35 Burst results for "Horace"

Ami Horowitz Debunks Myths About White Leftists and Black Americans

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:41 min | 4 months ago

Ami Horowitz Debunks Myths About White Leftists and Black Americans

"The first part of that video that we don't have time to show here, but everybody should follow you at army Horowitz and armie Horace dot com. You interview white people also from New York and what do they tell you are me? You know, that video started off a series of videos I do where I where I show white people talking about black people and then talking about I talk to black people, the white people said. And across the board, every time I do it, it is the exact same thing. You have white people pontificating about the inability of black people to do a number of things. In this case, I walk around with ID. Or nowhere, the DMV is, or in some cases, I did one most recently I loved about black obesity. And I asked white people, why is there higher obesity rate in the black community and they tell me racism? I can't make stuff. They actually told me that black people stress eat because the amount of racism out there. That's not a joke. I didn't wait to hang on hang on. They said black people are overweight. Because they're stressed out because of white racist. That wasn't one person who told me that. That is a narrative that I heard. And then of course, I go to black community, and I asked them, I said, why is there higher black obesity than whether we see them? Because we eat the wrong foods. We don't have personal responsibility. Exactly what you and I would think the answer would be is common sense is why her from the black community as opposed to the liberal community who the white community says, we know better, listen to us. We know better than black people. That's the overarching theme every time I talk to white leftists about black people, that's they talk about black people don't know, we know better.

Army Horowitz Armie Horace Obesity DMV New York
George Santos and the Total Failure of the Media to Fact Check

The Trish Regan Show

02:09 min | 5 months ago

George Santos and the Total Failure of the Media to Fact Check

"Back to how does this slip through the cracks? One lousy media with different value set to allow the competitor. I mean, the Democrat and his team clearly lack anywhere with all to just check the boxes. And three, a total lack of appetite on behalf of the national media to do anything about this. But that's to be expected. You know, if you're really wanting to go down the rabbit hole of conspiracy theories, you might wonder if this is the real manchurian candidate that just really screwed up. It's interesting when you think about how does he have those millions of dollars? Was he paid off? Does he really have those millions of dollars? I think he's still a fair question. These lies keep adding up. Let me give you some more that just came out today. I told you about the horse man, horseman's a wonderful prep school won the top prep schools in the country, and he's saying he went there. Again, I just say like, how does that happen? Because wouldn't you have known anybody that had graduated with him? Wouldn't people say, um, that guy is running for Congress. He said he graduated with me from Horace Mann. I don't remember him. And he might talk to a friend and say, I don't remember him either. Well, then he claimed that 9 11 took his mom's life, but apparently another report said that she passed away of cancer in 2016. Now maybe it was 9 11 related. We don't know, but everything is kind of just weird. So let's go through the list of lies because it's worth knowing where we are. All of these claims are misrepresentations have come from him, for example, having Jewish parents who fled the Nazi Holocaust. That's apparently not the case. He said he graduated from baruch college, apparently there's no record of that. He said he attended Horace Mann, the prep school in New York, no record of that. He said he ran an animal charity and that doesn't seem to be the case. He also said he lost employees in the 2016 pulse nightclub shooting that he worked at Citigroup and also Goldman Sachs that he owned rental property and that his family firm managed 80 $1 million in assets paying him $750,000, but apparently the only real record they have of him working is some kind of low level wage job. And then there's the 9 11 thing I just told you about with his mother's death. So this

Horace Mann Congress Baruch College Cancer Citigroup Goldman Sachs New York
What Is the Future of the 'Blind' BLM? Horace Cooper Weighs In

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

02:01 min | 11 months ago

What Is the Future of the 'Blind' BLM? Horace Cooper Weighs In

"So what is the future in that case? We saw the demonstration of the weekend that young man who fired into a woman's home with the two children there, 6 hour standoff with the police, finally he's killed. BLM comes outside that woman's house protests raised $15,000. The woman who was almost killed with her children comes out and screams him and them saying, this wasn't George Floyd, this man wasn't unarmed. What is the future of BLM? If they're so blind, that they're raising money for armed individuals who almost killed two small children, is their future a waning future or will they remain this separating wound in race relations? Okay, BLM was never an entity or an outworking of black America. If you wanted to get as many mansions and villas as possible, that would have been a good group to be connected with. But in terms of actually trying to improve the lot of black America, BLM has never been apart to that. And black America has increasingly recognized this. Got another data point. If you read my books, what you see is I don't just make the assertion. I show you the examples are the data. There are on social media that's Twitter that's TikTok, I guess, the communist control Doc. That's Facebook. There are 600,000 blacks who reject left wing views, and they post about this every single day. That 600,000 has always existed. That's just the 600,000 that's willing to post. The difference is, 15 years ago, 30 years ago, 40 years ago, it wasn't easy for that group to communicate. Right. Now, Americans are seeing everywhere that there are dissenters

BLM George Floyd America Twitter Facebook
The Evolution of US Race Relations With Project 21's Horace Cooper

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:43 min | 11 months ago

The Evolution of US Race Relations With Project 21's Horace Cooper

"Like to ask our guests, can you give us a diagnosis from that point in time, the 8 years of Obama, then the four years of my old boss president Trump and today, what has the evolution of race relations being in America? What is the trendline? What direction are they moving in? When Barack Obama said what he said, it was a code word. The left always talks about the right dog whistle. Yes. This was clearly a dog whistle. When he said acted stupidly, what he wanted to say and implied was racist. But you couldn't say that in 2008. Now I'm going to turn just really quick to a data point. Since 2008, every four years, fewer blacks have supported the left wing ticket nationally. In fact, since 2014, in every off year election, fewer blacks have supported the left wing ticket. What do those black Americans know? Our president, mister Obama, was the first in a hundred years to be successfully reelected while receiving fewer black votes than he did the first time. That didn't happen to Ronald Reagan. He received more, that didn't happen to George W. Bush. He received more that didn't happen to any other president if you successfully were elected. You got reelected. You got more black people. You did the first time. And it's precisely because these policies don't actually work.

President Trump Barack Obama Mister Obama America Ronald Reagan George W. Bush
How Trump Helped Minorities Wake Up With Horace Cooper

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:53 min | 11 months ago

How Trump Helped Minorities Wake Up With Horace Cooper

"We'll talk about your new book about Biden, but let's go back to your previous one how Trump is making black America great again. Can you explain to me because I need a little bit of assistance here? How after four incessant years of the then incumbent being called an islamophobe a misogynist and nationalist, a white supremacist and then eventually a Nazi that he received more support in the 2020 election from black and Hispanic Americans than any incumbent Republican since the 1960s. So what was it about him that made so many members of the minority communities kind of have that wake-up moment? It's the delivery. It's the consequence. It's the results. When you are looking around, I mentioned this in my book that there are black Americans who are saying, hey, my son, are my nephew, has finally left my basement and is moving out to their own apartment, record numbers of black Americans started their own jobs, started their own careers, started their own businesses. This is a sea change. And one of the reasons Joe Biden is so unpopular today with the minority community is it's not like as bad as it was under Obama. Under Obama, we had a stagnant economy. We have a stagnant economy now. But under George W. Bush, the economy had started to slow down. So the 8 years of the Obama administration was more like the frog in the pot cooking and suddenly finds out that it's been boiled to death without realizing it.

Biden Donald Trump America Joe Biden Barack Obama Obama Administration George W. Bush
Project 21's Horace Cooper: The Left Never Cared About Minorities

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:47 min | 11 months ago

Project 21's Horace Cooper: The Left Never Cared About Minorities

"From project 21. Horace Cooper, welcome back in our new studio. I love that this is amazing. You like this? He said the word. Wow. When he came in here, wow, that's how much he enjoyed it. Well, thank you for your honesty. Thank you for always being such a supporter of this show. I didn't know. We had like a Vulcan mind meld at a distance because I knew you were coming on the show. I wanted to have a couple of clips to play to you regarding race relations in America. And I chose that one of the current president, President Biden, which kind of ties in nicely to your imminent book because I think he used the phrase, put y'all back in chains, which is the title of your book, how Biden's policies harm black Americans. Your last book was a runaway bestseller thanks to it being canceled for a few months. That is how Trump is making black America great again. Tell us why that bestseller wasn't enough. And why you're having to write this one about the current president give us a couple of examples because I thought the Democrat party was the party of the minorities, the parties of the little man and caring for minorities in America. So here's what's I'm going to say with all due candor. I haven't ever believed that the left really cared about minorities, but a lot of black Americans are still under this illusion. The good news is the evidence is becoming so overwhelming of the lack of concern. The lack of care, the lack of prioritization that you are seeing look first with Hispanics, but also with black Americans fleeing from the party of the

Horace Cooper President Biden America Biden Donald Trump Democrat Party
New York Times Says Georgia Voting Law 'Limits Ballot Access'

The Dan Bongino Show

01:14 min | 1 year ago

New York Times Says Georgia Voting Law 'Limits Ballot Access'

"In Georgia It was a very simple law Basically implemented some voting day measures measures which would make it really easy to vote but to make it a little bit harder to cheat I say a little bit because you can still cheat I wish you couldn't but you can It's sad but you can see if you want to cheat you can still cheat And one of them involved voter ID Oh my gosh did the left loose their minds Here's The New York Times from April of 2021 by a guy named Nick Horace and Reid J Epstein these people sound very very intelligent They write for The New York Times so clearly they're smarter than us They wrote in April of 2020 when Nick chorus Senate what George is voting law really does The New York Times analyzed the state's new 98 page law And identified 16 key provisions that will get ready Limit ballot access oh no we can't have that limit ballot That sounds terrible My gosh what would you want to limit ballot access New York Times notes it will also potentially confuse voters They think you're an

The New York Times Nick Horace Reid J Epstein Georgia Nick Senate George
Author Paul Gottfried Has Written the Book on Fascism... And Antifascism

