35 Burst results for "Hundreds"

Mark Levin
Alejandro Mayorkas Doesn't Know How Many People Die on the Border
"How many migrants died in 2022 Approaching our southern border Yes Precisely why we are seeking to Do you know the answer Do you know how many died I do not You do not Of course you don't I know how many died 853 That is 853 and by the way here's the numbers that have died every year You go back to 1998 you see it's consistently between 304 hundred or 304 to 304 hundred Suddenly 2021 what happens You get an office and that red line are dead bodies I've been on the Rio Grande and I've seen dead bodies floating there who drowned Because of your refusal to do your job you don't even know how many have died What do you say to the Texas farmers and ranchers who find pregnant ladies dead on their property who find toddlers dead on their property What do you say to them I say that is why precisely we are taking it to the smuggling organization But you are not That is simply not true Number two but let me read from The Wall Street Journal The Wall Street Journal two weeks ago ran an article entitled It's like great a graveyard record numbers of migrants are dying at the border The story begins with this chilling line quote Eagle Pass Texas Local officials keep a refrigerated truck to hold the bodies of migrants who drown in the currents of the Rio Grande while trying to cross the border into the U.S. Mister chairman I ask you unanimous consent that this article will be entered into the record You take any responsibility for that Biden Because you are responsible for this Biden Talk about gun control He talks about Nashville All these people dying on the southern border suffering being abused and raped and sold into sex slavery the drug cartels the drugs coming across

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
What Happened to Me on January 6th With Brandon Straka
"That the last two years, of course, have been very difficult for you personally for those who aren't aware with your story and what happened to you. After January 6th, let's quickly summarize, you came to D.C., you were here for January 6th. And again, correct me if I make any missteps here, you went to Congress. You never went inside the building. You filmed what was happening. You made a video, you posted it, and then things started to go bad for you. Explain what you did on January 6th and what the repercussions were you for for you personally. Yeah, no, you nailed all of those details. So I was actually invited to be a speaker on capital grounds at a permitted event that was supposed to follow president Trump speaking at the ellipse on January 6th. That's the reason why I went to Washington, D.C. to speak. And so as I was approaching the capital grounds after president Trump spoke to go to my speaking engagement, I started getting a lot of text messages and things like that on my phone from people around the country that I know who were watching on television saying, we're seeing or hearing on the news that people are going inside the building and something's going on. That sounded unusual to me, so I started shooting a video and I was approaching from the east side. So I wasn't even on the west side of the building where people were, you know, some people were breaking windows and fighting with police officers. So you were on the peaceful side of the Congress. Yeah. Absolutely. And I didn't witness any of that. I didn't see anyone breaking any Windows or in fact, I didn't even see any police officers. There were literally zero police officers, zero. On the east side grounds. And I got to the steps of the capitol and the east side were thousands of people were gathered, but facing away from the capitol, mind you, they weren't they weren't facing toward the capitol trying to charge inside. They were all standing facing away from the capitol holding signs and one man is visible in my video at the top of the stairs, calling down to the people blow shouting. They've opened the doors. They're letting us in. We're going inside. We're going inside. So I walked up to the top of the east side stairs and when I got there, the two large metal open doors of the capitol were wide open. And there was a crowd of several hundred people there, some were trying to get inside the majority were just kind of shooting a video like I was. And so I shot a video for 8 minutes outside of the building before a man came out of the capitol dot on a bullhorn and he said they've cleared Congress. Everybody move out, move out. They've cleared the building. You

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast
Xi Pledges to Putin That "Change Is Coming After 100 Years"
"An important meeting just took place between China Xi, Xi Jinping, and Vladimir Putin, the meeting was in Russia. And it was a I think we might look back and see this as a fairly as an epochal event. Now Biden on his own at around the same time was meeting with Trudeau in Canada, but this was a frivolous meeting, in fact, he has Trudeau. He's like, I brought you. I brought you some chocolates that were made by some immigrants and so this is the kind of nonsense going back and forth between these two political midgets. And in the meantime, much more statesman like meeting in which we heard that quote change is coming that hasn't happened in a hundred years. Now, that's the kind of statement that gets your attention and makes you think. There's a massive kind of reshaping taking place in the world. And the United States, which has had the dominant position in the world, is losing it and losing it very rapidly. Think of how the world looks different in just ten or 20 years. If you looked at, for example, the per CAPiTA GDP between the United States and China, the United States was way ahead. Three times as much as China. And the Chinese are now catching up and in terms of purchasing power, they're fairly close to catching up. They'll probably catch up in the next ten or 15 years. And let's remember that China has a much larger population. So if the per CAPiTA spending power of each Chinese family is the same as each American family, but there are three times as many Chinese families, the Chinese will have a vastly bigger economy than the United States. And that means they can put a lot more into defense, a lot more into research and technology. There are just long-term implications. I mean, it's very hard to say that the 21st century belongs to America in the same way that the 20th century most clearly did.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
More Details on the Nashville School Shooting
"I have prayed for the children, and for their siblings, and for their parents, and for their grandparents. And for every member of the school I paid prayed for the staff and prayed for the killer and her family. The killer is obviously unbalanced, as they all are. Now, many people want to talk about gun control today. To which I always respond the same way after a mass shooting. And then we have a couple of these stories every year. A couple of these dreadful mornings every year. I always say the same thing. What would you do? What governor Glenn youngkin is doing is pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into mental health treatment. And open resources for people who are suffering. And no, and if self diagnosed or their parents or family or friends know that they'd fallen into the darkness and they, the answer here is not a ban on AR-15. I mean, that shed pistols as well as AR-15. That's not it. The answer is, what do we do? To stop our young people from careening. And it's not a large percentage of people who are trapped in psychotic killing madness. It's significant enough, but I'll play for you the police captain yesterday. Please chief John Drake, identifying the shooter, he will use her name. I will not cut number 6. Thank you, mayor Cooper, again, thank you all for being here. Just an update from today's press conference. We've identified the shooter as Audrey Hale, 28 year old female that lived in the natural area. We have investigations ongoing now at the residence on brightwood avenue. And we have made contact with the father that lived at that residence and our putting together more information information.

HASHR8
Automation & Remote Management With Foreman and Daniel Lawrence
"Let's start off though for those who weren't around or didn't listen to the podcast last time just like your one O one intro on foreman. Yeah, yeah. So foreman, we are minor management and facility management. We like to consider ourselves to be more facility management software these days. So back when we started traditional minor management rebooting, configuring machines, high level we give you a central dashboard that you can go to where you can see all the machines you have deployed in your fleet. Could even be spread across multiple sites. So kind of one page where you can see it in control at all, was just rebooting pool changing, firmware upgrading, kind of maintenance of the machines, management of the machines, and then it's expanded a lot over the last year, where now we're more facility management. So we're integrating with network switches, integrating with PD us, integrating what as an example of somebody has a cooling tower, maybe they're running the new ant space, forgot what it's called the HK three or something like that. If you have a cooling tower and it has stats on the cooling tower, we can integrate with that, bring all the flow sensors, temperature, humidity, all that stuff in. So it's really more big, big picture now. Facility management. And then the other side within the last 8 months or so, we've been working pretty hard towards curtailment features, so helping people turn their minds off when they need to be turned off and turn them on when they need to be turned on. Okay, I think a great thing to go through would be what this looks like in practicality for anyone who's sort of outside scope, because I think most people come from and I'm going to plug in my minor. And it's going to talk to a pool, and then I get payouts to my wallet. They're not necessarily thinking about it from a different perspective. That middle way, wow. That middle where a layer. So walk me through maybe like a deployment. Yeah, the easy way to think why form in if you have one minor or two minors, you probably feel pretty personally connected with them. I know we did when we were hobby mining back in 2016 or so. You have two minors, you can pretty much give each one a name, and you know how to access each one. Every minor has a web page on it, and that's how you configure it traditionally. There but they get to be hard to scale. So when you go from one or two minors to hundred or a thousand and you're trying to track things that are maybe dead, where the scanning tool is not going to pick it up anymore, you need something that's a little more robust. It has a little more state to it also. So you want something that says, I found a hundred miners at some point. Now I'm only finding 98, and these two that I know existed are now offline. So that's the piece you're missing with. Scripts and BTC tools and stuff like that.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
Protests Continue to Roil Across Israel and France
"Continue to roil across Israel and France all night long in this morning is Israel considers prime minister Netanyahu and his coalition. Our gathering to consider whether or not to pause the legislation, which is now reached the floor of the platinum session, the Connecticut can pass it, I believe, with one rating they've done all the amendments they worked all weekend. They're right up on the brink of winning. About hundreds of thousands of Israelis don't like it. Same people that voted against Netanyahu and the coalition, you know, a few months ago I don't like it. So they're out in the streets. They've closed Ben Gurion Airport this morning. Port is closed. In France, protesters who lost the election in Macron are now being joined by black clad anarchists and are burning down buildings in various parts in and has put out a story this morning. Is it safe to travel to France? The answer is yeah, but know what you're doing is going to be garbage on the street. So both countries have to decide whether or not their leaders who recently won, and I just remember when prime minister Liz truss, she's now a former prime minister Liz truss blinked when she won the election over Rishi sunak to replace Boris Johnson Great Britain last year, she put out a budget, the left wing exploded, a panicked financial elite, and she blinked and her government felt. And I think you have to consider that Netanyahu and Macron both look at what happened to trust. Indeed, they have to look a little bit at what happened to Donald Trump in 2017 when traps were laid for him by the outgoing Obama administration, and they have to consider, do I blink now if I blink, will it all fall apart?

