol about calls from wealth without wine with you. Want to say goodbye to alcohol. Revie said goodbye. Twelve called over the on just so this is the podcast few. We've got recovery stories to in spy experts to inform you plenty of advice on how to drink and change your life. Hello hello and welcome to the good. By twelve coal podcast. My name is john goran. I'm the founder of wealth without wine. And i'm your host for this podcast. My hero wealth without wine we help people to change their relationship with alcohol over the past five years. We've helped hundreds of people to do just that and we created world without wind because we believe it's really really halt to change your drinking alone so wealthed without wine wit all about community each week we're going to feature a community voice just to give you a flavor of the also. Try his somebody from one of Subgroups hello everyone. So i have a little friday when which happened last night Myself my family celebrated thanksgiving with our american bamiyan states Remotely and it was the first time in twenty-six days at i would becoming face to face with an actual bottle of wine so i was a bit concerned and i knew that i had to have some safety precautions. Set in place for myself. So i had my phone Close by me. So i could contact group if i needed to My also got some alcohol free wine that was recommended by this group and And the support of my family so my mom and i enjoyed some lovely alcohol free wine. Which actually wasn't as bad as i thought it would be. We served at super chilled and it was actually super delicious and refreshing. We skype with a family overseas headed delicious meal and i didn't have a drop of alcohol And then at the end of the evening we weren't bid. I finished off my class of savvy. Rich in the candlelight listening to some chile music Went to bid and the biggest one of all was waking up this remembering exactly what happened last night and without a headache I'm super proud of myself. Never ever in a million years thought that this was possible. But it did it and today is day. Twenty-seven machine all a fabulous wonderful weekend wherever you are in the world if huge cut to join our woman welcoming community and get a bit of support. Just go to weld without wind dot com and click on the membership top. So let's get my guest today into being a lady who's pretty well known here in south africa. Her name is maryanne sheera now. Maryanne is a woman before had time. She wrote a book called the natural way more than twenty years ago. An only now is the way of life. She advocates going mainstream on apart from being an author. Marianne is a motivational speaker. And she runs a very successful pekan restaurant as well as running natural health programs. I'll begin by asking maryanne satele to bit about herself. I had serious health problems which included being bipolar had kids at had ear infections tonsillitis runny noses that was high blood pressure so we had these kind of. I call him normal health problems because it wasn't like the big three cancer heart disease diabetes. It was just all like niggly stuff that was affecting our relationships and was affecting the way we functioned from day to day. And i have always been interested in the human body i prob- i might have become a doctor. But i'm i'm glad i didn't because it made me look for answers and other places so i was fascinated with the human body studied physiology anatomy and chemistry in the sciences and i was fascinated with the how the human body worked. So we're not. We started having these problems and we were being treated traditional medical way with anti anti-inflammatories and antihistamines for a head allergic dermatitis. On my hands and the kids with antibiotics just didn't make any sense because nobody actually got well. all it doesn't seem to do is suppress symptoms. And then they'd come back two weeks later. I saw the athol up. Gotta find answers. This was long. Before the era of google that really dates meet And just go and do a search on google. And the closest i've got to google was on several occasions sneaking into the fits medical library in johannesburg and he are trying to find says there and looking at books in the archives and just like nobody really had answers to my questions had to find the myself now. I really believed because i could see the. You'll buddy actually repays itself if you cut your finger to paint it stop. You don't need to go and you know cost a spillover it or go to the doctor. My fingers cut itself. Please can drug. I mean unless you chopped to finger off you'd want to beg on but just a cut finger. Paper cut irritate you. It hurts but you it just eventually repays itself and and if you study the human body like a did you find out that the liver you can actually cut off your liver out. Remove it entirely donated to somebody else. Give the small lobe to somebody else in the big global grow and then you've donated your smaller that logo groesbeck like this is the most amazing thing and yet when it comes to lever cancer you told is no cure for it. You're going to die while you would because you're going to be given all these drugs and you live a second will just get sick and pick up than you will die so i was looking for ways to correct the looking for the causes and then ask trying to fix the causes. I did find that. Nutrition made a huge difference. When i changed my diet. Took after find sugar and my by pella symptoms when my crazy periods of manic unbelievable highs. We are could take on the world. And i was going to change the world and i'm actually by nature very idealistic person and my mission in life is i want to change the world. One person at a time. I want to get them healthy enough. Got the goal to reach. A million people wrote a book called the natural way it came out in nineteen. Ninety-one was a runaway bestseller according to the publishers and it sold as i say of three hundred thousand copies it's been published in the united states. The funny thing is it seems to be taking of now first published in the states in two thousand five fifteen years not getting traction. So it's like if it does take off and i happened to reach the new york times. Basically nobody can ever say was an overnight success at this pathetic years. So you're a woman before your time. Someone emission to really help people if i can get rid of my bipolar symptoms and be completely sane And and thinks straight and have a brain in and and bow bowels and bladder that works properly all the time and be living in that sweet spot of health than anybody can do it. Because i had terrible problems. Janet listening to all calls from weld without wine. Marianne take me about you just mentioned alcoholic parents. It that intrigued me wondering if that was one of the reasons why you want it to research to health unle- to healthier lifestyle was that of a trigger. I think it. I think it was. I think you know even mentioned to some one time that i want to try to get drunk when us fourteen and jank moms cara pheno one and didn't like the way i felt i felt out of control and i think that sense of not being in control of my immediate environment and i wouldn't say i'm a control freak but i needed to be common working properly and audley at the sense of order i think that comes from growing up in the chaos of alcoholic appearance at home and my mom was a party animal. She was functional alcoholics. She could party all night and go to work the next day in absolutely fine my father however party will not and he wouldn't work for six months and that was you know he'd worked for six months and then not work for six months to a year or two years so we grew up with that sort of chaotic and then my parents got divorced because my mother said she had four kids anita fifth one. My father married. Somebody was crazy as he was. You know do things like pour petrol over my stepmother and threatened sitter a lot this crazy stuff that chaos does makes you want to live an ordinary that the thing. That really got to me when i was a kid. My mom had this medical encyclopedia. And i would pour over at the age of four hundred. All these gory. Pictures of people as innocent large thyroid landed was like the size of pumpkin and the knicks and these open ruins and at sit there and cringes kind of not. Wanna look at them. But it's fasten. The human body fascinated me from a very early age. My mom was kind of forward thinking as much as she was a party animal. She told us we couldn't chew gum or drink. Physical because our brains would fry and and we went lottery comic books either. So i had the sense of trying to do the right thing I think it also grows up with you know you grow up with a parent. That's a bit narcissistic. i think. Alcoholism in a sense is a narcissistic habit. Because you just carrying about a million myself. And i'm trying to numb my pain. You know not thinking about the responsibilities of life you know growing up with it. I had the saints. That i wanted to please my mom and do the right thing so i was considered the goody. Two shoes in the family just always trying to do the right thing in an nfl had to take it back to pregnancy was a need to just have off in my life Feel like yeah. Things went as chaotic. As they've seen. We moved a lot as kids. You know doing a geographic alcoholic. Parents do that things. Don't work you just move somewhere else. Yeah i've i've come across two different reactions when people have Parents they are do what she did. And react against the kale. Some won't control an order in their life all they they tend to say well. You know sin family. I'm bound to be that as well and then kinda give up unsolved drinking as well so Is that been your experience as well. Do you think people tend to go. A different one of two was party. Animal ended in two brothers. That partied hard. I mean they crashed a few calls when they were aided. And that god they've grown up and grown out of it and They've so but very working my two brothers especially very sober and very hard working And and i just think. I think what you you learn the learned behavior sydney. I look at myself is it. I may not have been addicted to alcohol. But as very addicted to sugar so ahead addictive side to me that anita to the sugar made me feel good in that space. So i suppose in a sense. I was doing much what people do with alcohol when us feeling unhappy or was feeling sad or on feeling like a done something. Well i would reward myself or console myself with suga whether it was fragile candy or cake. So is scream. It didn't really matter how much as i said. Even propane sugar staying out of the sugar bowl. As i got older. I became health conscious. South for made fudgy using brown sugar. That was really good. But you're that that that needs that sense of of you don't you you know parents at properly as if you growing up in an alcoholic home so you learn. The navy is that that it's a k. To satisfy yourself for full let need with a something in a with some