33 Burst results for "Huggy"

A highlight from David Brooks on How To Know A Person

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated

14:43 min | 2 weeks ago

A highlight from David Brooks on How To Know A Person

"Turbulent times call for clear -headed insight that's hard to come by these days, especially on TV. That's where we come in. Salem News Channel has the greatest collection of conservative minds all in one place. People you know and trust, like Dennis Prager, Eric Metaxas, Charlie Kirk, and more. Unfiltered, unapologetic truth. Find what you're searching for at snc .tv and on Local Now Channel 525. Welcome to today's podcast, sponsored by Hillsdale College. All things Hillsdale at hillsdale .edu. I encourage you to take advantage of the many free online courses there, and of course, to listen to the Hillsdale Dialogues. All of them at hillsdale .com or just Google Apple, iTunes, and Hillsdale. Welcome back, America. I'm Hugh Hewitt. Inside the Beltway this morning, I'm so glad you joined me. I want to talk with you about this book. David Brooks's brand new How to Know a Person, The Art of Seeing Others Deeply and Being Deeply Seen. David joins me now. Hello, David. How are you? It's good to be with you again. It's good to talk to you. David, I'm used to getting books, and I got yours for free. They get sent to me. I want to tell you I'm going to buy six copies of How to Know a Person, three for my children and their spouses, and three for friends who are no longer friends that I want them to read. I wonder if you've had other people tell you that they're going to be buying your book to give to other people. Yeah, thank you for being generous on Twitter about the book. I appreciate it. Yeah, no, I've had people buy it for all their employees. I've had people buy it for the families. I haven't heard about buying it for ex -friends, but it's a good strategy. It is. We just live in these brutalizing times. It is. And my book is supposed to be a missile directed right at that. It's about the precise skills of how do you get to know someone, how do you make them feel respected, seen, heard. How do you make them feel respected, seen, and heard? I know why my friends are not my friends anymore. It's because of Donald Trump. They thought me insufficiently outraged about Donald Trump, and I can't bridge that gap, right? I can't be other than what I am, which is I voted for him twice, and if he's the nominee, I'll vote for him again. But they don't understand it, and I don't know that they're trying to understand. I don't understand them either, but I think How to Know a Person has assisted me. So, congratulations. Let me also tell you, I told our mutual friend Bob Barnett that I was telling people about your book in Miami as I prepared for the debate, because my wife and I talked about one statistic in particular, one paragraph actually, on page 98. Thirty -six percent of Americans reported they felt lonely frequently or almost all of the time, including 61 percent of young adults, 51 percent of young mothers. The percentage of Americans who said they have no close friends quadrupled between 1990 and 2020. 54 percent of Americans reported that no one knows them well. That is an extraordinary raft of terrible news, David. Yeah, and I found it's hard to build a healthy democracy on top of a rotting society, and so when this people are filled with loneliness and sadness, it turns into meanness, because if you feel yourself unseen, invisible, there's nothing crueler than feeling that people think you don't exist, and you get angry, and you lash out, and we have these school shootings. We have bitter politics. We've got the brutality of what's happening on college campuses right now, where Jewish students are being blockaded out of classrooms or have the recipients of genocidal how to build a friendship, how to make people feel that you're included, and these are basic social skills like the kind you could be taught at like learning carpentry or tennis or something like that. It's how do you listen well, how do you disagree well, how do you sit with someone who's got depression, how do you sit with someone who's contemplating suicide, how do you sit with someone who disagrees with you fundamentally on issues, and I just try to walk through the basic skills, and in my view, there in any group of people, there are two sorts. There's diminishers, the people who stereotype ignore, they don't ask you questions, they just don't care about you, and then there's another sort of person who are illuminators, and they are curious about you, they respect you, they want to know your life story, and they make you feel lit up and heard, and my goal in writing the book was partly social, because we need these skills to be a decent society, and partly personal. I just want to be better at being an illuminator. I think it comes through in the book. I listened to your interview with Katie Couric and her colleague, who I don't know, and they were trying to get at a question a couple of times, I'm gonna try and land that plane. Why did David Brooks write this book? Well, I'll give you the personal reason. You know, some people, if anybody watched Fiddler on the Roof, you know how warm and huggy Jewish families can be. I grew up in the other kind of Jewish family, and our culture was think Yiddish, act British, so we had love in the home. We just didn't express it. We were not a huggy family. We were all cerebral up here, and then when I was 18, the admissions officers at Columbia, Wesleyan, and Brown decided to actually go to the University of Chicago, which was also a super cerebral place. My favorite thing about Chicago, it's a Baptist school where atheist professors teach Jewish students St. Thomas Aquinas, and so I went into the world of journalism where we just Frederick Buechner once put it, if you cut yourself off from true connection with others, you may save yourself a little pain because you won't be betrayed, but you're cutting yourself off from the holy sources of life itself, and so I just wanted to be better at being intimate with other people. I've heard you now three times, read in your book, heard you tell it to Katie, and heard you tell it to me, the anecdote about the University of Chicago, the anecdote about Yiddish and British, but what is new is you brought up Buechner, and I've never read Buechner. I now know his backstory, which is so tragic. You include it in the book. I did not know he had a tragic backstory that illumines his character for me, and maybe I will go and read it, but you're in interview mode. How many different book interviews have you done? Uh, probably 20 or more. I don't know a lot. You're definitely, I know what that's like, where you want to get through an interview, and you want to make sure that people, you land the point, and I want to get a little bit deeper than that. I want to find out if you're with your self -examination. There's been a David Brooks self -examination underway for a long time, but you have not yet written your book about God. Are you going to go there? Yeah, well, at the end of The Second Mountain, I wrote a book about my spiritual journey, and how I grew up, my phrase was religiously bisexual, so I grew up in a Jewish home, but I went to a church school, and I went to a church camp, so I had the story of Jesus in my God. And then when I was 50 or so, reality seemed porous to me. It seemed like we're not just a bunch of physical molecules. You know, I once, I was in subway in New York City in God's ugliest spot on the face of the earth, and I look around the subway car, and I see all these people, and I decide all these people have souls. There's some piece of them that has no size, weight, color, or shape, but gives them infinite value and dignity, and their souls could be soaring, their souls could be hurting, but all of us have them. And once you have the concept of the soul in your head, it doesn't take long before the concept of God is in your head. And so I went off, especially about 10 years ago, and it's still going on a spiritual journey of just trying to figure out what do I believe? And I learned when you're on a journey like that, Christians give you books, and so I got like 700 books sent to me, only 350 of which were different copies of Christianity by C .S. Lewis. And so that was my journey. And it didn't, it was very slow and gradual. There were some dramatic moments, but not a lot. But I realized, oh, I'm not an atheist anymore, and my heart has opened up to something. And I think this book is the extension of that. When your heart opens up to God, and if every person you meet, you think this person was made in the image of God, I'm looking at somebody so important, Jesus was willing to die for that person, then I've got to show them the respect that God would show them. I've got to try to see them with the eyes that Jesus would see them with. And that's a super high standard that I'm not going to meet, but it's a goal. And Jesus says, even in brutal, tough times, He sees people, He sees the poor. And the main thing He does is Jesus is always asking questions. Somebody asks Him a question, He asks them a question back. And that act of questioning, what you do for a living, that's a show of respect. And that's the doorway to seeing someone. And so to me, I think questions are a moral act that we're phenomenal at when we're kids. And then we get a little worse at it. And I come sometimes leave a party and think that whole time nobody asked me a question. And I've come to think like only 30 % of the people in the world are question askers. And so part of the thing I do in the book is just try to say, here are some generous things to do to ask people questions. It is a, that is the key takeaway, how to ask questions. And this is a skill set. I sent a note this morning to my friend, Jan Janur, who has been running a Christian ministry for 30 years called The Wild Adventure. He wrote a book called Turning Small Talk into Big Talk. And I was reminded of it. Yours is a longer, more complicated examination of the art of asking questions and why you want to do so. It's also, it reminded me a lot of C .S. Lewis, The Weight of Glory. You have never met an ordinary human being. Everyone is an eternal horror, an everlasting splendor, and you believe that and you get to it. And I want to talk about how one gets there, but I want to begin, interestingly enough, with a comment Katie Couric made you. And I listened to that yesterday. I'd finished your book last week and I made my notes last night. And then I listened to Katie Couric interview. She spontaneously brought up her interview with Sarah Palin. Why do you think she did that, David? I like Katie a lot. And she's been a guest on my show. I loved her memoir, at least the first two thirds of it, which was about her younger life, which I thought was fascinating. Why do you think she brought up the Sarah Palin interview? I was also struck by that because I don't think she talks about it enough. I know Katie from various things and I don't think she talks about it all that much. I think it was a time when she was asking questions and somebody just wasn't answering. It was a time when she was having a miscommunication. I imagine that's why she wrote up. Do you have another theory? I do. I think it's because she's been misunderstood because of that question and that she wants people who only know Katie Couric because of that question to know that that's not Katie Couric. And that, to me, it was it made perfect sense she used to be known. And that's the central theme of this. People want to be seen. They want to be known. And if you are known for the wrong thing, in this case, the Katie Couric Sarah Palin interview, you want to you want to get that off your cargo ship, right? You want that unloaded. And I thought, wow, you really the book worked on her. Let me tell you also, on page 134, you talk about face experiments with infants. I want them outlawed. David, what did you think when you read it? I think those are cruel and awful. Tell people about them. Yeah, so babies come out of the womb wanting to be seen. Baby's eyes, they see everything 18 inches away in sharpness. Everything else is kind of blurry because they want to see mom's face. And these experiments that you referred to are called still face experiments. The babies send a bid for attention. And the moms are instructed, don't respond, just be still face. And in the beginning, the babies are uncomfortable. And then after a few seconds, they start writhing around. And five within seconds, they're in total agony, because nobody is seeing them. And I really don't think that's that much different as adults. I think when we're unseen, it is just total agony. We're rendered invisible. And that's what I encounter in my daily life as a reporter. I used to go to the Midwest. I live on the East Coast, but I spent a lot of time in the Midwest. And maybe 10, 15 years ago, once a day, somebody would say, you guys think we're flyover country. In the last five years, I hear that like 10 times a day. And so a lot of just people feel they're invisible. And frankly, that's a little on my profession, the media. When I started as a police reporter in Chicago, we had working class folks in the newsroom. Our reporters, they hadn't gone to college. They were just regular people from Chicago, and they covered crime alongside me. Now, if you go to newsrooms, especially in New York, DC, LA, San Francisco, it's not only everybody went to college, everyone went to the same like 15 elite colleges, and a lot of the same prep schools. So if you're not in this little group, and you look at the national media, and you don't see yourself, it's as if they're telling you your voice doesn't matter. You don't exist. And that's a form of dehumanization that we've allowed to fester in this country. And of course, people are going to lash out. Yeah, I just spent two weeks with really wonderful professionals at NBC preparing for this debate. And at one point, I asked one of my colleagues in this exercise, I don't work for NBC, how many people do you think in this room voted for Trump? And taken aback, they did not answer because the answer is obvious. Nobody. And if if your newsroom is full of 100 % people not only didn't vote for Trump, but actually loathe them, you can't cover the country. It's impossible because you're not seeing the other 50%. And what your book is, I hope the newsroom is distributed as well. We are all about seeing people who have long been marginalized, and that is important. But if you don't see people who are supporting Donald Trump, for whatever reason, you can't cover the news. Let me ask you about this Philip Lewis fellow. I love him, because he finally gave me the courage to teach the do the Dormant Commerce Clause in the 11th Amendment with the confidence that even though my students are terribly bored, they have to know this. Where did you meet Philip Lewis? Because he's talking to teachers. Teachers need to read this book too, if only to be comforted in the fact that every teacher has this experience.

Eric Metaxas Dennis Prager Hugh Hewitt Charlie Kirk Katie David Miami BOB Katie Couric Frederick Buechner Jan Janur David Brooks Sarah Palin Two Weeks NBC Donald Trump 100 % San Francisco 18 Inches C .S. Lewis
Fresh update on "huggy" discussed on Stephanie Miller

Stephanie Miller

00:05 min | 19 hrs ago

Fresh update on "huggy" discussed on Stephanie Miller

"I can even order lunch while doing my homework, but I can't use my phone while driving. A distracted driver is one of the leading causes of death in the United States. So when it comes to driving, please don't be a multitasker. Don't drive distracted. A message brought to you by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Project Yellow Light, and the Ad Council. Because facts matter. You are listening to Stephanie Miller. Thanks for watching. One, two, three. I was wondering if they gave you an order in this one. this Yeah, is it? These are the good times? Really? Are you sure? You have to do the hustle too. Yeah, do the hustle. Leave your cares behind. right, All fine, fine. Easy for you to say. You're not facing fascism, are you? Written in 1970, whatever. Okay, hi, Rolina in Indiana. Hello, Rolina. Hey, how you doing? Good, go ahead. Hey, did you see, I'm sure you saw Biden's speech where when he talked about Bulbert, he crossed himself? Yes, I love Now it. what I want to see is I want to see every Democrat in Congress on a Monday. When she walked in, they crossed a and Tuesday crossed himself. There you go. Yes. Wednesday, they all have crucifixes they hold up at her. Thursday, holy water. Friday, someone's in there dressed as a priest with the incense and everything, speaking Latin, trying to exercise that demon. All right, there you go. And then I think if the holy water hit her, she would melt. I want a cruel world. What a world. Until I agree to baffle a girl. OK, I felt like that could have used more Ah, what a world. That was better. OK. Yeah, they can make that sign of the cross like she's the Antichrist. Yeah, yeah. By the way, someone mentioned there was a lot of times when they picture Jesus, wearing a cross, which seems like that would. That would not be what Jesus would wear. That would not be Jesus's fashion accessory, I don't think. No, I don't think he would like people wearing a star of David, if anything. A little bit triggering. Yeah. Yeah. All right. Black Knight says, God, Oh, my Chris Hayes is reporting on how Biden's economy is booming, how Biden's beating Trump at the polls now, and no one is talking about it. My God, someone in the media is actually doing their job. I can barely believe it. Thank you, Chris Hayes. Thank you. That's one person. Dean Obadiah says, Dear corporate media, please ask the 114 House Republicans who voted to remove George Santos because he's charged with 23 felonies. Why they still support Donald Trump, charged with 91 felonies. Thank you. Thank you, Dean. Okay, Seth, our homo of hope in Los Angeles. Hello, Seth. Hello, homos and Cody who runs the show and I know I'm up against a heartbreak and I do like things hard. I do think we need to have George Santos the musical and I think like Harvey Fierstein should play him. we I think all deserve that because he just wants to be loved. I have a baby. Oh yeah. Chris, you could play it. I don't know about And that. at some point he has to say you dropped the pot and huggies. Uh huh. I have the eight points. If you're voting for a Republican real quick, one 40 million people losing their health insurance is what you're voting for. Two, making it as difficult to vote, especially for a person of color. Three, taking away rights of LGBTQI people. Four, government control of a woman's body and women's rights. And six, weaponize the government. Seven, Muslim ban. And eight, student, no student loan forgiveness. And if you are voting for Republicans, that is what you are voting for. Yep. Yep. Thank you. Very good stuff. Ooh, he just, it hit that hard button. Yeah. Dated it and kissed it and married it. 29 minutes after the hour. I'm