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Caller: Large Crowd Was Very Engaged for President Trump in Waco
"At the rally Saturday. I understand. Tell me about it, please. Yes, sir. I was at the rally and my mom got there about 5 a.m. and already there was about a hundred people in line and hundreds more coming in and it was just very enthusiastic crowd. We ended up being about 7 rows from the stage and just a great crowd of people and a good rally. What do you say to those supposed know it alls who say that mister Trump's popularity is lacking these days that the crowds are not as enthused, they're not as large. What would you say to them? I would say it was still a very, very large crowd and I would say that the poll numbers are fine. There was about, I would say 8, 8000, maybe 10,000 inside the gate and then however many thousands outside that were there. And again, it was 80°. And just very, you know, sports going on and I like him is primarily conservative, but it was in a more liberal part of town and so to bring that many people out, I mean, that was still incredible numbers. Based on your experience that day, are you even more of a supporter of president Trump than you were before? I mean, did this experience lead you to fight even harder for his election again? Oh yes, yes. I was already, I don't think I could get much more enthusiastic than I already am, but yeah, for sure. For sure. Benjamin. Go ahead, finish your thought, I'm sorry. It was just a very enthusiastic speech and I think one of his best ones yet and he was very got the crowd very engaged

The Breakdown
Why We'll Remember This Banking Crisis As a Turning Point for Bitcoin
"Going to kick this off with another piece from Michael Casey from coin desk called this crisis will define the future of money. I think the title of the piece is pretty self explanatory, so let's dive in. Michael Wright's ten years ago, a strange new digital currency called Bitcoin caught my attention for the first time as its price surged during the Cyprus banking crisis. Local authorities had infuriated Cypriots by slapping a 10% tax on withdrawals, unwittingly encouraging some to warm to the idea of bankless digital money. I'm not alone in seeing parallels between the past week's events. Again, Bitcoin's prices rallied on speculation that stress among U.S. and European banks will open people's eyes to the leading cryptocurrency censorship resistant, intermediary free qualities. But if this is Bitcoin's cypress moment, the context is very different from 2013, with crypto now embedded in public consciousness, negatively mostly, the industry faces its biggest ever test, one that involves an intensified struggle with the financial establishment. The community now has a narrow opportunity to seize the day and define the future of money. Echoes of 2008, 2009. Recall that the Bitcoin blockchain was born out of the chaos of the 2008 2009 financial crisis, with Satoshi Nakamoto's immortal timestamp on January 3rd, 2009, inscribing a headline from that day's London times. Chancellor on the brink of second bailout for banks. That crisis highlighted how our dependence on banks to run the plumbing of our money and payments leaves the entire economy vulnerable to mismatches and banks investments in liabilities, which can undermine their ability to honor deposits, and it showed how the largest banks whose interwoven credit exposure create systemic risk exploited their too big to fail status. The idea that governments would always bail them out to protect the economy, to place asymmetric high return risky bets. It showed how Wall Street and other financial centers in effect hold our democracy's hostage. Now with the collapse of three high profile banks, hundreds of regional banks facing worrying outflows, the U.S. Federal Reserve creating a new backstop facility reportedly worth $2 trillion, and Switzerland's Central Bank bailing out credit suites to the tune of $54 billion, the echoes of that prior crisis are loud.

AP News Radio
Ramadan begins for the world's Muslims, a pioneer of gospel music is rediscovered
"On this week's AP religion roundup, Ramadan begins for the world's Muslims and a pioneer of gospel music is rediscovered. Hundreds of millions of Muslims began the daily facts of Ramadan this week during Ramadan observant Muslims abstain from food and water from dawn to dusk and gather with family and friends for nighttime meals. Enjoy within the bandages now. Imad Hamad of Dearborn, Michigan, says it's like opening a new page with God each year. This is the way that is required to face the month. This is the way it's required to again guts rewards and gain the forgiveness and open a new chapter. That's why we quote Ramadan is a month of renewable. Islam follows a lunar calendar, so Ramadan starts about a week and a half earlier each year. For more than two decades, the work of gospel music composer, Charles Henry pace, sat silent and 14 unorganized crates. I knew we had this gospel collection, but nobody had ever really looked into it or really even figured out what it was. Christopher lynch is a musicologist at the center for American music at the university of Pittsburgh. We had about 140 pieces of music that didn't exist in any other library in the world. And might be completely lost. Lynch and his team discovered that pace was an early pioneer of gospel music. His independently owned publishing company helped elevate and expand the genre. I remember working in our music store. If my late teens. Francis pace barns. She was surprised at her father's impact. I think what I learned as an adult, I recognized, God, he was smart. Just a little ahead of his time, maybe. One, two, go. Average Herbert Jones, the founder of the heritage gospel corral, says bases archives help secure Pittsburgh special place in music history. Pittsburgh was a stop over point for jazz musicians and blues musicians back in the 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s. So this is another niche in the history of Pittsburgh and the music field. This week, the community showcased paces work at a free concert in Pittsburgh's hill district. Hi, Walter radliff.

The Charlie Kirk Show
China's "Century of Western Humiliation" With Jack Posobiec
"You and I have both been warning, hey, there's going to be a new superpower alliance happening and the American regime is cheerleading for it and is actually helping it happen. Chilling last couple of days in Moscow as Xi Jinping Winnie the pooh goes to Moscow to meet with Vladimir Putin and they say, quote, there are changes that have not happened in a hundred years that are happening when we meet take care of yourself dear friend. Play cut 73 and then Jack, I want you to make sense of this for me. What does this mean? I'm not even sure, play cut 73. Now there are changes that haven't happened in 100 years. When we are together, we drive these changes. I agree. Take care of yourself to your friend. Please. Jack, what does this mean? So to understand China, you have to understand that the way they teach history, they refer to something as the hundred years of humiliation of the century of humiliation. So the century humiliation goes from the opium war of about 1859 all the way up to 1949, which is of course the founding of the People's Republic of China. So they could refer to that as the century of humiliation, meaning humiliation by what, humiliation at the hands of the west. So the flip side of that for him to say, this is a change we haven't seen in a hundred years. What he's actually referring to is their new plan for 2049. That's their target date on forward where it's the century of western humiliation that he wants the west to be brought down low. And what does the United States done throughout all of this? They've driven Russia. The biggest wildcard in all of this, Russia, which had been trying to extend economic ties to Europe. Of course, we've now see where those economic ties are. They've been blown up. Most likely by the Biden administration and their allies at the bottom of the Baltic Sea and driven Russia in to the arms of China. This is the most historic meeting that we've seen in terms of the global geopolitical balance of power since Nixon going to China,

Dennis Prager Podcasts
Manhattan DA Bragg Takes a Page Out of Stalin's Playbook
"Manhattan's DA Manhattan DA Bragg is determined to snooker a grand jury into indicting Trump. Show me the man and I'll show you the crime was the infamous boast of Joseph Stalin's ruthless secret police chief, Lavrentiy Beria. His modus operandi was to target any man the Soviet dictator chose and then find or fabricate a crime against him. Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, has taken a page out of Stalin's playbook and targeted Donald Trump. Driven by personal and political animus, the DA presumed the former president must be guilty of something. It wasn't just a matter of devoting enough time and resources to hunt down the crime. Failing to find one Bragg copied berry is paradigm and simply dreamed one up. That is exactly what has happened. The man spent a hundred something thousand, I don't even remember what the sum is. To have a woman that he had a one night stand with, not say anything. And he's being charged with a felony. I know, well, you know, he didn't exactly report the fund as the business expense that he should have. I mean, my Friends, there was almost no person in business. No person, let's put it this way. Who earns an income who could not be indicted if somebody, I'm not saying convicted, all brag cares about is a mugshot.

The Charlie Kirk Show
"No More Secrets" With Chaya Raichik
"In the era of mass censorship, ordinary but brave people have a lot of power. It's really an extraordinary thing. Literally billions of billions. Hundreds of millions of people have seen the content from libs of TikTok. Potentially billions. I don't exaggerate though. And try a rate check has just been posting what's happening on TikTok. That shows that every one of you in this audience can make a difference. You just do the right thing and you do it boldly and you do it courageously, you can move the overton window. We would not have the legislative action that we are seeing on the meta mutilation issue if it was not for libsyn TikTok. So try, you have a new book out, tell us about it. It's called no more secrets, and also it got protested, tell us all about it. Yes, so for the last two years, I basically been exposing groomers and predators to our targeting our children. And then the pattern of a groomer who wants to prey on a kid is to cut out the parent to isolate the child to sever the parent child relationship, and then to prey on the kid. So, you know, I was like, look, I've been exposing this for two years, and I think the time has come for me to actually put out a tool which could help parents and children to combat this and to help kids not fall into that trap. So I wrote a kid's book, no more secrets. It's available on book dot com, but it basically teaches kids Ann parents. It strengthens the family unit, and it helps create that trust between parents and kids. Where if there is a trusted adult who tells a child, you know, don't tell your parents that we can keep this between us. This is a secret between us. The child should know that that is groomer behavior.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Who's Badmouthing Sean Davis?!
"I want to bring in a man who I love. Sean Davis, and I mean love in the most deepest man to man kind of way. Sean Davis cofounder of the federalist and brother, I heard someone talking bad about you on the twitters and I think it was this senator cornyn guy from Texas who was hell bent on running us into World War three by backing zelensky with everything he wants and you pointed out maybe that's not the greatest idea and he called you Neville Chamberlain. Well, I think the most interesting aspect of that is that we had a senator who was actually able to make a historical reference. Prompting him, it's probably the only one he knows. Right, right. It's on his list of one. But we should give him a little hint tap for that. Yeah, he went after me, called me an appeaser and a Nazi sympathizer compared me to former British prime minister Neville Chamberlain for suggesting how dare I that maybe just giving buckets of money to Ukraine forever isn't actually an America's national security interest that maybe what's happening over there is a dispute that Europe needs to figure out and that maybe we're actually making ourselves a lot less safe by putting all of our eggs in that basket spending hundreds of billions of dollars over there while our own border is completely porous and unprotected. And for that he went after me, which I found equal parts of using infamous horrifying.

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast
You Can't Penalize Innocent People for Someone Else's Crime
"How would you like to be a San Franciscan family, realizing you suddenly are on the hook for an amount of money in excess of the fines levied for insurrection? It's one thing to be fined in a court of law, quite another to be fined in absentia for a hundred year old crime that you did not commit. It may not even be a crime your ancestors committed. And this gets to the fundamental law in the reasoning behind reparations. You can't penalize innocent people for someone else's crimes. And to argue that it's justified solely because of race, does nothing to solve the problem of racism. It's actually guaranteed to make race relations worse because you're unjustly punishing innocent people based on skin color. The fact that the board of supervisors approve this plan also demonstrates the naked contempt they have for their constituents. Over half a million per family is an insane amount. It's pretty audacious to think everyone would be okay with paying out that much cash without a complaint.