people it could be gambling. All pornography will with made was shook end and food as a compulsive overeater. And the only reason we're glad clinically obese of always been physically active and and if i was not eating properly and exercising. I wouldn't ever sleep. I would. And i think that looking at having dealt with so many people in our family and with people have met of the years that alcohol sometimes puts people to sleep just eventually knocks you out so eventually do sleep when you're very active brain not taught how to look off draw brain. How what does alcohol do to bring. What is caffeine due to the brain so one minute drinking coffee over here and then that's like over stimulating central noticing. Make all your nerve cells five. Ab rapidly and then you'd having alcohol too. Because that's a natural depressant than you take the to calm you down and put you to sleep and then you wake up the next morning and you hung oversee start with the coffee again in the brain goes into overdrive. Then you would lots of sugar into the coffee. So you just getting on this treadmill and i think i think if we were taught the staff about how everybody body reacted to sit and things from when we were kids. Part of the reason assorted school is that we would understand how our body worked and figure stuff out pretty soon and make good choices. But that's me probably being idealistic as well if you were talking to someone. That was drinking super too much. They weren't really aware of what it was doing to that office. That brains. what what would you tell them. How would you summarize the home that it does to us. Gee i'm the first thing we know. Is it really damages the central nervous system in the brain. And we've now these quite a lot of research showing that parkinson's disease which michael j. fox got a really young age and he has a. He was a big drinker. Huge drinker everything. I've read on him. The alcohol played a big role in. He's laughing was younger. That can damage your central nervous system. and it doesn't do it alone. Units alcohol and sugar and bed diets and bed living but alcohol plays a huge role in that. It really affects a whole lot of things affect your central nervous system in your brain so you don't handle stress well and lacewell you handle stress. The more you're going to drink because it numbs you. Eugenic feel you can just numb yourself. you stop feeling in dozen courage assistant behavior because it becomes all about my feelings and my stress and my money to numb in. I mean we all know this. We would go without food in a hassle appearance drink and i've seen it in other families. The mother a single mumble drink because she's lonely or because she feels a failure whatever. Her reasons are and there'll be no food in the fridge. Another normal alcoholic friggin. Look on his nets moke in there in a piece of cheese. And that's about it if you lackey Most just don't have food in them. And i know as kids if they was cheese enough ridge. We would flatness in like half an hour because he's a no win. The food was going come which didn't help but encourage things like a compulsive over eating so a central nervous system and that's the one side the other side that in a fix and impacts really badly as the indicating system and that's a system that controls every single part of the buddy janice it controls your liver your lungs your kidneys digestive tract your muscle tone. You sleep your menstrual cycles. Your facility these nothing. It's not in your breathing. Your lung function your hair. Growth your nails. You'll skin it it. It affects every single part. The endocrine system produces hormones in different parts of the body in those hormones may chemical reactions take place which makes the body function properly. Have alcohol's interfering with it function because what it does is it actually pushes your blood sugar up really really high so you feel like good on alcohol woo and then your blood sugar over produces your body produces over produces insulin. 'cause you're about to go into a diabetic coma and in your body's designed to repeat itself over produces the insulin brings it all the way back down and as it starts to slide mcdonagh feeling really tired immaculate and sleep and pass out if it gets really bad And then you you. You might have something like coffee or tea or another drink to try and raise your blood sugar again so when you blood. Sugar fluctuates fitting brain and central nervous. System your endocrine system and your immune system and you can understand the not explaining this very well with the whole covid. Nineteen they send. People are drinking and having caught accidents but alcohol suppresses immune function. That's what it does. So the government instead of educating everybody in showing us adverts over and over which i think would help better than just locking everybody down and telling you you know these content touch alcohol reagan so ridiculous. You can't buy alcohol during the on the weekend so everybody's just by way more so every restaurant selling wine under the counter to the clients you know because they can't make money selling food during lockdown. It was bizarre to see the activities that going on at the end of the day understood. Exactly what it does. And how it suppresses immune function we must take these things a little bit more seriously than being wrecked on the knuckles suck educate people that teach them the stuff so i think other thing that it does and this is fascinating. Refined sugar does exactly the same thing is alcohol does just desert loose something called reactive hopper blah seamier. Which when the blood sugar shoots up to high we over produce insulin and brings it right down so down so far down your blood sugar that the part of the brain your frontal lobe that controls moral behavior planning and forethought will just shuts down completely. Okay and the part of the brain that takes over as part of the brain that controls aggression appetite and sexual function. And i think this is probably really important to help people understand these blackouts that they have so you can have a blackout but you not passed out you just living life. I mean. I know a girl that poured wax all over yourself. Hot wax in that state couldn't remember how she got burned from this x. She took all our clothes often. Did this is absurdity. Because the people that were they told her what she does. She could not believe she did something like that. I had a woman that came and spoke to me. Because i was when i speak often speak about the stuff because it played such a role in my life and how important it is to make. Sure you're getting the right kind of glucose about in a while. And she came up to me after she said. I'm embarrassed to raise my hand and tell you what i do but cannot speak to you privately. Acid short can understand when she told me the story. She said i'm going to tell you. I'm very very committed. Christian person go to church regularly. my husband's actually involved in the leadership of the church. We go to bible study on wednesday nights. We go to between one and three services and the sunday we we're involved in the charitable work and stuff but she says periodically. I wake up in another town or another suburb in strange man's bid. And i have no recollection of how i got the and i say to you consume and she said. Nah don't i said are you a sugar addict. And she said yes osama title sugar addict and it does the brain. What alcohol does we. You just black out completely. Obviously you've got to be extreme amounts of sugar to do this but alcohol does the same thing you drink. Extreme amounts you'd binge drink and the knicks thing you wake up and you in somebody else's bid and like how the hell did you get in the shame of all of this is worse than you start drinking again and this whole thing goes on so what happens is when the primitive brain takes over. You either going to get aggressive. You're going to just eat and eat and eat canoe appetites. Just nothing's gonna be enough or you. Could your sexual function could take over. And you become extremely promiscuous and that's clearly very dangerous because besides possibility of fathering all mothering a child you could end up with terrible sexual diseases. So it's it's a huge problem and people don't know this until somebody like me comes and tells him and nobody studies this. Because you take the average psychologist or psychiatrist. Dr they studying medicine and how to cheat you when you sick with medicine and surgery than looking. And what is the cause of all these problems and vivian often. It's a physiological or physical course an and utrition is something that's kind of just ignored and net. That study was done with reactive. Hoppy glycemic was done by women. Called baba read stood. She lived in the united states and operated in stable municipal area and she was in charge of the juvenile delinquent and criminal juvenile delinquent and the prisoners. The adult prisoners in the end the juvenile delinquents and she found that of them something like ninety three percent of the people that she'd work with suffered from this reactive hypoglycemia and in that state of blacked out. Where you can't remember what went on people will kill the family. They'll the children we ask you. Yeah then they will beat somebody into coma they'll be do the most. They'll they'll commit a crime. And they have no recollection of course when you committing crimes being something people like as easy to say you lost your mind and you can't remember but it's an actual condition where you had no recollection of went on. It's completely blacked out. You listening to reply to alcohol. The podcast from world without one if eat lights join our tribe. Please check out website. That wine don't cold so yeah. Apparently those many people in child but have done that have a blackout killed somebody. You cannot in jail recollection too. Many people in jail i mean. Can you imagine Horrendous but blackouts very common in all community. We talk about the loss of people have blackouts. I used to have the have them as well Boston is like all it was a walking talking blackout because I was with some friends for afternoon. And apparently i seem quite normal. You know i was walking around talking. We'd walk quite a long way together. I have no recollection. I mean we'd been drinking since frightful Drink but i. It just hit me over the edge. I lost an entire. And you know i used to have blackouts where the end of the evening was a bit fuzzy Quite remember how it may be. But this one was really serious Hated the idea thought woking talking blackout the fat my brain was so alcoholic couldn't even make memories nazi Absolutely terrifying and here's the thing that people don't understand is that you'll cells and your buddy a designed to consume glucose. Nothing works in your in your at salable. You got thirty seven trillion cells in your body. They desperately need glucose they needed to make. Atp a denison