"huggy" Discussed on Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

03:33 min | Last month

"huggy" Discussed on Stuff You Should Know

"What was your dog's name? Well, there were a few, but Jingle Bells, JB, was a great one. God, JB was such a good dog. We brought her home and put her in the fence for the first time and went to the shelter and brought her home, and she just looked at us and jumped right over the fence, and we were like, oh, this one's gonna be trouble, and she was, but she was a great dog, and then the other one was LL, LL Bean. Those were the two dogs I had in the 80s. That's great. That's a very 80s dog name. Totally, totally. LL Bean. Yeah, she was so sweet. I'll just tell you one anecdote real quick. LL was a, I guess, kind of a shepherd mix, Doberman Shepherd mix, kind of. Super sweet, super sad eyes, just the sweetest dog. She just looked like she'd seen too much in life, even though I know for a fact she hadn't. She just had kind of the old soul thing going on, and she was roommates with a dog named Hershey, a little schnauzer, and Hershey would fall into the pool every once in a while, and LL, who was a great swimmer, would go in and swim over to Hershey and push her, nudge her toward the steps so they could both get out. I saw it more than once. That's how good a dog LL was. Well, very quickly then, I, as a child, had the big two were Huggy Bear and Bo. Nice. Huggy Bear was a German Shepherd that had floppy ears, and Bo was a basset hound who would step on its ears. They were so long. And we, you know, I've talked about it before, but we kept our dogs outside. My parents did that. We had a big, probably quarter acre dog, Finston dog pen with a very large doghouse built on it. And when Huggy Bear died, Bo died not long after because of a broken heart, we think. And one day my parents came home and found me laying in their doghouse crying. Oh, that's sweet. How old were you? I don't remember. Probably like nine or 10. Man, that is sweet, Chuck. Would be a guess. But anyway, you were talking before we digressed about your dogs in the 80s. Oh yeah. So we both had dogs in the 80s and we could attest that their poop didn't come out white. It magically became white as time wore on. That's right. And we could stop here with some heartwarming stories and the answer to that question. But because we do what we do, we're gonna talk more about dog food and dog poop right after this. Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck. Do you struggle to save money every month? Well, with Rocket Money, you can quickly identify all of those sneaky subscriptions that keep charging you month after month and cancel any that you no longer use. It's such an easy way to start saving money. Rocket Money is a personal finance app that finds and cancels your unwanted subscriptions, monitors your spending, and helps you lower your bills all in one place. With over five million users and counting, Rocket Money has helped save its customers an average of $720 a year and one billion in total savings so far. Rocket Money also lets you monitor your expenses in one place, recommends custom budgets based on your past spending, and they'll even send you notifications when you've reached your spending limits. So stop wasting money on things you don't use, cancel your unwanted subscriptions, and manage your money the easy way by going to rocketmoney.com slash stuff. That's rocketmoney.com slash stuff, rocketmoney.com slash stuff.

"huggy" Discussed on Planet Mikey

Planet Mikey

08:08 min | 1 year ago

"huggy" Discussed on Planet Mikey

"Wanna know why this girl crashed and broke her butt cheeks on the ice, trying to do a double Sal khao. Last time I tried to do a double Sal Kyle, animal rights organizations were at my house. And boy were they pissed, but I don't even watch one second. Have you? Yes, you're not alone by the way. The like Olympics to Olympics. I want to say four years ago. The opening ceremonies had like 40 million viewers in America and then last year at Tokyo is like 28 million a huge drop off. This year, it was like 12 million. Like a disaster drop off. And what is it? Irish roses number one sport is figure skating. I like figure skating unironically, I've written about it twice already. So there's no avoiding it. There's no avoiding. Would you ever have thought that knowing Jerry Thornton as well as we know him that that would be something he actually wrote about at one point? You know what? Cheese is off audience to no end, which is why I love to do it. So Nathan Chen, the Americans said a record in the short program. And so I wrote this thing comparing him to rocky and rocky four, like going into a hostile territory in a dead of winter in a communist country where everyone's against him and he summoned the courage to come up and randomly figure skating trivia. I'm the only guy in this room right here. All right, go ahead. Your arms ever kissed Nancy Kerrigan. Okay. I think you meant to say kneecapped. No. You really think I whacked her in the leg? The only leg I never looked suspiciously like a glue. You would. The only leg I've ever whacked was my middle leg. You kissed Nancy Kerrigan on the knee. On the face. Oh, I see. On a knee. What are you crazy? No. Now, where's she going? Why? Nancy Kerrigan is lovely, but at that time I remember thinking, I have more of an attraction to Tonya hard. Yes. Because she gave you that vibe that say you were in school with her. She was just as likely to make out with you in the hallway as beat you up and take your lunch money and both had appeal. But it would take either one of them. You know you could sleep with her, but she might burn your house down. The bad thing about Tonya Harding is that even when she was young now, in particular, you don't know if you squeeze it too hard if you're gonna ooze pus. You know, because she's that much of a piece of trailer. The greatest thing that ever happened to her was Margot Robbie playing her. Oh my gosh. She should have won the Oscar just for passively making her likeable. Make me suspend disbelief long enough to think you could possibly be Tonya Harding. To make me forget that I brought up pus in the same sentence. It's just going to ignore that. So no, but Nancy Kerrigan, I did a live shot. See, here's what happened was. She was in her stranded in her house. She couldn't leave her house because the media was on her front lawn after she got the whacking from Tonya Harding, right? She was before OJ. It was the biggest story ever. So I did fake live shots in front of a green screen, the weather board. I met with a picture of her house behind me. And I was bob smithers. This is bob smithers reporting from the carrigans front lawn again and so far no one's come out and it still looks the same a couple of leaves have blown by, you know, just and I do them every ten minutes updates from Nancy Kerrigan and it was all phony. She called into the show. She heard her family was sitting there watching bob smithers doing these fake reports. They thought it was funny, so she called in and it was like a huge coup for us to get the talk to her. So then I saw her at a bar. I don't know which one was on Boston. You know, hey, huggy kiss, and I was like, Nancy tarragon. Thank God it wasn't Tonya Harding. That was like 9 94. A story that today, if you didn't live it, you have no idea how big it was. What's your name? The anchor was married to Mari povich. I should know I know Chung. Was doing the network newscasts from the mall in Oregon state where Tonya Harding was training like it was a mole. It could go to the gap and then to hot topic and then walk over and watch her train and they did the. Like in the economy today, the stock market took a tumble in this Tonya Harding, skating behind it was surreal. And everybody because we're all so stupid and we would no smarter than people thought that Nancy Kerrigan was like this princess and privileged and she had life so easy. Her father was working like three jobs in order to keep her skating. He was just a working class guy. Regular guy in stone. There we go. And that's where I did my last people. More on that nuclear attack from China, but first this update on what's going on with Nancy Kerrigan and Tanya. That was honestly the biggest story ever. And the story got completely blown away once OJ killed those two people. When June of 94. Wow. Remember the Olympics where Tanya finally gets out to skate there? And the whole world is sick of this. And want no part of the Americans. And she goes out to skate and she broke her skate lace. And she goes over to the judges, and that's in the movie. They do a great job. Like a kabuki makeup is all streaming down her face or whatever. And they let her go rather than tell her well, go piss up a rope honey, you missed your chance. They go, all right, we're not dealing with this. Go fix it. And they took the next one. Oh my gosh, I shouldn't know this. It was Jose art from Canada. She had to suddenly go on to it's like being a comic and you're waiting for your turn and you're not ready yet. You, now, you know, like what? So she didn't skate nearly as well as she would have and then Tony gets to go out there and carrying and came in second. The Irish rose against can't get over the fact. How do you know the figure skater that had to bump up her spot? And Nancy ended up losing to aksana baiul. From Ukraine who didn't skate although I always yeah. She just threw in a jump at the end. Like, oh, that's means what to me. I don't know, but Nancy should have won, but didn't only because she got piped. Maybe Mikey at it. I would like son of her by you all any day. You know what I'm saying? I really would. And I'm not kidding you. Can I tell you a quick Jeff torberg story because there will be no others? Jeff. You guys, you guys, honestly, the Jeff Tor bork story. Have you ever had any gifts? No, did he have to move up his skating? No, this is nothing. Okay, all right. Nothing to do with skating whatsoever. But if you Google Jeff Tor board, you're going to find out that he had an impact on Major League Baseball history. In several forms. Jeffrey tambor? No. Tour Borg. Sorry, former catcher for the White Sox, the Dodgers, manager of the White Sox. Remember Jeff doorbell? Absolutely. All right, so this will be the final, and I will say this now. Unabashedly. The final Jeff torberg story I'll ever tell on this podcast. Thank God. I'm in the elevator at Fenway Park. Fenway always, yeah, she's used to Fenway Park. We all met the elevator. And here's Jeff torbert comes walking off. And you know, baseball card collectors can recognize people's faces. This isn't as good as the Dave justy story. No. That was good. But this is walks off the elevation. Oh, Jeff torberg. He goes, how you doing? I go. You caught one of Sandy Koufax is no hitters, you know. He looks taps me in the chest smiles goes. Perfect game, and don't you forget it..

Nancy Kerrigan Tonya Harding bob smithers Sal Kyle Olympics Jerry Thornton Nathan Chen Margot Robbie Nancy tarragon Mari povich Tonya Tokyo Tanya Oscar Jeff torberg America Chung aksana baiul Boston Oregon
"huggy" Discussed on Game of Crimes

Game of Crimes

03:05 min | 2 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on Game of Crimes

"I'm sorry we'll take you in conjunction with the final question. You're in a brand new office. Are they gonna let you out of that room because you were able to get out of that room earlier. You didn't have the code. If you're listening bill sherry needs extraction staff. The government is a many splintered thing and sometimes we do things and it always works out. It's just a little uncomfortable in the meantime so we're still growing pains. This building is going to be amazing like by the time we named the room after stephen hobby Just texted me the code. Apparently it's very secure code. One two three four thought at the all right. Well sure. I can't tell you how much first of all tell you folks. They're listening final thing here. You don't understand what it's like that we've now gone probably three and a half hours. This is the special agent in charge of the entire state of arizona for da. You've got lots of things to do. You got people liaise with hugs to give t shirts to make to where you know. We're getting a t-shirt to route seriously. They rental huggy bear. That is going to come out. You know and for you to give us three and a half hours. I mean i can't tell you first of all how thankful we are. We had some fun on this. You know we take the topic seriously but we don't take ourselves seriously but for you to spend this kind of time Can't tell you appreciated you know. Thank you so much. Thank the bill. Bill really helped set this up quite a bit and thank you for taking the time for doing this. I mean you had other things you could have been done and instead you spent three and a half hours with a couple of wise guys. You know what i mean. Well i'm honored to be here. It is so important to me every time that we have the opportunity to talk about the great things that the men and women in law enforcement are doing will take that every time so important at our our citizens need to know how hard we are working to keep them safe and we have to be the ones to tell them. So thank you for using your voice. Thank you for giving me one. I hope it's row received. Well going.

bill sherry stephen hobby arizona Bill
"huggy" Discussed on Janet Lansbury Podcast

Janet Lansbury Podcast

05:27 min | 2 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on Janet Lansbury Podcast

"The other child was hitting because i know that child is doing the best that they can in that moment. Yeah it is hard not to get all mother. Bearer father bear when our child gets hurt absolutely and we can't blame ourselves. If we do that. I remember one time. I talked about this in my book. No bad kids. I was walking with my daughter over to the playground. And this boy who was with his dad came all the way around like three corners of the playground and ran up just to hit my child and he was a little older. I was just stunned. I mean that seems so over the top to me. I didn't start screaming at him. But i was very surprised and i had my hand there right away and i'd say oh. No you know what you do. That he went back off renting to his dad. The i'm thinking about it later. I thought wow. He really wanted his dad to notice that everything was okay with him. This is like raising a flag to his dad. Cmih see what i'm doing. See how far i'm going to show you. I'm not okay so there's always a reason. Children do these things. And yes i would apologize. Another child got hurt. Because of my child i would apologize to that child. I'm so sorry. That really really hurt. But i wouldn't do what i hear. Some people recommend. I just don't believe in this that we would then say to our child. Look you're made him cry. See how sad he is. You hit him because children are the most aware people on the planet. And i know that my child or this other child is going to see all those things. They don't need me to point it out to them. They're they're taking it all in and more and feeling the shame and feeling the sadness and feeling whatever it was the confusion the fear. That made them do that. So i don't need to add to that..