AP News Radio
Tear gas, clashes as Lebanon protesters try to storm govt HQ
"Clashes erupt in the Lebanese capital with retired soldiers in the thick of it. Lebanese security forces fire tear gas to disperse hundreds of protesters who've tried to break through a fence, leading to the government headquarters in downtown Beirut. The protists comes amid widespread anger over the harsh economic conditions in the country, the majority of those in the clashes are retired army soldiers demanding better pay and riot police and troops, on the other side, Lebanon's in the grips of the worst economic and financial crisis in its modern history, rooted in decades of corruption and mismanagement by the political class. I'm Charles De Ledesma

AP News Radio
Teravainen scores late, Hurricanes rally to beat Rangers 3-2
"The Carolina hurricanes came from behind twice with three third period goals to beat the rangers three to two. T moter of islands scored the game winner with two 33 remaining. Oh, that was big. For sure. Just keep grinding, keep going, stay the same way. Not let them having any free chances, frustrate them. And it will work out so good job. With a hundred points, Carolina, in first place in the metropolitan division, two up on the Devils, and now 8 points up on the third place rangers, who had won four street. Mike mancuso, New York

The Officer Tatum Show
Taking the Word 'Woke' From the Left
"Now guys, you might be thinking Carl, why is this topic with woke the word woke such a big deal? It's a huge deal because it's a cultural indicator that we are starting to win. Here's what is really hard for those of us that are, let's say, on the right, if you will. I consider myself a constitutional restorationist. I believe that we're in a post. Judeo Christian, I believe we are in a post constitutional America, okay? That's where I believe that we're at. But I think that I don't think we've completely lost it or we can't restore it. All right, we've got plenty of fighters out there. The problem is this is not what's happened, what we've seen transpire from the left, how they destroyed the country, did not happen overnight. Now, it was, I mean, it was put on the fast track system during the COVID lockdowns. No doubt about it. But what they've been doing, trying to fundamentally transform the country. This is a, this is a project that's been going on from the left for a hundred years. And now conservatives are starting to fight back and realize it's more than just tax cuts. It's more than just elections. We gotta fight back in the cultural arena if you will. And we're starting to see inroads. People are starting to wake up and I'm gonna give you some examples.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Joe DiGenova and Victoria Toensing Unpack the News of the Day
"Happiest in studio with me, your favorite Joe digenova Victoria than Singh. On a day, a hundred and 64 years ago, when the Republican Party was established, which led to the abolition of slavery, thanks to the first Republican president called Lincoln, little public service announcement there, yes. The KKK was the armed wing of the Democrat party and the first Republican president was the great emancipator. I think it is upper side for us to discuss some Republican responses to the news of the last 72 hours, saying that for some reason, one side of the political divide should surrender their rights to protests. You know if they never said Black Lives Matter, I don't think you should go out there and protest. After George Floyd. But remember, this was in the middle of the pandemic. And everyone was told to stay home. Stay home, don't go out. And don't congregate when groups. Yes. And all of a sudden, after George Floyd, a whole bunch. I mean, like a hundred and some doctors, quote unquote, wrote this public statement saying, well, we said not to go out, but there are some causes that are more social. That are more important. Don't let this be an okay for you to go out and protest being locked up. And basically they said that in the public letter, it was pathetic.

Bob and Sheri
"hundreds" Discussed on Bob and Sheri
"Count yeah, none of those marriages was legal because you were never legally divorced. Shh. Betty? Yes, they are, sherry. All attention again. Attention all bob and sherry listeners. Yes, they are. It shut up about it. It doesn't count. Shut up. I mean, you know. Yeah, yeah. I mean, please. Hello. Hello. Love you. This woman. Are you married right now? You are? Just does he know about mister Ramon Jordan? Not more of you. No one does. Oh, that's right. It's just between us. One million people. But everyone will keep your secret. Everyone does. Because they know how important it is. That's right. All right, we'll be right back. I'm telling you folks. I'm warning you folks. You hush on this. Are you one of those couples that missed out on a proper honeymoon? Maybe your schedules were too busy and you had to postpone. 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The fun size podcast, a shareable taste of the show at our website or the free free bob and cherry app. Bob I came across something that's just for you and for anyone who has a dog that's afraid of thunderstorms and lows loud noises. This is a dog trainer and canine behavioral specialist named a demp femi who says that the best way to deal with your dog's fear of storms is to immediately begin desensitization training. And this involves making loud noises, bright lights, and even the smell of a storm familiar. And he said that you should, like, on days when the weather is good, you should, for a brief period of time, every day, like go on YouTube or whatever and pull up a wicked thunderstorm, and introduce your dog to those noises in a safe way, but before you do that, take your dog on a really nice long walk because there'll be a little more tired. And they won't have all that energy to put into anxiety. So it's the same way that exercise helps humans sort of forget what we're all tied up in knots about and relax a little bit. This dog trainer says, you take this dog for a good long walk, play with it, and then gradually build up their tolerance. So you would take Finn for a walk, and then you would come home. And you would play a thunderstorm on YouTube or your speakers or whatever. And you start at very, very quietly, and gradually bring the volume up. If your dog gets really freaked out, you take a step backward. You bring the volume back down and you wait until tomorrow. But you gradually get your dog used to the sound of the storm. So you've taken them for a walk and you're introducing the noise and your dog is kind of relaxed and you're petting him on his head and when your dog, when you hit that point where the thunderstorm sound is playing and the dog isn't overreacting, then you reward them for their positive behavior. You give them a treat and then tomorrow you do the same thing. And so on and so on and he said, if you do this, if you follow this, you'll reach a point with your dog, even though it sounds crazy, you'll reach a point with your dog where they no longer associate the sounds of that storm with something to be afraid of. What do you think? Do you think you could try that with Finn? I don't know. It sounds like it makes sense, but I think what Finn would do is he hears the storm when it gets a little bit intense for the first time. He just leaves the room, and he goes into my closet, our bathroom into the guest room next to the bed in the corner. And then you try to pull him out, he will not come. So, I mean, it's a 9 year 9 year old dog. It's not an old dog. He's not an old dog, but he's 9 years old. I think I might give that a shot if he were like one or something like that. I don't know that would work right now for me. I like the idea of the YouTube storm. As far as my going around with a pots and pans, making a lot of noise and screaming. I don't want him to. Associate that craziness with me, but I could see the YouTube storm thing actually being pretty good and effective. And you just, you start small, so there's the big walk so that he's kind of tired and happy and relaxed. I got it. And then you start small. And the minute he becomes agitated, you bring the volume back down and that's it for today. And then tomorrow, maybe he goes a little bit longer. I think that this is worth a try because you get so upset when he gets upset. And then you're both upset and then Mary yells at you because you smell like frozen food or whatever. And it's no way for a man in his dog to live. Yeah, that's true. That's true. We need to just the two of us move to place that doesn't have storms. I don't know where. No bad weather. Yeah, no bad weather. He can be free of anxiety and you can eat whatever you want without being yelled at. That'd be Paradise. I know. Hey. Bye bye. The kids say goals. It's just something to think about. Hey, listen, fire. I'll post I'll post a link to the article where I read that for everybody else that has storm phobic dogs. It's an interesting idea. It's bob and sherry. Hey, thank you so much for listening to the bob and cherry podcast and the bob and sherry podcast. We would love if you would subscribe, rate and review and share it with a friend on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, wherever you go, and thank you again for listening. Dissecting politics with exclusive interviews, commentary, and humor. Useful idiots, with Katie halper and Aaron mate. So Addy timmermans is banned from coming in contact with a chimpanzee. At the Antwerp zoo in Belgium, part of what makes this complicated is that he was a pet. Don't be like, oh, it's harming his socialization. That already happened. Honestly, they are getting in the way of their love. I mean, they haven't even gotten a second base. I don't think so. It depends how long the chimp's arms are, though. Useful idiots with Katie halper and Aaron mate. Listen, wherever you get your podcasts.

Bob and Sheri
"hundreds" Discussed on Bob and Sheri
"How early I have to get up for? And then he'd say, oh, that again. That again. Yeah, but you know, like you'll tolerate it from an animal, but to have that in a person, that's not flattering, that's not, there's nothing good about that. No. And even if it doesn't end badly, and we all know what you mean by ending badly. Even if it's just, he's here and then he's gone, right? It's creepy. Who needs creepy in their life? Right? Who needs to have creepy feelings in their life? It's just, it's like the guy that shows up for your first date with his mom so they can talk about wedding planning. That actually happened to one of our listeners. It did. No. Yeah. No. Make it stop. It's bob and sherry. Now, let's open up the bobbin sherry, archive vault. We're joined now by Betty. Hi, Betty. Hey. So what happened? Would you wake up to? You woke up married. A husband from a mom, Jordan. From where aman Jordan? I'm Jordan. My goodness. Had you met him before going to sleep that night? And this happened. Oh yes. I call it. So you met him at college. And we went on a bunch of us went to the beach. And I just wasn't married. How old were you, Betty? Betty, what was the last thing you recall doing before going to sleep that night? Was tequila involved? Well, no. Was he one of your friends who went to the beach? He wasn't a friend. He was my boyfriend. Oh, he was a boyfriend. Boy Betty, you're what we call on the show the strong silent type. Now you've got to volunteer. You got to have the details. A little more. So you go to the beach with your boyfriend who's from aman Jordan. Had YouTube. And a bunch of people, had you talked about marriage? Was it a serious thing? Yeah, we had talked about it, but I've only known him for two months. And we just, I guess, did it. Did you remember? 30 years. It's been, that was in the 70s. I did not see him since. Did you get it in all? Did you get an adult? Did you get a divorce? No, we're still there. As far as I know. You're still married? You're still married to this man? How many years haven't you seen him in? Some years. So you haven't been married in 30 years? Well, yes, I have. You're a big mist. Well. That's a first. I love you, Betty. I love you, Betty. I want to talk, I want to talk to all the audience right now. Hang on, Betty. Hang on, honey, I don't cover you here. All pop and sherry listeners, attention. All bob and sherry listeners. Okay, it's fine now, Betty. Don't worry. How many times have you been married? After that three? Three after the Iman Jordan guy? Did you get divorced from any of them? Yeah. Okay, so it's just the one. It's just that one guy. But in theory, and this is only in theory because.

Bob and Sheri
"hundreds" Discussed on Bob and Sheri
"At bob and cherry dot com. Somebody sent me a link to a website called father Lee. And obviously the focus is on things fathers might be interested in. And I am a father. So I was poking around in it. And there is a really charming little article about the most popular dad movies. And when I say dad movies, I mean, movies that, as a father, you would watch with your kids. So there's like a hundred of them. So I paired it down to the top ten, and let's see if you'd agree. Number ten is from 1982, and at CT, the extra extraterrestrial. That should be there, I think. You know, it was a beautiful tale of a young boy who befriends a stranded alien, of course, from outer space, and that thing broke the record for the highest grossing film of all time. I forgot that. ET did that. And you know it wasn't a movie with bombs going off. It was a fairly quiet movie, but it had such charm that it just came across like you're looking at a summer blockbuster and indeed you were. Number 9 is honey I shrunk the kids from 1989. I like that movie. I really did. I thought it was really unique. I think I saw a part of it the other day, I think it still holds up. And Rick moranis, I've always been just so impressed with him. He left it all, you know? He left honey, I shrunk the kids. I think they were offering him like two or three others. And he just said, I'm going to raise my kids, and he left show business completely. I think his wife had passed away. Yeah, his wife died, and he needed to be there for his kids, and so that's what he did. And you know, it's the sort of thing that shouldn't be so amazing and yet