triphosphate which is what creates energy your monaco andrea desperately. Need that your every little organ nelio in the plasma critical in these tiny little things inside the cell that you can't even see with your naked eye it needs glucose your brain and central system can't work without glucose and if you're not getting enough you going to crave alcohol or sugar and barbara read stood say we knew feed children refined sugar growing up on any level. She said you're actually preparing them for alcoholism because they get into the cycle. The blood sugar going up and it's coming down and they feel that the sugar satisfies and then you you graduate from a kid to adolescence or young young person in your twenties wait sitting stuffing faced with ice cream and chocolate says locked kind of interdict so will have a drink and it does. What sugar to to you. And now you recognize that. Except that the alcohol gives you even a bit of feeling takes you higher disrupts you lower so if we understood that we need need proper glucose for body's natural glucose and and so often when i've done a talk i actually say to the audience and i remember reading this one year at a secrets convention at sun city outside johannesburg. The were probably five hundred people Woman and i said to them. Okay if you do any of you crave sugar and they've just everybody put the hand and i said when you craving sugar. What is it that you put into your mouth. What is it you put. And what is it that you actually craving an attempt to get the point across. Imagine yourself in the garden of eden and you craving something sweet. What would you eat. And there was a stately silence and this woman blonde voluptuous woman sitting in the front rows in this deep voice. Adam evan rumor osc that christian. I'm thinking this woman. It was really funny at the time. But it's just interesting because i've often christian in los angeles of austin in the republic of hot bay of austin zimbabwe of austin the uk. Austin all over the

KNBR The Sports Leader
"hoppy" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader
"The first team radio studios Hoppy Kercheval with Brad. How so? Brad? What's ahead in the Orange Bowl tonight between Texas A and M and North Carolina hoppy? I think there's two key questions coming into this tonight. Texas A and M just left out of the college football playoff. Is that a disappointment? You get a flat effort today? Or does that serve his motivation for the Aggies on the North Carolina side? How do they handle all of the op out a bunch of their offensive weapons side? Line for tonight. How to the Tar Heels overcome that. Now, let's get back to our game in the fourth quarter of the Outback Bowl here again, Bill Roth and hands Olson All right, Hoppy and Brad. Thank you. And the score here is almost 20, Indiana six, But that is likely to change momentarily. Fourth quarter will begin with Indiana with the ball on the almost three yard line. Second and one. They've got a bunch of chances to bang this in, Aren't they? Hands? Just don't run power, really try to push it, Take it out of Jack's hands. Put it in your running back Sands, Stevie Scott or Sampson? James. Really try to push this ball. Give your offensive line the respect to let them push that interior second down and one on the three. Two tight ends for Indiana. They're gonna go wild Cat to start the fourth quarter. They bring started in quarterback takes the snap and takes it in touchdown. Indiana Hoosiers Go Wild Cat Touchdown. Indiana shows your offensive line the respect And while I can't give you that opportunity, because you know I'm firing off. I'm just gonna hit somebody in the mouth. We're gonna double team. You.

KNBR The Sports Leader
"hoppy" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader
"Short pass and step out of bounds and then kick it. Look it, throw the ball to the end zone. Let's see the line is the 32. On the right. Half smart corral calls for the ball takes the snap. They do throw it short right to the tight end Kelly. He steps out with one second left. They didn't get any yardage on that play, and now they're going to send the kicker in there. Lucky to get their foot down with the second half. There really are. They're lucky to get out of bounds of the second life. You know for me, I kick it about six seconds. Very little game. It's probably get anything. It'll be 3 to 5 yards to be His career long field goal. The previous long was 41 against Vanderbilt in 2019 seasons. 39 yard attempt for Luke Logan on the final play of the first half, one second left. Here's the snap kicks blocked by Indiana. And the return man feeling and then took in me. He could have run that back and his teammates are going. My goodness. Wow. Why would you take a knee? That's Michael McFadden, too. That's your junior stud. They were ready to run it back and ball popped into the air and I caught it. Let's see who blocked this field goal on the final play of the half. You hear the coaches yelling at Mica son? He could have run that one back. He could have. There was a nice lane off the left side and he's fast and he's experienced. Well, that is the end of the first half. With the score all Ms 13 and Indiana three. Coming up. Next will join Hoppy Kercheval and Brad House in the first team radio studio. This is the 2021 Outback Bowl. No guy wants to feel or look weak. That's why we don't ask for help. But being strong can be even tougher when you're dealing with a pandemic..

Solvable
Political Demonization is Solvable (again)
"A few years ago identified what you felt to be very deep problem in your country. can you describe what it is and how did you I recognize it? So actually goes back to well by data I nearly. Ninety, two there was a vote on Switzerland joining or not joining European commercial area or economic European. Economic. The and the Swiss refused that, and that was actually the starting point of an. Incredible career of a party called the Swiss People's Party. Here which is which happened to turn from really Conservative Party into a rather writing populist parties well and Chris blowhole. He's the leader, the the well-known like personality of this party. There's a saying that he get has tailor made suits, but which actually don't really faith on the shoulder. So he would pretend to be one of you know the people but actually a billionaire, he's super-rich one of the richest people in Switzerland. He runs this party anti finances this party mostly, and so that was basically the start of this career of the party. So the problem you identified is the problem. Of Swiss, populism you identified a particular event and it was the referendum on mass migration. Can you explain would what's the significance of referendums in Switzerland and why this one in particular effective the NFL pay came up with a will be called an popular initiative, which is a therapy democratic proposal to the Swiss people that we voted on, and that means that you a needs to collect one hundred, thousand signatures at on a specific hem nego text, which thin if it is accepted is being introduced into our Constitution. So such as some law, you know it's changing. Our Constitution. So the writing populist as well as other parties misused the tool today as a marketing tool for issues they come up with this at just right before elections. So they can compaign on a specific issue, but originally disrupt was given to minorities which would never be represented in parliament and through this initiative, they could introduce law and come up with issues which matter to them, and so that particular event was in February two, thousand fourteen voted on the so-called mass immigration initiative already from the name, you can see that it comes up, it brings up a certain framing and yes, pay wanted to. Limit the number of people coming to Switzerland in the free movement of people agreements that we have with the European Union Switzerland is not member of the your opinion, but we have but a treatise and visit they're just too many people come to Switzerland every year and they one. Yeah. By really close marching of fifty point three percent it was only twenty thousand votes which made a difference, and so you said to yourself, how do we stop this and then you went through a process of trying to think how how do we push back against this kind of language get the thing was we didn't actually. Themselves, in the country that we grew up in because we we saw Switzerland as a you know cosmopolitan international country, a open and so on and we nobody expected this to happen. It was like our brexit moment. You know we said, okay, that's not the country that we want to live in. We want to change this. We won't have a brighter future and the brighter vision for what Switzerland's can be, but the populist argument had already infected all the other parties in other words everybody began saying in Switzerland well, actually maybe it's true. Maybe they're too many people here. Maybe we need stronger borders maybe we need greater sovereignty. So how do you? How do you push back against that kind of? This change of social mood. Basically, what will be so is that we want to promote. Switzerland regarding the future we said Switzerland is the land of Opportunity of the twenty first century. We're not the kind of open air museum where nothing should ever change and that's also the country wants to live in in two thousand fifty. We've actually looking forward to the two thousand fifteen so in so you began reframing. The conversation but actually use you said to me earlier you you thought I about creating a political party and then you decided that wasn't the way to go. Right. So for us I mean, of course, we're super disappointed about all the other party if it just overtook the narration of the hoppy of there are too many people in our trains too many people renting apartments here I thought okay, we have to. Make a new party because we don't cannot identify with any other. We don't have a political home. But then we realized that the Indus was political system. It doesn't make sense to create a new party, but instead, we decided to create an over partisan movement. Actually goes against this tendency of polarization, but we wanted to unite the progressive liberal minds in this country, and also we wanted to link US somehow back to the tradition of eighteen, forty eight, which is the foundation of the liberal state of Switzerland, and we we introduced ourselves with our manifesto as children of eighteen, forty eight. So trying to link these liberal ideas back to the past. So they're part of Swiss history and they don't seem like some kind of foreign import no absolutely and even more it was a vedic patriotic but emancipated. Patriotic Understanding of where we come from the founding fathers of our country for deliverables in eighteen, forty eight, and we totally identified with their mindset of what it means to be a modern Switzerland.

Business Wars Daily
And Now For Dessert: Chocolate Beer!