Cmih confusion
"huggy" Discussed on Janet Lansbury Podcast

Janet Lansbury Podcast

05:22 min | 2 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on Janet Lansbury Podcast

"Back in my spot as the secure base then i will stride in. Maybe if something looks really dangerous or harmful. My child's really hurting. I would run in then and then i would say oh. I can't let you do that. Gotta stop you and then to this other child are you. Okay checking them out and then again. If that other child the quote victim of this was my child than i wouldn't rush in grab them. I would block to make sure it's not going to happen again. And i might say the same thing. Ooh i can't let you hit him. You know looks like you didn't like what just happened or i don't know if you're trying to say hi but that's not safe. My hand was already there so to my child i would check out how they're feeling what they think about that. You know where you all right. Sorry that i wasn't there to stop that from happening. And if my child was in floods of tears than yeah. I might say oh. Gosh that's really upsetting for you and very close and i wanna hear the feelings. I'm still not grabbing my child and moving them out of there unless they really can't recover from the feelings and then i would escort my child to where i'm sitting on the bench or something and have them come sit with me and then see if they need to go home they wanna play more so the message is we want to give to the child. Who's again the quote victim is that i see you. I'm interested are you okay. I'm here for you at the child. Reach job to me. of course. we'd be hugging. But i don't want to override their feelings and give them a message. Oh you can't handle this. Other children are overwhelming. Because those things will discourage my child from their interest in engaging socially and that's the opposite of what i wanna do. I wanna encourage their interest. I want to encourage them. So let's go with another example. A huggy child a child that goes in wants to hug. Every child i actually a lot of questions about that and it's an interesting one because usually it is a form of physical aggression but it's a socially acceptable form of it to the parents. So the child does it sometimes. It is that they're genuinely adoring of children and want to hug them. That can be the case too. But even then i would be aware that this may not be welcomed behavior with other children and i don't want the child to feel that they aren't supported there and i don't want my child to feel like it's okay to do that with everybody because it's not sometimes children get a big hoopla about it because it does look adorable to us and we make a big deal out of it and then sometimes you'll even see a child hugging and they're kind of looking at the parents see. I'm doing this adorable thing that you gave me kudos for and what do you think of this. So it's kind of inauthentic that they're hugging. They're not doing it from a place of affection. But like i said regardless we wanna be there so we know that our child has this tendency. When i see my child going up to another child i would be the buddy guard. I'd be ready to come close. So i can be right there. I see my child reach out to hug but my hand was there right away. You can't see me. 'cause i'm not even doing it ear while i'm doing this podcast so you come close right away. You see your child start to reach out. You're gonna put your hand there so it can't happen. Ideally and you're gonna stop child very gently there but you know firmly to so nothing's going to get around you or whatever and you say looks like you wanna hug this child. I'm not sure if they want that. And then i'm looking at the other child..

"huggy" Discussed on Hollywood Handbook

Hollywood Handbook

02:52 min | 2 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on Hollywood Handbook

"Kind of sounds like what sounds like a smaller tiny well. Maybe it's tiny. I don't know clay. We grew up in the same home town so we have similar voices like we knew the same kids. So like all the comedies. Stuff that we do is con- comes from the same place right but you understand help. Is someone time near. The tiny would be cuter. You've also to be cute. If i would have had a chance to do of i was. I was doing a noise. That's how star is dude my laugh and then i do a wind down noise then you in and now you're saying words you're about to buy noise. If was that your new noise is going to be how my head is. This blood will use. You've said that you weren't going to do anything. And i feel safe with hazen sean. Watching even though we're muted let me go back to my point if you come in and you change the rules of which is that you can say words and you say hello. Do your voice. If i would have known that i could do a voice i would have done it. And then you need a law simply me a lawyer point your copy. Everybody would think that you're gone. I've a new hewitt voice idea okay. I'm ready sorry. Huggy gisele buried is way to squeeze is that That's the blood lord. Okay so he would like wits new character. Yeah he's the blood. Lord is yeah. He's sergeant sergeant bones. His nephew sergeant. Sergeant bone says love the taste of bones. Having do you wanna try one more time. Happy birthday sport. You might have cav man thank you. That's daddy dude. That's bad that's now daddy. I hate to say it but dude. That's daddy do that is daddy. That's my daddy dude. Do dude it's dad. He do danny by the way just so y'all's listeners. Know we're not at that cute shit reality were bad ass dudes and this is high normally talk. I only talk. The way that i was because of for comedy purposes is so funny that i would ever be cute. I hate that chip suit. Joke is us being cute when we're the opposite which is rugged my so raw bad. That's facts that specs. That's big facts. Shit that is rusty ahead and hard.

hazen sean Huggy gisele Lord danny
Andrew Cuomo Won't Go out Without a Fight

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:45 min | 2 years ago

Andrew Cuomo Won't Go out Without a Fight

"We need some ground truth because my my team here is conflicted. Is this reprehensible excuse from going to leave. The governor's mansion or not he'll jesse jones. Yeah i gotta tell you. He is the yen game will be. He's going to have to step down but it's not going to be easy and it's not going to be probably within the next six weeks i i went over this a nice show. Am nine seventy new york in the morning. Said and i talked to a senator rob or up in new york state. We talked to michael goodwin. We talked to zelda. And it'll be this guy digs in andrew cuomo exact you know and let me tell you italian i wanna stick up for my tenants. I keep telling you every time we talk. I got out. She got the blogs i got. I guess i'm getting buried over your pelosi. help me out. what am i doing. Thank god for steve. Scalise gonna save them on the radio. I guess we love leave. You know what i'm saying. Thank god it's the least italian louisiana. We loved that everybody else. I'm in trouble. My goodness gracious. They say they'll be out but it's gonna take awhile he's gonna dig in he's gonna get like we've never seen before isn't it reprehensible joe that he's gonna leave if he ever does because of you know kissy kissy huggy and not the fourteen thousand people who died because he sent them back those people's homes. Yeah yeah it's it's a terrible situation. But i don't think he's going to skirt that issue to the democ apis. Yes even. this is what. I'm hearing on the inside in new york flagship station. They don't i don't think he's gonna get away with any any any of it. I think they're going after him. On it. And i went and i went to the link and it's a great question and this is a great viewpoint that you're putting out there said gorka because there's no way he can

Michael Goodwin Jesse Jones Scalise New York Andrew Cuomo Zelda Pelosi Louisiana Steve JOE Gorka
"huggy" Discussed on Premium Hoops

Premium Hoops

03:45 min | 2 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on Premium Hoops

"Podcast kohl's wicker was still you know doing pods. He was allowed to at that time. shadow houston rockets. I guess Excited to see where they go but shot uncle anyway. What i meant to say was they. Were talking about like a hypothetical situation. In which zach levine would like be the second guy on like a you know go like the sixers or something like just throwing around ideas and i think coal. Raise some concerns of like. How is that going to handle like an more off ball roll and same kind of takes the opposite perspective a lot of times that and he said something that really just stuck with me where he's like you kinda just have to trust some of these guys to figure it out like sometimes they're just basketball players. They are aware of what they need to do. And kind of over indexing on like their outer limits as from from from feel or iq standpoint can be like putting them in too small of a box. Like is donovan mitchell. This like all huggy guy is if he was on like a different team could he like. Pass the ball. A lot more swing. It may quicker passing. Reads all that stuff. I probably. you'd probably figure it out. Like i think we get so fixated on what we see a player as being that we don't give them enough credit for being able to make adjustments in the right system So there's no guarantee like henry says book night will do that but i'm glad you left. It open ended henry. Because you know it's possibly just does it. Yeah i think. I also applies to really point scott and i think a very important point and i think from also would apply to things i've said can thomas as like When i say it makes you want to clarify what i said in the sense that i don't mean say that he willingness for his unwillingness thing. I completely agree. Like it's the point i made about. Lebron just relax That i said it jokingly but like that is a real thing or if he gets picked a twenty one by the knicks and they say kim. You're you know. All takes johnny bryant. Who's the head system at the knicks. Now like sit down next to camp thomas before practice four in the you know. I guess it's the fall now is gonna say summer i kinda summer And be like look. You're getting this shots from here. This shots from here. This not unassisted. We're trying to get the assistance numbers in camps. Probably like enough and does it. It's like an. Nba coach told him to do. And that's who's paying him on my concern. The sort of the determinist aspects of that. I do i do think you can sort of draw like i feel is still at audible skill and like decision making you still in evaluate -able skill and You know there's certain complexities in passing reads and the pace. The guy who make decisions with indecisiveness and productivity this map before with those things are skills that are improved their or unimproved In certain guys are better spots to improve your skills and others guys are better than others. But i do think that the The general sort of like underlying problems of Would such and such accept a role. A i do think like like i think that there is not every guys intel. Unfortunately as good like you talked to some people around certain guys and they're like yet we've never been able to get a read on them..

zach levine donovan mitchell houston rockets kohl sixers henry johnny bryant knicks thomas basketball Lebron scott kim Nba intel
"huggy" Discussed on Premium Hoops

Premium Hoops

03:45 min | 2 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on Premium Hoops

"Podcast kohl's wicker was still you know doing pods. He was allowed to at that time. shadow houston rockets. I guess Excited to see where they go but shot uncle anyway. What i meant to say was they. Were talking about like a hypothetical situation. In which zach levine would like be the second guy on like a you know go like the sixers or something like just throwing around ideas and i think coal. Raise some concerns of like. How is that going to handle like an more off ball roll and same kind of takes the opposite perspective a lot of times that and he said something that really just stuck with me where he's like you kinda just have to trust some of these guys to figure it out like sometimes they're just basketball players. They are aware of what they need to do. And kind of over indexing on like their outer limits as from from from feel or iq standpoint can be like putting them in too small of a box. Like is donovan mitchell. This like all huggy guy is if he was on like a different team could he like. Pass the ball. A lot more swing. It may quicker passing. Reads all that stuff. I probably. you'd probably figure it out. Like i think we get so fixated on what we see a player as being that we don't give them enough credit for being able to make adjustments in the right system So there's no guarantee like henry says book night will do that but i'm glad you left. It open ended henry. Because you know it's possibly just does it. Yeah i think. I also applies to really point scott and i think a very important point and i think from also would apply to things i've said can thomas as like When i say it makes you want to clarify what i said in the sense that i don't mean say that he willingness for his unwillingness thing. I completely agree. Like it's the point i made about. Lebron just relax That i said it jokingly but like that is a real thing or if he gets picked a twenty one by the knicks and they say kim. You're you know. All takes johnny bryant. Who's the head system at the knicks. Now like sit down next to camp thomas before practice four in the you know. I guess it's the fall now is gonna say summer i kinda summer And be like look. You're getting this shots from here. This shots from here. This not unassisted. We're trying to get the assistance numbers in camps. Probably like enough and does it. It's like an. Nba coach told him to do. And that's who's paying him on my concern. The sort of the determinist aspects of that. I do i do think you can sort of draw like i feel is still at audible skill and like decision making you still in evaluate -able skill and You know there's certain complexities in passing reads and the pace. The guy who make decisions with indecisiveness and productivity this map before with those things are skills that are improved their or unimproved In certain guys are better spots to improve your skills and others guys are better than others. But i do think that the The general sort of like underlying problems of Would such and such accept a role. A i do think like like i think that there is not every guys intel. Unfortunately as good like you talked to some people around certain guys and they're like yet we've never been able to get a read on them..

zach levine donovan mitchell houston rockets kohl sixers henry johnny bryant knicks thomas basketball Lebron scott kim Nba intel
"huggy" Discussed on The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

07:36 min | 2 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

"Started doing their own thing. They started bringing the money back into the community and some of the black folks that worked for the white folks that was. They couldn't buy anything anyway. With white folks. They came into the community which we should be doing anyway and they started spending their money in the community with these black holes so black folks had his economic empowerment in this community and mass with this is all about. And these white folks the babylonians or already you're already races and yeah hating at the same time all this could have been diffused but it didn't and you saw black folks out there living in their glory news. Cj somebody's black holes were millionaires. Somebody's black folks. Owned a big china hotels and these black folks had this whole district today cells and it was just i can pitch it as being something glorious. Were black blindfold and in the babylonian who's racist to the court they contain it. It just took anything to spark this. And then yes i believe the fact that it was over three hundred people that was killed singer. They try community three hundred people a whole entire community. Not only that china's the records of it as well and then they talk about finding the dead and i get it out of all due respects to be accountable for everybody's dead but then needs to be some type of payment been needs to be something to give back to these black folks generation wise as far as what they did and they can't even sign a hate crime bill. Yeah know i understand that. That's why it's life is back living. We're able to continue living. Their lives continue to be able to do the things that they do ran for mayor. And that's what. I don't understand what happened was which was really about then. We're gonna move warm but what happened was the thing that really really bothers me about. This is the simple fact that when they did all of this and he destroyed this community the babylonians that lived out there we took the property built back up and now it became generational wealth for that family. That oklahoma's homa oaklahoma no tulsa tulsa tulsa. This is the town right. yeah tulsa oklahoma. You should be ashamed of yourself man. You should be ashamed of yourself. You should be on your knees begging for mercy with this disgusting history that you try to hide and thank god for the black folks in. Ej created a commission as still are not teaching these kids in school about riots. And other stuff. They don't teach a screen so they still don't care the black folks had to see. This is absurd. The black folks that live there had to create a commission to get to the bottom of all this mess. Because if that wasn't the case this was still be swept under the copy. Well if they even can get to the bottom of it half the people on the commission probably their parents were part of it. So who's really getting to the bottom of anything you think i'm gonna out my racist family. And what they did in this community knows it down to. It's like it's like who are policing the police. Like how far does this go exactly. Like i truly believe like man. Somebody gotta be of kim cares. Nobody nobody cares about black. American even black americans because they don't do what they need to do because they're worried about if we look at these stores along a lot of ball avait and then on top and then on top of that moving fast forward this what is it called greenwood green. I'm sorry green. What is the district. Pulsar was an what happened. Was wasn't greenwood. Oh the babylonian gave the black folks peaceable corner would a barbershop. That's all that remains of this. And all they did was rebuild in have this generation wealth tulsa oklahoma. This this is not a look for you. In the way. That shoe barry. You'd a really attempt to try to you did you. Did you succeeded. You bury this history of this massacre of black folks for something. That really just didn't even happen at didn't have any proof for we know why because he was racist core. You saw african american community with wealth and ownership and the money was going back into the community to stabilize it economically. And in your soul you could not to your core and these black folks was even video. They went and worked some of them. Who had to work for you. The babylonian they worked for you they put in a hard day's work you paid him and he took that money and put it back in the community. And you couldn't you couldn't take it. No i wish it was deeper than that. It wasn't even as deep. They did it because they were mad. Sean that's why they this you know no. They weren't mad because they were out there making money. They knew they were out there making money. They were mad because they thought that something happened. Some lady some white lady but it goes because they were they were mad. They wanted to do and they do whatever they weren't. Great city at the corbett is. I think they were talking about what we wanted to see. You want them to have that land. They could've been done sending out have the city. Let's shallow as i said it was. Look at the time line you take in nineteen twenty one being as racist as it was even to this day but think about nine thousand nine hundred ninety one and oklahoma city names also that they were gonna have a community of black folks but they let them but they let them out they let them out the they didn't want anything out there. Nobody was out there. They didn't care so you don't think none of this system. I of course. It's from racism. But i don't think it was because they were like. Oh let's bring down the black community. They did it because they were mad. What's any excuse to do that. They didn't need an excuse. They apparently short. Sean huggy show morning. Everyone does this sound. I know it's been a long time for this change on us soil. Hey sweetheart basically that whole massacre thing with hatred. They were saying they seen how black people with thriving and didn't need them and so that whole thing was basically built about hatred because we were doin what we have to them from no not angry white. That's what it was that.