Bob and Sheri
"hundreds" Discussed on Bob and Sheri
"Right, well, two months for 3000 years of longing. So that'll help you plan your weekend and speaking of planning your weekend. When we come back, the people's movie critic is a very exciting afternoon for you. Saturday, September 24th. OMG can not wait. It's coming up. Bob and cherry. At the bobbin cherry show, we've decided to make every day. And you can get in on the phone. Just submit a picture of your cat or you and your cat at our website. Bob and sherry dot com. Our big boss Tony Garcia assures us you could win a valuable special really expensive prize. You want to say that one more time without the sarcasm? That's bob and cherry dot com hit the contest tab. From doctor pussy's dot com and bob and sherry. Sign up for our newsletter, we never spam you. Never did get bob and sherry exclusives just go to bob and sherry dot com. Back when the people's movie critic told us about his buddies backyard wrestling, we were like, bring it on, I want to go and broadcast from your buddies backyard wrestling. We're going to do it instead of a happy hour and don't you know it's coming up Saturday the 24th and we're going to be out there, me and Heather and Doc and possibly max and Lamar are going to be out there for the backyard wrestling event describe what goes down. This is not. This is not like some deal like you see on YouTube where these cats have got some plywood out here and they're jumping off the roof of a house and all this no, no, no, no, no, no, no. This is a 100% regulation wrestling ring, okay? A 100%. And the people that are going to be wrestling, they make a living wrestling, okay? This is like, these are people, okay? This is not a bunch of young people. These are pros. And he has got this thing set up in his backyard. He has built a stage so that he has an opening act of a band that's going to be playing. He's got a snack bar situation. He's got parking for all that he's got seating all the way around. He's got a VIP section. This is unbelievable. And it is in his house in the neighborhood in his backyard and it's crazy. It's crazy. And I mean, each time he gets bigger talent, bigger names, and he's bringing them in and people are coming to see it. And we're going to be there. I can not wait. So he only sells a hundred tickets. I mean, this is like, this isn't some wild free for all. You got to get your ticket and get in line. Yeah, yeah, you got to have, he'll put him online for sale. And he sells the tickets online and if there's any leftover at the gate, there will be a little bit more expensive at the gate, but if you pre order your tickets and you don't want to wait around. I mean, you know what I'm saying? You don't want to wait around. So I'm telling you, this is going to be awesome. I can't wait. I can not wait for you to see this in max, especially, max. Oh my God. And I'm so looking forward to this. So lamarck, you know, something that I wondered ever since we first talked about backyard wrestling, and we'll be carrying this for you on the bob and sharing Facebook page live on the 24th of September. You know, with your showbiz personality and your kind of giant outsized presence, did you never think about becoming a wrestler? Oh, I never wanted to become a wrestler. I wanted to become manager of a wrestler. That's what I wanted to be. Yeah, and that makes sense because the manager is the one that has the mouth that does all the selling and that sort of thing. Yeah. In fact, that's how Jimmy got started. That's how Jimmy got started on this. He was doing some, there's a couple of local arenas into arenas, and they have wrestling there. And he became a manager of a couple of wrestlers. And so he was very flamboyant in his management of the wrestlers. And he, you know, he loved it. He loved it so much. He's like, you know what? I'm gonna open up my own spot. I'll be in charge of everything, and that's what he's done. And I mean, when he first told us about this, I'm like, okay, I've seen this stuff on YouTube. Oh no, no, no. When I walked up, I mean, it's a cement pad. It's just like watching TV. Just like watching TV. I'm telling you, it's awesome. My husband is asking me so many questions about this. He doesn't usually pay that much attention to work for me, like stuff I do with the show. He's come up to me at random points and without any setup. So everything's out of context. He'll say to me, so did they, do they wear costumes? Costumes. The wrestlers that Lamar's back. Yes, they wear costumes. Yes, they have a referee. Yes, it's yes. It's legit. Yo, yes. All right, so is there a website that we can shout out for people in the areas and welfare South Carolina to grab? Just to try to grab one of those hundred tickets? Just be out. We'll post it. I'll get the website. I'll get the, I'll get the website for it. I hadn't got it right with me, but we'll post it on Facebook. That won't be a problem. Okay, so problem. September 24th, the takeover. Hosted by round Emerson junior. Don't Jack around. These are like Elton John tickets. They go in a snap, baby. There's only a hundred. Only a hundred. All right, thank you people's movie critic if you jumped in late, he was not a fan of 3000 years of long yield. We gave it two buds, and that was just out of respect for actress elbe. So think about that when you're picking your movie. It's bob and cherry. Could it be like a truly American art form is taking the world by storm? Ranking in the top 100 in many countries around the world each week, restless shores is a very popular, with our overseas neighbors, even in many countries where English is not the native language, from Azerbaijan, to Andorra, from Yemen, to Yonkers, New York, and all points in between restless shores, international fans are the wind beneath this American podcast swings. For more, check out restless shores dot com and find restless shores wherever you get your podcasts. Oh, well, this is odd decidedly odd. It's the bob and sherry off their podcast called the odd cast with stuff we wouldn't couldn't or shouldn't do on the regular show. The odd cash drops every Monday and Wednesday on the bob and sherry website and the free bobbin sherry app. I listen to you on the way to work in the podcast on the way home from work every day. Lunch is sweet. Thank you. The off air bob and cherry podcast called the odd cast download it now at bob and sherry dot com with the free bobbin sherry app or wherever you get your podcasts. Ways to get in touch with the bob and sherry show. Stick your head out a window and yell. Hey, bob and sherry. Get the bob and cheery free app for your phone and leave us a talk back message. Email us through the bobbin cherry website, bob and sherry dot com, or email us hello at bob and sherry dot com. Or you can call us at 8 three three four two 44 bomb or 8 four four 52 sherry. Leave us a DM on the bob and cherry Facebook page, or you can just kick it old school and yell out the window. Hey. Voluntary. Bob and sherry, with the people's movie critic Lamar. You know, it had a little balcony and kids move up the balcony and they'd get the candy and they'd throw it. At the price of candy today. I hope they're throwing it. Throw it. Hey, Lamar. For $8 a bag. I eat the M and ms and then I eat the bag.

Bob and Sheri
"hundreds" Discussed on Bob and Sheri
"His public life back. He's disgraced, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. But now you know why there was just no matter how many efforts were made. There was zero cooperation and there was no way that we were ever going to get Prince Andrew into a court of law to see anything justice done. King Charles seems to be such a good man in many ways. An interesting man, but not a perfect man, and I think everybody knows that I'm talking about, you know, his attitude toward Diana and how that divorce went down and having an affair with Camilla. I was listening to a reporter with the endless amount of British press coverage of the royal family over last weekend. And I can't remember the name of this reporter, but this was someone who was a woman who has done a lot of research and evidently a couple of books on the royal family. And she started referring to Camilla. And one of the instances was Charles was dancing with Camilla, and married to Princess Diana at the time, but some royal of share. And Camilla's husband, the silver stick in waiting. I can't remember his name off the top of my head. Was chatting with one of the partygoers. And that person said to Camila's husband. Well, it looks like Charles is really enjoying being with your wife and the dance floor. And the silver stick said, oh yes, and he very much, she very much enjoys being with him. And evidently he said it with pride and we followed some of us have followed those stories that he would look cast a blind eye toward their physical relationship. And obviously it's an affair. But she went on to describe Prince Charles in a way that I had not realized. And this goes hearkens back really to another era of British royalty. That evidently, and this is not me. This is this British author. She said, well, Prince Charles enjoyed romantic. I'm trying to be nice about it. Romantic encounters with many of his friends wives. It's good to be king. I mean, what do you I listen to at my jaw dropped? And I thought, you know, I could see that happening like in the 1600s, the 1700s may be the 1800s, but in the 20th century, maybe the 21st century, it does seem like it is good to be king and then some, but evidently they knew about it, or at least the women were quiet about it, but I had the feeling the men knew about it and it was like, oh yes, my wife is with the prince tonight. Wow. It's totally just a different society. Altogether. Where that would be like an honor, maybe or whatever. I think though that if you're like the aristocracy, maybe your days are shorter than mine because if I, if I sat down to dinner and my husband and for me that the prince or the king was coming over and I had to entertain, it might be pissed. I got to tell you, I'm tired at the end of the day. I do not want to have to oh, I've got to go put on grown-up clothes and hook up with the king, like no thank you. You know, maybe the whole attitude is, okay, she's doing that. My wife is doing that with Charles. But I'm going over here to your cousin. I'll be visiting with your cousin in the country house. While that's going on or during some period in the year. I don't know. I mean, as we were just saying, it's a different world. Now, if I could, if I could send cave out to hook up with somebody and in exchange, we get one of those grace in favor country homes to live in for free for the rest of our lives. My love, you are going to have to change your shirt. I need a country home that get out there. Well, if you available because he is downsizing. Downsides the amount of palaces, yeah? Straight ahead, the people's movie critic is back with us and we're so glad he's reviewing 3000 years of longing next it's bob and sherry. The fun size podcast, a shareable taste of the show at our website for the free free bob and cherry app. It's time now for the people's movie critic. We're so glad to welcome Lamar back with his review of 3000 years of longing halo Mark. Hey, you know, if it was me, I would probably retire it 3000 years of longing for this to be over, okay? Our possibly possibly the other cattle could be how to make one hour and 48 minutes seem like 3000 years, okay? I love this sounds harsh. I know it sounds harsh, but I did try to like it. I really did because I have to say, but he is always an amazing actor and Tilda Swinton. I mean, she's a great actress. She has a long resume. But this was a very slow movie. Especially after watching Idris Elba take on a line in a fist fight in beast. I mean, you know what I'm saying? This really slowed down. It really did. But I just say, I'm a place GM, a Genie that has been trapped in a bottle for 3000 years. And he plays it really great Genie. He's smart, charming, funny, and all the other things you would want, you know, out of somebody that's gonna be forced to grant you three wishes. But I couldn't get past his ears. They look like sort of like elf ears. If the ears had been known by a dog, okay? They were all just all up. And maybe all Genie ears look like this, okay? Maybe they do. 'cause you can't see them because they're wearing a turban. But if I had no fears like that hell I'd wear a turban too. That is a very good observation. That's solid Lamar. I don't know how many times I leaned over to Carl and said, what about ten years? What's wrong with the ears? I don't get the ears. She's just squint talking about the ears. I was like, okay, whatever. But Tilda Swinton plays ala theia. And she's an academic who is a narrow narrow, to lodge. Narrow. Narrow to largest. You nervous. You did better in rehearsal, I think. But what that is is an expert on the history of storytelling. And so when she meets the Genie, she's offered three wishes. She's like, not so fast. Because she goes on to explain that she's very familiar with all the fables of magic wishes. And none of them end well for the wisher. But if she doesn't make a wish, Jen will be caught between two worlds and be invisible and he'll be alone for all time, which would be worse than being in the bottle. So to set her mind at ease, Jim proceeds to tell her three stories of how he has gotten in and out of the bottle over all these thousands of years. Now, the majority of the movie takes place in the lethal hotel room, and she's in her bathrobe with wet hair and just sitting there listening to this. And the three stories, they're not terrible stories, but they're really not all that memorable. And you can see this is a setup for there to be some kind of romance between her and Jen. But there is zero chemistry between these two people. I don't know how it could be any further unless he was selling hot dogs and she's a vegan and I'm just telling you it was horrible. I couldn't get