"The pandemic has done strange things to America's Diet. We started stockpiling Spaghetti. O's frozen waffles became a thing again, and apparently we started drinking beer for dessert craft beer drinkers who want big flavor often choose hoppy IPA's but more recently. So called Pastry stoute's for dessert. Beers have become another. Fizzy favourite, rich, and decadent. They're made with flavors ranging from pumpkin spice to candied apples and Bloomberg reports. Their sales are up eight percent year over year ying-ling. America's oldest brewery is on trend. The beer makers teamed up with another Pennsylvania icon to make gangling Hershey's chocolate porter. The dark beer was such a hit at bars and restaurants last fall that the company is. Rolled it out in bottles this year Yuengling two hundred year old dark brewed porter is infused with Hershey's cocoa chocolate Syrup and chocolate nibs bruise and they're not the only company putting a sweet twist on their bubbly bruce a much newer player on the beer scene is giving trader. Joe's some sweet treats for the Beer Aisle Hollywood park craft brewery has recreated the. Flavors of TJ's popular speculation cookie butter spread in beer form. The grocers cookie butter spread has developed a bit of a cult following people actually buy it at TJ's and resell it online. The beer version is made with Hoven Ella, beans, milk sugar, and toasted coconut in review the website pop sugar declared that speculative cookie butter beer quote tastes like Christmas in a bottle. TJ's has also worked with another brewer to develop a coffee peanut butter cup porter, which is a dark beer brewed with chocolate malt coffee and peanut butter powder. Perfect for those who want to drink their after dinner traits. If you have a sweet tooth, these seasonal libations may be welcome news but pastry stoute's and desert beers differ from more mass market brews in another way crack open corona or Heineken, and the alcohol content is about five percent alcohol by volume or a B.. Desert Beers are upwards of eight percent a b a pint of cookie butter beer has nearly double the alcohol content of your regular glass of Suds. That's because the sweet beers are made with more sugar with. VERTU, to alcohol during the brewing process. So imbibers beware these beers pack a punch and the calorie count isn't going to help your six pack either as we head into fall in the holiday season celebrating with Desert Beers can give you a sweet treat and warm buzz and glass or bottle. The bad news is that they make that fourteen fifteen. Stick around a little longer and.

Take it or Leave it
Hasbro Troll dolls almost broke the internet
"Figured we talk about a couple of stories because I've gotten I have gotten questions about both of these topics, email to me and message to me. So we ran a story over unfiltered free parents last week about the Hasbro troll doll. Did you see this tiffany? Yes, I did. Okay. So this troll doll, which is based on the character poppy. Basically it it has a button on the belly where the belly button would be, and it sings and it has like ten different phrases and sings different songs and then what parents noticed was when they opened up the doll box and they looked at the doll, there is a second button betwixt poppies legs in the. Spot and when you push it, she squeals and giggles. And that is not noted on the box. That anywhere. hoppy has a special upside down mix up park button where she's giggles and squeals. But this mom just Jessica McManus started this petition online saying. This isn't appropriate for a lot of reasons. She started a petition on change dot org where she got well over two hundred, thousand signatures at this point she says, this troll doll is basically conditioning kids should we do a trigger warning trigger warning? D. Say. Those words that could be triggering to people in regards to abuse. Okay. Is that what you have to say I? Think I. Don't know if we're GONNA talk about it. We should at least put it like on the caption of the thing when we post it is all in Oh for the for the episode. Yeah. I thought you meant right this minute we'll. Yeah, it doesn't hurt. Okay. All right. Do it now to they'd call I didn't think that near correct. But what they're basically saying is this doll and the placement of this button and the sounds at the dollar makes when you touch the button. are conditioning our kids towards A. Pedophilia being okay with being touched or molested or pedophile pedophilia, and they're saying that that's okay and some parents on the other side of this or saying we're really were really reaching. This is such a canceled culture. This is such a this. This is such that, and then there are lots of parents that are saying, well, why are we putting a button in that spot? Anyway. Like what is the need for a child's toy for a button to be there? So I just thought we'd have a conversation about that. Well and from what I understand. There isn't an actual button correct me if I'm wrong. There isn't an actual button on the dolls stomach. Like there's no, it's inside. So you so her stomach is flat and you touch it. It's right. It's like a squeeze I, guess. Yeah. Whereas on the CROTCH. It's an actual protruding it is there is. There is a cut out. You can see the button it looks it's a circular button. That's exactly what it looks like that. You would rise and so that's my point is that why I don't know anyway so I was interested in what they had to say about it. They said, this feature was designed to react when the doll was seated, but we recognize the placement of the sensor may be perceived as an appropriate. Does like what does that mean like when you slam it down it goes When you sit down at does it like gasps and giggles? and. So. It begs a few questions for me personally number one I'd like to know how did it get through? So many marketing and production meetings that nobody was in the corner raising their hands saying hey. Quick. Question why are we putting a button on poly? What's her name Poppies Vagina like why are we doing like? Why would we put it? They're like why? If we want poppy to sing an extra song or doing extra giggle? Do we not put it on the hand? Are we not put like like you know what I'm saying like there was nobody in any one of these because you have to think. I don't know much about big business but what I can tell you. Is that there had to have been how many marketing and production meetings and prototypes built of poppy prior to going to production and being in the local Walmart and target Right. There have to. There's no way because I I just know how many times I have to get a sample of t-shirt when I'm just printing my own t shirts where I'm like, you know what I don't like I don't like the way the t looks there. I don't like the this or that, and you play with it and you go back and forth how many meetings did they have? Where people were sitting around a table and looking at a prototype and think note the vagina that's where the button should be, and even if it was for sitting how often in reality are you actually like sitting? Adul- down I'm trying to think like I feel like when my kid plays with dolls, they're standing and just be beep and then thrown like it's never like. Seated so much that there needs to be or it would make sense. It would make sense if it was one of those, like, do you remember the dolls that the ones that you feed the Plato or the bottle with, and then you sit them on the toilet? That makes sense to see to have a seated position for the doll because I have I have taken a bunch of Plato out of out of that dolls. But before because what was it baby alive? That's stupid. Baby alive was you'd feed it Sophia would feed it. There was little plato things where you could make it look like peas or carrots or baby food or whatever, and then it would eventually make. Its way into the diaper but mostly, I was just pulling plato out of dolls but right. But it would sit on a potty and you could make p you'd push its belly and the P. would come out. Yes. So that would make sense for a seated thing.