Sean three hundred people china Sean huggy babylonian over three hundred people today nineteen twenty one babylonians tulsa oklahoma oklahoma tulsa about nine thousand nine hundr half the people oaklahoma african american American black Pulsar americans
"huggy" Discussed on Balls! A Supernatural Podcast

Balls! A Supernatural Podcast

04:00 min | 2 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on Balls! A Supernatural Podcast

"That's half of what they didn't season to you. Think this'll be the huggy season. You would think as three hugs. That hurts my heart. I know that's my extra super till Indices it's those by the end of the season to better my favorite tidbits. Because it's stuff that i don't necessarily think about it makes me kind of reflect on the season. I know you were pulling stuff from like episode. Six talking about it was so happy i like. I made a note in my notes to mention what i mentioned once. Oh you going back. I yeah i was like i'm gonna fucking do at this time. I'm going to be prepared. I know you usually go. You know i mentioned this couple episodes ago last season that it was like no. I'm getting references. Oh yeah being professional. Because that's what the people want. That's what they come for. Oh i guess. I have to give you a plot. I was ready to talk about the episode. Something like we let them know what happened at the episode of for those that didn't watch and those that are just here for straight up slapstick entertainment. That's exactly what this is. We were together. I'd put a pie in your face. Mailed it okay. Can i hit you with the plot. Literally that literally hit you but okay with only thirty hours left until dean's contract ends bobby tracks lilith to new harmony. Indiana dean does not want to attack unprepared refuses to seek help from ruby due to hurt ambiguous nature sam nevertheless secretly summons her request her demon killing knife. Ruby claims. that sam's doormat doormat. Psychic abilities can easily kill iliffe. Who is it who's on quote unquote shore leave. It has her guard down. Sam considers the alternative but dean shows up in tricks. Ruby into a double strap. The brothers take her knife in leave. Despite dean's rebukes bobby insists that he go with them and points out dean loose nations with his demise approaching rapidly. Dean has begun piercing the veil allowing him to glimpse the true forms of demons..

Dean Sam Six thirty hours Ruby three hugs ruby dean double strap couple episodes ago sam once Indiana
"huggy" Discussed on Frequencia Urbana Podcast

Frequencia Urbana Podcast

08:18 min | 2 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on Frequencia Urbana Podcast

"Louis them impotency a decatur goku in a ferrari yanni elaine milo evi thrills concerning so and so the main i get ready to roll stock dig a making a suicide latkes. I loved the care no knowing. They'll devour outling at the moment. And also how lommel overly de enemy dialup caring in focus q. Rbm will hit your one goal. A salary lower mcdowell mogul music latino so cuando lemme lemme wearing press. You your air or metal and insomnia yesterday. All quesnel say you all i. I'm being hladik era organs. I widely sony's important than arena. Been though intercity any an email. Gator adding aimed they'll meanwhile feta lia goal gave lousy blasio implementable adding side nor journal journal way. Right geico say also on seattle aggregate yuliya aquino h. Well as you take us. Young dipa could communicate combatants. Ya con doses. Only albert rental say relegate goku komo follicle on the model chaos lead by whole wineman muc- levin. They'll say deals at your by hole. Sony sowing at the moment. Who are sony. Nautical millennials Quayle lying also oregon. Don't say by alabama up by la promotional seen orleans Levarty spotlight aloe. Dlc gay tie cable little even the house bill. Alexi dogo brogel. Hockey's adam hundred thirtieth. Today i economy get chemical. Hbo so that. Look at your crayon. Help us hollow jabre gay talk so one on mansa yellow corolla Boater border security will get the in. Nato habit theology elian and case he angel. You're locking lowery. I said look for bill gates on the whole the liberal medically feed through either Goal allowing the. How i i ll Let i nick cardi your dentals kamanga solely the guy i album process. Cloud hormone tama. Lulu saline patio and for the biggest getting so cousteau puzzle. Our home album. Kelly kelly's when we take a walk cubby calling by wholesome tacos album can get on some tacos. Yeah you on a single swelter. Talk more plays album now. Mexico born in pakistan and bucket toilets does or cobbles. I say lantern pinned elaborate kadena. May bobby go to yard. Only saying he co alot he's a liquid liquid riley bahama blah blah yearly. Casale kicked dopp their ally in the komo gate town. They got al komo logo on alexa scooter. Aleka your ucla Counci a sycamore delay k. Amendment bottle say that he doesn't play nice. Komo say a we being pursued persona that he sucked away ago Anthony impeccable chicago school. Beto you say no that Feature with a lot of people making your way see joel away found out the de brings ebay rhythm in solar ent deporting. Timmy lampley same seattle running. Getting there won't lead that. I meant the journal Desiring closed doors on august errol flynn drumming got adrian people orient fowler a level removed. You'll see your halo rockies. I rise you get a job or e mail ballots The thai be more a drive through that. Not make labor go on waco. Greg thousand one hundred they will eat. A coup compal padania in waco rose guards. The bus will wake up when federal sipe. It'll take radical loss over. He he didn't want to be bothered like the wake. I added a gate. A colgate says he said your great diaz who who surroundings in forgo young bodyguard Taleban our Ema a permit. The house mentor sarmento. ceiling torture. Healthcare say guy that will collect calls. They got al. I hope it okay. I'm gonna cannot determine all or go onto any other tame but they weren't policy. But i don't file a popular former lump dna mira. I'll cowan so coach. Go from pr guy in winch. Our paulblanco all alkai ican aeko laramie as how the eagles energomach gave thousand any game regular. Hi four era buying ingo period on a coupla fulmer. you'll our s. also we had a laissez palisades. You do. Y'all of books. Getting ready for quality copied Model that w. d. at the akilah about solid. Seal go long. Little grab excellent. Abbas huggy is he a minimal delinquent doug as he had elliott gould our i will said they piled new harbor all levin all over. Now i don't know oughta easy. I don't know logo. i being to start seeing. He side Dna wound album gay. Get us a done whether said komo que just height to to release his album. Cool crowd ocala. High sufian fare better pal. Guantanamo question play. I said okay. I'll go by. Qc ray. The redeemable mckay sought redeemable kim on mobile The donald not not in l. Togay get your ben. Sira a gables these y you or beauce jennings as won by moving.

Anthony pakistan ebay Kelly kelly Today yesterday Aleka Casale Sony Mexico Abbas huggy Desiring Alexi dogo brogel one hundred Taleban kim yuliya aquino komo school sony
"huggy" Discussed on Capt. Hunter's Podcast

Capt. Hunter's Podcast

01:44 min | 3 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on Capt. Hunter's Podcast

"Coming at you again. Thank you so much for tuning into captain. Huggy podcast the podcast that is dedicated but bridging the divide between the police in the communities that they serve. We are really in some serious times as we go forward. Currently as i record this introduction we are undergoing the second impeachment trial of the former president of the united states And so as a result of that. I reached out to.

second impeachment trial captain united Huggy
"huggy" Discussed on NewsRadio KFBK

NewsRadio KFBK

02:23 min | 3 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on NewsRadio KFBK

"Yeah, Greatest. Joey Joy Scarborough, Huh? Are very honest with you. I actually preferred a Bill Haley's rock around the clock wise, you know. So why? But of course not an original song, But here you go. Here is Joey Scarborough. This was the greatest American hero and this was like you said. This charted this song charting. Suddenly I'm a bond of other world. Sure, love inside. You almost sound like you did Otto turn right there. Billion. It online market on here. I never thought I could feel so, baby, believe it or not, And you just remember that you realize Oh, yeah, that was greatest American here, so it really it really set the stage. It really It just made the show. The theme is so memorable you instantly instantly recognized. I'll give you one more. I bet you could recognize it again within two seconds Here we Oh, Mm. On that one. I'm drawing a blank for some reason. No, no, I'll give you four seconds, okay? Uh, the music sounds from every but again. I must. I must be suffering from sleep deprivation. Sammy Davis Jr. Don't you know your hair, huh? I don't recall ever actually watching that show Baretta. Which is funny? Yeah. Really with huggy bear. And this parrot is never lit cigarette. Don't do it. Mm hmm. E They put a lot of work into these things can dog I mean this was a full orchestration? That's so good. E mean, that is just so good, and I feel like we're missing out on the theme songs..

Joey Joy Scarborough Bill Haley Sammy Davis Jr Otto
"huggy" Discussed on News 96.5 WDBO

News 96.5 WDBO

03:57 min | 3 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on News 96.5 WDBO

"Oh, which be not for awakening. Hey, give us all the Berries for 15 minutes could save you 15% or more. No, it's from Geico because they helped save people money. Well, I hate to break it to you. But I still got it from Shakespeare. Geico 15 minutes could save you 15% or more people means while letting American bunch of convenient payment to recover entering the Cerro No South nobody who's twice or Villa Quatro in over the past. Oy pajama water settles nothing coincidental. What in time we're recording time women. E. C. This constant. It's a bunion into room. Penelope Empire in familiar Ola. So it Dr Patel were all born Orlando in total Pacientes Constant, almost every huggy bear active adore. Hence, CIA frequency open data. The arena 2nd 10 Afghanis consented. They'll ban us from standing to little Mama's mimosas. A black consul, medical professor John Ross, Bacillus, upsy, honest, Attractive man tomorrow. Stella. So familia presentable. Paula Stella's is the annual The more we know that they're actually looking Garciaparra. You know they're looking assuming I think it offers a Muslim Makoto Puerta, nueva y from 12 consumed cocaine in total sluts. Planets out there. Give it the life on 12 for Quentin Westra in dollars. Mistress planets. Come on Intercom your iPhone relatively well, there's a first time Come in, man and do some good life on 12 for Quentin. Mr Alperovitch, Valerie sink, Okay in math luxuries in Miami and San Antonio. He's still willing to, you know, Single needle, the studio's sericolo Coz Gordon, a phone for Quentin Wester Paratore Familia. If you think I'm your soda 20% in tow, Bland in comparison, Collins the mask Yesto noise. Impressive promotional. Same Make or President Service your mobile off their life on 12 for Quentin Westra. Younger Benji Parson took Aramis double current leader, Syncopation Covert Oral B movie. Little Committee Quit Okay does In fact elements were missing Posters sequencing generosity doesn't creditos people arrested occupier installed a security contractor infinitesimal directly contacted desperately in discovering Kato, The Akita Pentagon. Similarly human being forced into the open plan, Candace Genius, But the tide is the commercial you further in Istanbul tomorrow. You want to come in Clinton, the subways, the duty to rescue Kathy Lygia espresso. This holds us with very little Solano's father's body that is, the single owner is willing to take that. Thanks. Still a peddler the CIA for days in Colombia. You go out there. He sweet story a musica CD into your restaurant. W don't come before then we're just going to say for yourself. Oh, my God. What did they say? Some grace was colonial drive. Hey. I don't even know is DJ Latino Internationale, Little American Social TURKEY leg. Few marketing people decide. Diego Santa whoever exitos moving, they say's it'll sink off..

Quentin Westra Geico Quentin Wester Paratore Famili CIA bunion Quentin Paula Stella Makoto Puerta Little Committee Penelope Empire Benji Parson Cerro No Villa Quatro Dr Patel Orlando Candace Genius Ola cocaine Diego Santa
Super Bowl advertising will look different this year

AP 24 Hour News

00:49 sec | 3 years ago

Super Bowl advertising will look different this year

"The Super Bowl during a pandemic will look different on the field, and so will the ads because of the pandemic. Some big brand names will not be advertising during the Super Bowl. Pepsi COKE Hyundai Kia, They decided to sit out this year and it's need room for a whole bunch of newcomers. Judean Poggi with at age says the ads will reflect the changes in our lives because of the pandemic. Scots, for example, let's keep this backyard thing going. That's why Scots and Miracle Gro want to give you a chance to win the lawn and garden. Your dreams. You even have diapers advertising in the Super Bowl for the first time with Huggies too. Potently goes for telling a story. What if this could change the world? A burrito? Yeah, You're so weird This year. You actually seem more people really engaging with the ads and spending time watching the adds more so than in the past. I'm Ed

Super Bowl Pepsi Coke Hyundai Kia Judean Poggi Huggies
"huggy" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