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:13 min | 1 year ago

Author Paul Gottfried Has Written the Book on Fascism... And Antifascism

"And Paul Godfrey has written a book titled anti fascism. The course of a crusade, who is Paul gottfried, you wonder, I'll tell you, first of all, he's my guest for this hour. He is the editor of chronicles. Some of you know that journal, he's an American paleo conservative philosopher historian columnist. He's a former Horace raffensperger Professor of humanities at Elizabethtown college in Elizabethtown Pennsylvania, as well as a Guggenheim recipient wow, doctor gottfried welcome to this program. Thank you for having me on. Well, it's a joy to have you on and to talk about your new book anti fascism. You had to be aware that there's something funny about the idea that you've written a book called fascism, the career of a concept followed by anti fascism, the course of a crusade. Tell us about that. Well, you know, I became interested in the subject of fascism before I was confronted by the problem of woke of the woke left, which is what we're dealing with right now. Much of my earlier scholarship, you know, dealt with political movements and movements of the right, as well as movements to the left. And I wrote a biography of Carl Schmidt, a German political theorist who influenced into war fascism. So sort of natural that at some point I wrote a book on fascism as well. And in studying the book on fascism, I was informed by a person who has become sort of my mentor Stanley Payne who's probably the outstanding scholar on the subject of fascism that the best part of the book was my treatment of anti fascism. So I was urged by Stanley and then by Amy ferranto, who was my editor at Cornell University in northern Illinois university presses. They're now merged that I should write a book on anti fascism, which I did. And as I told her, I found it much less interesting to my book on fascism because the people I was dealing with were much less

Paul Godfrey Paul Gottfried Horace Raffensperger Elizabethtown College Elizabethtown Gottfried Carl Schmidt Pennsylvania Stanley Payne Amy Ferranto Cornell University In Northern Stanley
The Similarities Between Terry McAuliffe and Horace Mann

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:20 min | 1 year ago

The Similarities Between Terry McAuliffe and Horace Mann

"I don't know about you, but I like talking to John's mirror. And I was talking to him was a yesterday about John Dewey, Horace Mann, about education about what mcauliffe said before he went down in flames and John, I thought, let's keep talking about that because we had ten minutes here. And I said, this is actually so important. And that's why when he said what he said that parents shouldn't have the right to interfere in what the teachers teach I just thought that is one of the wildest statements I've ever heard. The idea that an adult running for office could say such a thing or even things such a thing, again, call me naive, but I was absolutely astonished. Well, it was a great moment of candor. Terry mcauliffe said in a debate, parents should not be telling teachers what to teach in schools. We have experts for that. That was very candid. And as I said last time, Horace Mann, the founder of mass compulsory public education in America, Horace Mann, school for teachers is associated with Columbia University. I remember seeing it when it would get off to Trevor bridge. He was a Unitarian. He kept that kind of quiet. He was a social gospel reformer, and he thought it was the job of public schools to save children from their parents. You had all these fundamentalist Christians who believed in the Bible. You had all these Catholic immigrants getting off the boat like my ancestors. And they had all these reactionary views. They were not on board with modern science with progressive ideas with eugenics with all the things that the progressive movement had in mind. A massive federal government managing the country from the top down as experts basically peeling away the old constitution. Woodrow Wilson, before he ran for president, wrote a book about how the constitution was this archaic obsolete rickety 18th century mechanism we needed clear it out of the way so that we could run the government according to the dictates of modern science. And by modern science, they meant Charles

Horace Mann John Dewey Mcauliffe John Trevor Bridge Terry Mcauliffe Columbia University America Woodrow Wilson Charles
John Zmirak on the FBI's Plan to Investigate Parents Over School Board Meetings

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:13 min | 1 year ago

John Zmirak on the FBI's Plan to Investigate Parents Over School Board Meetings

"Well. It's always a happy part of my week when i get to talk to our friend. John muir john's miracle. Welcome to the program. Hey are going to talk to you. No matter how grim the subjects were yes. Exactly a what. What is on your mind. What are some of the things that You know today is wednesday We're in the middle of another strange week. What what are you. what are you thinking. Well we just learned that the fbi is going to investigate parents who go to school board meetings to question what the teachers are instilling joke. Yes that's mind-bending is it not mind-bending i mean this is. This is one of these things that i guess. I took for granted that everybody in america knows that the government has no business getting between parents. Their kids never unless there is violence. Horrible violence how dare. How dare they imply that parents shouldn't no. i mean. look in loco parentis. We have schools public schools because we can't teach kids in many cases so we say we're going to hire people to teach kids. How did the government take this over and try to shove the parents out of the way. This is completely. Un-american is completely wrong. And i want every american to know. This is utterly unacceptable. Don't ever let school boards or governments pushed around when it comes to your kids as it is right now. The the is the enemy. Okay the fact that the fbi and the department of justice can be used to exert pressure on individual citizens trying to get involved in local politics. That's what school boards are the most local organic natural form of politics. The healthiest thing in the world is for people being involved in the decisions of what happens on their local government including including local schools with that said public schools. Were always a terrible idea. That public schools were created in the late nineteenth century by progresses like horace mann. Who explicitly said. They wanted to teach children to be less conservative less religious than their

John Muir John FBI America UN Department Of Justice Government Horace Mann
"horace" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show

The Paul Finebaum Show

07:22 min | 1 year ago

"horace" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show

"Slash fantasy football to we walk into the back between john dalton and my griffin though buddy martin scott a busy night anyway. Let's get back to al in alabama. How good afternoon good afternoon. Paul how are you today. Very well thank you. I really enjoyed that piece. horace king. I remember that season in seventy one. I had hurt. Russell is defensive coordinator. And the but not what i called about and i got a granddaughter and all and then i try to keep up with them too but when they hired Brown horse them. I read up on him and found out before he got into coaching. He was actually a license. Nhra top you'll dragster driver. Was he really. I didn't know that is a his father owned a team. Dale hartson was pretty interesting story to stop a lot of open. Fans might wanna look it up. They would think you would enjoy reading. Well we'll check that out. Thank you for sharing that Appreciate very much good to hear from you. Let's continue with more phone. Calls and joe is up. Next in red bay alabama. We thank you for taking my call. But we don't really worry about what the barnes look up. I mean they don't look too much. Are they going to see how many times alabama's walk them. Almost he'll also sale. Our girls are for your you know now but then your question and i hope i'm not speaking out of school because i know you told our Our producer something that Is there any chance you could share with us. What what you're eating for supper tonight. Well random mind hey hate shouted squirrel back in the back in the winter and brought it over. And i've got my girlfriend. Come down with longtime she you know she cooks all dumping but i mean you girlfriends coming down from florence and you okay. We'll guy She's cooking squirrel squirrel squirrel dumpling. I've had chicken dumplings. But i'm afraid to ask what squirrel dumplings are. Well it's pretty much dumping with was going win. But i mean this is the first time i've ate squirrel since back in eighty. One i went shooting at a friend of mine's grandpa's wished barbecued it up. You know nate. But the first time i've actually and they're pretty good. I vaguely remember somebody telling me that cooked possum once before is that possible. I do know some that have. I'm right squirrels are good to eat. And i can just go out in my backyard. And i'd never have to buy a meal again But but i'm i wonder. Could you tell the rest of us on educated people what a squirrel tastes like it. It tastes like well. Actually if you bobby open you you drank enough beers. It just takes like you're eating estate so that drinking beer. I mean look at a squirrel. And i see that bushy tail and i see that rat like looking face. I'm just trying to think like. Where's what's to eat on that thing powell thing you can do just you. I mean how many score will get out and trying commit suicide. I mean they don't maintain have alive. I mean they just want to end it squirrel dump so you wrap the squirrel meat. In in a in a dumpling. Right now now now. He just might. Don't you know got to meet off you know and it made off in it and then after a while it's you know it's it's not it's got it was made in okay. No more no more questions on squirrel dumplings and football now we can. Yes okay. florida. People's thank alabama are arrogant. Yeah buddy martin said that there's an alabama arrogance permeating the air this week. I'm if you just said right now. I'm going to read by not fix the row foot. Job red bait. That ain't arrogance because you could probably do it. That's the same thing it ain't but don't florida fans if put them in alabama's yours you know shirt. Do you not expect your tainted in there. And we'll them. Yeah no that's exactly right. Well listen you you take care of yourself and he will bone apetite. devon is up next in louisiana. Go right ahead. Hey paul how are you doing. We're doing great. Thank you for the call you sir. Thanks for taking first time on the show. Hey paul i quick question I wanna see what your thoughts are on the situation going on in baton rouge would. How many games do you think coach has left before they pull the plug. Well i do think the next next week's game is going to help set the table for the rest of the year and it would be impossible to answer. I think. I think mississippi state beats lsu than i think. A lot of fans are going to be heading for the hills but I mean i'm a long way for making that call on this thursday. Yeah they actually beat the game saturday Yeah i i don't know it's it's it's kinda interesting not really sure what to think about it. I'm i'm a big coach fan. I like him. i think he's a good recruiter. I think he's a good coach. Just i dunno lsu football. It's just not the same right now. It's kinda it's kinda odd but really appreciate your call Taking my call thing. I don't ever want to give advice to a fan base But but i do think lsu fans and just need to kind of move move on from what happened a couple of weeks ago and see what happens in the next few weeks The schedule is is so challenging but that mississippi state game is critical. You just can't let that game. Got away Lsu supposed to win that game. We don't know we don't know what's going to happen You know beyond that. But but that's you know the games are going to get more difficult. I mean it's an incredibly challenging schedule. But i think the talk about that is really somewhat ridiculous right now. Thank you for listening to the paul finebaum. Show podcast the paul finebaum. Show ears weekdays on the sec network. Beginning at three eastern..

alabama buddy martin scott horace king Dale hartson red bay alabama john dalton football griffin buddy martin Russell Paul nate lsu Brown joe florida bobby powell paul devon
"horace" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show