![[AI Futures] Steps Towards International AI Governance - with Futurist David Wood](https://storageaudiobursts.azureedge.net/site/images/stationIcons/14752.png)
Artificial Intelligence in Industry
[AI Futures] Steps Towards International AI Governance - with Futurist David Wood
"So David where I thought we'd start off here is around this broad topic of the governance of artificial intelligence I. think that there's concerns about the near-term around security privacy. There's longer term concerns about becoming more powerful people are thinking about should there be just regional surveys of governing technologies or or is it prudent to really think about global governance GM stance or way that you like to frame that problem? I'm all in favor of some local experimentation I. Think it's appropriate to have some things out to not obvious in advance that we can. Off. The Bat first time get a complete system of regulation. Correct. So I'm in favor of different parts of the globe whether it's the EU whether it's America whether it's China experimenting with a view to. Seeing which rules make more sense which rules viable. However, it has to be a stepping stone to watson envisioned global agreement because people will not surely be loath to commit themselves to that restrictions nationally locally if they perceive thought competition is going to be able to walk without these restrictions and get potential advantage. So we have to move into coast to international agreements to. Many people people are. Fearful of the any prospect of global government they feel that it's going to be d'italia -tarian or inch to wants the. Taliban. But what I will say is that we already have examples of global governance of various things. We have a sports organizations which managed to reach agreement on how the soccer football. World Cup is played. The Olympics Organization makes lots of agreements even though the constituent. Nations have lots of different political viewpoints and lots of different makeup. So there are examples of how useful agreements can be reached even between the ideological opponents. That's what we have to build on. I. Like the idea of local experimentation. It does indeed feel very hard to take a directly to the top okay world. Here's the page we're going to be on in terms of how data's treated or what is allowed to do or not allowed to do that Cetera. How do you see that playing out in terms of? Relative, near-term thinking about obviously the EU is they have their GDP are rules that are coming out. You see new sort of waves of these rules emerging in different countries than some observation by the global community as to how are they shaking out their implications for private sector innovation whether implications for human rights where implications elsewhere and then being able to use those as the experiments to build something more global. Exactly, right and the GDP aw in the EU is very important case point most people of mixed views about the actual implementation we often think, wow, this is clunky. This is A. This is poorly done on the the hind. We have sympathy towards what the rules are trying to do, and we say, yes, it is appropriate. Thought is the right to have an explanation. It's appropriate for people to understand how the data's being used and so on. So we can see that the intent is Goud. If maybe not. One hundred percent in agreement, but it's a starting point, but it is not something that's done once and then finished on the contrary. It's part of what should be an ongoing sequence my lendings in the Business World I spent twenty five years in the mobile technology and smartphones industry that was an industry in which there was a great deal of rapid change, their surprises of a new entrance of disappointments of things going wrong and. Then things going overwhelmingly right. My key lesson from all of that is the importance of agility the flexibility. Of course, you can set the overall long term direction, but you must stay get to that overall target in stages interim as moll steps, a new must be ready to your plan based on what you have lent in what new things become clear that were less clear L. ear on that face so we will get their stage-by-stage. I think politics the world of politics often seems almost like a domain were that innovation where in the private sector let's say is rampant stood to be the only game town isn't the only real game in town in politics to some degree because experimenting with fifty counties in Wisconsin, about how we're going to manage healthcare bills is really hard to do and seems somewhat viable as opposed to. Some big change for the whole state of the whole country and it just Kinda. Gets rolled out. Is there a way to sort foster a greater degree of this experimentation because it feels like at least historically, there have been limits to seeing politics as part of this iteration learning it's more of just clunking inevitability. It's not seen as maybe the global community is not look to aggregate policy as a way for us all to learn for us all to move forward. So ready to encourage that mindset in that learning like you saw in the private sector. One problem with politics is people really like to admit that they will wrong stu really like to have something a defied with them as being a failure whereas in business more people are willing to shrug and say, yes, dot to didn't walk as I expected and you know what analogy I'm wiser. And Business we talk about failing smart failing fast and feeling forward and it sounds like buzzwords. But all three of these things means something particular failing forward in particular means that you don't try and move on quickly and did deny the you ever were associated with such an experiment you say, well, here's what you've learned from it and you use that as a starting point for the next round of experiments but they politicians like to present themselves and we often as voters like to see all politicians is A. Superhuman Infallible Vegas and we need to have a much more human understanding of how politics works. So that's one thing that will help. A second thing that will help is more of a coalition that mentality rather than two different groups WanNa. The right and the other the laughed the Republicans at the Democrats or whatever politics is in my view much healthier when there are multiple different parties involved and where it's quite easy for people to move from one party to another as their owner. Viewpoint changes evolves over the time. So sadly, when two different blocks very adversarial. Limits the ability to have more meaningful and useful discussion. It pushes into their role in mental state as well. It puts into this tribal frame in which we often don't want to say something we think is true because it might be embarrassing for offsides. So instead, we latch onto something that makes the other side look stupid even though we may not fully believe it. So it's a very bad way of having a proper. Discussion. So sometimes I talk about we need more than just democracy. We need a super democracy. We need to learn how to have these discussions in a way that We're happy to admit that we've been wrong with hoppy to admit we've changed our mind after all to court the Economist John Maynard Keynes though he may not actually have said this when the exchange I changed my mind, the

Skimm'd from The Couch
Carmen Rita Wong, author, host, and financial expert
"Hey everyone. The show might sound a bit different today because we're skimming from three different couches, the skin is still working from home for the time being because of covid nineteen today we are very excited. Carmen reader Wong joins us on skimmed from the couch. She is the founder and CEO of Malakand productions. She's also an author and the former host and Co creator of on the money on CNBC she spent years as a personal finance expert for NBC CBS. And CNN and she's written for publications including Glamour. Latina essence and good housekeeping, and in a very big full circle moment she was also carly's boss. At one point Carmen, we are very excited to talk to you. Welcome your skin from the couch, also good to be with you guys. This is very full circle for me. My very first job right out of college was as a production assistant at CNBC for new show called on the money, and I was there for about two weeks when I think somebody jobs one day, somebody came to me in. They're like you actually your job titles changing. Carmen's personal assistant. Good luck. To check. Back and like go theater sheets, anything for lunch very quickly currently under her wing, and it's amazing that we are still in touch today. I'm so excited to have you here. I'm so excited to be here. Those were the days right. Oh my gosh of you sitting just off the camera when we're on the set. general. I still high. You take all your your hamburger, your water your coffee. I got down hot and it's. Certainly was not divis- at all because it was one of those things where I was working as we'll talk. I'm like jumping ahead like twenty. Our date I mean nonstop seven days a week so carleen literally keeping me alive. We're GONNA get into all of this, but I will say you are one of the hardest working people I have ever known so I. Am very excited to share your story, so we're going to start with the question. We like to ask everybody. Which is Skim your resume? Gone how about this I don't have a resume. Here really I mean not that I don't think I have one. State, but like you've had one at different times you. Working for myself fifteen year whatever many years it was, so I haven't had to pull one together in more than a decade. You become a bio Danielle you did. You did a great introduction in so many things I've been a magazine editor, a TV host and writer and producer and a faculty professor author I'm Working Fifth Book. I'm an investor in women led companies, and I am a board member for some big nonprofits, which I love that work to so all of it. What something that isn't in the bio and we can't Google about you that people should know oh girl. You think I'm GonNa tell you that. Google. Wade Carly anything you know you did not read I think one thing that people like maybe John. Know about us like you're I, mean. Maybe they're hearing now, but you are very funny like you're very good sense of humor, and you're very good under pressure. Thank you yeah I'm freaking rock under pressure, but that doesn't mean I mean. You may not see what's happening inside, but yeah, I'm a goofball can't google at I mean there's some pretty funny pictures of me. Still shots that people take if you google made them. That's the one thing that going forward. It'd be nice to show people more, but as people who do know me like. Carly knows me off camera. Yeah, I'm a goofball. You are all right. We're GONNA get into this. This which if we talk about people's Childhood in? Toss how you grew up, but I think you are very. Guests were like your childhood is really really important to get into and kind of the family dynamic. You grew up with and how that folded over time and you're somebody who learned a lot about your family. As you got older, so I want to let you can share your story. I will just start off by saying you were born in New, York and then West. Those uptown Manhattan. I was I, actually did a story on the moth. Right, which is on the podcast as well a bit about what you alluded to there about finding out only last year that I have no idea who my father is, so that's a whole thing, but I grew up with two fathers. Up with the father named after hoppy Wong, and then I grew up with my stepfather, had a very very strong mother Dominican mother, who emigrated when she was fifteen, and we lived in Uptown Manhattan, and my brother, and my older brother, and I were the walls, but she eventually divorced, and we moved to New Hampshire. And that was a real shock for us a very big culture shock

Talking Tech
Interview With Javier Mercedes About How He Uses Social Media Services
"A lot of people have our by to tweet. They might do a facebook. FACEBOOK post, or they might just do it. All and I was really interested in talking to somebody. Who Does it all from podcasting blogging? Flocking Patriot on going live you name it. Harvey Mercedes is here with us from Austin and heavier. Does it all tell everybody about yourself up here I? My main platform is youtube I'm a video tech to`real youtuber and a gear reviewer on Youtube so. If you were to symbol across a lot of my content, it centers around filmmaking video podcasting and. Just gear reviews and other things of that nature teaching people how to make better videos and better video podcasts. But I, think you found that just putting in video up is not enough, and you've got to let people know, and it sounds like you work every other avenue to get the word out correct. This is true you can have the best content and word of mouth is great, but it's half the battle and I would say almost seventy five percent of the battle is marketing in order to do that effectively. You have to be on all those channels. How often do you blog? For the most part it's exactly whenever I was coming out with PODCASTS I try and have. one particular topic or guests that I'm talking to a week, and then distilling down the things that I learned in terms of that podcast and creating the micro content around that of all the obviously the whole goal of everything you're doing is to drive traffic to Youtube, so which vehicle is generally the most effective for for found a multiple Avenues in each one at right now I've been doing this for about two and a half years to three years like all in In terms of growing youtube channel, and knowing what it means to be a content creator online. And I think. What I've learned is that some ways are better than others. There's other there's some episodes. Save for my podcast. That will do amazing on facebook. Because of a specific kind of highlight reel that I made I interviewed to Olympia Nhs in for some reason. I made a highlight reel of those Olympians doing saying some amazing stuff, but then also put it with some roll of them, actually doing their thing, and it was shared out by a whole bunch of people in facebook drove a lot of traffic from that The other example that I just said was seventy. Five hard is specifically linked to my own website, so that's driving traffic into. Everything that I'm doing on my website. Heavier was I know there's so many places where people can find you. Let's give him one so if they want to read more about you, it's heavier Mercedes. Dot Com! Yeah, yeah, just, or you can look Havi, Mercedes. That's J. A.. V. E. R. Mercedes just like the car on Youtube If you have any questions for me, find me on twitter at Jefferson Graham and I think it's at hobby are Mercedes on twitter correct on all the social places. It's hoppy Mercedes X..