KNBR The Sports Leader

08:06 min | 3 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

"God Bricklayer Kruger. Tom Tober with Yeah. David Fleming gonna join us today to talk a little. Whatever. You know what they could be football could be basketball. Could be baseball could be Despite anything. Ethan Strauss will join us talk little hoops. That barrel's little 40 Niners football and then burns. He died little baseball, and he's got a new venture that when I asked him about so after 10 years he's stepping away from His craziness will step away from the MLB network. So the set is safe. The little Mini baseball diamond is safe, uh, it could rest easy. What the hell's Nope. Good. Good afternoon, guys. I love burns. He man. I think Burns is kind of like I liked him as a player. He was a cool guy in the room that you could approach and he was really dander. But you know, just seeing him kind of through the lens of social media playing. Paintball in his backyard wherever it is in Colorado and And with his kid and how excited to get to his kid parks, a home run and just how hard he'll actually pitch to his kid. If you watch it, you he's not laying it in there, man he's thrown. He's trying to get this kid better and thrown hard. But I just love the spirit of burns. He Yeah, He's pretty amazing. He's Ah, He's gonna enough energy. To probably light a city for a month or two. I mean, he's the if I wanted somebody running on a hamster wheel to keep those big fans working over and like Al to be the guy Leader says. I mean that's just who he is and who he is. And you know what he's done running across the country and raising money for physical education for kids and stuff like that. Just super cool. Just a really good too. Yeah, good, dude. Get hard. And tries to do a lot of good for for a lot of people. So be fun to have him on. Ah! Did you guys buy any? Maybe if you did, or didn't did you read it to Robinson story today? I did. I know. Oh, you can you need to read it right? I mean, it's long, so you won't be there will be something for every commercial after the show. There's a good 20 minute. 20 minute read, but it is You know what I have been doing. I've been avoiding a picture on the front page yesterday. Calm all day long as it's got, God bless him and whatever he's gone through, but that zoo tough look and I didn't even know what's the word I'm looking for. I'm a coward. And things that are hard to look at. Are tough for your boy. Yeah, I didn't. I didn't even connect it. I didn't even connected guys because I you know, you know how me and how much I follow the Giants. I've really watch this kid when he was in spring training with the Giants, and actually, he's kind of good. He had good talent, good, stroke, versatile player, and you know, you just never know what's going on with somebody or if the pandemic had a big put playing it, But he just kind of felt I even make the connection until I stopped like the fourth time. That that was the same Drew Robinson. That was that was in camp with the Giants. So then I had that I had to read the story and Oh, my God, it's pretty. It's pretty amazing for those people that didn't read it. You should. But long story short. It's a story of someone who was troubled on the inside seemed normal on the outside. Good looking playing baseball grew up in Vegas was a stud. In Vegas. His brother was a study Chad Robinson went to the thing of brewers. But Drew was drafted fourth round by the Rangers went to the Cardinals. You know, up and down and up and down, you know your typical minor league kind of career for For a non star. Uh, but on the outside, I guess everything seemed good on the inside. He you know he had his goods girlfriend. He had broken up with the least two or three times. Because he felt like he wasn't good enough for and he didn't deserve what was happening, and he just couldn't find peace. On the inside, and he did. He scuffled with that for a long period of time, And then the pandemic hit and he couldn't see anybody And he was isolated in the house. I know he wanted to get a couple of dogs, and he couldn't for whatever reason, I know, pandemic related or well, he was about to get a dog. And then he said, No, I don't want to do this before. Yeah, that was that was a little later on, I think, Okay, Roger, stuff that happened because he was by himself. He just wanted to have something. He was by himself and You know, alone with this is thoughts and again. This is your their people out. They have to read it on the front page of ESPN. Or you can find it s o. He decided, uh, Kill himself. He had had enough. And you know when you got a gun and couldn't figure out, you know he's trying to figure where to do it and just settle on the house. And, you know, he's one of those guys who was thinking why don't want to do it here because too much trouble for the family and I don't want to have to do this and I don't. It's just it was me start drinking. Then he's like, I don't want him to think it was alcohol. Yeah, just, you know, thinking of other thinking of the way he would be perceived and how would look and everything so anyway. He puts a gun to his head. And pulls the trigger and shoots himself. Well, it goes in one side of his head comes out the other side of his head. Leading all over the place but still alive. Uh, I'll save you the details you could again. You could read the story. He lives. 24 hours just in the house took a shower. Absolute took a shower. Well, well, his head was bleeding and at a hole in it because he shot himself. And he's putting towels up to his head and all that, so eventually he calls 911 and told him that he had shot himself. And they show up and they take him to the hospital thinking Texas sister and his sister was the one that was in case emergency. I know that what happened was they had taken to the hospital and the Cardinals found ax is still in the cardinal's insurance. So they found out they sent a text to the You know, contact next to kin type deal. In case of emergencies. So she was the one the sister and then she knew she passed along the news. Uh oh. Let me go back just a little bit because he thought about shootings of again and just finishing it. And then he just had the epiphany that Hey, Meant to live. I'm going to live. I meant I meant to live. So anyway, he goes to the hospital gets out and you know is it started in new I think he got because they were supposed to get him his girl for a supposed to get married that got canceled. And then she had moved on because I guess he was just so She understood him. She loved him. But she knew that day. This would this was something that you know, because it was breaking up and he did feel bad for himself. They feel like you don't deserve her. And I don't know all the everything, but and after this, I guess they got back together. They got married. Uh, hey, started writing in the journal he started talking to people about. Hey, you know, you can find someone to talk to tell everybody What you're feeling, you know, let it out. Somebody will want to hear it. If it's not a family member, because his family wasn't big on emotions. It wasn't a big I love you. Huggy Huggy type family. Mom and dad got divorced him and his brother live with his dad. Sister lived with mom. And he was he was, I guess. You know the dad hard worker, I think, stonemason or bricklayer, I think something like that. And you know, just hard work loved his kids. But not, you know, shows it s O. Anyway, he said he wanted to start over again and And just let people know that there's people out there that if you're hurting if you're depressed if you have those thoughts Call. Somebody call Somebody call a family member. If you don't feel comfortable with that there are people out there that will help you. They wanna listen. Uh, your life is worth living, and they want to let you know that so that was what he dedicated his life to So I was like, Well, that is a great That's incredible story..

baseball Giants Burns Cardinals Drew Robinson Bricklayer Kruger MLB Vegas Ethan Strauss Tom Tober Niners David Fleming Huggy Huggy Chad Robinson football Robinson basketball Colorado
"huggy" Discussed on 106.1 FM WTKK

106.1 FM WTKK

04:53 min | 3 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on 106.1 FM WTKK

"10. Years of news twice an hour and smart talk all day. 94 5 wpt I in the triad and won all 61 FM talk in the triangle. Wait. Here we go. It is a 36 on the case, Seo Dae radio program. Phone number 8889347874. Get, um Here we go. Have to have our happy huggy Kissy Kumbaya come together Peace and unity Story of the day and that my friends will come your way from the Representative and House Committee of Oversight and Reform Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney. Which we will get to here in just a moment. Talking Randy Parton on the colder. All right, Let me grab this because I don't keep things separated here. Sharing calling us actually from Roanoke Rapids. How you doing, Sharon? I'm doing great. Casey, How are you? Pretty good. All right, so talk. Talk to me because I remember. I remember one of the things when I moved to North Carolina 10 years ago, and I asked him like, so that's the theater out there in Roanoke Rapids. I'd driven by it. What's the story there and people? You know, people gave me their version of the Randy Parton Theater. How it came to be the politics of it, the expectations of it and what it is now. So talk to me if somebody like It's a beautiful theater, you know, and it was. It was not supposed to be standing. There was not since we stand around. It was supposed to be a drawing card for her compound out there said to speak. I was retired, but they were supposed to be several venues out there, you know, food, entertainment venues, Black little pool hall. You know all this stuff that they promised everybody that was gonna be a destination. So the destination Travis spot on 95 in about the house, Omar Between you know that the New England area in New York and Florida, you know, so, but nobody else. Everything can just stuff through when they just didn't move forward quickly enough, But it's a beautiful theater, and they tried everything they can. Of course. Now the bill is on us taxpayers we're paying. We're paying the bills out there because you know it went into default or whatever. I mean, I don't know that exactly legally, but I know we have certain the bald and they have tried several, um different entrepreneurs to come in and try to do things in the last one They had in there, and I'm not sure we're still affiliated was There was a couple ladies, but the name of was barnburner productions, and they actually did a really good job. I was starting to get some pretty good shows out there and trying to keep it alive. Tonto, reduce the burden on us that Crosses over that kind of get the desk, but they've tried everything in the world in their Internet gambling and everything but the one thing I really want to say with Where's because Randy Parton when he came? Yes, I think so. But I think the whole fried that dream this To ask Go up like to be in the cups a little bit, but you know, and I said the rot of what you know many entertainers, you know, onstage with the bus. Come on, people, You know, it's not exactly known today. You know, sober, You know they're not Doing it. You're not church cancers, and I come on. So anyway, but the night they took him out of there. I'm not sure why they took him out. But you actually left in a patrol car, So I'm not so good background on that. But it was Debbie are also wasn't set up. You know, there are always here. What were they doing here? You know, anyway, that's who had recorded what people said. But this is to me how he was not like wasted Ralph thing he said to them before he got in the patrol car with hilarious, he said, and I don't know what speaks works around here, the paper meal or the politics. Was just cracked the others before we have some fast so we can probably write a book over this insanity. I mean, that's the old sounds like one of those ultimate good old boy. Everyone's kind of getting a little richer except the taxpayers kind of stories. Assassin rapping What? Itwas of exactly what it was that party perspective this morning, Okay? That's I love you guys. Listen to me every morning. Carry on. Thanks. Haven't going there Yeah, e don't know. He left in a patrol car. Was amazing. I assume that's how I'm going out of here. Something about to say who hasn't left the venue in a patrol car? Listen, That was where he worked. It's where it would be your work. If if you have to leave your You know what? Just I said what I said okay. Anyway, come together Peace, harmony, unity. All of that, In today's Today's story. Representative Carolyn Maloney. The.

Randy Parton Carolyn Maloney Roanoke Rapids Casey Randy Parton Theater Representative House Committee of Oversight a Debbie Black little pool hall North Carolina barnburner productions Sharon New England New York Florida Ralph
"huggy" Discussed on WCBM 680 AM

WCBM 680 AM

04:45 min | 3 years ago

"huggy" Discussed on WCBM 680 AM

"Case you know, by the way, Chuck you, Schumer. On the National Guard being sent out into the parking garage for break time. Tweeted this out, quote. If this is true, it's outrageous. I will get to the bottom of this. And of course, now they're blaming the Capitol police. We're saying the Capitol Police are the ones that asked the guard to take their breaks in the parking garage in the Capitol. Police have put out a statement saying they appreciate the interval support of the garden, helping to secure the Capitol complex. Leading up to and including the inaugural ceremony. The department's grateful for their service and our blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. You know the kissy face huggy Bear on now, Of course, the guard is about lot back in The Capitol complex after incredible egg on the face of Democrats and Republicans, because let's face it again. Actually, the Democrats control both houses now, So really, it's not really much McConnell's full although I'd like to blame him. Let's go to Jim and Kings will. Good Morning tea. Oh, good morning. Yes, sir. We're doing Thank you. I just wanted to tell you all I think you're doing a fabulous job. I want to keep here and I don't understand how Americans just can't open their eyes. Has nothing to do with party. Open your eyes. Now open your eyes and try to fend off the advance of communism because that's its being a couched in terms of progressivism or whatever. They're calling it these days. But that's exactly what this is. This is authoritarian when you look at Big Tex shutting everybody down. Publishers dumping Trump banks dumping Trump. Again, going in that there's actually a Democrats now that have put out a video of what they're calling the Trump Army. It's the largest army in the United States, and they're asking their neighbors and friends, teachers, etcetera to snitch us out. If you're trump supporter, or if you are a trump voter, they want they want you canceled. I know and and people were afraid to open their mouth. Believe me on one that runs my mouth and it's crazy. The people that are scared Yeah, well, you know, most people, Most people really don't want confrontation. But unfortunately you're gonna have to give it now. I'm not advocating violence or physical confrontation. But you're gonna have to stand up for this country Stand up for your beliefs and principles against the You know the horde of of leftists. That's correct. I mean, you know, we built this country of fighting for that We're gonna have to do with people need to wake up, Jim. Thanks for the call. Appreciate it so much. We can only one in there. Victor and Silver Spring. Good morning. Morning, Victor. Good morning. I'm not surprised that this happened at all any time that Democrats use you when they're finished using you. They throw you away like a piece of tissue, and I got a question. These illegal aliens coming across the border. I wonder how many of them will have cold virus And will they get the vaccine before Americans? Yeah, well, if they fall into the proper categories, they may For example, if they happen to be felons, and they're in prison, they certainly will. But if they go if they if they happen to make it to New York, there's no way they'll get the vaccine because Cuomo screwed that up so badly No one's getting Thank you, Victor Appreciated. Cold pressure. Christian Bel Air. Good morning, Chris. Busy this morning. What a pressman. Thank you for taking my call. I think there was three things that hurt Mr Trump. The first one was Steve Bannon Leven. I think he played of integral part in him winning and when he left, he wasn't I think that was the big hurt. I think Twitter. It's Mr Trump. Part of Twitter was on the downside. And will Mr Trump got in and use Twitter? Of course you saw what happened and following the third one is Jared Kushner. I think it's son in law did a lot more harm than good. Even though he did the Middle East. I think he was one of the third one that really hurt, Mr Trump. Thank you for taking my call. Appreciate it on the third. I disagree. You know, I think history will take a look. Curses work in Kirsten's work rather in the Mideast and say it was a stellar contribution of the Kim administration, now from our executive producer was actually secretly working for the other White House. But Know Kushner rethink the criticism of him. He's a little more he's not as conservative. He's little more moderate on has some leftist not left this but the more liberal side to him on some issues like criminal justice reform, things of that nature. But again, Look, you could go back. And you could say was banned in the loss of man and you could say it was a lot of things. We'll get to that in just a second. All right. You're on the morning drive with Casey million Sean, you know that, Dr Ed Lazear Cosmetic advanced chemistry. They have cranked up the business again. They re opened. You no longer have to put off getting that million dollar smile you could now once again get your smile, makeovers, veneers, implants, implant retained dentures, whatever it takes..