The Paul Finebaum Show

06:01 min | 1 year ago

"horace" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show

"West. and ken abreu. I took him out into the community to meet the people that choice it out. Ten other people in the community. They got to know that david french. And likewise just five of us just being together having our conversations and talk about what was actually going on and happening in this experience as we went through the college process you know being eighteen years old i contain only fall looking at. I was looking forward to Was i going to get to play on saturday and What kind of data. I had a feeling you were going there. I i'm curious. You mentioned your mom. And i don't wanna put words in your mouth but i think i can accurately. She was probably pretty proud of of your accomplishment. So take us into your house and let us know what the folks were saying man. This recruiting process start happening and that was a meeting call coast duly and some other members of the community. The names that. I've known as while to allen james smith and guy a maximum and In the conversation. We'll talk about whether they really wanted to crude and wanted us to go to georgia to play football. I didn't want to just be the first black athlete at george. I want to make sure that i was going. Truly get an opportunity to display my talents out on the field and that was kind of met and a statements into the conversation Dr walter allen. This came up with the asset. Said that kenyan appleby will come to school with over here if you accept. Pope and vince gave hope a walk on scholarship. And that seal the deal for us to go to georgia harsh king Our guests harsh Let us know what it was like. When you mentioned some of you have been together but when you got all five back together this week. What was that like. And and what was the biggest falsehood told about About each other. I don't remember any follow was was telling jokes and talking about the songs that we remember and enjoy it and also campus. You know starting to black student. Union and us on a friday or saturday night and we had a building over your call memorial hall and it was built back out in the fifties. I thank and they'd had harwood flows and greek shows hailed in there and you could stop on that floor and make a lot of noise and great sounds and a lot on friday and saturday night. Parties were held over there. And those were the moments that you could cut back and let your how loose especially when football season when we had a curfew at eleven o'clock and i use to try to be there at ten thirty because my dad was wanting of sticklers about if you go go somewhere and beat at eight o'clock you need to be there ten to fifteen minutes ahead of time to be on schedule on time so the campus life was a joy. The students that i went to school with the classes wealth and i got to meet and Some of them Was really a great experience for me. The entire time. I enjoy my college experience That were possibly some players. That didn't necessarily expect that you there. But i was there and i was going to do the best. I can that student athlete. And that's what. I tried to keep my mind and my focus on what i was there to do. Not to fix in their solve anybody else's problems but to take care of my piece of biz harsh before you go. I'm curious what you and your friends must think about. Today's athlete to live in a completely different world. You understand that. Not only are they not only just not an issue any longer. They're able to do things that you guys couldn't do such as make money What are your thoughts on on. What's happening right now. i. I hope that money situation. Don't get too much out of hand. And an example that i would think of okay. We got quarterback down here that just was given a large some of money. Okay i got a quarter. I got a office a lineman center over here. That don't necessarily get a lot of high publicity. But he protecting the quarterback If i'm the quarterback. I think i might ought to find a way to cut off. Tc share with everybody versus holiday for myself because we talk about a game that requires all eleven. People doing their job assignment on a regular basis. Not one person would get out of glory and all the accolades but those others contribute to it so it will probably be best to take care of you but is taking care of you front to keep that team together and keep camaraderie. Going another thing that that's kind of i'm thinking about is Law to these schools and institutions You know they get a chance now to change and said i wanna leave and go to some other place and actually played in some instances. I thank that's a real good thing and others may not be the best thing for everybody to take that road So it's some real challenges coming up for these coaches overtime and. Kobe seem to be doing pretty good job a hal in making that happen for the university of jordan i hope he stays successful in doing as a season in the years. Progress harsh king part of a group being celebrated Fifty years later many. Thanks for coming on harsh all the best and we really enjoyed talking to you same here. Thanks giving me this opportunity. Thank you very very much an extraordinary story to think about the history of the university of georgia and of college football. We'll take a break more to.

ken abreu allen james smith Dr walter allen kenyan appleby georgia football vince Pope david West george university of jordan Kobe university of georgia
"horace" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show

The Paul Finebaum Show

07:03 min | 1 year ago

"horace" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show

"Show our four podcast. We welcome you back. It's great to have you here for the final hour looking forward to talking to our next his horse king who was part of a message group of people fifteen years ago. Who broke the color barrier at the university of georgia. Horace king was several of his teammates. Chuck kin abreu clearance. Pope larry western. Richard appleby were honored Yesterday and today at the alabama at the at the george at the college football hall of fame in georgia and horace. Thank you very much for joining us. I know Seeing your your friends and your former teammates had had to be a tremendous thrill for you. Good afternoon and tell us all about good afternoon and thanks for having me actually to have all five us together at the same time it is truly actually been fifty years. There have been time. That's been three two and four of us all five us together at the same time. It has truly been fifty years so the family's still together. We still enjoy each other. Tell us some of the same old jokes movie they've been enhanced a little bit but Today is just been an exciting and a fantastic day Looking more forward to what's going to happen the rest of the week and hopefully dollars pulled another hour for this week. Horace you had a very successful career there and went on to the nfl. But but let's go back fifty years ago Nineteen seventy-one obviously. You know things had started moving in the right direction In the south and in georgia and around the surrounding areas. But i you tell us i mean what was it like In and what did you guys Deal with In in relation to the times well They were changing times of the first situation. I had with integration was my senior year in high school and that was a term School year. that wasn't that enjoyable. But i had football and i had basketball then both on both the on the basketball team. We really had a lot of fun and enjoy each other. Football team was. We was a bit disgruntled. But things are actually changing enjoyed at the time and this whole thing of being recruited When the university of georgia step in front of me and alpha male academic athletes scholarship I was just excited. And i was looking at Thinking only i was going to end up at a you school. But when all recruiting and all that stuff was saying don. My mother pretty much made. The decision told me that i was going to the university of georgia and it turned out to be a a great decision and a good one for me harsh. You mentioned the the difficulty in high school and that is not unusual for those times. How were you able to to deal with that. You're young man. We're all volatile at that age and most of us have never had to go through what you went through. Well bill a decent human being and being respectful of others. I think it was beneficial in helpful to me We had a mixture of by a hair's predominant. Blacks knew that i came from. We had some white teachers that hey stepped in and it was just a matter of fact kind of thing that hate to happen. Change was occurred and only way that it could happen is that somebody snapped chalk land. It just happened to be that point in time in history where i was present when all that happened but I try to be the best person that i could be treat. Everybody like a respectful human being and things appear to what out the whale for me. I didn't have any real Serious confrontation than any kind of situation. So I navigate through the process. Best harsh when you got when you got to athens and you had some. You had a band of brothers so to speak Take us back to that time. And i'm sure all of you can can laugh about it now but what. What did what all you go through together. And how did you help. Lift each other up the band of brothers woman. The three to five of the showed up at the university of joyce. I'm actually from athens. I went to talk to high school. Which is away about five blocks away from the university of georgia campus and likewise with france. Pope and richard appleby west and ken abreu west from all been and abreu was from rome The minute that we kind of met you could tell that we came from similar kind of homes and backgrounds and one of the things that i could tell about. My roommate was that his mother was a little discipline about like minds. As you make your bed every morning when you got up and the family pau just kind of took shape as we were freshmen together on a freshman football jane because seventy one you had to play freshman ball and overtime as things progress. We talked about being student athletes and actually graduated from the university of joys and not just being football players that other fastest to our live and just being athletes and it just grew and mushroom from there and other players came in. They join in on on on family and the free My roommate layer wes. I think he got married my sophomore year. So i had a replacement and got name rayfield williams and we bonded together Real will we had our meetings to try to support and help each other. As problems the situations arose and dealt with it from within the group of the five of us when we first there horace how aware of your high school football basketball player. This is an important moment of your life. You get to college but how aware were you and your friends Who were honored today of what was going on around the south at various other. Sec schools and and did you when you traveled and played games. Were you able to communicate or commiserate with with other players who are going through similar things relevant. We communicate with other players. I i did get a chance to We play maryland watson. I think we end up playing them twice. And i got to know. Louis carter and it got to speak with him about his experience in maryland and most of them was all similar. Kind of situations I grew up in ad. Is i'd really homesick. Thing never happened for me but some of the other players may have happened so Sonos.

university of georgia Richard appleby Horace king Chuck kin abreu Pope larry football georgia basketball horace Horace university of joyce alabama ken abreu athens nfl university of joys don Football abreu rayfield williams
What All Americans Should Understand About Black Lives Matter

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

02:17 min | 1 year ago

What All Americans Should Understand About Black Lives Matter

"Couple of questions black lives matter. What should all americans understand about black lives matter. And where does it fit into america. Organically is it some big plots of the democrat party. Is it just another race hustle. Ethno business also from a new generation of of al sharpton 's or is it truly something organic that is headless like an amoeba way. Does it fit in. What should all americans irrespective of their mellon levels. Think of this thing. I consider The movement behind b. l. m. not a real estate investment vehicle to ensure that the founders can get up home about the house multi worth multiple millions but instead the analog to the militant wing of the d. n. c. for the latter part of the nineteenth century and for the early parts of the twentieth century. The klu klux klan operated to make sure that all americans remembered the messaging the importance of separation the importance of weaken get you. Wherever you are. We can stop that job. We can prevent that opportunity. Black lives matter is working with corporations. It is working with the media. It is working with the academy. It works with government. The sad thing about the bill in movement is it was is able to do out in the open with the klan had to do secretly that danger is something that i hope that we start seeing a pushback. I want to start seeing. And i hope that we start. Seeing companies have to apologize for being willing to associate with racial separatist like the black lives matter

Democrat Party KLU Al Sharpton America
Why Is Black America Leery of the COVID Vaccine?

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:54 min | 1 year ago

Why Is Black America Leery of the COVID Vaccine?