Bob and Sheri
"hundreds" Discussed on Bob and Sheri
"Giant time suck that is. It's all coming up for your Friday. It's bobbing cherry. Are you one of those couples that missed out on a proper honeymoon? Maybe your schedules were too busy and you had to postpone. That's why bob and sherry want to give you a second chance, honeymoon, to enables Florida, you could be in a dream getaway to Florida's Paradise coast where you'll stay 5 nights at the Hilton Naples in centrally located this luxury hotel offers spacious accommodations and world class amenities with complimentary bike rentals. You'll be able to explore this charming resort city on the coast known for its white sand beaches and great shopping. Plus you'll enjoy a romantic sunset dinner cruise aboard a luxury yacht courtesy of Naples princess cruises. Tickets to Naples zoo at Caribbean gardens and admission to walk through a 170 acre garden Paradise at Naples botanical garden. Just tell us your story why you need a honeymoon redo. If bob and sherry dot com on the contest tab and we'll pick one lucky couple to send on a sunshine filled getaway to Naples Florida for that special honeymoon you've always dreamed of. A second chance, honeymoon. From bobbin sherry. Now, on the voluntary show, we're going inside the docker room. And that's with Doc, we're going to take a look behind the scenes of a sports story that you may not know anything about. Doc, what you got today. Yeah, so this first story is kind of like a bonus morons in the news because the Miami dolphin season got off to a really hot start last week when they won their season. Opener. But some fans had their day completely ruined when a fire broke out in the stadium parking lot and it completely destroyed 11 vehicles. Wow. Now reportedly, the reason why is because someone who was tailgating in the parking lot left an active grill under a car, which caught the car on fire, then that car caught another car on fire, and that second car then exploded and caught the other 9 cars on fire. It took firefighters about 30 minutes or so to put out the fire, but thankfully nobody was hurt because everybody was inside to have the game. You know, when I think of somebody tailgating, especially the person who is running the actual cooking of the food, I just always picture a guy, he's a big guy, he's a bubba. He's friendly, and he really knows what he's doing with meat and fire. He must have been sick that day because who in the world takes hot coal and puts it under a car. You're forgetting the most important part of the tailgate experience and that is alcohol. It's something to do with this disease. I hear you, but I still say that the bubba knows I don't put hot coals underneath the car. So the local hood. The local news story, they interviewed one of the people whose car was total. It was a guy who he said his car, it was a 200,000 dollar Mercedes and for some reason he had $3000 cash in the car when it went on. Oh my God. Who keeps $3000? A $200,000, and can you imagine it's in Miami? Why does a car cost $200,000? What is going on inside that car or outside it that makes it be 200 $1000? I think if a Bugatti or something like that, like a rare sort of car that's not a production car, you're right, 200 grand for it. I'd be so afraid to take that thing anywhere. I know, I know exactly all right. What's next? So this next story, I play a lot of rec softball, and I have witnessed my fair share of injuries out there on the ball field. But this story is really amazing. It's the story of a Utah nurse who ended up saving the life of a guy out there who had a heart attack during the middle of the game. Here's the story. It's a nail biting moment, emergency CPR is being performed in the middle of the ball field, and the woman sure looks like she knows what she's doing. Registered nurse Daniel Tom happened to be in the stands watching her son's play when she heard someone yell, call 9-1-1. I immediately looked out and I had that straight shot right down to where Darren was laying. And so I jumped up and then I just booked it out there. It was life or death, the man didn't have a pulse. Daniel, who was still in her scrubs because she just left her shift at intermountain medical center in Murray city, Utah, immediately began chest compressions right on the field. It was frightening. I don't have my doctors. I don't have my nurses. I don't have oxygen. I don't have medications. I had nothing. When I got out of the car, Dana was on top of him performing CPR. And I could tell that she was tired and so I took over CPR from there. Daniel was almost certain the stricken man wasn't going to make it. My eyes just filled with tears. And I was so. Sad because I really didn't think he had a chance. Then, more help arrived, paramedics used a defibrillator to shock the dying man's heart. It worked. And here's the proof. Meet 57 year old Darren ewell. Turns out he had suffered a massive heart attack on the field that required four heart stents. The doctor told me if I had my heart attack at any other place, including possibly home, I'd be dead, but I had it right there in front of a nurse who just barely arrived at the ball field, and she saved my life. Oh my gosh, what a story. Boy, I'll tell you what, that was a miracle. Wonderful. Great story, Doc. Fantastic. Very fantastic. We've got the people's movie critic coming up. He's back. 3000 years of longing is the movie comedian Dennis Gasol is next, it's bobbing shell. Have you ever wondered what to do if you're in an abusive narcissistic relationship or need tips on how to spice up your sex life, or maybe how to not fall in the trap of being a mom martyr or perfectionist, or you just want tips on how to get your picky kids to eat. Whatever the reason you were there, you were welcome. Hi, I'm doctor Kim, you're confidant and host of the parental podcast. Please join me for your weekly dose of expert level advice and resources from me and my guests and a relatable, easy to digest way. Find the parental podcast on Apple podcast, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts, hi, I'm doctor Kim, the parent ologist, as a wife, mom therapist, and all around juggler like most of you, I lead a hectic life and sometimes that means indulging in foods on the go that my stomach doesn't always agree with. Thankfully, pepto bismol provides me fast and effective relief for all kinds of upset stomachs. Having a little too many guilty pleasures at a family barbecue birthday celebration may lead to indigestion or heartburn, so I always keep pepto on hand to get fast relief when I need it the most. Pepto bismol uses directed and keep out of reach of children. The bob and sherry podcast, it's a podcast with stuff you won't hear on the regular show. I had Todd tracked down the founder of the American museum of the house cat. Which was a real rare finding. What did it look like, doctor? It looks like a distant alt right up here. It's bob and sherry, uncensored, uninterrupted, and unfettered. The bobbin sherry oddcast. You know, I like people, but I don't crave being around people, you know what I mean? I do. My odd. Not natural. No, you're not. I'm not on that way. You can get the bob and Cherie cash by going to our website, bob and sherry dot com, POV, AND, SA GRI dot com, or text the word oddcast two, 8 8 8 two 6 two 7 four three 7 8 8 8 bob sherry, or the simplest way, get the new bob and sherry app for your iPhone in the App Store. Every morning on the way to work in the podcast on the way home from work every day. It's bob and sherry, unlike you've ever heard them before. The Bobb and cherry podcast. I've been sherry books, swag and the mother of all mothers merch. Just hit shot at bob

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"hundreds" Discussed on Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"The game begins in the spring when everything else begins again and it blossoms in the summer filling the afternoons and evenings and then as soon as the chill rains come it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone. You count on it, rely on it to buffer the passage of time to keep the memory of sunshine and high skies alive, and then just when the days are all Twilight when you need it most, it stops. Today, October 2nd a Sunday of rain and broken branches and leaf clogged drains and slick streets. It stopped. And summer was gone. Somehow the summer seemed to slip by faster this time. Maybe it wasn't this summer, but all the summers that in this, my 40th summer slipped by so fast. There comes a time when every summer will have something of autumn in it, whatever the reason it seemed to me that I was investing more and more in baseball, making the game do more of the work that keeps time fat and slow and lazy. I was counting on the games deep patterns, three strikes three outs three times, three innings. And it's deepest impulse to go out and back to leave and to return home to set the order of the day and to organize the daylight. I wrote a few things this past summer, the summer that did not last. Nothing grand, but some things. And yet that work was just camouflage. The real activity was done with the radio, not the all seeing all falsifying television. And was the playing of the game and the only place it will last. The enclosed green field of the mind. There in that warm bright place with the old poet called mutability. There's not so quickly come. But out here on Sunday, October 2nd when it rains all day, damn but never loses. She was in the crowd at Fenway yesterday, a grade a full of bluster and contradiction. When the Red Sox came up in the last of the 9th trailing Baltimore 8 to 5 will the Yankees rain delayed against Detroit needing only to win one or have Boston lose one to win it all. Sat in New York, washing down coal cuts with beer and watching the Boston game. Boston had one, two, the Yankees had lost to and suddenly it seemed as if the whole season might go to the last day or beyond, except here was Boston losing 8 to 5. Well, New York sat in its family room and put up its feet. Lynn both ankles hurting now as I had in July, it's a single down the right field line. The crowd stirs. It's on its feet. Hobson, third baseman, former Bear Bryant quarterback strong, quiet over a hundred RBIs, goes for three breaking balls in his out. The goddess smiles and encourages her agent a canny journeyman named Nelson briles. Now comes a pinch hitter, Bernie carbo one time rook of the year erratic shade two handsome, so laid back, he's always in his soul stretched out in the tall grass one arm under his head watching the clouds and laughing. Now he looks over some low stuff unworthy of them. And then uncoiling sends one out. Straight on a rising line over the center field wall, no cheap Fenway shot, but all of it, the physics as elegant as the arc the bowl describes. New England is on its feet, roaring. The summer will not pass. Roaring, they recall the evening late in cold in 1975, the 6th game of the World Series, perhaps the greatest baseball game played in the last 50 years. What carbo loose and easy had uncoiled to tie the game that fiske would win, it is now 8 to 7, one out and school will never start, rain will never come. Sun will warm the back of your neck forever. Now Bailey picked up from the national league recently big arms, heavy gut experience new to the league and the club follows off to and then checking tentative a big man off balance. He pops us off liner to the first baseman. It is suddenly darker and later. And the announcer doing the game coast to coast. The New Yorker who works for a New York television station sounds relieved. His little world well lit. Hot combed split second time has no capacity to absorb this much Gritty, grainy, contrary reality. Cox, swings about stretches his long arm, bends his back, The Rookie from pataky who broke into two weeks ago with a record 6 straight hits. The kid drafted ahead of Freddie Lin range, smooth, cool. The count runs two and two and cock swings. The ball beginning toward the mound and then in a jaunty wayward dance skips past briles, fainting to the right skimming the last of the grass. Finding the dirt moving now like some small purposeful marine creature negotiating the green deep, easily avoiding the jagged rock of second base and traveling steady and straight now out into the dark silent recesses of center field. While the aisles are jammed, the places on its feet, the rappers, the program, the Coke cups and peanut shells that detritus of an afternoon, the anxieties, the things that have to be done tomorrow, the regrets about yesterday the accumulation of a summer, all forgotten. While hope the anchor bites and takes hold or a moment before it seemed we would be swept out of the tide, rises up..

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"hundreds" Discussed on Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"Taylor, thank you to you. I mean, I'll give you a hard time all the time. You know, the over unders on your drinking, but doing this show every day can be a grind and man you work through it so well. I appreciate that buster. You know, we work well together. You know, this is year two of our of us doing the podcast together and I think we really, we crashed through the ceiling on previous efforts and hopefully we'll continue to do better next time. You, my man, I mean, you're up at four, you're pining to get up at four a.m. right now. And that is just unbelievable to me. So for you to get up, do whatever you gotta do. Do this podcast. Go on TV, go on the radio, right all day. Do interviews. You're getting ready for Sunday Night baseball. I mean, we chronicled on here on the podcast, but you're a busy man and you know, you work a lot harder than a lot of people do in most industries. So hats off to you, sir. Well, I appreciate that. You too. I mean, juggling all the podcasts that you do. And I will be seeing you soon. You and I have talked about getting together. You know, me going out to dinner with you and your wife and that'll be a lot of fun. So thanks so much. My thanks today also to Jeff and did Todd have a great day everybody. Thanks for listening all year. Stay safe and remember, Hayden inequality based on skin color is something we need to fight against every single day. So it's a podcast tradition to wrap up the daily podcasts with a reading of green fields of the mind by the author, the former commissioner, Bart giamatti. But Barr, of course, is a renaissance man and that means that he is also a Red Sox fan. He wrote a classic piece, actually, one of his great pieces is called the green fields of the mind. Please welcome him back commissioner boichi united. This little piece was originally written one afternoon as the class notes for the class of 1960 and the college I was the class secretary I had absolutely nothing to say about my classmates. I wrote what you're about to hear, it was properly an immediately rejected by the alumni magazine. On the grounds that it was completely irrelevant to the purpose of the class notes. I accepted the judgment, cheerfully. And then when unaccountably two months later, I became president. The almighty magazine.