On The Ledge
Clivias
"If you're not familiar with Clavier mini-armada this is a wonderful species. That's native to Southern Africa and their members of the Amer relived. Aca family. That's the Lilly family with strap. Like leaves and Gorgeous. Lily like flowers that are usually orange but come in a radio collar three to read rusty reg yellow. And there's also some with variegated leaves for you variation fans out there and as to the clavier debate. Well they were named after lady Clive. Who was the granddaughter of Robert Clive and Clive of India? So I guess officially it should be Clavier but Steve from implant center and I both ATV so. You're just going to have to deal with that if you happen. To be a proponent of Clavier Steve Hickman is part of a family run. Nursery called the whole implant center in South Yorkshire in the UK and this interview was recorded before lockdown happen so there may be some references to flower shows which normally at this time of year. Steve would be attending with his plants. But of course that's all been curtailed for the moment but that just put it into context as to why that might be mentioned in this episode. Now Steve as well as being an expert and one of the premier breeders of clears in the UK. He's also an expert breeder of Agatha this to bake and narrowings so didn't check out their website something for the Garden Dot Co dot UK which is got loads of information on growing all of these plans including clears and really is a great resource. I'll put some inks in the show notes so you can take a look at that over to Steve to kick us off with some fron tastic useful information about growing these beautiful flooring house plants and he starts buying explaining exactly what court about clears in the first place where first of all we started and we still do A. I'm a few years ago. They outcomes has changed families into Morella. Deysi which covers the cliff is is not to go into the May. Tens of this society amid other girl was principally a guy called Mike Jeans who was then national collection holder and from talking with him and saying the clippers and the fantastic amount to call us. That are available now. Such as Reds Brahms's yellows petits Greens and pinks and from tastic by colours. It really attracted me. I The ship of the leaves like some shape. It's exactly like the ACA pompous impressive with not in flower because of the array of different flower. Colours just fantastic just mind blowing. Libya's went out saying for a long time. Steve Do you think they coming back in fashion? It's a traditional Victorian plot. You say parents and grandparents used to have them up. They used to have they asked pedestrians manly the vote in the oranges and occasionally the yellows but these days like I say these different colors our community the ball and what we're doing to encourage people to start growing With exhibiting clippers at The larger richest flower shows which is Chelsea Chatsworth. Where LAST YEAR? We did it for the first time in the Pavilion Chelsea and we at to get the gold medal along with the pumped exhibits as well so people say all these new fantastic colors for the first time and people with play Orange One Sort of increase in the collections. I think we are always going to be suckers for all those new and interesting plants safe more generally. What are the basic catastrophically? These I think quite tough floods are they. You have Roy of an easy to grow so stopped up in February. If you've clavier in a container they only liked to be repoted every now and again just like yoga from the same family. The lie of the rose to become jested so once. You've you plant in. Say six to eight inch. Container is happy for three. Maybe four years in that same content. Now let style February you start watering the clavier once a week or once a four not just keep it moist but you do start to feed the clear. Once every two weeks and the reason he stopped feeding now become apparent. Sort of later on you do this. Roy through the season about September. Now if you've never wall broom the clavier will start to flower. Send the flower up through the leaves early January February even a little bit early. If it's a really warm room if you keep it nice and cool which we try and do the flower. Later in the season surrender may June time. So You keep watering you. Enjoy the flower ridden. If you pollinate the flowers with a cotton bud In the morning or evening you get seedpods form in which I'll talk about lead but the most important thing to keep flowering every year is the do like a cold spell so when the danger cross gone sort of June two you can take it outside onto the shade of a tree or a shady part of your Patio Conservatory and leave it there while end of walk. Tober bring it in. Just before the frost or alternatively you can keep it in your house while the September implicit outside September October so it gets not Eight to ten week chill sets the board in the base of the plant for flower in the following spring. Now you can't live is fairly dry over winter. So December January you keep it on the dry side not bone dry but dry. That's the rest in period And brings you into February. You start watering and keeping it moist you feed once a fortnight the fade then brings the flower up through the leaves and the flowers normally just held above the leaves. If you don't say it correctly the flower often stays in the central Rosette delays. And you don't really see it so the cold spell. In the autumn. The dry over interest impaired undefeated wants all night. It keeps you plumbed health and on the issue of fertilizer. What what do you recommend Of The freeway recommend Is is sort of general feed but we have especially speed that we use we do. It is available on our website and the flower shows a mouse. Eighteen twelve eighteen. It's not jim loaf law phosphates and high potash dot keet plums hoppy right the way

Inside VOICE
Bringing Voice to British Gas with Diana Mundo & Laura Celada
"Was an eight week project where you went from discovery all the way to a live action and I know there was a lot of research involved as well as great collaboration and love to start with you Laura. Can you tell us why you came to Diana and her team? What was the problem that you were trying to solve? So everything is started. We Oklahoma we have we saw talk about the importance of north technology. That is happening a gross old along with before an old. Is this actually going to try IT We're told that a company. We need to be eating up the the market. And when I it's okay honey. No so that's why we tied aid remind to do something with boys. How come you like basically make school combined most ignored we still being heating issue? And that's why we rely so they were no boy. The pro blend that could be easily so by customer without the need Huntingdon near so. That's why would go okay. How did he great Anakin Lula assists done? That had got the message. Hold them. We'll come on each is without the need for funding Guinea Benito coining on waiting for like x number of minutes. Dessie joining any air to arrive on that. Why we tell okay we need. I could partner to the That's why we go talk to me. And probably Sapien The Anna on the web every collaborative from them I mean at one. They were very adine. Beverly I'm have been like a schoolgirl. Amazing mom point of view. Yeah and Diana as you had said it took you eight weeks. I would love for us to kind of go through this entire process for people to understand how it works and I know it started a lot with the research you did and then kind of creating a strategy. So can you take us from kind of week one through week AIDS? What you all did yes. Sure Solo Project Larson. It was a little bit crazy. You know going from absolutely nothing all the way to live action show when we started. We kicked off the project with a big team We had Actually developed her. Ania copyrights there with Toby and Stamler people from British styled as well and it was committed people in Google for the first brain We kind of got altogether all got to know each other. We have one of the boiler engineers we make sure but we were Working kind of in the right direction and solving the right problem. So basically the way we worked throughout The whole project was guided by Beta We had a program where they had engineers from the other side of the phone. Healthy people so Problem supporters so basic problems like turning the polar on enough again That people can do comedy easy and wait for an engineer to my Dean. You wake up one day seven in the morning and your house is freezing. Realize there's no hidden there is no hot water. It's just awful. If you have something upon that will help you saw the property or life will be so much better than waiting for today's needs to come so that was kinda premise of the work. We took theft role DOTS programme that they have on the phone We can finalize which word problems people were Hobby Morrison. We took those problems and we prayed it. Basic journeys based on flows from technical blows so we prayed as basic. You start tearing me healthy kind of do they stop with avoiders. We talked to the engineer. Health does kind of refined those journeys make sure everything was saying We started working on it like straight away. We knew how important would be to the research. All the time with this Especially with boys. You know it's even more important than ever to proper besides the users so we started thinking very early in the journey we create a prototype. We started testing has said really I think it was six rounds of testing three official once and three unofficial lunch and we always tested every test before we went out like always is supposed to be on week. Three we British cows employees and probably safe and employees We tested the prototype and Berman on. It came mutter of Ethan racing on that for specified so basically they corps the work they happy with the first three weeks and after that we focus on. May Era Handley Unhappy Batch. Everything we could to make the experience right. We passed it again. We you search with the recruitment of boys devices for user on. We tested this time. The second time tested we feed it with the actual developed option so our affair fashioning remark teachers were really really hard and they had a an action but were four weeks five more or less with the with real users and again by Liebau Yael User fessing unbelievable information we eat race it on the copy on the dialogue and everything that we were getting out from the users and then for the final ash around week seven we visited the exclusive really cool experience when to their boy nurse. Martha cut me a sport who they boiler academy on. We fish that we real volume so actually people were fixing boiler Scorpio. This time. He was in with paper. Going there at the beginning actually managed to fix them. That was really exciting. And the last week we just focus on tithing up again improving based on the research on. Yeah we win. Lie On the very last day of those leaks but relies on the lie. They actually live at the moment as well. I love that so you I mean you're really emphasizing the research and the data in the beginning and I like the you're testing throughout the week so correct you are wrong. It sounds like you're kind of doing a little bit and then testing doing a little bit then testing rather than creating this entire thing and testing it at the end. Would that be correct? Exactly yeah so we first they hoppy bus and we put them in a prototype and that was the first base. We changed things on with us that again. So to squeeze shakes research sessions in a big house the apiece every other week that we were best thing I know.