"You have a sense of. Why black america is leery of vaccination us mandates we. We've had we've had the senile man in the white house talk about the tuskegee 'em and Which had nothing to do with it. I think he thinks that's the same as the tuskegee institute is it to do with fear of over the white man or is it more complicated than that when joe biden and comma harris ragged to their donors that they were going to diss of vow. All of the amazing achievements that donald trump did with vaccines and they did so knowing that the group of americans most sympathetic to them. Excuse me were black americans. It is no surprise to me that people hurt those messages. Listen to those messages and believed those messages so went went so when kamala harris actually says that if a vaccine is developed under donald trump's aegis she's not going to take it vats. Listen to and that's what we're paying the price for today harris absolutely. Let me just add by the way. There are friends and relatives of mine. That believed that she still hasn't been vaccinated and believes that that is part of the reason for some of the strange behavior. We witness where she had to go to the walter. Reed reed hotel up. Or walter mondale hospital. When those texans came to town For their super spreader

Tuskegee Institute Comma Harris Donald Trump United States Joe Biden White House Kamala Harris Harris Reed Reed Walter Mondale
What Slavery Could Not Do, Government Agencies Have Been Able to Do With Impunity

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

02:21 min | 1 year ago

What Slavery Could Not Do, Government Agencies Have Been Able to Do With Impunity

"Since the nineteen sixties government agencies have aggressively interfaced with black america and they have promised black america that we can fix every single problem over a trillion dollars later. We now see things. In black america that never existed before government came and knocked on the door. Such as one of those is the prison rate for black men. You can look at the records of the nineteen twenties. Nineteen thirties forties and fifties. black american. Men were the least likely to be in federal prison than any other. Racial category employment black men were the most likely to be employed in america through throughout the roaring twenties even in the middle of the great depression and afterwards up through the nineteen fifties illegitimacy mo- black children in the twenties thirties and forties. Were more likely to be born in two parent households than the population at large. We are told big lie today. We're told if you wanna look at some of the problems and challenges that face black america you have to assume that it's all a legacy of the evil of slavery of course slavery was evil but founders understood that the principle of liberty that is based in the declaration of independence understood and underscored that important point. Here's the thing what slavery could not do what jim crow could not do. Government agencies have been able to do with

America Depression Jim Crow
"horace" Discussed on America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:46 min | 1 year ago

"horace" Discussed on America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

"G. o. k. a. and on all other platforms for the time being at least twitter facebook What else do we have get an instagram. Follow us there and also to a video and podcast feeds. Wherever you get your podcasts. Horace you mentioned Restaurants you mentioned government control. You talked about The unbelievable amount of control that americans have given the state in just the last year and a half talk to us about how this affects minority communities. We have government officials. We have the white house. We have governors calling the unvaccinated chew paid and threatening their fellow. Americans disproportionately i. I'm on vaccinate. I will never be vaccinated. I had kobe defeated. I'm not afraid but Proportionally it is my black fellow. Americans who are leery or just simply don't see a need to be vaccinated. How does how does race relations. How does the state of of race relations How's it affected by the last year and a half and the role of the government vaccines mosques and everything else. So let me say this. When i was twelve years. Old my youth pastor a shared idea with me he said for god so loved the world. He didn't send a government agency and that with me. That's good what's for dinner tonight. How about a juicy bone from good rushes dot com. You know the biggest problem when it comes to grilling steak. He's finding the.

Horace twitter facebook white house kobe
"horace" Discussed on America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

07:53 min | 1 year ago

"horace" Discussed on America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

"It's america first but it's one on one our opportunity to sit down and get to know our regular guests that little bit better and drive deep drive down on the key issues of the day and today it's a fabulous fabulous guest. We have with us. Strong support regular guest of american i. Who's in studio again. He's left the free state of texas to be with us. He is senior fellow with the national center public policy research. Also with project. Twenty-one horace kupa welcome back to america. I well thanks so much for having me back on so we every time we talk to you. I could do it for hours. You are a thinker. You are a candidate individual however we've been growing exponentially we've got more than three million listeners. Video platforms you. Name it so for those people who've just locked upon this channel just been sent this link to this interview. Let's start at the beginning. Who is horace cooper. Where did he come from to be where he is today. Well i don't know if that's a simple question. I would say that i was born in texas. I am my mother and more importantly my grandmother's grandson Virjee johnson Was an amazing influence on my life. And i you know my mother and father had a little something to do With everything but she. Because my brother and i got to spend summers with her helped to instill in me a sense of independence a sense of the importance of how we as a individuals are stewards of our lives How we're responsible for what happens in our circumstances and She had nine children. She was able to get seven of those children to graduate from college. Three of those children including my mother get phd's and it helped really encourage the importance of education in our family and with me in particular and i went off to the university of texas learned everything there was to learn about left wing crazy nonsense And i recommend it for your children if you want to really see if they're grounded send them to a place like that. You haven't really done your work. I probably wouldn't send them to a place like that and Afterwards i went to one law school that i was interested in attending The george mason school of law. It's now called the antonin. Scalia law school. And i got a chance to then work on capitol hill and in the administration of george w bush. I have had a tremendous number of opportunities to travel the world Read and really really learn how this great country was made just for people like myself and it has been such a remarkable experience and i would say even people who were only briefly in this country. Look around and what you'll see is that america is the best possible lesson about how freedom about how liberty about how south government can work horace sadly with many of Our black friends on america first. We hit this refrain again and again and again that it was my grandma. It was my grandpa in your case. It was grandma virjee. Why is that what. Why is it that that we see such proclivity or a train that that generation is skipped and the black youth in america seem to be many cases brought on by grandparents. Well i would say this in my case my parents merit at an early age and even having done so my grandmother said is still have to do your part. You still have to do the responsible things and that included for my father. He was one of the few americans who voluntarily signed up for The army during vietnam and he shipped out and when he returned. I learned a lot about the importance of devotion to one's country about sacrifice and the like With regard to my mother she started school. I undergraduate ben a masters and then a phd. If you've got a family that you're also being a part of you can't necessarily say we're going to be done in about five six eight years. It took a while but my mother was determined and she was able to get it done and with my grandmother. Being willing to say. I'll take up some of the slack. You can drop the kids off with me. Sometimes we stayed during the summers for few weeks at a time. My grandmother taught me the value of the early morning wakeup now a lot of times especially when i worked at the department of labor i was a chief of staff as a political appointee There were about Forty one hundred people there It served me quite well to one wakeup casually and relaxed at five. Thirty or five forty five in the morning especially when it came time to do employee reviews so this was this is thanks. Grandma johnson correct. That's absolutely and it was unbelievable. You know. I missed out when i was in college on some of the late night parties i tried one overnighter to prepare for an exam and it didn't work out well for me and i realize grandma was right. It do everything you need to do during the wake up hours and then you'll be prepared. There's no reason to try to Rush into something and stay up as late as you can and it has served me. I'm unbelievably well. The earlier rises the early bird. Catches the women to horace scoop project-21 us on twitter for him and his colleagues at projects. Twenty one you senior fellow at the national center for public policy research horace. I want to get this out of the way It's an important question that i'm going to stop the identity. Politics of the left so loves where race relations in america today. Could you give us the thumbnail. Sketch that sale the last twelve years. What happened What state was it. In the beginning of back obama's two terms what happened under president trump. And where are we now given black. Lives matter george floyd kick. Can you tell us. Can you give us the trend line for the last twelve years or so..

america national center public policy horace kupa horace cooper Virjee johnson george mason school of law Scalia law school texas antonin george w bush university of texas capitol hill horace Grandma johnson vietnam department of labor army ben national center for public pol grandma
Who Is Horace Cooper?

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:51 min | 1 year ago

Who Is Horace Cooper?

"Is senior fellow with the national center public policy research. Also with project. Twenty-one horace kupa welcome back to america. I well thanks so much for having me back on so we every time we talk to you. I could do it for hours. You are a thinker. You are a candidate individual however we've been growing exponentially we've got more than three million listeners. Video platforms you. Name it so for those people who've just locked upon this channel just been sent this link to this interview. Let's start at the beginning. Who is horace cooper. Where did he come from to be where he is today. Well i don't know if that's a simple question. I would say that i was born in texas. I am my mother and more importantly my grandmother's grandson Virjee johnson Was an amazing influence on my life. And i you know my mother and father had a little something to do With everything but she. Because my brother and i got to spend summers with her helped to instill in me a sense of independence a sense of the importance of how we as a individuals are stewards of our lives How we're responsible for what happens in our circumstances and She had nine children. She was able to get seven of those children to graduate from college. Three of those children including my mother get phd's and it helped really encourage the importance of education in our family and with me in

National Center Public Policy Horace Kupa Horace Cooper Virjee Johnson America Texas
"horace" Discussed on America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:55 min | 1 year ago

"horace" Discussed on America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

"Sadly with many of Our black friends on america first. We hit this refrain again and again and again that it was my grandma. It was my grandpa in your case. It was grandma virjee. Why is that what. Why is it that that we see such proclivity or a train that that generation is skipped and the black youth in america seem to be many cases brought on by grandparents. Well i would say this in my case my parents merit at an early age and even having done so my grandmother said is still have to do your part. You still have to do the responsible things and that included for my father. He was one of the few americans who voluntarily signed up for The army during vietnam and he shipped out and when he returned. I learned a lot about the importance of devotion to one's country about sacrifice and the like With regard to my mother she started school. I undergraduate ben a masters and then a phd. If you've got a family that you're also being a part of you can't necessarily say we're going to be done in about five six eight years. It took a while but my mother was determined and she was able to get it done and with my grandmother. Being willing to say. I'll take up some of the slack. You can drop the kids off with me. Sometimes we stayed during the summers for few weeks at a time.

Horace cooper rudy giuliani horace cooper academia america federal government Jim crow harris twitter polk county new york swimming national center for public pol
Horace Cooper: What I Learned From My Dear Grandmother

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:55 min | 1 year ago

Horace Cooper: What I Learned From My Dear Grandmother

"Sadly with many of Our black friends on america first. We hit this refrain again and again and again that it was my grandma. It was my grandpa in your case. It was grandma virjee. Why is that what. Why is it that that we see such proclivity or a train that that generation is skipped and the black youth in america seem to be many cases brought on by grandparents. Well i would say this in my case my parents merit at an early age and even having done so my grandmother said is still have to do your part. You still have to do the responsible things and that included for my father. He was one of the few americans who voluntarily signed up for The army during vietnam and he shipped out and when he returned. I learned a lot about the importance of devotion to one's country about sacrifice and the like With regard to my mother she started school. I undergraduate ben a masters and then a phd. If you've got a family that you're also being a part of you can't necessarily say we're going to be done in about five six eight years. It took a while but my mother was determined and she was able to get it done and with my grandmother. Being willing to say. I'll take up some of the slack. You can drop the kids off with me. Sometimes we stayed during the summers for few weeks at a time.