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"hundreds" Discussed on Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"I have no idea. What pan telling you you were talking about. Well, you know, if Mickey Mantle, you know, standing there, you know, at the plate about to hit his last career home run. He gets a pitch groove to him. Not to say this is your last home run, Taylor, but it might be. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I would hope that you would get that question because it's right in front of you in a way that it isn't for me. Pull the curtain back here. Jeff passen is waiting the wings to tape his segment. And as soon as the word Cardinals came out of my mouth, he shook his head like nope and I thought for sure I was in trouble, but oh, okay. Take the victory. All right, well Todd, thank you very much. Thanks for coming on every week. Always love talking with you and I'm so happy that we have these series of one here contracts locked into place forever. Yes, secured by pizza in Denver buster. Thank you. Thank you, Taylor, the reverend you're keeping the trains moving every Friday morning usually for me. Thank you buster, thanks to all our fans. And here we go, winter begins. So thanks, guys. Bleacher tweets all righty buster, bleacher tweets for a Thursday, Bradford leach at bee leech or bleach, I think I like bleach better 26, right? And thank you for another amazing season of the baseball tonight podcast. I listen every day and will miss my daily fix. Thank you for the kind words bleach. Yeah, Bradford. Thank you very much for that. Thanks for listening every day. Look, I love the fact that how the podcast so much of what we do on a daily basis is built around what you guys want us to talk about. David is up next at baseball fan 1918 our pal David writes in, just wanted to say that I have enjoyed the season and I appreciate all the work you both put into the podcast. I joined Twitter just for bleacher tweets and appreciate the listener interaction that this pod encourages already looking forward to the off season specials, David. Thanks for hopping on Twitter for us. Your tweets have been great. We love having you in the mix here. Yep. And we are going to have as I mentioned at the top of the show more off season podcasts this one, so that's going to be a lot of fun. And I just want to mention, you know, part of the reason why we have more interaction was based on a suggestion. I want to say about three, four years ago from Louise cornetta, who oversees this podcast and it was a great idea. And it's fun every day to work in the bleacher tweets. The questions we're getting from the listeners to folks we have on the podcast and between Louise and PG&E always feel like we have great support here. Absolutely. Go bosses out there. Love Pete and Luis. Let's go to Kati Kasey at tweeter bleats. And what is your sense on Buster Posey's future in baseball do you think he will walk away completely or still be involved down the road whether it be coaching a broadcasting? I think he's gonna be an excellent coach of his kids. You know, I think that's why he's retiring. I just haven't gotten to know him a little bit. I think he really values being around his kids and the great thing is and I was texting back and forth this morning with Bruce bochy who's on his way to San Francisco to be part of that ceremony. And we talked about that. You know, buster comes from a really close family in Georgia. And I would fully expect that that's where he's going to go and he's going to be on the sidelines and the opposing parents would be like, hey, wait, isn't that the whole fame catcher? Buster pose used coaching on the other side of that ten year old game. I think that's absolutely what he's going to be doing. Next up, we have Thomas Kennedy at game 6 86 writes in, hey, buster. How about Ron Washington and bandage and the mets would love to see him manage again, especially my team? Yeah, Ron Washington, a buck showalter, bocci. I think that the next manager they have needs to be someone with experience. Marcus cleaver at Marcus cleaver writes in is this the end of the current championship window for the Astros or do they still have another run in them? That's an interesting question. And I was asked that by Mike Greenberg yesterday in his premise on his radio show was, you know, this is the end of the line because Zach ranke is leaving and Carlos Correa is likely leaving as a free agent. And I don't agree with that. You know, they still have a good core of players between guriel and Bregman and Altuve. They've got some young pitching that's been established from barb Valdez and especially with Oakland now slashing their payroll and probably trading some of their guys during the winter time. You know, the fact that the rangers might have two or three more years in development before they're relevant. I think Houston is going to continue to be the standard bearer in the American League west. Let's go to Carlos munoz at Carlos almighty, Carlos writes in, Verlander, Scherzer, Greinke Kershaw are all part of the Mount Rushmore of this generation starting pitchers and are all free agents next season who is signing where and what do these contracts look like? If Kershaw continues to play, I'm sure he'll be with the Dodgers. I don't think he's going to get as much because at this age, you know, he's not going to be as productive. He doesn't throw as many innings. He's got the injury history. I think it's kind of year to year with him, and he'll be paid very well. My guest is somewhere in the range of 25 million. You know, was Zack ranking? I think there'll be a team that will definitely want him. Boy, in terms of a deal, again, I think Zach is at the stage where he's going to wind up with the one year deal. I think max has put himself in position to get a three year contract because he was so good this year. And you know, max is going to pick a place where he has a chance to win. The cardinals would be a great fit for him. How much fun would he and Adam Wainwright have being teammates and, you know, max, of course, having grown up in Missouri. And Justin Verlander, it feels like he's going to get a big offer from the Detroit tigers, like a legacy offer. Not only to go back there and potentially lead us a team that's on the rise on the pitching staff, but because he started with the tigers and someday he'll go into the Hall of Fame with the tigers cap. Last one, for today, last one for the 2021 season. Zach Lachey at zo show 21 O 9. He just kept Zack keeps tweeting cubs at me. It doesn't matter what I'm tweeting about. What you're tweeting about.

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"hundreds" Discussed on Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"Todd raiden is a chief executive of our weekly quiz. He's a graphic artist who's working be sent in ballfield all across America all around the world, or you can go to his website Todd radham dot com and Todd is our closer. Congratulations. I think that's appropriate Tod. Well, buster I don't know if I am the closer because annually the late commissioner of baseball a Bartlett giamatti is truly the closer. But that said, I'm happy to be the 8th inning guy, hand the ball off and conclude this amazing season, congratulations to the braves. And to brave spans everywhere, including your son, Jake. Oh, my goodness. Yeah, and today I get to bring get to give him his World Series swag. He's very excited about that later today, and I'm sure that, you know, he probably showed up at school with a brave sweatshirt and probably had fans of the Yankees and mets running in the other direction among his peers. Real quick, yeah, and far to yamani first passed away more than 30 years ago, which is why you are the true closer, but we're going to be hearing from the former commissioner with his reading of greenfields of the mind, but you were telling me before we got going about an interesting connection with Bart giamatti. Yeah, buster, I have a close friend of mine who is a sports attorney and worked at the commissioner's office for some time. And he was hired by barchi amati in the middle of all of the Pete Rose messiness in 1989. And for those who are not intimately familiar with the details, it was an ugly time. And you can imagine being a young attorney being a hired into that environment and working long, long hours and not really getting to know your boss. And he has told me stories about the fact that Archie amade would come to him very late nights and say listen, you know, we're going to go out to dinner. We're going to get there. We just have to power through all this. And of course, Bart giamatti passes away, very tragically, very suddenly. And regrets are ahead. And buster, it's impossible and you can get into this, but to think about a man of letters. President of Yale University. And a lover of baseball like most commissioners are probably all, but it's really difficult to comprehend this particular man being the commissioner of this sport. I think he was brokenhearted by the by the Pete Rose situation because it was clearly a part of him and you're going to hear that in greenfields of the mind that he had such a he hung on to a romantic feeling for baseball. And so the idea that he was going to be the one who is going to kick out the guy who got more hits than anybody else in the history of baseball and say what you want about Pete Rose. It was clear that Pete loved to play. I think that that was devastating for Bart giamatti on a different level, which is why along the way, he kept on trying to give him opportunities to put himself in a better position, Vis-à-vis baseball. Please admit everything. Tell us everything, so we can get this on the table so we can get back to rehabilitating you into baseball and Pete never took those opportunities, you know? So and I'm sure that that absolutely weighed on bar giamatti and what turned out to be the last month of his life. Okay, let's get to this week's quiz. The last quiz of the year. Weeks 34 gentlemen. Taylor, 6 wins, buster, 11 wins. There have been 16 ties. We already held their parade. Like my parade went in two parts in the center of downtown downtown Randolph center Vermont and going past the farm. We did that months ago having wrapped this up. But go ahead. And that took about three minutes, probably, right? Well, then this is 30 seconds. This is the perfect question for week 34. The world champion Atlanta Braves share the same red and blue pantone colors with this club. Is it a, the royals be the cubs? See the cardinals or D the Blue Jays? This club shares the same red and blue pantone with the world champion braves. Royals cubs, cardinals, or Blue Jays, Taylor. That's got to be the Cardinals, right? Wait, don't give the answer yet. He said, you got to be the Cardinals. And here's an interesting question because I feel some on certainty in Taylor's answer and while I am badly colorblind and probably can't see the same pan tones as Taylor Ken, I sense an opportunity here. He's saying the Cardinals, boy oh, boy. You know what? I'm gonna go with the Blue Jays. Jorge soler has stepped up to the plate and hit it, hit it, hit the snot out of the ball. It's still going. Is there a stewardess on this flight? Because it's the Cardinals Taylor. Yes. Eat it buster. Sorry about that. I had to. I had to. Well, you know?.