Mr Trump Capitol police Jared Kushner Capitol complex Trump Army National Guard Victor Appreciated Twitter Kings Jim United States McConnell Chuck Dr Ed Lazear huggy Bear Middle East Schumer Christian Bel Air Silver Spring Steve Bannon
Expectations Are Premeditated Resentments

Addiction Unlimited Podcast | Alcoholism | 12 Steps | Living Sober | Addiction Treatment

06:00 min | 3 years ago

Expectations Are Premeditated Resentments

"Okay my lovely friends. Let's dig into this topic. Expectations are premeditated resentments. This always strikes a chord for me. When i hear it of course because there's so much truth in this simple statement when i started this journey of recovery. This is yet another piece of my puzzle that i didn't understand a recognize. I had zero understanding that. I put all these expectations on people and outcomes in situations and then i ended up mad when it didn't go the way i thought it should go. And i know you're going to relate to this too because it's human nature it's something. Everyone does addiction or no addiction. These expectations are out here. Running wild in the streets people. Let me give you a simple example. I caught myself on this one many many years ago when i was just learning about expectations. Okay i'm driving my boyfriend's house and remember many years ago. I did not pick the best boyfriends right in. This was definitely one of the best ones. So i'm driving over there. I'm excited to see him. He was in a pretty good mood when we were on the phones. I'm thinking i'm going to get there when walking in he's going to give me a fantastic huggies going to be really sweet and it's going to be this magical moment and it didn't happen that way at all. I walked in. He was in the middle of something else and was kind of dismissive. Like he didn't care if i was there or not. And he was gonna finish. He was doing whether i was there or not. And of course my feelings were hurt. And i sat down just got quiet doing a little pouting now. I didn't take it to any extreme. Like start a fight with him or anything like that. I'm not really a fighter like that. I think it's kind of a waste of energy and most of the time you end up in a fight because you aren't really listening to your person and they aren't really listening to you and on top of that. You're usually arguing over opinions. Which to me is really silly because opinions right or wrong. They're not facts to fight about. And there's no law that says you have to agree right like we're all allowed to disagree. Everyone is perfectly allowed to have their own opinion in. It doesn't make them wrong but when we fight were typically fighting to be heard in try to make our person agree with us instead of hearing each other out figuring out the compromise and respecting one other thoughts and opinions and sometimes a good fight is just what you need to get everything out on the table and you come back stronger than ever as long as no one is pulling any low blows in the fight and name calling and things like that. This is a good example to you. Go into a conversation with someone. And you have an expectation of how they're going to respond or react you expect. They're going to be understanding and kind and loving and totally hear. You agree with you and you're gonna walk away from the conversation with a smile feeling really good about it but really that expectation is that you're going to get your way so when it starts to go a different direction and you see you aren't getting your way you start to get mad if you're person isn't just agreeable unwilling to do what you want. The tone starts to turn to anger and resentment we fight. I think special occasions fall into this too. Have you ever had like the birthday party that you plan and invite all your friends and you buy a special outfit for it and you're so excited you spend two weeks thinking about all the fun. You're gonna have fun. Your friends are going to have in. It's going to be epic. Then the day comes and it falls totally flat like your new shoe breaks before you ever get out of the house. Four of your friends text at the last minute that they can't make it. Your hair won't cooperate and then it rains like it's a mess. I get tell you how many times this has happened to me. Not just birthdays but even just nights out right you get so excited and those expectations are going up and up and up in some point. That level of excitement creates an expectation. That just can't be attained. You know the really bad thing about this is when our expectations aren't met. It leaves us bummed sad mad disappointed and then we can't even enjoy the situation as it is because we just feel disappointed and let down expectations. Get us in a couple of ways. One is the expectation we put on others right expecting a certain response from one or a certain greeting when you walk in the room like i talked about expecting an outcome that you predetermined in your head. The other is the expectations you put on yourself. Sometimes we even combine the two. And that's a real disaster waiting. Let's do another example husband makes a surprise romantic dinner for wife. he shops. He cooks before she gets home. He has her favourite flowers candles lit. He's being amazing and thoughtful. Wife comes in the door not in a great mood and says thanks babe. I've just had a really horrible day. I want to take a shower and go to bed.

Document What You Do

The Digital Story

05:11 min | 3 years ago

Document What You Do

"So being a california boy. I wasn't as familiar with lafayette radio electronics. As folks who lived in new york and new jersey in on that side of the country but in their day they were a big deal. They were a big deal. They went up against the likes of radio shack in heath kit and those kind of folks in terms of mail order electronics and they had stores to boot. I became interested in them. When i saw a few there. Stereo receivers for sale on ebay thinking. Those are the kind of cool. You know what i mean. You know when you're just kind of browsing around any go. That's a nice looking piece of equipment there. So i was initially attracted to their design but as i read up on them i saw that many people like the way they sound as well. They have that nice. Sort analog warm sound that so many people like with vintage stereo receivers and amplifiers now. They did have retail stores back in the day. Lafayette mostly in new york and new jersey as i mentioned earlier but their catalog businesses really the big deal In their lifespan. And if you live somewhere where your electronic shop was maybe a mom paw that had a limited selection or limited inventory. You could get a four hundred page. Lafayette electronics catalog and deceit everything. Everything that you wanted to see you know. The pages were filled with tape. Recorders and microphones and stereo systems. Cb radios and more and more and more they began their business in nineteen thirty-one like so many businesses. At that time they started out with a different name. I don't even recall what it was. But it evolved into lafayette electronics by the sixties and seventies You're seeing their ads. In popular electron ix stereo review in all of that and they had a number of store locations to i believe at their peak. They had something like a hundred and fifty store locations again. Most of them on the east side of the united states. The twenty two hundred. I purchased sold for two hundred ninety nine dollars in nineteen seventy six. It had a walnut. Finished would case. If feature twenty-seven watts per channel it has dual tuning a source selector switch for fono f. m. f. n. mute mp xfl filter a. and auxiliary it also had advanced features such as low noise transistors and phase locked loop stereo fm circuit for improved separation and low distortion in addition to all that it looked great. It really a a handsome looking receiver. And you'll see plenty of shots of it because i documented My restoration project of it. So you'll be able to get a good look at it. So i found my working unit on ebay for forty five dollars. It was like the perfect restoration project in the sense that with a little bit of work. And i'm talking about just a couple of hours of work. You could have something that looked ten times better than what you started with and you got it for a low price because you know one of the things about how ebay works is that is. Something looks really crappy. Obviously i mean that makes total sense right however when you know how to restore things you can look at things and say that only requires an hour's worth of work or two hours worth of work or i know how to you know. Get the part for that or or whatever and then suddenly those become you know hidden gems those become treasures that you can get a low price and then bring them back to life and you know. That's definitely what i thought i could do with this. Now it's funny. It took a long time for it to come. It came from new york. Of course right because i guess that's where a lot of those electronics are even those the mail order businesses. Well it came from new york in a large huggies diapers box that was split open on two sides and then it had styrofoam popcorn leaking out the broken areas of the box. I mean this thing. This box was possibly the ugliest box at ever arrived on my front doorstep at the studio. In fact i'm pretty sure that that driver who delivered it could not get out of his truck fast enough. You know what i mean. I i think i remember hearing it land on my doorstep. I'm not even sure if he said it down all the way i just heard this plop which probably made the seems split even more

Lafayette Radio Electronics Lafayette New Jersey Ebay New York California United States
Canary's Royal origin story

Risky Business

07:58 min | 3 years ago

Canary's Royal origin story

"Just aim and make that the problem that needs solving what they tell us about how you re right because you actually had a pretty interesting off between. Okay. So we've talked about the thing I'm so sorry this is turned into your life by the way. I mean, look for those of you who are listening I mean you can probably guess that her brain and I. A friends and I'm friends also Hula and I'm friends with Shell like I. Love these guys and I just think the history is is really interesting which is why I'm bothering to draw it out in podcast, but you didn't just go straight from. Straight from post into into things, canary thinks had a previous incarnation. Really. Tell us about that. So. So it's actually interesting because leaving things I knew that we wanted I wanted to try to build a product company. and. My earlier hope was actually slightly more ambitious than that of multiple products ends vision of you just buildings and then split them off and they'll go become companies on their own. And one of the things you figure out as that everything you build actually takes a whole bunch of efforts to get it to market I. didn't know the product that we wanted to build yet. So lost left sense post roll already headed huggy up version of multi go and so he went it's today did on that and made it better and better and better and when I left I had like four or five ideas. One of them was a west of believe it or not. One of them was like, how can we detect badness on this thing? One of them were solving? Remote Password resets as lame as that sounds like the Susan unsolved from a short list of them. And my plan was to find customers could pay me to solve that problem for them with understanding that I could then resell that as a product and and so instead of raising money said I'd go to a customer and say, Hey, this is a big problem for you pay me the bullet for you and after I bullet for them might sell it to other people and so we we tried a few problems and then there's a division in the because one of the first customers that actually did stuff like this fall we built aversion Ibuka version of wikileaks for Ozier, Jazirah. I'm really surprised that you actually a named that because I was prepared to ask you a question about the work you did for I broadcast because this is not something you've really spoken about publicly before is it? No I haven't. Not for a huge secret, but but just because like like generally customer names adjust not what? You did a lot of work for Aljazeera for quite a bit. And I were interfacing with very senior people in that organization. So. So what happened was it started with a friend of mine who worked there said that they needed or they were interested in wikileaks prod program, and this was way early when Wiki leaks was the darling of journalism soap. So you took this is when wikileaks was cool. It wikileaks was cool and all the journalists wanted them and already aljazeera was saying they wanted own platform where people could leak stuff to them. So I spoke to them a little bit and we actually bought a really cool thing for them like like considering when it was. Tells you. It's age it was a Java applet that loads on the client machine. Would negatively tool and natively PGP. Of with the logic that the stuff you want to leak never leaves your machine without being encrypted with a key that's never shown on the Internet. So on your machine gets encrypted and by the time, it reaches the Sava it's natively toward. So the Selva doesn't know who sent it. You can just pull that stuff off the server end up PG peaks update later on and what year was this This was twenty, ten, late twenty ten. So. So it was super cool an and advantage for but. And while I was doing it the whole of Egypt solution habit and I was looking at the at. Aljazeera. Win when Egypt cell. And Up Ultra Zito got taken off the edge and at the time what what I figured out just by accident by being there was that datebook that security meant having a file and here was all that was covering a what was becoming a Adam Spring. But literally, they had zero reveal understanding of security of like everything you can think off flat network and also it's such an interesting business model right? Like like everybody hits the John Lewis but journalists literally have. Some journalists have all the interests of a full blown spies except they publish everything end. Actually vamping up in cotton wool isn't the solution because putting stuff out there is what they do. So, ended up speaking to the general a at the time and. I proposed a bunch of products that I said we could vote for them again with the view to these would be great products A. Outside. And we agreed on a contract where we could hold a bunch of things like how would you know you owned? If you were journalists how would you know that your devices will own stuff like? And the interesting thing is he said look you can do this as long as you come over here to Doha welcome at you. And a at the time it was just my wife and I we said Okay let's let's go do a Doha holiday and see how that works. It turned out to be super interesting. Of An and when I got there, I saw the breath of their problems. And they then went through management changes like a a new data general came in who turned out to be A. Royalty and he was more interested in locking stuff down and at that point I said to them hey, listen he does these projects that we're doing for you but I'll leave. And he said look, can you build also security team and so? Essentially, what I did at that point, and at that point things was just me. So, I had the ability to and I said okay. Hired their team that team up and and something? That's that's not spoken about in the Canadian origin story is after I bought that team and left them like at still periodically. Not so much consult for them as as like give advice to some of the executives like like the head of the new media division or the head of ED Technology Division. and would canetti pitched idea to them of dropping honeypots as as a way to get insight into the new. Satellite Networks and they didn't implement normally they they used to do everything I'd say, and they didn't over two visits and that's when we started to figure the hold on these people want to do it. They just not getting around to doing. And we need to make these. Yeah. The problem that needs solving is is making this thing so easy that people who want to will do it. End. Of the time see sewing them was super interesting because it gives you an interesting view again into the. House coming off ten years of. Ridiculously convoluted hack sense post right because in the position I ended up in like just get involved when it will cool hack. So cool customers and so you end up with these really cool technical problems. And now you walk in an actually your problem is solving. You'll analysts it. Yeah. Journalists in Morocco sharing.

Wikileaks Aljazeera Egypt Canary Morocco Ibuka Jazirah Zito John Lewis Ozier Adam Spring Ed Technology Division.
The Plague of Justinian I

5 Minutes in Church History

04:20 min | 3 years ago

The Plague of Justinian I

"Welcome back to another episode of five minutes in Church history. On this episode, we're talking about a very dark moment in church history and history the plague of Justinian. The first first let's talk about just in the first he was born in four eighty seven. He came to be Roman emperor in five, twenty seven and he reigned until his death in five sixty three at the time of becoming Roman emperor the barbarian tribes controlled much of what was the Roman Empire The ostrogoths controlled Rome in the boot of Italy that extends down into the Mediterranean Sea the visigoths controlled Spain, the vandals controlled what was formerly North Africa the Roman empire was a fraction and a mere shadow of its former self just Indian ruled from capital at Constantinople. He was determined to bring back the glory that once was the Roman Empire. To do so he would need to launch military campaigns to the east into the Iberian Peninsula to the south and the vandals to the West and the ostrogoths into the north. He had to launch military campaign literally in every direction. And he was very successful after a decade or so of military campaigns warfare. Then in five forty, two Justin faced a new invisible enemy. Well, we'll get to that in a moment first a few more points on just in the first, he is known as giving us the Codex Justinian us it's also sometimes called the Corpus juris civilised. This is the body of civil law. Someone took the time to count it. It's somewhere around the neighborhood one million words. It was a massive rule of law to govern the Roman Empire contains laws on criminal and civil matters on trade, but it also controls laws regarding heresy and Orthodoxy, and even laws regulating paganism. Another thing about just in the first is that he is the creator of the Huggy Sophia he was not the architect though he had significant conversations with the architect and was very influential in the plans but it was under his watch that the Haganah Sophie was built from five, thirty, two to five, thirty seven the old basilica had fallen during riots in that city and just in use the occasion to build what was the biggest church the Roman Empire ever saw its length was two, hundred, sixty, nine feet. Its width was two hundred and forty feet and extended a height of one hundred and eighty feet. It was a massive structure. The HAGIA Sofia. Well, that's just any in the first. Now, briefly on his plague in five, forty to the bubonic plague broke out. This is the your cineas pestis. What came to be known as the black plague. It would come again in the thirteen hundreds and it would manifest throughout the Middle Ages and the time of the reformation. Back in five, forty, two, it is believed to have started in Egypt. This plague then carried on merchant ships too many nations and to three continents. Africa Europe Asia it is credited as the first pandemic in recorded history. It brought all of the efforts of Justinian one to a stop it ended the military campaigns devastated the economy. It ended up killing millions at its height. It would take five thousand lives a day in the city of Constantinople alone. Even. Just any in the first contract. Did it. But he survives one of the stories from that time PRA copious notes of the effect of the plague on the people it caused them to shake off the unrighteousness of their daily lives and practice the duties of religion with diligence but sadly, he also notes. That as soon as they were rid of the disease, they went right back to their old ways. Well, that's just any in the first, and that's the justinian plague five, forty two