America Vietnam Army BEN
"horace" Discussed on The Smoking Tire

The Smoking Tire

01:42 min | 1 year ago

"horace" Discussed on The Smoking Tire

"So that's so octane. Engine tune but it reduces the ability of the engine. Right tech itself right. You end up with the octane in there. That's not what is advertised right. So what we did instead wasn't took us a year and a half and it wasn't trivia three guys. I have three software guys again. I used to have five and We actually put a three and a half our map sensor and which some people do but they don't change the software. I've never found anybody to actually change the software correctly for three and a half bar and we re scaled all the maps and all the models and the for the three and a half bar so now different times. You have to do what would be kind of repetitive. Grunt work to reprogram all those for three and a half bar said it just takes a couple of minutes but but once it's all done but to figure it out. It's like a year and a half. Yeah yeah okay. More what. I meant a year and a half. So what we what we've done now. We can run another fourteen point five pounds of boost. But all the computer models that ignition timing. The fuel mixture the thermal protections are all map to go with it so so on the crappy fuel if you had to yes and we also reset the upper and lower ignition limits. but we don't raise the lower limit. We just expand the upper limit so it can learn more when you put better fuelling so you can put ninety one in this car and it makes eight hundred runs exactly the same smooth unknown destination. No no jerky. Not no smoothness of like the knox working. You can't tell you change a fuel except he lost on it. Horace bar seems pretty good and you can put pumps and rayson and it goes eight fifty one hundred and it goes on nine hundred and you can put method. It goes nine fifty and it does us all by itself in four times. You step on the gas learns in the current perfectly smooth and every mode objects four times you step on the gas and learn. That's all it takes to figure it out. What the fuel quality.

rayson Horace
"horace" Discussed on Aaron Mahnke's Cabinet of Curiosities

Aaron Mahnke's Cabinet of Curiosities

02:17 min | 1 year ago

"horace" Discussed on Aaron Mahnke's Cabinet of Curiosities

"Born in lawrence massachusetts in eighteen forty nine. Horace didn't play an instrument or hustle. Amateurs at chess no. He didn't cobbled together. Shoes in italy. Horace fletcher like the chew. As a young man fletcher traveled around performing odd jobs following his interests he worked as a writer and artist and even managed in new orleans opera house for a time. He loved to read and he indulged in many of life's pleasures mainly food. It was this pleasure. However that inflicted some of the worst pain he'd ever experienced in his life for one. As he got older he struggled with obesity and it side effects such as chronic stomach pains he also found himself being refused coverage from a life insurance policy or rejection. That sounded alarm bells for him. He quickly realized it was time to make a change one day while traveling to chicago on business the middle aged fletcher began chewing his food. He'd always shoot his food before but this time was different. He kept chewing and chewing and chewing until all that was left was a liquidity goo on his tongue. He believed that this was the key to proper digestion and weight management according to this new practice which he dubbed fletcher ism. All food needs to be chewed until it has been turned into liquid. Any solid particles were deemed unnecessary and could be spat out. It sounds absurd today. But at the time fletcher ism caught on. He became known as the great mass decatur and argued that his practice could increase a person's strength despite reducing the amount of food they actually eight. He also had strict rules about win. To consume sustenance followers. Were instructed to avoid eating when they were sad or angry and to wait until they reached the point. That fletcher called good and hungry. No midnight snacks for him. He started touring the united states giving lectures on his methods methods which were scoffed at by doctors and scientists as nothing more than self-important hokum. That didn't matter. Though fletcher ism had reached far more important spokespeople than doctors celebrities and titans of industry had begun shoeing with wild abandon among them. Were john d. rockefeller and author upton sinclair. Even mark twain was considered a friend

Sherlock holmes
Horace Fletcher: 'The Great Masticator'

Aaron Mahnke's Cabinet of Curiosities

02:17 min | 1 year ago

Horace Fletcher: 'The Great Masticator'

"Born in lawrence massachusetts in eighteen forty nine. Horace didn't play an instrument or hustle. Amateurs at chess no. He didn't cobbled together. Shoes in italy. Horace fletcher like the chew. As a young man fletcher traveled around performing odd jobs following his interests he worked as a writer and artist and even managed in new orleans opera house for a time. He loved to read and he indulged in many of life's pleasures mainly food. It was this pleasure. However that inflicted some of the worst pain he'd ever experienced in his life for one. As he got older he struggled with obesity and it side effects such as chronic stomach pains he also found himself being refused coverage from a life insurance policy or rejection. That sounded alarm bells for him. He quickly realized it was time to make a change one day while traveling to chicago on business the middle aged fletcher began chewing his food. He'd always shoot his food before but this time was different. He kept chewing and chewing and chewing until all that was left was a liquidity goo on his tongue. He believed that this was the key to proper digestion and weight management according to this new practice which he dubbed fletcher ism. All food needs to be chewed until it has been turned into liquid. Any solid particles were deemed unnecessary and could be spat out. It sounds absurd today. But at the time fletcher ism caught on. He became known as the great mass decatur and argued that his practice could increase a person's strength despite reducing the amount of food they actually eight. He also had strict rules about win. To consume sustenance followers. Were instructed to avoid eating when they were sad or angry and to wait until they reached the point. That fletcher called good and hungry. No midnight snacks for him. He started touring the united states giving lectures on his methods methods which were scoffed at by doctors and scientists as nothing more than self-important hokum. That didn't matter. Though fletcher ism had reached far more important spokespeople than doctors celebrities and titans of industry had begun shoeing with wild abandon among them. Were john d. rockefeller and author upton sinclair. Even mark twain was considered a friend

Horace Fletcher Fletcher Fletcher Ism Horace Lawrence Chess Massachusetts New Orleans Italy Obesity Chicago Decatur Titans Of Industry United States John D Rockefeller Upton Sinclair Mark Twain
"horace" Discussed on The Twilight Zone Podcast

The Twilight Zone Podcast

07:07 min | 2 years ago

"horace" Discussed on The Twilight Zone Podcast

"Ford both very valid depending on your own life experience but in terms of quality. I just don't think incredible wealth of horace ford really holds a candle to walking distance. I truly wish i could find the episodes of studio one and encounter to be able to compare and contrast whether those versions were any better than this one from what i can tell as i said aley. The broadcast length was the same. So this isn't a case of piping is story out for the twilight zone but it does feel ov- along and i'm afraid to these is at least a bit boring so i really would have liked to see episodes because i wanted to know whether a different portrayal of the main character could make me connect with more because unfortunately i just don't connect with this performance at all. I think the premise has real promise. Because like i said you. How's that different perspective. On childhood walking distance is about a man trying to escape his coordinate trauma whereas horace ford is about a man who is buried his childhood trauma. He tried to himself that every sin was grace in his childhood by romanticizing to the point of forgetting the real truth of he was bullied and beaten. He didn't have a happy childhood but instead of facing the berries so he comes bubbling to the surface again. So admired for being head of its time in a way and speaking about the long term effects of trauma when it remains untreated but unfortunately admiring. the things tackled. Just isn't quite enough for me. In this case so to be honest. I just think it's a bit of everything that doesn't work for me elite performance. I can't connect with which in turn leads me to not really believing the relationship between harrison his wife. I just can't understand why she would be with this man but a so many things in it that make me not really care about horses struggle. I get what it was trying to do. And i can reason out many of these things that i have problems with the episode. But it's still just answer up to an unsatisfying hole for me but i can see how this really would connect with other people especially if they actually really enjoy batting performance so while it doesn't really work for me. I can't damn this episode completely. And i'm glad to horace was able to discover the root of what was wrong with her to the point that he could make his peace with it and live his life from then on. But while i wouldn't describe watching the incredible world of horace ford as traumatic sadly for me. It's an experience then. I'll probably try to forget exit. Mr and mrs horace foot who have lived through a bizarre moment not to be calibrated on normal clocks or watches time has passed to be sure. But it's the special time in the special place known as the twilight zone. So that is the incredible world of horace ford. Now you know it sounds like it was a bit down on that episodes and to be honest. It didn't really work for me but it's one of those ones where you know. I think it probably does way for some people. So i hate to be hard episode. Like they're you know. I always try and find something else to say about it. Because i think then awesome episodes that universally everyone will agree on not very good but i think this is probably not necessarily one of those but it just didn't work to me so if it worked for you and you didn't really enjoy the experience of having me not enjoying it and i'm sorry about that you know. Such is life such as a welder. Live and we can. We can all agree on everything. But i hope you know you at least enjoyed the episode's somewhat so we're at a point. Where would almost at the end off season for now. Originally i hope to get it done in a year and i think at the beginning of last year i was doing pretty well at that i was on track for. I think there was a couple of things at derailed me first of all the new twilight zone obviously broke my stride beer because i had to cover there but then after that we we were just searching the midst of you know well to vent and not obviously impacted me as well instead of having more time to do things i had less but i think as well when you have less time to do a season four episode a really kind of impacts on getting that episode dawn now issue call like a clear week to work on the episode and you can just hammer away out and then it. It's not too bad. It's it's quite easy you can just get it done but if life is generally busy these episodes are really difficult to do. I'm fine and so you know with a season one-two-three three episode on a season five Common up because they are pretty short. If you're not able to work on for a few days and you need to get the sense of it back again. It's quite easy. You can just watch the episode again in only takes you twenty three minutes so it's no big deal but with these season four's if you're busy and you're not able to work on all the time but you need to get the sense of it back again by watching it again. Then it's a whole hour out of your day that you need to find and it's it's just been quite difficult so while the podcast has generally been a podcast comes out when it comes out. I think i did use them more or less manage to episodes in a month. But it's gone to one a months over the past few months and i'm hoping that changes which is a season five but in the meantime we've only got three episodes to go of season for and in the next episode. Be announcing to you. How you can take part in the end of season episode. An which is something. I always enjoy getting your voices onto the show and saying what you like and you don't i can really just celebrate in the twilight zone altogether so listen out next month and i'll give you some details about how we can do that. In the meantime thank i choose reviewers markman seventy three. Thank you for your very kind review. Biomass over there in australia. Thank you very much. Appreciate your review and then finally okay. I don't know how to say this. Or whether it's an abbreviation gelin banks in banks in the us with a very kind reviews. Well thank you so much and they say that they are currently restarting the podcast. From the beginning. I've.