Latino Rebels Radio
The Latinx Political Leaders of... New Hampshire
"Bernie Sanders. Just crushed crushed. The Latino vote wasn't even close. Think right now I saw the data from Ucla even though the entrance polls had sanders at fifty one fifty two percent. There's data out there from Ucla that actually looks at actual caucus data caucus voting. That had senders over seventy percent in in field of a lot of candidates. Like I think it was like seventy one and eighteen for Biden Sanders ran away with it and it got me thinking when I came back. I had to share this conversation that I recorded during the New Hampshire primary with nine. That's right Latino and Latina leaders in New Hampshire and I thought you know what? Let me drop it right after Nevada especially now that sanders got such strong Latino support. Because I think this notion of White New Hampshire White Iowa and then we're waiting for the diverse voter in Nevada and then this is when the real contest begins. I kind of want to dispel that a little bit. Especially because once. You hear the voices of these people in New Hampshire. They are there and they care for their community and their politically engaged. So I hope this conversation could at least give some thought as to why maybe someone like Bernie. Sanders is having more appeal than usual with Latino Voters Latino voters across the country. So anyway this conversation was recorded. I believe two weeks ago. Yeah around then in Manchester New Hampshire before the New Hampshire presidential debate the democratic debate. So here it is. I am at a restaurant Mexican restaurant in Manchester caused. Anything gone and we're going to have a conversation about Latinos in New Hampshire. It's ridiculous the people that are around this table. They've kind of told me their story before when I'm let them tell my story to tell their story. Their stories are amazing. Everyone's like ordering hoppy those right now. There's chips and Salsa so anyway so that's what's happening at this restaurant in Manchester. Now this get get closer like a circle. Yeah we're good because I just think I only have one Mike so I'm GonNa make sure that everyone gets to say acknowledge. The person may be. Hi How are you? I'm so what I'm GonNa do I is. I'M GONNA go around each part of the room and I wanted to tell me who you are your connection to New Hampshire and anything that people need to know about you. That's like amazing. I already heard some stories. I WanNa get this on on record so I'm going to start with this fine. Like incredibly like Suave Mexican man. Who told me his story? Oh my God so I wanted to ask you your name. Your Connection New Hampshire what you do and then just tell me a little bit about your story so let me check your level here and okay. My name is Alejandra Ruth from Mexico. I came here thirty years. I went to the United States and twenty seven twenty years. I'm leaving in New Hampshire all the time because we live in Hudson and I even my most of my activity western Massachusetts. I got involved with a New Hampshire politics because I discovered there was white. Supremacy is we're coming to my town Hodson because they thought that Dot Colson. Welcome them because at that time There was Sabin cases of profiling by the police things that we need to do something about that. And then we speak up on the themes change and now we have a very good communication between the police. And the Latino Community Hudson saw. That is quite made me to be involved and I was very active on Mexico. When I was a young student at the university I was climb over the movement of the nine hundred sixty eight and then in some was forced to leave Mexico because by two attempts of innovation there and Soak night game from Spain to here so I said well I cannot be silent when I saw the Latinos and the people who have been leaving their countries because their governments failed to them and they were coming here to look for Better Life. Just thought these were not doing the support they supposed to to them. Wow Okay I need a moment with that story so I'M GONNA go over here. Thank you for sharing that. That's amazing I'm going to go over here. And you tell me. Your name your connection. You Hampshire what you do and tell me a little bit about yourself. So hold on. Let me check. So I'm Ali. Sandra Rodriguez Murray and I moved to Hampshire. When I was five from Miami I am currently a regional organizer in Manchester National with a group called rights and democracy and we organize our across a variety of issues. Having to do with health care the climate worker's rights but I also volunteer in my spare time with Org Psycho Sacha and I'm really passionate about immigration immigrant rights My mom is an immigrant from Iowa and I remember as a kid going the capital with her and her becoming a naturalized citizen and I have a lot of different immigration stories and statism my family. My Dad is actually his first generation from Scotland. So I just have different connections to the community but I even though I'm in New Hampshire and such a like white stay. I still feel like really connected to my Latino side like I've always been close to my family in Miami and we spoke Spanish at the house. And Yeah but I love growing up in the Hampshire. That's great all right. So this handsome young men over here to who told me his. He's looking all right. So tell me. Your name your connection New Hampshire and how you got here and what you do now so here we go three okay. My name is Sebastian windass. I came here in two thousand one raft in nine eleven and then You know I can't muster j. One foreign student I can't work for three months. I was supposed to leaf and decided to go back home. Because there's a better opportunity here For four years of the first four years of my life here in America was undocumented So I know exactly what people were. No paperwork go through I know everything about immigration system because experiencing myself and then in two thousand sixteen I became a US citizen in a kind of made a promise to my kids. You know a to get involved in now that have voice and I can say some speak up. I need to get more involved with my community. just got elected as a democratic delegate for the for on behalf of Bernie Sanders. We're excited with Carlos So you know. He's just just the fact that we're bringing Latino community. Which is a small Hampshire? You know to everybody's attention is something that I find really inspiring you know and I think there's more this more that we can do Just because I was I was a greener holder and then it doesn't mean that can get active community man. I'm I'm like being blown away by these stories and I still have two more stories to share and there's more people coming. There's actually more people coming here and I'm GonNa Talk to the man that organized all this conversation and he gets the present themselves so I'm looking straight at him You introduce yourself you tell me like how you got to New Hampshire and wow all right here we go. My name is many expedia. I am so a little bit about myself. I came to New Hampshire and twenty fifteen to work on the Hillary Campaign Vin working in politics since two thousand twelve with Obama's campaign But I came here as an organizer. I'm originally from California from Santana. California born raised Chicano but I After the primary decided to stay here loved it so much work for the mayor of Nashua worked for Senator One of the senators here and then eventually decided to run for office myself so I am one of two Latinos who are currently in the four hundred person state legislature and one of my goals is to hopefully get more let to run because we need deserve to have representation in our State House and we need to make sure our voices are heard there. So really proud to be here and really proud to hopefully get more More Latinos

TKO with Carl Frampton
Boxer Tommy Coyle Announces Retirement
"Well when you having a good start to the year a special announcement for two whole Coun- self joined by Tommy. COYLE could see my last time. I saw you you you in Campus Filial Vegas. You're off to New York based business. Fell food to you you you just off the back of the Gerry fight in New York and we had that impromptu shot which turned into quite an emotional one because obviously you were considering your future and if announced yet so that's GonNa be five six months ago. I now think of June July yes five months and you've got some news sweetie sort of prompted you to to make a decision. Yeah Ace. This is a tough call. But I've decided family trains manages. It's time to call it a day. What a phenomenal Korea? Korea achieve more than thought I would have. I exceeded my consensual. Absolutely you know I never very my wildest dreams thought I didn't find a Madison Square Garden so look over my shoulder and I'm content. I'm happy with my career bull. Well it's time to call a day. I always said I wanted to get out of the game with all my faculties intact and I'm going to stick to my poem is not so I'm going to given well. Congratulations on an amazing career but oversee this is probably my difficult vineyard done. In ten years I retired about four or five times in the last a six months and just announced today would start crying. I don't know he will know. I've cried no Fato you now. The Classic Moments Not GonNa lie of being that'd been docked to being twelfth being over because I don't worry tie little fight in love everything about all of the come opening Cameron louds physicality of Avenue. You know gain in there and I've been a little bit percents There's no way I fi- why and someone awards I've been involved in. He goes swimming. You get what you know. He's how many more wars have. Where do I draw the line? Do I have one war too. Many interesting I've achieved my mountaintop. I've known world champion The best fighter in the world book of our right good goal of made to talk caught. Memories are properly really. We're GONNA talk about some of your your best memories and best fights and stuff over the next so forty five minutes dish. You've come coming to the end of the year career as you know you can always have just one more fight but actually to draw the line and walk away before that one more fight becomes two more free more. Yeah yeah he's actually probably brave room. I get back in the ring. Yeah it's not money does get it right and when the right hammers to to get out and five very