Roman Empire Justinian Iberian Peninsula Hagia Sofia Mediterranean Sea Rome Constantinople Spain North Africa Africa Italy Justin Egypt Sophie
Call of Duty Modern Warfare: Completing All 3 Contracts in Warzone Battle Royale

This Is Only A Test

07:43 min | 4 years ago

Call of Duty Modern Warfare: Completing All 3 Contracts in Warzone Battle Royale

"Will. You've been playing some new colleague. I have been called Kadoi Quad Kadoi wars zoning the new battle royale from the makers of call of duty modern warfare infinity ward. I thought it's called duty. Had a battle royale mode already so obviously. I don't know much about this. You are a longtime pudgy player. So yeah you want to explain how it works. Yes explain how it works. Give us give us the so. They did a battle royale last year. with Block ups for it was really hot for like two weeks and then people stopped being destroyed and then disappeared basically. I mean there's still people that play it on the rag but it had problems with like sound model and stuff like that. The folks at Trae Art. I think did a really good. Gd Talk last year explaining what they learned from the first rather the battle royale which is basically like in a first person game where you're being unto constantly it turns out sound is really important and they focused a lot on that like the sound bottle in modern warfare warzone is is much much better. It's still not you know I. It's it's still not perfect. None of these models Arkansas. You're doing math to fool people's brains into thinking they hear sounds up and down and behind them when they're wearing headphones and since cod is a console game it has to work with. Speaker and TV's as well as funds like there's not as good as your pc only But it's really neat so you drop in one hundred and fifty players solo mode now and they have a three player team mode a Hundred Years. You get chucked out of the plane you. The map is basically like It's kind of like a mash up of all of the call of duty or a lot of the multiplayer maps. So there's there's like a quarry section and there's a TV station section and there's a bone yard section and all these different like kind of You know Classic Cod death match. Maps are either expanded or kind of injected as kind of like showcase locations in the larger battle. Royale actual royale map is really big as it would have to be rich people but the really interesting thing that they've done is they've added a bunch of mechanics. They get you back in the game if your squad game and you get knocked out so or in a solar game for that matter so for example you get knocked somebody somebody kills you for your teammates can get you back up in in. Pudgy or I think four nights all does this. You're out busy. You Watch your friends play for the next twenty or thirty minutes in this thing called the Gulag where you're in a rock style. Prison shower there to players started on either ends. You have a shower is where you lost me. Look man you went to prison shower part. I don't talk right. It's like it's the show. It is literally looks like the shower. Prison the prison shower from the rock. So so you have to like to one man leaves. The Guy who leaves gets to bears back in on his friends if you suck. Yeah so this is rocket league. It's Thunderdome but it's essentially like you're you're a subcategory of death match happening coinciding with this large fifty. Were all the people who are waiting at rocket. Leak or rocket arena not rocket arena. He's very rocket well in that rocket. Arena way like the people who are waiting for their turn to fight are standing up around the edge of the shower looking down from the guards gallery throwing rocks at the people who are fighting so like and if like you and one of your teammates gets knocked they'll be up in the arena and they can tell you which way because it's basically like doted three lanes there's right mid and last so like if you have a guy in the arena in the gallery that telling you which way the opponents going you've a pretty big advantage you have like a grenade you have a flash bang or a smoke grenade or something like that but mostly you have like a pistol or a shotgun or or whatever and then you have to murder that person if you go back in and you get back and then your team can get in world currency Like you find cash when you kill people you like cash part of diluting process and you can buy them back in at a by station for like forty five hundred Docs. It's really neat. They did a bunch of stuff to simplify. There's no attachments. They have to pick up the guns. You can you. The guns are coated like a while so like you have gray green blue purple legend gold or orange legendary loot and all that means is like the low doubts on them. So like they'll have different grips of different muscles. They'll different scopes so you don't have to be worrying about like does this angled grip going this gun or do i. Is it better on this gun? What would I do with all this stuff? The things take literally hundreds of hours to learn a game like a g are are much more straightforward. It's been really fun. I've really been enjoying an added Solos yesterday. Haven't had a chance to check that out yet. But I'm going to do it and this is free to play free to play so if you already own God modern warfare. It'll show up as a menu item if you don't it's like an eighty or one hundred gig download. I assume because the map is enormous and Let's see if you are a fan of the duty years where they have a bunch of weird like voice packs and Snoop. Dogg boys packs and a bunch of like. We'd leave crosshairs for your guns. I'm sorry to tell you that that is not the case. This is not one of those years. So hopefully the we'd leave. Crosshairs will come back next year and calling me. It's not health. Pack base it's health region so you have health jen your armor. Which is the most important kind of stat? You have rather than having a helmet and a chesapeake like you do in most games Basically you just have these metal plates you jammed to invest in front of your shirt and those three of those gives you one hundred percent armor basically and you can carry extra armor around which is nice. If you're in the middle fights and stuff like that it's it's IT'S A. They did a really nice job with. It's a really neat. It's a really neat. About how do you have a sense that they're going to avoid the pitfalls of the other battle Royale Games in terms of like keeping maps updated? Ed like changing over You know some nursing and keeping the the weapons in line Do you have a sensor that I know it's early So it's it's difficult to say my assumption is they're gonNA do one. Map is like adding maps is a neat thing if you look at what it asks. Legends is done when they add a new map. The old one goes away for a while and then they bring the new one back with some changes. So they're kind of cycling back and forth Fortnight has been constantly evolving. Their map huggies keeps adding new maps. And that kind of fragments. The player base every time they do it which seems like a bad thing when the player base shrinking so My I I think it's too early for a lot of that stuff to say until they find out what the stable audiences you know the games a week and a half old at this point so it's unclear It's unclear if if people are GONNA stick with we won't know people are going to stick with it for a month probably gets But the other nice thing is it ties into the existing call of duty. Modern warfare battle pass so the mud. It is if you buy into the battle pass in one place then you can use it in both the normal. Dm Game and also the battle royale so it's not like it's not like there's a subscription the cosmetic stuff seems pretty reasonably priced there. Aren't there aren't loop boxes like they? They've done a pretty good job. I it seems like I think that would be pleasant to Blaine. Would make you feel skis for playing unfortunate. Call of duty unfortunate play mechanics.

Trae Art Arkansas Blaine Murder
Bracket Watch: Who's Making a Late Push Up the NCAA Tournament Seed Lines?

CBS Sports Radio

02:53 min | 4 years ago

Bracket Watch: Who's Making a Late Push Up the NCAA Tournament Seed Lines?

"Then the blue bloods are six to ten in terms of the rankings Florida state Duke Maryland Kentucky Louisville Craig is in there ten in one poll Meryl Levin another poll and then you start to get into the meat of these teams in the big east and the big ten with Villanova Seton hall Penn state you throw all burn in there then you get a west coast team in Oregon in terms of rankings then you're back to the big ten for Iowa many got Huggy bear in their West Virginia and and I just keep going down down down the list and what was I could see West Virginia going to the final four Bob Huggins teams are a lot like god to me what Bob Huggins does a West Virginia or at least tries to is what is tries to do at Michigan state T. Jim toff Rodham hard may come play tough I mean you got him in Morgantown West Virginia if you've ever been in Morgantown West Virginia once one of the nicer dumps in America but be that as it may there's not a lot to do down there so your car you try to do you work on your game and you get top there near here in the cold in your playing defense my point in bringing this up is you look at the big east's top to bottom and the big ten top to bottom they're probably the two best teams in college basketball and you can look at Villanova and Seton hall is a team that can definitely get to the final four or again you know I'm kind of wishy washy about a little bit I need a little more Intel on them to really feel good about thinkin they they can make a deep run in the tournament we have a really talented teams this year in college basketball but I don't think we have the proverbial bird team you look at the top ten it's pretty balanced and the NC double a tournament is still about the match ups well when you just look at these teams how many jump out to you to be able to win the national championship and although in filling out a bracket then I like to know a couple of teams then I'm gonna move on right away yeah I know I'm gonna have some tough decisions this year in filling out my bracket if let's say Florida state matches up against Creighton or if Villanova goes against San Diego state where you give me a little Dayton against Maryland then do can can scan Zacha yeah you start to break those matchups down and it's like okay though those aren't so easy to be able to

Dayton Zacha San Diego Seton Hall Villanova T. Jim Toff Rodham Michigan Villanova Seton Hall Penn Louisville Kentucky Florida Maryland Meryl Levin Creighton NC Intel Basketball
Jonathan Pryce, 'The Two Popes'

Popcorn with Peter Travers

12:55 min | 4 years ago

Jonathan Pryce, 'The Two Popes'

"There's a movie now that you can see a Netflix. It's called the two popes and it stars my guest today. Jonathan Pryce and Anthony Living Hopkins. Playing guess what the title characters doing doing it brilliantly. So Jonathan Welcome Creek Pope Francis there. You are the big news now. About Pope Francis is his encounter with this woman in the crap out there where he sort of slapped her hand. Yeah Yeah have you been being asked this question now would I please slap really. Okay do I WANNA be grant. At the Golden Globes. There was a lot of Grabbing and pushing polling I was tempted to slap but I feel really sorry for him because people aren't seeing the whole whole sequence video where that particular woman grabbed him very yanked him yanked him and he's He's an Obama scientists bound to hurt. Well let's talk about the two popes in terms of the whole concept of you being offered this to play the The Argentinian Paul. Because we don't see him in the movie being the pope really walk up to that while Anthony Hopkins is playing Pope Benedict German. is you're an Argentinian to Welshman playing these. Yeah somebody must've said. That's that's what we need is to Welshman to do this time for Welsh. Pope was watching and watching. You play this. I kept thinking this other. Argentinian you play. which was one there? You are the dictator in a way. Pope can be a dictator but Pope Francis Go. You is the liberal reform. The one that wants to give them more compassionate look at the church. Did you have any trepidation about pilots. Just just just the usual about whether I wanted to do any of. Is that how you approach them. All Walk Negative. Say No no I thought uh I thought I'd be on a hiding to nothing representing this particular pope. But that didn't last very long. I read the script and won ten. You that Fernando Morella Morella was gonNA be directing it. I definitely wanted to do it and I think it was mainly to do with the fact that I'm not religious logistics. I was brought up in the Christian faith. I went to church until I was a teenager. but I found that this pope was the first pope who I thought was speaking to me and millions like me about issues that what. Mrs Narrowly to do the Church or organized religion but to do with politics and to do with speaking out up folding environment and about the economy about the injustice is the during the world so I he was someone for great empathy towards towards and help. That looked like him a bit and I walk like came definitely Even though you've got ten years on me you could sneak into the the Vatican may be busy and just an take over there and do what you would need to do there. Does that give you a feeling when your plane that that this was what I would do if I win. The pope shoes. I wouldn't be so presumptious to fix that but I'm glad he's doing what he's doing And obviously he's got. There's the whole church and Vatican side of things which he doesn't seem to be able to deal with those conquer but when you're constantly reading lots of stories about how he's disliked within the Vatican because he's a reformer and people don't want that change and I think that's that's why he became pope. He was be made pope in order to make these changes. Otherwise so why choose him because he was in the never been an odd uh-huh latin-american Pope and the film implies of that we don't necessarily know the truth. That benedict wanted Bagogwe uglier to be the next pope because he saw in him things that he could not even he couldn't do he saw in many ways his opposite didn't they and this is it. I didn't mention this in the introduction but benedict was a pope who retired. WHO said I'm not going to do it anymore? And so we have to popes who Are Alive in this world today and they're the clips at the end of the real popes in seeming tab. Having a really terrific time when I sold the first Kata film I was bit disturbed. They were showing the real popes at the end of the phone. Because I thought it would invalidate everything. We've been doing for the previous to house. But what you see in these two men is a is a the committee this just a welcoming the way they they greet each other with great affection and you can see the respect. They have for each other and far from taking away from our performances it they it enhances. It gives an element of truth to what we were doing. It's a really terrific script. Ns Two popes one of these two guys talking to each other which sometimes scares people when they go to the movies. I want that but yet a mirage as a director makes this movie move. You've so beautiful to gorgeous thing to look at. It's also sometimes. Polaris that's going on. Did you all know that that was what was going to happen before he did it. No no what's what's wonderful about. The film is that it It's such a surprise for audiences once don't you don't you. You gotta get them in there and then once they're in that It's a surprise Because it's it's much funnier than I ever expected. And and the audience expect and I think the way we made the film there was no. We didn't have many preconceptions. I don't remember ever talking onto Tony. I'm going to be like this. And he said I'm going to be like this and finance and I want you to do this. That and the whole process was really organic bound because we have the the strength of that script bit underneath his you know holding us up and when I saw it and the way Fernando put it together other because he says his work starts in the editing room he lets us do what we want and encourages us to go certain ways but when I they do what they want to that yeah good directors do that they let you think your your your coming up with the Serving quietly feed and things in your ear they let you think it's your idea So when I saw it I didn't know it was going to be so funny. Rondo humorous. I mean that first scene of your character trying to book his own plane reservations on the fault. Yeah probably apparently did that. That's what he did but it's the post game I saw with a big audience was telluride. And because you I don't know what to expect and that moment the right at the beginning of the phone web the audience laughs as one. The huge wave of laughter. You can feel the audiences sir. I sent me sat by a few. And they're going to enjoy this and the you can feel the audience sitting back and saying this. This is going to be okay you can. It's like Yep okay you know bring it on make happen and yet it also doesn't avoid the controversies that exist within the church. Now the whole thing with the problem priests they're predators that are there and also their histories. Can you talk a little about his history. Go Yeah it back in the seventies in terms of Argentina. It's all mostly. It's all in the film and we didn't shy away from it. The way were applauded and thanked thanked by the people people in Bonus Iris. When they sold the film we had a screening because they that fear was this is going to be a whitewash elma? Crossover Haggi Auger fear Goglia. Because he is still seen as a divisive character in Argentina because of his perceived involvement involvement with the cardinals. I've found on Youtube footage of him being interrogated by or question by his peers fellow cardinals about his involvement with the colonels. And you see a very different man the man you see smiling on the balcony. And he's made pope he's he's he's very doer he's quite angry. I think he's impatient. He's drumming his fingers on the table. And I put that image together with talking to a Jesuit priest and bonus. Who worked with him? I who said they didn't like him. He was Very always stays. Ah Stay by himself. He didn't mix I he was he never smiled. I'm when they saw him on the balcony. This smiling pope. They didn't recognize him because he was smiling. Didn't person yeah. But then you do get the other side of him where he is in the film you see him Saying mass and the kind of the slum township areas and and the other side's members very popular so it's not a a a bio-pic it's not a huggy overview of this man. It's a it's a Watson Study of him and I think we've been fair to him because we all respect him and admire him And we had a screening in Rome three or four weeks ago were members of the Vatican Cambridge theory and They said they liked liked. That enjoyed it And a particular Cardinal WHO's a friend? WHO's a friend of Love Benedict and of Francis He'd liked the phone very much. Fernando the director said. Do you think we were too hard on the church. And he said you went hot enough woo but he also said that he thought France would like the film and he wanted the DVD to take them to show him the film. I love so That review see that. Yeah well what do starts right. Yeah that'd be good and also from France's family in Argentina. Fernando got an email to say that they'd seen it. They enjoyed the film and they liked. What we've done Representing their uncle. That was that was really nice. Colon uncle Uncle Horace to two years. How were you and Anthony Hopkins together? You know. You haven't made anything or done anything before. Really WE'VE BEEN ON A. We're both on the recording of under milk. Wood the Dylan Thomas Poem that was produced by George Martin. Twenty seven years ago the Beatles producer and Tony was first voice. I was second voice and you come twenty seven years later. We're in Rome and the coal sheet has You know you're rated as the importance in the film. The number and I was number one and Tony was number two so it was my revenge after twenty seven audit your greet each other even morning with morning number one number two. It went on from there but we. It's interesting the what happens to the two men in the film is reflected. Did what happened to Tony. And I because you know in the film you see two men sort of sniffing around each other like a pair of dogs like where each other Eh Wary of Tony but I was. I was I I'm an aura of Tony Hopkins. I'm a great admirer of his. So I'm not played late into those early scenes and as you see the pope's relationship growing so my friendship with Tony grew and It is the equivalent of both of us. All of US tangoing together by the end of it. That's a good way to put out.