australia horace ford twenty three minutes horace harrison next month both three episodes Ford markman two studio one horace foot three three episode aley one season four last year season five
"horace" Discussed on The Twilight Zone Podcast

The Twilight Zone Podcast

08:08 min | 2 years ago

"horace" Discussed on The Twilight Zone Podcast

"This long as well so this is not a case of story being stretched too far to fit our long twilight zone. It's more the case of a story. Just not engaging me and i usually liked studies like this the studies of appear some breaking down or going insane because those stories are usually very performance driven. And if you are fascinated by the central performance then you appreciate every small moment no matter how insignificant in might seem. Because you're so focused on what the actor is doing season. Four's miniature is a good example of this for me now. I realize it's not for everyone. But i probably gave the episode a bit of slack because i liked to at robert davao was doing with it. But i just don't enjoy watching pat angle here. I just find him annoying so on this last occasion when horace follows his old friends into the alleyway at randolph street. He that talking about a birthday party that they went invited to his best party and he tries to plead with them to accept an apology and as he does. He turns back into the young. Horace ford who was their age. You imagine not being invited that birthday party. Can you imagine. I'm supposed to be his best for he sticks in a mobile army and how we bust on the party. Billers watch for this fellas. Some i gotta tell you he'd probably baller something. You gotta listen to me. I have to tell you. I apologize fine. You cut out a if look at me. I'm i'm standing right here for me. Are you my buddy wanted. You listen to me you guys. You think i don't know what you guys from. Apologies georgie. cy. Oh come on. what are you. Give me the treatment for you. Listen will you please listen to me. I couldn't help it. I'm telling you get a chance. I'm your best friend. Will you listen to me. Just a minute wars maxwell maxwell for friends set about giving young horace at beating which then culminates in. Maybe the highlight of the episode of quite chilling moment when him bryant takes horace. Watch back to laura and we see that it's actually his childhood. Mickey mouse watch now. And the ending of this was a great point of discussion when this story came to the twilight zone now. It's my understanding that the original versions of horace ford finished here hammy. Brandt took the watch back to laura which suggested the horace ford went back in time to his childhood for good. But cbs just didn't like this ending and one of the executors rotor head attachment and said the meaning of the play is not clear so martin grams junior documents in unlocking the door to television classic that habitation rotor reply suggesting an alternative endon and it said start with the one thousand nine hundred eighty four street with the people in wardrobe of the period all cars etc shooting down on the street side. We see him running through the crowd. A few beats behind him comes laura horses wife. She is obviously lost sight of hair. Me as she makes her way down. The busy street. She comes to the alley. Looks in and sees horace. The boy lying on the ground. She goes over to him. Recognize him as your husband is horrified and frantically talking in yanqing adam perhaps in dialogue also trying to call him back she shakes vigorously and the boy transforms into horace ford. The man seen is then played in the alley which could contain all the thoughts and dialogue which our presence in the vision already shot at the end of the scene harrison. Laura walk out into the street on their way home only now. The street is nineteen sixty. Three the people in present-day close set dressing and cars accordingly up to the moment as they walked down the street and passed assign we could still bring in hammy brand looking after them very close to the same effect could be obtained somewhat more simply by using what has already been shot up to the time that laura finds horace the boy in the alley and reshooting from there to the end so this was more or less what ended up onscreen apart from a few details and it seems that when the studio one vision was broadcast originally in the days that followed they received over a thousand letters asking for clarification on the ending as well a grams. Junior writes that reginald rose himself was forced to defend his play reasoning that the view is probably did not understand that the story doubt in fantasy and perhaps widow nabl to distinguish who's fantasy it was so as filmed laura goes to find the poor young porous thankfully transforms back into a fully grown man and has the realization that is childhood might not have been as wonderful as he's been making out. I don't know what happened to me. Laura no idea but for one minute one second maybe one hour. I don't know. I saw something that made every memory i ever had a lie because when i was a kid was and hugli sad on nightmare and i saw i i know what it was. I remember it now. I don't know what happened to you. Either horse but i think we're all like that. We remember what was good and we what was bad because we couldn't live if we didn't. I can see why rod sailing would be reluctant to use incredible well of horace ford so close to walking distance because they do have this malati's but i also think that given the space of a few years there was enough distance to tell the story now walking distance about a bantam mind who did have a good childhood and wanted to revisit it because it was everything a childhood should be horace. Ford was a man having a breakdown and at a saying clues as to why that might be in the episode. It might be the pressure a supporting his wife and mother in the household the pressure of being an adult so he retreats into the things that should have been from a simpler time. But what happens when that simpler time wasn't as wonderful as martin sloan's wives in walking distance. Then i guess you need to make it up..

Laura martin sloan Horace ford laura randolph street one minute reginald one hour Brandt horace ford one second Ford robert davao harrison georgie Junior hugli over a thousand letters Four horace
"horace" Discussed on The Twilight Zone Podcast

The Twilight Zone Podcast

08:27 min | 2 years ago

"horace" Discussed on The Twilight Zone Podcast

"To tv guide was to encourage rod sailing to venture away from science fiction and retained his dramatic routes from the likes of playhouse ninety and studio one. So it's interesting. Still science fiction was seen as the lesser of the mediums. Drama was king and science. Fiction was really in the basement but reginald rose ended his letter to rod sailing on quite a lighter. Note if you promise not to be sore about the tv guide article. I'll tell you a funny story my rotten kid age ten had the bathtub party last week. What do you think. My rotten kid demanded as entertainment. Dear old dad said he. I want you to show my chums me three twilight zones. So did the daddy. Ron kid and sailing to the deep respect for reginald rose which which culminated in horace ford and then go on the twilight zone a well. Corey mr cory. Mama hadn't even fi be. Hey hey laura this what we used to call it yes. Have you ever get the time economy with a candy ball in my mouth. The kind that that changed colors why you suck why he made me stand up and every minute that point one color but i got out of my mouth and brad bus army brand y the greatest stick ball player in the whole world. Never forget this time is five real sea one time you know what it used to invite. You left great tan gray gray die hard stop. Nobody cares about when you were ten anymore. Good you're almost thirty eight for what you don't act thirty eight. Sometimes it's what i mean. So what kind of an answer is so fun. Ask jackie here. Why would you just be quiet for once horace. So the walking distance comparisons are helped by the fact that the episode is using the same music is walking distance which is fine. You know episodes did use the same music. Sometimes but i think because walking distance has taken on such a huge alive beyond the show in the subsequent years you know it's really identifiable as the walking distance music so to hear a here is a little jarring guy think but this scene introduces us to this dynamic. The horace ford has in his home life. The two women who shares living space his mother. Mrs ford played by ruth white and his wife. Laura ford played by non martin. And i think laura forge reaction to harrison that scene kind of mirrors my own experience watching harris. You know he's a good guy you want to give him the space to be who he is and talk about these things but then you gradually start to lose patience with them. And the long-suffering. Laura is played by non martin and she was born in one thousand nine hundred ninety seven in illinois and she was a hardworking actress of the day in many days to calm with a career that spanned five decades and a very respectable one hundred sixty eight credits and she pretty much made her career as a guest performer with some recurring roles. Here and there like on drew carey show but for me. I'll always remember here as freddy. Krueger's more there in the nightmare on elm street three. I'm while this was here. Only series twilight zone. She was in two stories in the atheist twilight zone if she dies and the source of full of loneliness which is one of the better eighties twilight zones and a very special story and deed. How is she in this. Well i think she does really with quite a difficult role here because it might just be me. But i find horace ford to be quite an annoying character while we can't george who someone will or won't fall in love with. I think the problem. I have here is that i can never really understand why this woman is with horace ford and why. She puts up with how he behaves. They don't seem to be compatible or kindred spirits in any way. I guess maybe opposites do attract an locking the door to television classic. She says her co star pattern. I have been great friends. We did stage work together. They flew me from new york to horace ford. I was flown in for a lot of television. We were known as the jeanette macdonald and nelson eddy of the stage and screen. Because we worked together so often i match rod when he came on the set us a very nice man kind of shy but here. I am an actress and i was in offered sailing. We were doing the street scene where pat relives his childhood with the street kids. I was off camera with everyone else and he played the part so well that i had chills on my back next to me how i felt and they agreed with me so a lot of this episode is taken up with horses home life and we see that. He lives with his mother and his wife. So if we consider our question about season four episodes you know all they too long and so on if this one was to be in a short format i would imagine they probably would have jettisoned one or the other of these characters but i guess in this long form version you would think that maybe one of the reasons why his mother was here is to kind of show why he is such a man child you know to. She still muslim too much. Is that what this is all about for the thing is. She doesn't seem to be doing that much. His friend landed and his wife. Laura seem to do that more than his own more mother. Mrs ford actually calls him out on his childish ways. She says term. Why you always talking about randolph street. The street where he grew up it was a terrible street. And i just want to forget it. She also asks him why he's always talking about when he was a child. So it's not really hair presence. That is making him so immature but she does give us some clues the horaces childhood was as rosy as he's making out so while it seems as though her presence here isn't really that necessary. I suppose she's just part of the window dressing of horace ford just being a big kid. Why do you always have to talk about when you were a kid street. You know what. I think i wanna do is it. I'm going back there right now. Why shouldn't harness. It's just a dirty old street. What are you going to say. Stay home brew. You going off horace horseless so when we get to randolph street with. We are greeted by one of those beautiful city street. Backlot sense that we've become so accustomed to hearing in the twilight zone. I'm sure we've probably seen this very same one dressed up in different episodes because it certainly looks familiar. But this time i think i enjoy all the more because it's just bustling with life and detail.