yes you have you look at examples of guys lead. Floyd mayweather obsolete aren't right Joe Calzaghe don't rate. There's not many more that the the difference like just getting out of boxing at the right time. We're not talking like levels of war. People are in the sport but very few fighters get it right and a problem with a lot of geysers they lose a fate and they will win an illusion and negotiates the win and I it just keeps going on and I think that's someone like Tommy Tommy Different Completely different character me. I'm enjoying boxing. At this point in time him but when I feel like a stand retire nor ten retire I will. We were joking about it. I was expecting Tomita shadows here today. I'll Albee hoppy when I sit down and do a Tko. Paul cost talking about my retirement. My career but Tommy's Amman wants to fake all the time and it was just m some fun not that I don't Wanna I love but I would enjoy. Enjoy the director. Yeah I think the thing is. I have a phenomenal business. I have a little business business of work harder and always been a believer that you console Dream Look like a nightmare. I'm health and wellbeing industry and out. How can I go out that promote health and wellbeing? If I've got my own and the way I fight he's no viable in the body the brain everybody knows aw. My eyesight is being affected. Douse the reason Jane more pulled me in the fire Jerry and I don't WanNA A. I considered the operation to fix vision. But that would be like you know in the Burn Hill and then Jim fire you and you know some day I don't want full live with this won't leave. I I really love it. I've hundreds of kids training gyms are WANNA stay in. I love it so I can Remain passionate by and do a good job of older kids that we work with when you mentioned about the either one nine the spring Simonis Mondays. Anthony go go. He was on the Undercard of Derry. Mathews if I'm right and he's been caught woefully short so early very very unfairly and I guess the one thing that when people look to you when this episode goes out in a in a couple of times that you have set the exit strategy up from. I'm a sport that so many tone we're gonNA hide featuring older Danny Williams this season at some point and sit down with him us into forties after an amazing career the sort of ended a decade and half ago and didn't perhaps because he didn't necessarily stop an exit strategy and didn't have maybe the education to realize that there are other things that you need to do off the boxing and I know that some of you were hard on we've been saying life off the boxing and you have to set it up early and Patchy think do I would take the base of Tommy and again I know where I'm at the stage of my career but my boxing at this point in time is capable of the time I'm not so I want to do and I think that I think in about the things that Tomlin's doing I want to replicate what he's doing in Belfast. And the thing that will give me something kept me out of bed in the morning and I wanna be people in the whole of Tommy and the people at the community level and the kids and their parents wants. He's doing such things. I would love to do that. And he got back with me to the Belfast. And Tommy of spoke about it and he's willing to help me and give me ideas ideas and stuff and Tommy's more business minded a May I January collaborate business. I don't have a plea but only learn can learn a bit from Tommy. The thing is I don't have a real clue about how business I'm visionary. I'm very very visual. And I've been very very fortunate. Now I've managed to get the right people on the spot on the point if people know while the boss government program. I've managed to get the right people on the books to help we achieve the division. And no it takes brains to one surround yourself with brains and I think that's where I've been smart. I realized it's a many years ago. Everybody has a shelf life and I knew I don't need I would say shelf life and I did starts applying for after after boxing because I made all wrong decisions. Growing good may or expelled from school from school. No Geez no real no real education. It's all really early and who's to say that I WANNA go engine Mama I would. I don't so I was mindful. The box rooms only gonna be for so long and I needed something want to stimulate my brain kiss. I don't think so probably from one. I put to something to to fall back on on family. Three children three boys a wife go to support them and box in for me as just been vehicle to go and do there's some great things in the community and some great things and my business at all about assume day and accounting. How many people are in my team? I don't say staffer team and my OAF is important because no saying I'm invincible. I play Vile Pot and the organization. They will rely on me for a salary will families. And when you it's a I've told you and you have a company you don't think about yourself I'm going to take everything's consideration consideration. That's why I've done for the last six. There's no why why have not jump to conclusion and tried to rush my decision full by law and hot of strategized about it and first and foremost my kids. Far too important island fought in watch to risk my health. I see the bigger picture you know. I'm going to wake up every day now instead of waking up and thinking right it's time to go to the gym. Grab grab I gotTA have breakfast but I've got to get to the

Sips, Suds, & Smokes
And then you shake the can
"We'll get oh boy dave. How many beers have you tried so far just this here well? You know I haven't been any festival so that's really you know dampen now what I've done but I'd say between the daily beer reviews. Just you know my day drinking stealing beers from other people when they're not looking around three hundred. Is that Elvis who ooh. Let's not bad I mean that's the only half how about some some of the rescue. What's what's your number just for the year? Yeah it's probably be about three hundred. I probably do about five hundred a year. But of course I can drink mobile and you come on now. How would say that I drink a couple of two three hundred a year? Maybe this year maybe a little ahead of the curve because of been to a few extra festivals but yeah seems to be average here for me. I'm not so sure what it is this year but I'm looking at archive in terms of beers that that I have and divided it by the years I have been archiving beers and so on average per year three hundred and forty nine as wow calculator for that is like yeah brought in the math. He's he's got the slide one ounce officer true true but a lot aren't confessed to the vast majority of the beers that I have are probably probably less than four ounces on average. I view spews yeah. There's the power of the drain. Spit takes probably on average two to three thousand every year. That's if between industry tastings beers. There's that get sent to us. sometimes you know more than once yeah the Armadillo beer not going to happen not gonNA make the show more years. Here's the great American Beer Festival. I mean you're going to drink a few hundred. Yes definitely when we've been to things like that that have you know probably fifteen hundred beers alone. You know at that that we're probably hammered down but I don't know. Would you say that tasting more beers actually do you like that better or would you rather just have like a hundred really good beers. You know every year I'd like to do both both is that you had to go. We have three hundred good beers through the bad ones to know the good good ones that you'd like to stay exactly right. I mean there's beers you. You know you try when you're going out to place and there's beers like if you go festival and then there's beers at a tasting bottle share air but then there's just like beers when you're sitting around having dinner or you know mowing the yard or whatever you know waking up first thing in the morning you know get ready to go. Oh wait never mind and then there's the beers that are available to you on Friday afternoon after you bought your lottery ticket in the refrigerator there behind the counter no just kidding well. It's football season in my beer actually increases with each week so consumption cause very good. It's it's fabulous drowning of sorrow thinner. Today is the day of hope. It's the first game match well. Let's definitely add to those totals today. Good Will Kendall. I'd like for you to read our son's ratings for our audience today. We'll be discussing in writing these beers with the suds ratings plus plus. Our signature belching sounds here those ratings now one that sucks Gimme anything about too do was that about three or four Abbadi should really not make that sound and five listen to that time Gimme another war well done all right thanks Kendall. I appreciate you reading surgery today. So this is a blind tasting so like I said each host has brought one or in the case of kindle is brought to beers and we're just GONNA GONNA go around and for each host and we're going to talk a little bit about that beer what it tastes like and then we'll rate it and then we'll tell you a little bit about that beer as well so hang tough with us through this I think find it rather informative by the way we do this an awful lot and so we really enjoy a tasting like this to do yeah. It's a lot of fun yeah all right kindle. What's happening in my currently beer number wine? Let's see here number one. My the first impression was it was kind of multi and hoppy that was tastes which makes it's a family only hoppy definitely yeah. I know you're a Sierra Nevada free so it's a good malt cascade came out of California. -FORNIA is yes yeah but it is not Nevada. Okay we as a Sierra Nevada shirt on being in front of me to throw us off. Every spare thing about kindle is a swerve is a firestone Walker. Oh Oh I'm GonNa say this is from the Lago Nita's family wow yes oh I know close log Anina serve drinking beer so is this little something it is not like a description sure hit a slips rated. Did I okay okay. I'm sorry anymore comments. I lots of comments but not about this subject suck. I wasn't ready fallacy. Let's let's figure out a rating severe here. I give it a four so so four it is here for kindles first beer. Somebody shake GRANDPA. He's sleeping again. This is a kind of a classic west coast. Ip and the reason I picked this. It's not a new beer but the format was new to me. The description is this beer was