Pope Francis Tony Hopkins Fernando Morella Morella Benedict Anthony Living Hopkins Argentina Netflix Rome Jonathan Pryce Barack Obama Director Golden Globes Cardinals Dylan Thomas United States MRS Youtube George Martin Polaris Rondo
Your Favorite Trader Joe's Skincare Products

Forever35

07:22 min | 4 years ago

Your Favorite Trader Joe's Skincare Products

"I was listening to the episode about the woman with a flawless skin? Thanks to trader Joe's enriched moisturizing lotion and I've been using it for years. Then I levitz going to tell you guys go to trader Joe's don't miss the antioxidant facial serum for all types of serum and you should definitely treat yourself to the LAVENDER's de-subscribe it will turn your shower and do my full on spice enjoy. Thanks for keeping me company then yesterday work and I can't wait wait here about your traderjoes. Hall lavender sea salt scripts sounds great disown. I've purchased a few of their shower scrubs before and as mentioned I have they're like shampoo in my shower. I did get this serum in my hall okay good. I haven't cracked open yet. We will kind of uniting to have a meeting about Blair Joe's mission but F- Why those items are in their here's another facial skincare trader. Joe's rave that we received received hi Katie Jori I'm driving to my mom's house for Labor Day weekend and I was just listening to the latest minneap we were talking about toners and I I wanNA share my favorite. It's not super fancy. I love the trader Joe's Rosewater Toner as I sit on my face after I wash it. It's refreshing. It's not expensive. I believe its cruelty free It's just a great product so thanks thanks for pod is nice. That's in the hall. Thank you I also want to note that. That caller left that voicemail a few weeks ago before this original trader Joe's skin lotion call. I'll look at Vassar. They were in the in box just waiting adding to be heard so lobby to that one right. We've got a body care recommendation making making gory emily. I just listened to the part of the mini episode. We're GONNA do a trader Joe's product test and I got so excited as you both did as well that I had to call in and mentioned the trader Joe's mango shaved clean you. You should definitely include this in your test. I have been using. There's there's nothing like I love it so much. It's not it's not the cheapest chasing gentleness McLean that you can buy but it's definitely the most effective my legs used to each so bad after I use like the Gillette you know the GEL that can turn into a foam when you rubbed it together because it was so drying but the trader just is so you you should definitely for that in your in your product test also loved the superstar wash and I can't wait to hear more wrecks. Thanks guys so oh I did not even know they had shaving cream. I missed that I mean I haven't I did not by the body wash so we've got to go back and get a whole we should basically sleep just by their entire skin-care body section and then while we're there pick up some frozen croissants to to Karaka made their frozen macaroni loans. I don't think so but I think I've had them at. Your House is a possible no good by them. I haven't made them. They're frozen. Croissants are legit legit delicious. I served them on Christmas morning. Oh there's so much good stuff to be found a trader. Joe's I mean aside from the skin care the gross I mean gross talk about forever but we won't we won't but we will in the future episode all right last voicemail with a seasonal holiday skin-care recommendation from TJ's Aj's hiking endure. This is Jessica S I actually just pause the most recent mini episode to call all the first time first time caller here because the idea of a trader Joe's focused product recommendation excited me so much and actually actually have a recommendation the caveat to this is it is not in the trader. Joe's usual lineup only come out at Christmas. At least I've only seen it the run up to Christmas but it is so good it's worth it and I usually stop then and it is the trader Joe's face mask trio the door. I know that you're not a massacre. Here's the thing I'm actually not a massacre either. I like to do what just occasionally like a relaxing thing or like a clean ass just when I've had some breakout and the price is right on these I forget what it cost. I bought these obviously last year but I wonder if either around on ten dollars maybe they also make great guests especially if you're ever part of like a gift exchange with the low amount and you get a clay eighty talk mask a pineapple papaya enzyme math at exploiting and then a moisturizing rose gel mask there each to fluid ounces also also perfect for travel. I cannot recommend these enough I don't really love masks a lot so I don't like you spend a lot of money on it. Honestly honestly I have tried much more expensive mass that I do not like nearly as well as best trader Joe's facemask trio so if you end up doing your focus focus on traderjoes products. I know it won't be out probably for at least another month or so but definitely keep your eyes out all right guys. I love your podcast I so much it's one of the highlights of my reach by so what I've always heard like on. The rumor mill of trader Joe's is that they are more expensive products products that like trader Joe's gets and just puts their trader Joe's label on. Have you ever heard this. I've heard serve a version of this. which is that a lot of their stuff his made in the same production facilities as differently branded item right and they just put their the name on it? I feel like Costco. Does something similar like. Everyone says that the Kirkland brand diapers are the same as huggies Caesar's interesting. Yeah I know Kirk Lyons coffee that they sell with their brand is starbucks but they have that on the label. I would be interested to know what the well here's an example that I know for a fact because this was written about but Bomba the Israeli peanut snack. There's now a trader Joe's version. Yes and I believe it is made under the same auspices as the original Bomba so I've I wonder what this if the skin care is available elsewhere a very interesting point. If there are any more you have to get chemists confessions on. Yes we Ojo Elliott the Mama Pa we do make a note yes but there's anyone who works the traderjoes skincare department slide into. RDM's get in there. Leave us an anonymous message out. Tell us what is going on with. These products secrets also send us some dried mango because that is my favorite thing trader

Blair Joe Lavender Kirkland Katie Jori Costco Ojo Elliott Rosewater Toner Karaka RDM Mclean Starbucks Jessica S Kirk Lyons Ten Dollars Mill
Huggies Dads on Diaper Boxes Campaign Goes Viral

Business Wars Daily

03:53 min | 4 years ago

Huggies Dads on Diaper Boxes Campaign Goes Viral

"<music> from one hi this is business wars daily on this Wednesday July twenty four Chicago. Dad is reeling from newfound celebrity of the most surprising kind and what happened him says a lot about are changing culture not to mention some very smart marketing on the part of huggies. He's diapers earlier this month. Huggies owned by procter and gamble introduced a new line of premium more sustainable diapers on its glossy black boxes or photos not just babies or babies in MOMS but for the first time babies with fathers. One of those boxes features African American model Orlando Phillips Holding a winsome one year old girl. The campaign is surprising since for decades fathers have been the butt of jokes not to mention huge frustration when it comes to diaper changing but with younger father's play more equal parenting roles many dad's feel under represented not to mention under appreciated for sharing the work in bonding with their kids. That's w true for black fathers who struggle with the stereotype that they are uninvolved loved so when Chicago Father Joe Flowers Junior saw the photo of Phillips and Baby Soraya Lattimore on the huggies box. He was elated in a facebook post he shared the photo saying huggies moved to show a black father. We're on the boxes quote a I in history. He added quote. Look how far we've come. I'm about to buy these for no reason whatsoever well that post went viral and production time had been shared eighty one thousand. In Times flowers has been interviewed by U._S._A.. Today and several other publications aside from shocking the softspoken father the response demonstrates just how advertising follows and mimics changing culture. It's about time social media fans hands seemed to be say obviously the marketing campaign turned out to be a smart move for Kimberly Clark the companies and fierce competition with Pampers owner proctor and gamble for the twelve billion dollar diaper market that competition. It's tougher than ever to because his diaper sales have been shrinking since two thousand eight when the birth rate began to fall sales dropped almost six percent from twenty seventeen to last year C._N._N.. Reported as kimberly-clark's then C._E._o.. Said you can't sell more. More diapers to women who aren't having babies proctor and gamble actually quarter DADS I in June it announced that it would install changing tables and five thousand men's rooms nationwide after an activist dad posted a photo of himself changing his one year olds diaper wild squatting uncomfortably on a men's room floor that dad called for change with the Hashtag Squat for change and Pampers responded. Both companies are now trying to sell more ECO friendly diapers at premium prices huggy special schol delivery diapers the ones featuring dads on the boxes us more sustainable materials pampers has put out its own more sustainable line to boot if the response to the DAD marketing is any indication we're likely to see a whole lot more of it and and the move is intended to boost sales and prophets well. It's also a push for gender equality and for breaking stereotypes and for that Joe Flowers junior and thousands of others have nothing but praise.

Orlando Phillips Joe Flowers Chicago DAD Gamble Pampers Kimberly-Clark Procter Facebook Baby Soraya Lattimore Kimberly Clark One Year Twelve Billion Dollar Six Percent
Huawei first-quarter revenue grows 39 percent to $27 billion amid heightened U.S. pressure

Noon Report with Rick Van Cise

00:33 sec | 5 years ago

Huawei first-quarter revenue grows 39 percent to $27 billion amid heightened U.S. pressure

"Cesco shares of Kimberly Clark rallying today. A gain of five point seven percent. The company behind products like Kleenex and Huggies reported better-than-expected first-quarter earnings and a sales decline that wasn't a steep is feared he was oil prices are sharply higher in the wake of a White House announcement that countries that continue importing oil from Iran will soon be subject to US. Sanctions. Some good financial news for Chinese tech giant alway the company's quarterly revenue rose thirty nine percent. The spite continuing US pressure on allies to Sean wa ways telecom technology as a security

Cesco Kimberly Clark United States Iran Sean Wa Telecom Technology White House Thirty Nine Percent Seven Percent
Prepare to Pay More for Diapers, Clorox and Cat Litter

News and Perspective with Tom Hutyler

00:38 sec | 5 years ago

Prepare to Pay More for Diapers, Clorox and Cat Litter

"For what it's worth, I'm Michelle Franzen. There may be a lot of crying this year. Over a hike in prices for Staples, like diapers cleaning products, even toilet paper. Big brand companies like pampers and Huggies. Proctor and gamble. Sharman? An arm and hammer say the higher costs of raw goods and transportation due to US tariffs are partly behind the increase church and Dwight says it's raised prices on products like Armand, hammer's baking, soda cat litter, even Oxy clean, Clorox and Colgate-Palmolive are too. So far it's worked the higher prices offsetting lower volume. It's change from the decade of slashing prices. During the rebounding

Michelle Franzen United States Hammer Sharman Staples Proctor Clorox Colgate-Palmolive OXY Armand Dwight
Russian lawyer who met with Trump says she is an informant

Schnitt Show

03:16 min | 6 years ago

Russian lawyer who met with Trump says she is an informant

"What we know now and bill cosby found guilty on three counts of you know sexual charges yesterday in pennsylvania listened to some of this audio from the scene from the cosby show i love your neck honey it certainly is nice to see the work things out for themselves yourselves is my barbecue sauce barbecue barbecues have you ever noticed after people have sung in my barbecue sauce after a while when it kicks in they get all huggy buggy i'm dead serious haven't you ever noticed that after one of my barbecues and they have the sauce people wanna get right home coming up on the nineteenth i don't breathing why don't you give the chicken to these people are going up oh boy so here's the rest of the guy oh now cosby and his wife were scurrying away to go upstairs with the barbecue sauce on the dresser and and then he races back because rudy and his boy or or eating the chicken and copied and takes it away taking it away there's the ending credits how creepy is that in the context of what we know about bill cosby these days and the the accusations the charges holy moly that's unbelievable i quickly on vessel and then i'll get into diamond and silk i've got the funniest audio from capitol hill yesterday from diamond and yelling give congress people yup and atom diamond silk trump's best friends so vessel that's kinda this natalia vessel that's guy she she's at russian lawyer who met with donald trump and paul manafort and some others member that was the trump tower meeting in june of twenty sixteen and well now she's admitted that she has deeper ties to the russian government than she had previously disclosed that we have known that she was a government lawyer i always assumed that an i've always said when talking about this of course she's reporting back to the kremlin i'm on deeper ties to the russian government than previously disclosed hey hey folks let me do my shocked face right here on the microphone did you see that in an interview with nbc news which will air later tonight on nbc nightly news vessel that's calls herself.

Bill Cosby Pennsylvania Rudy Paul Manafort Russian Government Donald Trump NBC