harrison Laura jeanette macdonald Laura ford new york ruth white illinois randolph street two women non martin harris last week reginald rose two stories ten five decades george thirty eight eighties one hundred sixty eight credit
"horace" Discussed on The Twilight Zone Podcast

The Twilight Zone Podcast

07:52 min | 2 years ago

"horace" Discussed on The Twilight Zone Podcast

"We'll let's find out when we visit the incredible world of horace ford mr horace fort. Who has a preoccupation with another time time of childhood a time of growing up the time of st game stickball and hide and go seek yes a reluctance to check out americas the nature of his image proof positive that the time he dwells in has already passed him by but in a moment or two. He'll discover that mechanical toys and memories and daydreaming and wishful thinking in. All manner of odd and special events can lead one into a special province. Unchartered unmapped a country of shadow and substance known as the twilight zone broadcast on april eighteenth. Nineteen sixty three. Reginald rose and directed by auburn bittermann director. Tonight is abner bittermann. And it wasn't too long ago that we met him when he directed his face twilight zone episode. The domi and i think that was an episode where he brought some real direct. To'real flourishes an interest in visuals to that show and he was able to use that dummy prop to great effect so i won't go into his bio too much because i'm sure we spoke about it back then but he was both an actor and director and i sing from looking down as credit. It's perhaps directing where he made. His biggest mark acted to more twilight zones after this one so we helmed for in total and i personally feel. He's got quite an interesting roster of twilight zone episodes starting with the domi. Then the incredible world of horace ford the number twelve looks just like you and then finally i am the night columbia black but the big question is could he bring any of that flare that we saw in the domi to horace ford. Well let's find out and tonight's writer of the twilight zone is also an interest in one. He's a gentleman by the name of reginald rose who was born for years before rod sailing and careers followed quite a similar pass however rose seemed to skew away from science fiction and fantasy for the most part is pay the bills by writing episodes of the anthology shows of the day. Like playhouse. ninety a one but this stretch of their career was punctuated by the occasional success. That raise their profile and raise the bar for writing in general for sailing of patterns or requiem for a heavyweight for reginald rose it was twelve angry men and then they both created successful socially conscious television shows per sailing. Of course it was the twilight zone and for reginald. Rose was his one thousand nine hundred sixty one. Show the defenders miss show about a father and son giulio lawyers who often talk on cases to do topics that were quite controversial for the time things. I use an asia on american activities and even abortion were all topics that the defenders examined while the defenders only got four series compared to the twilight zones. Five it did have to revival television movies in the ninety s and both of these writers also had versions of the same story made to for rod sailing. It was again requiem for a heavyweight and patterns for reginald rose it was twelve angry man and the incredible world of horace fort because the twilight zone version of this story is not the only version of this story. It's not even the fast vision of the story in one thousand nine hundred fifty. Five reginald rose wrote and episodes of theater one in hollywood called incredible world of horace ford and rod enticingly. The title character was played by the twilight zone. Favorite are connie and it was directed by planet of the apes director. Franklin j chef. And i believe that. This was the episode that i talked about early on the vision that was fair shown into rod serling for consideration of being remade to include in the twilight zone but when the twilight zone was actually already in production there was another version of the incredible world of horace ford made again and this one was written by reginald rose on this time it was released in one thousand nine sixty and it was for another anthology show called encounter now. This was a canadian show. That was a series of hour long episodes and two boasted some great names in its cast including twilight zone alumni. Like william shatner. I'm barry morse now. The encounter version of horace ford was again written by reginald rose. All three versions have been and the title character was played by. British actor called alan young. You had quite the career himself. But one of his. Most recognizable roles was as voice actor because he gazed at distinctive scottish brogue to the character of scrooge mcduck and duck tales and numerous other appearances and i would dearly love to do a deep dive on all three versions of the story so we could compare and contrast them because although they were all written by reginald rose that are some differences with the twilight zone version but i would've especially loathed to watch the arcand evasion but unfortunately i just couldn't find them to see them and if they don't exist anymore i think that's a real shame so reginald rose android sailing we're on similar paths. Pastor didn't tend to really crossover that much but mark grams. Junior writes in unlocking the door to a television classic about an editorial written by a writer called edith f ron and the editorial was called cana tv writer keep his integrity. And apparently this was as martin grams. Junior says a backhand slap at rudd sailing who had made numerous comments in the public eye about quality television. Now i can't find our regional article to quote to you for martin grams junior quote sailings response to it and he wrote the tv guide and he said should tv guys have any further interest. Interested me. I would count it as a personal favor if they refrain from sending miss. Edith ephron with haley's handled hatchet to do the job reginald rose on the other hand praised ephron and he said. I've seen the tv guide piece. And i'm writing to thank you for all the effort he put into making it an interesting and excellent article. I only wish it could have been longer. So would this stare any animosity towards the two writers. Well rose ended up on the twilight zone so economy not bad because in the same month rose wrote to sailing saying that the only reason for the letter.

william shatner reginald april eighteenth ephron Edith ephron Rose alan young reginald rose edith f ron Reginald rose tonight two writers Junior twilight zone both twelve British horace ford two encounter
Ozuna, Albies Go Back-to-Back as Braves Beat Brewers 6-3

Clark Howard

01:58 min | 2 years ago

Ozuna, Albies Go Back-to-Back as Braves Beat Brewers 6-3

"Losing to the Braves starting pitching matchup in this one. Adrian Hauser on the mound for the crew. Drew Smyly going for Atlanta would be the Brewers, who would strike first in the bottom of the second inning. Avisail Garcia leave the inning off with a double A Travis Shaw ground out moves Garcia to third. And that brings up Louise Aureus. Now the pitch swinging a bullet hit after global Dansby Swanson in the left field on Gloria's will get the runner home sound. They score that one. I think it's gonna be in areas should have caught it. At least for now. That's being ruled a base hit. Although Dansby Swanson would commit an air later on in the inning, But the Brewers weren't able to take advantage of it. They get the one run on two hits. They strand two runners there in the second and say one. Nothing game going into the third. This was a neighboring houses would start to a run into a little bit of trouble. Very angry and so would lead the inning. Awful. They walked and Freddie Freeman with line out a wild pitch from Hauser would send Adrian's a two second. Then they walked to Marcela Zuna that puts runners on at 1st and 2nd. Ozzy al Bees, then lines out. But then Dansby Swanson walks so that loads the bases for Austin Reilly swinging a bouncer off of Hauser. Deflection. Maria's can't get it. One run is in house is going to come in. Ozuna scores to make it a 21 Atlanta lead It deflected off of Hauser. Horace was going over to get it and he might have had a chance to get it if it doesn't hit Hauser That would push wants into third than William Contreras is hit by a pitch so multiple walks a hit batter there in the inning. Hauser would get out of it with a strikeout to enter and see our days. The Braves leave him loaded. They put do put two runs across there in the third, and it is a 21 game. That would be it for

Dansby Swanson Adrian Hauser Drew Smyly Avisail Garcia Travis Shaw Louise Aureus Brewers Hauser Braves Freddie Freeman Atlanta Marcela Zuna Ozzy Al Bees Garcia Gloria Austin Reilly Ozuna Adrian William Contreras Maria
"horace" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

Good Seats Still Available

03:39 min | 2 years ago

"horace" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

"Of course were were until the yankees rose in late twenties. The giants were the greatest Most successful franchise in baseball certainly in the national league And you know the mcgraw Legacy that was left to build terry in the nineteen thirties but still a very very good ballclub. And you're right. They won in nineteen thirty three and then and horses first. Two years of ownership and thirty six and thirty seven one finis. It was a terrific team with and hobble and and Terry in a number of other stars But beginning in nineteen thirty eight the giants Begin to fade as a contender and very same moment in the late thirties. The dodgers Who had been the real. You know third wheel in new york baseball there were. The dodgers weren't taken seriously by anybody. The dodgers were joke. They were funny. They were dumb bombs you know they they were. They were the butt of all. The jokes For decades in new york well not in the nineteen thirties. They weren't they weren't they brought in russia. And they brought in larry. Macphail mcphail refurbishes ebbets field and puts up and spins a ton of money to bring in dolph camilli and joe medwick. And kirby higby and pete reeser arise and tv reason. Nineteen forty one. The dodgers are winning the pennant. It was just unheard of. They surpassed the giants standings. But in attendance shocking. The national league this complete reversal just in time Horse dunham was was staggered. He was stunned. That the What am i doing here. My my pop. My he called his dad. Pop would be ashamed of me. I'm along the dodgers up. Stage me right here in new york and just don't to to react he. He promotes mellat from player. Star player to player manager in nineteen forty two us a move whose wisdom be questioned but it was certainly not a move. You know that that was made by somebody who is just biding his time. He was meant to shake things up and then immediately following that kerry with stones bankroll behind it. He brings in johnny mize a huge purchase of a superstar slugger into the giants they were trying to to respond to counteract the offensive that the dodgers had placed for them but it wasn't successful Under off the giants were even less successful than they had been earlier. They even dropped to last place in nineteen forty three and then again in nineteen forty six so he was finally in another realm of kind of desperation in mid nineteen forty eight that stone them does the unthinkable and he fires his beloved mellat. Please understand. I don't think i've covered this year. on wasn't just stones employees that they were best friends he loved mellat and and then hated to do anything to disappoint ott and having to fire him as manager was crushing thing. I want them to have to do but the did it because he felt he had to. And now he's the fire a lot he brings in under the leo durocher to replace him as stunning move. Bombshell evolve bombshells the hated archrival. The guy who'd been the face of all this upstart brooklyn dodger success. You're gonna bringing into him in demand the giants. It was a huge stunning bombshell. Intended by stone them to signal that you know all was not well..