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"hundreds" Discussed on Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"That's the part of this that throughout the past year the past 5 to ten years as tanking has been a thing. There's been very interesting to see. What incentive defends have to buy tickets if teams admit they're not going to be any good. I don't care how that works. Orioles. So and I mean, let's face it if it plays out if it drags out the longer that it drags out. The people who are going to get absolutely hammered the most and bear the brunt of that financially, you're going to be the free agents. And you look back at the signings that happened last winter because everything got dragged out, we didn't know the impact of the pandemic teams with their budgets. The idea that Kiki Hernandez won up with a two year $14 million contract seems absurd. The idea that Mark bell Anson didn't re sign with the braves because he got $3 million seems absurd, but those are the guys who are going to get pounded by this. Yes. Always. And that's, I think what is at the heart of this collective bargaining situation? It's that the MLBPA wants free agency to matter. For the longest time, let's remember the longest time. Free agency was the thing for which they were fighting. It's where their identity was forged. And it was something that was extremely successful. So the notion that free agency isn't Valhalla for a particular set of players right now is something that's difficult to come to terms with when so many of the gains that you've made and so much of the solidarity that you've shown has come from the fruits of free agency. That was the bet that Marvin Miller placed. That free agency was going to be the thing that made players rich. And it was a hell of a bet. Like, he knew, he understood what the motivations are. He understood the economics. He understood everything and sought years decades honestly in advance, but free agency now in this era where teams are smarter where they're more efficient and where they pride themselves on that intelligence and efficiency just does not what it once was. And to try and put levers in place to make it so again, you worry about what the unintended consequences there are going to look like. And if there's anything that can actually salvage free agency itself, other than something like, hey, let's just get everyone out there earlier. So they can get paid. And I actually get paid because when you got a three in front of your age, and you're going to free agency, you're just looked at differently. Yep. And I've kept you too long this morning, but before you go, I do want to get a guess from you in the minute we have left, what's your guess? And that's all it is. It's a total guess is to win, you think that there might be an agreement? Because mine at this point, I was more optimistic a month ago. I'm less optimistic now after hearing various voices, all of that as you and I know can change with one really productive conversation between the two sides. My guess at this point was that the start of the regular season will effectively become the deadline, these two sides need, and then we'll get an agreement sometime mid to late March. How about you? That's more pessimistic than I am. I think that by the middle of February, people are going to start getting extremely antsy. Okay. And they're going to understand that free agency is going to take about two weeks and I do wonder buster whether this is the sort of thing that will finally kill the 6 week spring training. Players don't need 6 weeks spring trains anymore. 95% of them come to spring training, ready to throw in in great shape. And frankly, spring trainings eye wash at this point. So I'm guessing there will be a deal in place by February 15th. I hope you're right. I hope I get some sleep and yeah, you go out and spend some spend some of your money go out and get a catcher to catch your song. I think I'm gonna do either that or some equipment and also, by the way, let's go voice. You made it. Like after that early stumble, we made it through to the end and I feel good about that. Okay. Thank you. Thanks, foster. Being a small business owner requires you to wear a lot of hacks. And sometimes those hats aren't always the best fit..

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"hundreds" Discussed on Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"Wow. It does real hard. Again, it's either that or I'm particularly soft and that that part may be true, but I know what your son believes. If it's one of the two, I know it's unbelievable. I think it's both, actually. Yeah. Exactly. You know, normally, in most off seasons, I would run through all the teams and I'd run through the prime free agents and ask you what's going to happen with this guy. What's going to happen with that guy? I think we need to start though with what's going to frame the context for this whole winter. And that is the upcoming talks of the ongoing talks or not non discussions about the labor agreement. Where do we stand there? They're talking and we've seen some progress, I think. But the major issues still have not been resolved. And the notion that they're going to get resolved over less than a month we're talking now doesn't seem particularly realistic. Could it happen? Sure. I mean, I'm not going to be a pessimist about this because I feel like I've been realistic about it the whole time that yeah, we're probably going to get to 1159 p.m. on December 1st without a new collective bargaining agreement. Probably. If we do, I want people to understand. The sky is not falling, right? There is no issue with spending the next couple of months trying to figure that out. As long as games do not get lost. But once we start getting into spring training, that's where the panic is going to come in and that's where people can get understandably frustrated because baseball off season is supposed to be about trades and it's supposed to be about free agent signings and it's one of the for me it's not the most exciting time of the year. I still love the playoffs, but it certainly second. And for a lot of people, they look at the off season. It's almost a second season. It is always amusing to me and I'm sure you get this as well buster. When non baseball fans who are in your life, whether it's Friends, whether it's the parents of your children, whether it's teachers, whether it's people who recognize you at the grocery store or whatever, say, so now that the season's over, what are you planning on doing on vacation? And I'm like, it depends how well I know the person. If I know the person like well enough I'll be kind of rude and say, like my season's just starting now. You know, when the regular season ends, the actual transactional season is what I am here for. And not having that right now is going to be really weird because we're not going to have that. I understand that in the past, especially the past couple of years, it's been delayed, right? Teams have been looking to push back more and more the signings of players and you've had really slow starts to winners. But this is one of those where absent a small trade here or there, a couple of contracts. Relatively insignificant signings. I just don't, I don't think we're going to see a whole lot over the next month. Now, I would agree with you, we had the deal yesterday where the tigers pick up and experience catcher Tucker barnhart, but it's not a very limited contract. Sort of thing. Exactly. That's the sort of thing we're going to see, right? We probably see Atlanta Braves again, jump the market, sign one or two players a one year deals, but they're not going to be these massive contracts doled out for free agents. I wouldn't imagine. Well, how could you if you're, right? Player. That to me is the biggest quarantine. I mean, everybody needs more context about where the financial landscape is going to land. No, but okay, so let me make an argument and tell me if I'm wrong here when it comes to the team side. The vast majority of teams buster are not going to be going near whatever the competitive balance tax threshold is. And they're not going to be they know worst case scenario for teams. If there's some sort of change in the economics, it would be that there's a floor, so they would have to go and spend. I don't think that's going to happen. I don't think that's realistic, but it is something that's been discussed. I just think most teams have a budget or a general sense of where their budget is set. And it's the players who are going to need to figure out what the dollars that they're looking for are within that budget, just how high the high end teams are going to stretch. Those low to middle class teams, though, I think they could theoretically go out and spend without any concerns about how the new CBA is going to affect them. Because in a lot of ways, it's the teams that are at the margins, both at the top and the bottom end that are most affected. Here's how I think it could be a factor is that if, in fact, the labor talks aren't going well, and they're going to drag out a long time and there's some uncertainty if the season is going to start on time. What that's going to mean is that there are some teams who are going to struggle to sell tickets. Yeah. Yeah, okay. That's fair. That's fair. And I'm not justifying that. The Oakland owner cut the minor salary from 400 to $300 a week, right? During the pandemic, so some of that is not necessarily going to be justified by the numbers. But that's how some teams will treat it. Like we're not spending money if we don't think that we're going to be able to sell tickets until and you know what? I hope I help fans call them out on that. By the way, I hope that that just seems like a, it seems like an excuse and a not very good one. Tickets are gonna sell if they're games play. And just because tickets aren't selling at a particular time, doesn't give you as an organization or it does give you, it shouldn't give you the leeway to say, you know, we're not gonna put any money into baseball operations. Why would you buy tickets if you have a team that's saying we're not gonna spend on our team?.

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"hundreds" Discussed on Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"It looks like the most beautiful rainbow you've ever seen. Like the way that I just bruised up from a fast fall like a 72 mile an hour fastball that got spiked and it hit me. I'm clearly if we constitution, but still, what catchers do back there every day, squatting the way that they like, yeah, this is like the real in time examination of my own biases against catchers. And maybe it's just that I don't know how to objectively add value. Like in my head, you know, wins above replacement, honestly, I think is a terrible way to measure catchers. I just don't think it does a good job. I don't think framing metrics have been properly rated in terms of their transition to war. Yeah. But I look at it and it's almost like mad respect catchers like I have all the respect in the world for you. I just don't know how to show it. Your story reminded me of hearing about Mike Messina when he was growing up his dad used to catch him. His dad is a lawyer. I think his first name is Malcolm, if I remember correctly. And then when Mike was like 12 or 13, he threw a fastball that hit his dad on the kneecap right on the point of the kneecap when he's squatted down as a catcher. And his dad was like, okay, that's it. Yeah, yeah. Like I'm done. Like, child, you're taller than me now. That's a masculine enough. You throw harder than I ever did. That's emasculating too. Don't hurt me now. That's just insult to injury at this point. I did want to tell, you know, I got some fun stories about Buster Posey that I wanted to tell. You know, he's the only adult that I've ever met who has the same name buster. I met hundreds and hundreds of dogs and cats with that name. So that's always been fun. I've been introduced on many radio shows as Buster Posey. But the best and Jeff, I know this was going to make you laugh. And I'm not going to say the name of the person because I don't want to embarrass this person. This person still alive. But within his field, these are superstar. This happened and now we can sort of hide his identity because now I've done almost 2000 podcasts. There was a time when we had a guest on the pod. And I realized Jeff one question into it that the guest thought he was talking to Buster Posey. Right, and I didn't want to embarrass this person, but I also wanted to have him on the pod. And so I structured my questions in a way that got him away from sort of identifying that. And at the back end, Josh macri was producing the pod at the time that the back end, I said to Josh, I'm like, Josh, he thought I was the Giants catcher and you and I both know the last person in the world who would host a podcast would be Buster Posey, right? And I remember telling buster that the following spring and he got the biggest laugh out of it, I have no doubt, you know, he's retiring at age 34 that the reason why is because he's someone who has made a lot of money in his life, he grew up with a very close family in Georgia. It was texting back and forth to Bruce bochy this morning. That's where he's going to wind up. He's going to go back and be a coach to his kids. I never got to know Buster Posey, particularly well, and that was always something that I was disappointed in. Because interactions with him were great, and he was whenever I talked with him, I walked away from the conversation thinking, wow, he is really smart. He is a sharp guy. He gets it, he understands that he was gifted with something and that he's able to go out and do this job and do it really well. But that's not his identity. And we saw that when he opted out during the pandemic season and we're seeing that now when think about the gift that it is, buster, to go out after missing a year, be awesome and then say, you know what? I'm done. I'm okay with that. I'm cool with it. I've always, I've always deeply admired men who can walk away at their peak, whether it is Barry Sanders, Jim Brown, Calvin Johnson, you don't see it in baseball a whole lot. There aren't many examples of guys who leave when they're at their absolute best. And I think Buster Posey wasn't his prime prime this past year, but was there a better catcher in baseball? I don't think so. No, I would agree. Yeah, he had three O four, three 90 on base, 18 home runs, you know, was right at the heart of what the Giants accomplished this year and surprising everybody in baseball. All right, enough about catchers enough about Buster Posey. Let's talk about the off season coming up. Actually, can we go back for just one second? I want you to look. I texted you the pictures. Do you have your phone right there? No, no, I don't. All right. I want to see his reaction in real time to what happened to.

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"hundreds" Discussed on Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"NBA today. We've talked about it a bunch, but three p.m. eastern. Noon Pacific on ESPN, ESPN app and wherever you listen to podcasts. Support for this podcast in the following message comes from supercuts. Let's face it, life is busy between work and family and more work our to do lists have a way of getting longer instead of shorter. Luckily, supercuts is here to make at least a haircut part of life easy. Supercuts is perfect for people who need a haircut, but don't have a ton of time for a haircut. No more scouring the web for salons with availability. You can use the supercuts app to find the location nearest to you and check in or just walk in. Another bonus, the salon shows estimated wait time so you know exactly what you're in for. That way, you're only insulin when you need to be. Don't expect to stay a while. As for the cut itself, it's always super solid. Thanks to supercuts, highly trained stylists. Get in, get out and get to that thing. You needed a haircut for. Whether you've got a big presentation coming up or a wedding or you just need some upkeep, supercuts makes getting a haircut effortless. It's not just any haircut. It's super cuts. Check in now on the supercuts app or on supercuts dot com. Gatorade knows there's no one path and athlete takes to unlock the true greatness. For DK Metcalf, greatness starts with an early morning grind going hard when everybody else wants to quit. For world record breaking trackstar Sidney McLaughlin, it's all about setting a goal and working hard every day to shatter it. And for Jayson Tatum, greatness starts with giving everything to live up to the legend that came before him. Whatever path you take to greatness, Gatorade's proven formula is there to help you fuel it. Greatness starts with G. The.