Two years russia dolph camilli thirty six late twenties joe medwick Terry pete reeser kirby higby mid nineteen forty nineteen thirties late thirties new york Macphail mcphail first johnny mize ott mellat nineteen thirty terry
"horace" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

Good Seats Still Available

02:28 min | 2 years ago

"horace" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

"Nowadays his his His demise would have been able to be avoided but then time you got bright's disease called at the time he he was a dead man didn't he didn't expect to die quite that young but when he died the the the the the will stated that horace she'll take over the giants and so that was understood and it was it was greeted with with delights in all the local press. Everybody knew horace every light cars. They were happy for him that he could take over as the giants owner and it was it was seen as just a natural Positive progression described the team in new york Around this ownership environment with under horses Oversight i my. My sense is that there are a couple of blips of Of of true success. So that in sort of the mid thirties with folks like carl hobble and mellat. Bill terry And in the late forties early fifties which leo durocher. Obviously willie mays. Of course bobby thomson culminating in. I think what most people would firmly remember is probably the brightest moment in new york. Baseball giants history the world series championship in nineteen fifty four But it's interesting. As i say that i i'm guessing that it would be safe to say that the new york baseball giants were not necessarily known as for an ongoing period of time a determinant franchise. Essentially they were kind of you know not bad occasionally really good and that only one world championship so i guess i'm i guess the question in there is how good of a an oversight. A how good of an overseer was horace in the new york ownership Saga in some respects. You could could maybe make the assumption that he's a great you know. He's a good guy a solid manager of affairs. But maybe not necessarily you know pushing all of the envelopes to get to two championship status on a regular basis. There's a lot in there. But you know i'm going. That's that's that's a that's a great question And it's it's it's a major theme of the book In fact It was a source of great frustration for horse that he wasn't able to be successful as he wanted to be the giants. You're under john mcgraw..

new york john mcgraw bobby thomson carl hobble Bill terry early fifties late forties willie mays two championship mellat four one world championship leo durocher nineteen fifty thirties every cars mid
"horace" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

Good Seats Still Available

05:41 min | 2 years ago

"horace" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

"The san francisco. Bay area grew up in santa clara But my parents. My mom and dad both grew up in oakland in the nineteen twenties and thirties and they were big pacific coast league fans. Big oakland oaks fans But by the time i came along i was born in nineteen fifty eight by the time. I came along the oakland oaks. We're no more. And they had moved from oakland down to santa clara and the the team in the bay area major league team in the berry was the giants and so they became devoted giants fans. I grew up in a household where in the summertime. The giants game was always on the radio. Always and you know in the car house. Whatever so i was steeped in giants phantom. You know literally since before. I can ever remember so. I grew up as a passionate giants fan in soups or in in san francisco. In the san francisco bay area in the sixties and seventies In that period horse stone and was the owner of the giants. And everybody's sort of knew. It knew his name but he was. You know very very publicity shy. He never appeared publicly. Never was quoted in the paper almost never So he he was known to be there but he was mysteriously absent and so i always just assumed as a kid he was just just the honor he wrote the checks but other people made all the decisions and ran the team and of course as i grew older and began to understand that was not the case at all stone. Them was not just the owner stone. Was the general manager. Sonum fashioned the roster. He made the trades. He did everything. He ran the operation. Top to bottom itself which is extraordinarily unusual doing the sixties. he and calvin griffith in min- minneapolis. We're the only two owners left doing it. I guess charlie fending oakland pretty much the same thing too but it was. It was becoming a very rare thing so over the years. I always been a giants fan. But then i became more of a general baseball scholar and historian Did a lot of work with the society from african baseball research making presentations and writing articles For about ten years. I guess i. I wrote a weekly column on baseball history at the online baseball site hardball times and contributed to their annual Baseball books every year. But all along you know. My phantom was the giants and It just became more and more apparent in the is as a scholar. Baseball history that stone stoneham was one of the great figures in fashioning major league. Baseball became to know it over the twentieth century. And no minute ever told his story. Nobody because he didn't wanna story to be told not was he was publicity shy he didn't want to be quoted. He was absolute opposite of walter alley and bill. Vivek you know these very branch. Rickey these Baseball mogul's who were very interested in fashioning their stories very interested in cultivating the press and making sure that their story was told and earn told and hurting the way they wanted to told so on them was absolutely not that way and so his story begged to be told So a friend of mine guy by the name of rob garrett Had been involved with the giants organization and researching a book..

santa clara calvin griffith charlie fending rob garrett san francisco sixties Vivek oakland two owners Rickey both Bay about ten years seventies min- minneapolis one oaks twentieth century Baseball nineteen twenties and thirties
"horace" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

Good Seats Still Available

04:33 min | 2 years ago

"horace" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

"Mgm radio which was the dodgers radio flagship station. He was calling the game And there are clips. There's a clip of him out there to a calling that final homerun And not nearly as as exciting or excitable as hodges for probably for obvious reasons. Ernie harwell was calling the game for for television. The new york giants flagship television station at the time was w x channel. Eleven which i think carries both mets and yankees games now but interestingly that game on local television channel eleven was also for that game being simulcast on the nbc television network and interestingly it was the first ever coast to coast. Live telecast of a major league baseball game so there probably a lot of people who heard the ernie hall not a bad call and of itself. that's also available floating around there on youtube etcetera but again not nearly the verve and the powerful excitement that you heard in the hodges call if you were listening to the game outside of new york. You've probably heard the gordon mcclendon call on something called the liberty broadcasting system. Yeah he said. The giant yelled out. The giants win the pennant. I think only once as opposed to hide his his. Like i don't know twelve but that was probably the more more or listen to broadcast. If you believe that there was another radio call by name. Al helfer on the mutual broadcasting system as well as two guys calling calling it for a spanish language network. I'm not quite sure what that network was named but buck canal and fairly low that you say that feel. Oh ramirez go. Sorry it's been a long day and there was also a re recording by nat allbright Who recorded or re recorded the game and For for later broadcasts as well so there are a whole bunch of places. You could have heard this game but but none more memorable than that of a russ. Hodges i believe last year. If i'm not mistaken. The library of congress even inducted that broadcast of hodges into the national recording registry. That's how iconic That call was one of the few rare moments of onfield greatness for this new york. Baseball giants team obviously followed up. Nineteen fifty four with the ultimate prize. The world series But of course alas the team along with the brooklyn dodgers across the river bolted from new york in nineteen fifty seven four the greater pastors of california and leaving broken hearts everywhere. But we're going to get into the story of of the giants and the guy behind it. Horace stoneham it's a fascinating tale. You'll get we'll get into it but he inherited the team from his dad. Let's say he wasn't the hardest working guy until his dad kinda put him through his paces in order to succeed if he could rise to the level of of managing a team like this in in he did so for sure after some hard Some hard times in some Some hard knocks in in the real world and and then some and It's very interesting that we have this conversation With our pal this week. Steve shredder Because his book is coming out in a couple of weeks time it's called forty years giant the life of horace stone. And you'll hear in our chat with steve few moments not a whole lot. That's obvious about the the life and times of this guy because he'd liked it that way he didn't he was kind of a modest character Some would argue his team kind of suffered from from a modesty Factor as well in the against the backdrop of.

Ernie harwell Steve shredder Horace stoneham new york last year nbc ernie hall youtube nat allbright two guys california twelve Hodges this week both congress first Mgm w x channel gordon mcclendon
Leak at wastewater pond prompts evacuations in Florida

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

00:41 sec | 2 years ago

Leak at wastewater pond prompts evacuations in Florida

"More evacuations in florida where officials fear a leak in a pond of wastewater could burst. County officials believe a failure of the reservoir containing fertilizer. Wastewater from an old plant is imminent far governor rhonda santa's issued a state of emergency for manatee county to make sure it gets the necessary resources to deal with the problem. The worry started. Friday when the first evacuation order went out. Sky grundy has three kids and tells fox thirteen tampa bay. She lives in the evacuation zone. Feet i'm hoping that the dogs and horses and it's like if we leave die take everybody with me. What about the poor. Horace officials say could take ten to twelve days to drain the seven hundred billion gallons from the

Governor Rhonda Santa Sky Grundy Manatee County Florida Tampa Bay Horace
"horace" Discussed on KTOK

KTOK

02:31 min | 2 years ago

"horace" Discussed on KTOK

"Right. And Robert you wanted to ask Arlen about was in another illustrator Max Collins. Did you say how was the Junior really Light and Muscatine? I wonder if you ever met him. You did comic strip for Batman and Dick Tracy comic strip in the eighties. I just wonder if you ever met him. He's famous Mac sound, Jones. But no, I've never met in person. Robert. Thank you for that. Let's say hi to Jae in Indiana J and the Wild card line. Good morning and welcome to coast. Hello, Ireland. Good morning. To both of you. What a wonderful program is so nostalgic. I Was one of those 10 year olds looking sitting down in front of my old black and white TV to watch. But I had to pray that my older sister had a baby sitting job or I didn't get to watch Batman. Ireland. You mentioned, um, Batman and Robin and climbing up that wall. Do you remember the episodes when it was always fun to see? Which guest star was gonna pop their head through that side window and facing toward dynamic duo. Yep, Right. There is always a cameo that with those were those were always fun. Yep. Remember that island? Horace. Remember all or I remember the ones that I watch, you know, And I remember all that. Uh, Sammy Davis Jr was famously first of all. They even had the Green Hornet and Kato in the fall of 66, right. When their TV show debuted, they came on the Batman TV show is a little teaser in the window and then later on. In that season, there was the famous crossover episode. On Batman, where the Green Hornet just sawed with data and Bruce Lee. All right, Jay. Thank you for that. I meant to play this earlier. This is this was ah song. That that was released Frank portion as the Riddler. Dan, Can you play that? I don't mean this. What do you call a sleeping bowl Answer. Bulldozer. Riddle me this What? Tell me what? Tell me. What's the difference between the elephant and the please? Another difference. Well in elephants can have please, but the fleet can't have elephants of there you go. There's Frank Ocean as the Riddler. There was a bunch of those songs put out by a different Batman characters. Arlen.

Max Collins Bruce Lee Sammy Davis Jr Jae Robert Frank Ocean Dan Kato Arlen Dick Tracy Batman Jay Robin Jones both eighties Riddler 10 year Horace Muscatine