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"hundreds" Discussed on Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"Working from my home in New York back home from the World Series Taylor and there's always something in a little exciting about that. Going to the off season that only you know, you got a lot of off season moves coming up, but it's gonna be nice to get into an off season regimen, you know, in bed, at ten o'clock up at four that sort of thing. Yeah, no one is no one's crying for us, but, you know, just personally, you know, our schedules our daily schedules are wrecked once the playoffs start. So I'm happy to get a workout in, like you said, go to bed at a reasonable time. All the, you know, I mean, I love the show, but I will be happy to take a break from our daily cadence for a little bit. So yeah, and the uncertainty of the off season. I mean, we have like big major existential questions about the league and the players union, negotiating here, but then just like wear all these, you know, we've been talking superstar shortstops, all season long. I'm excited to see how this is all going to shake out. Yep, and we're going to be talking about Jeff passing about that coming up. And you mentioned, you know, we had the daily podcast running since what was it February that we started doing that? I think going forward this off season, I'm thinking generally speaking will aim to do one podcast a week while, you know, we'll jump in if there's news to react to. We'll certainly do that. Last week, we generally talked about doing one every two weeks and that felt a little light to me. Yeah, yeah, we can pick up the pace a little bit here. 'cause I think there will be more aside from like a work stoppage and then there's nothing going on, but it kind of feels like there will be more to talk about. And we don't have to go super long. We can just check in and say hello and talk to our pals here and move on, but just a little something extra for you folks that you want. Exactly. We're also going to talk to Todd radom today. He's going to have the last of a weekly quiz and we will honor a podcast tradition at the back end. For some news and notes, the Atlanta Braves will give a nod to the past and present with a two part parade Friday celebrating their first World Series title in 26 years. The braves defeated the Astros on Tuesday night to wrap up the championship and their procession will start at Woodruff park in the heart of downtown, Atlanta, not far from their former homes at Turner field in the old Atlanta Fulton county stadium. The team which returned to Atlanta on Wednesday night will be honored for about two miles along the city's most famous thoroughfare, peachtree street before being escorted to its current home in suburban Cobb county to resume the parade for another mile. Teams are making moves all over the place. Players are making moves. The Philly's declined club options for next season bradfield was doable Herrera and Andrew McCutchen. You say kikuchi chose free agent after the Seattle Mariners declined his option. Yesterday, the Cincinnati reds traded veteran catcher Tucker barnhart who was an excellent defensive player to the Detroit tigers. You know the tigers managed by former catcher AJ value defense. That's a big move for Detroit. Castiano's opted out of the last two years of his deal with the reds. He's 29 years old. He could have gotten $34 million in this next two years. So he's betting he'll get more in this off season. I think that's absolutely going to be the case. Given the respect for him as a hitter and as a competitor. And we got a some breaking news yesterday first from the athletic Buster Posey will announce his retirement later today. This is a player who I believe is a Hall of Famer. We're gonna be getting into all that. Taylor, what do you got? Buster couple podcaster promote here. First of all, swagger and perk, we've been talking about it a bunch, new episodes on Tuesday this week, Kendrick Perkins and Marcus spears are having an open conversation about mental health and sports including their own struggles, come to terms with the end of their playing careers, also want to promote the woj pod. Adrian Warren ski he's always getting the best guess in the NBA this week he's got Atlanta's John Collins on talking about his push for his $125 million extension that must be nice growing up as a military brat in much more and.

Radio Boston
"hundreds" Discussed on Radio Boston
"Is that correct. Yeah i think we've looked at different numbers a different time points so I would say that you know i. It's definitely high case numbers Per hundred thousand but it's also potentially the rate of acceleration of increasing cases that we're seeing region as well And so probably it will be you know up to jurisdictions we're still thinking about what that firm number would be I would say that the high number that we've been talking about in bristol barnstable county potentially Depending on what the governor thinks of may qualify as sitting that description so the two of you are really it. Sounds like now turning to the governor to see what step he's going to take next in terms of public health recommendations here in the commonwealth. Is that fair dr boucher. Yeah that's the way that's the way. The system works is that the cdc provides guidance and then at the states and provide the actual policy that we need to follow. I think for your listeners and for all of us as citizens you know it's important that we pay attention to this information and there's been emerging information about the delta burien that is concerning and again. I'm going to be like your broken record today. Keeps just reinforcing the fact that vaccines are the best tool. We have to protect ourselves and our families And you're there the reason why This isn't a lot lot worse right now. And dr pierre cases eight times higher than lows in june. I know that still the overall numbers are low compared to the peaks earlier this year and last winter or positive positivity rate is above one point six percent though four times higher than at the beginning of july. What would you if you were advising the governor. What would you tell him to do right now. Well i think that The delta variance is clearly forced to be reckoned. So addition to thinking about how we can continue to support vaccination efforts in our entire commonwealth. But especially in those particularly under vaccinated spots that remain vulnerable Especially as we move into cooler weather having more indoor teaching and congregation I would recommend really taking a critical look at the activities that we've seen in our coming off and elsewhere contributing to spread of cove nineteen And also it's really difficult to feel like we're backtracking on the progress that we've made and we're really weary. Of course it's not done with us and so we really do need to take a hard look and make sure that we are protecting our communities ourselves families and particularly the most vulnerable including those who are unvaccinated but Children and those who are not eligible for vaccination yet as well But i my colleague and saying that vaccination really is one of the most important methods that we have at this point We still need to think as we're getting the vaccination rates up and higher hopefully What other layers of infection prevention we've used in the past still work and can work for us moving forward one eight hundred four three eight to five five to.

Clear+Vivid with Alan Alda
"hundreds" Discussed on Clear+Vivid with Alan Alda
"By <Speech_Male> <Music> <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Advertisement> <Silence> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Speech_Music_Male> fish been cleared <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> at least a hoax <Speech_Music_Male> though <Speech_Music_Male> like thanks to <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> the copley foundation <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> for sponsoring <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> both clear and <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> vivid <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and our sister series <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> science <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> clear and vivid. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> The <Speech_Music_Male> copley foundation <Speech_Music_Male> is dedicated to <Speech_Music_Male> the advancement of <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> science for <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> the benefit of humanity <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> has an actor <Speech_Music_Male> and a diverse smith <Speech_Music_Male> has been featured in <Speech_Male> television series <Speech_Music_Male> like the west <Speech_Music_Male> weighing in nurse. Jackie <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> but it. The creator <Speech_Male> of works like <Speech_Music_Male> notes from the field <Speech_Music_Male> and she's <Speech_Male> carved out a unique <Speech_Music_Male> place in american <Speech_Male> theatre <Speech_Male> spotlighting <Speech_Male> which he calls <Speech_Male> the school to prison <Speech_Music_Male> pipeline <Speech_Music_Male> notes <Speech_Music_Male> from the field <Speech_Music_Male> was first produced is <Speech_Music_Male> an award winning play <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> and it led later to <Speech_Music_Male> an. Hbo documentary <Speech_Music_Male> and a random <Speech_Music_Male> house. Book <Speech_Music_Male> and <Speech_Music_Male> his website is <Speech_Music_Male> added to be a smith's <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> dot org. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> This episode <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> was edited and produced <Speech_Music_Male> by our executive <Speech_Music_Male> producer. Graham <Speech_Male> shed <Speech_Male> with help from our <Speech_Male> associate producer. <Speech_Male> Jean chamois <Speech_Male> are sound. <Speech_Male> Engineer is dan <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> zula. And <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> our publicist. Is sarah <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> hill. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> You can subscribe <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> to our podcast <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> for free at <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> apple podcast <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> stitcher <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> or wherever you <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> like to listen <Music> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> <Music> <Advertisement> <Silence> <Advertisement> <Music> <Advertisement> <Music> <Advertisement> <Music> <Music> <SpeakerChange> <Music> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> next <Speech_Male> in our series of conversations. <Speech_Male> I talk <Speech_Male> with neil. <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> He studied how animals <Speech_Music_Male> like us got <Speech_Music_Male> to have the parts that <Speech_Male> make us up through <Speech_Male> evolution <Speech_Male> six years <Speech_Male> ago. He and his <Speech_Male> colleagues made a <Speech_Male> breakthrough discovery <Speech_Male> when they spotted. <Speech_Male> The snout of a <Speech_Male> flat headed fish <Speech_Music_Male> poking <Speech_Male> out of iraq <SpeakerChange> in the <Speech_Music_Male> canadian arctic. <Speech_Music_Male> Every <Speech_Male> time you bend your wrist <Speech_Music_Male> every time you shake <Speech_Male> your head you <Speech_Male> can thank these creatures <Speech_Male> living in devonian <Speech_Male> ecosystems. <Speech_Male> Three hundred and seventy <Speech_Male> five million years <Speech_Male> ago and we know <Speech_Male> that because <Speech_Male> we can trace the fossil <Speech_Male> evidence all the way <Speech_Male> back to that time <Speech_Male> so this fish <Speech_Male> tells us a <Speech_Male> lot about how animals <Speech_Male> took the first steps <Speech_Male> on land but <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> more even more importantly <Speech_Male> and i honestly <Speech_Male> in my <SpeakerChange> opinion <Speech_Male> more beautifully <Speech_Music_Male> is that it connects <Speech_Male> to us <Speech_Male> that there's part <SpeakerChange> of our history <Speech_Music_Male> locked inside <Speech_Male> of these fish. <Speech_Male> Neil shubin <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> not only does science <Speech_Male> but rights <Speech_Male> clearly and vividly <Speech_Male> about it to <Speech_Music_Male> next <Speech_Music_Male> time on clear <Speech_Music_Male> and vivid. <Speech_Music_Male> meanwhile <Speech_Male> on thursday <Speech_Male> on our other <Speech_Male> podcast science <Speech_Male> clear and vivid. <Speech_Male> I talk <Speech_Male> with allison milwaukee. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> He's figured out a way <Speech_Male> to grow miniature <Speech_Male> human brains <Speech_Male> or more <Speech_Male> accurately little clumps <Speech_Male> of human brain <Speech_Male> cells <Speech_Male> in a dish <Speech_Male> so we start <Speech_Male> with <Speech_Male> Skin cells from <Speech_Male> people <Speech_Male> in by activate <Speech_Male> the only four <Speech_Male> genes inside <Speech_Male> that skin <Speech_Male> cells. We can turn <Speech_Male> them back <Speech_Male> into these <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> embryo. Nick <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> like <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> stem cells. That have <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> the ability <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> to become any <Speech_Male> tissue of the body <Speech_Male> in my lab <Speech_Male> specialize <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> in brain cells. So <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> we add factors <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> to drive <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> yourselves to become <Speech_Male> brain <Speech_Male> tissues and then <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> self organizing <Speech_Male> three dimension <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> forming <SpeakerChange> this brain <Speech_Male> organoids. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Alison milwaukee <Speech_Male> is using these brain <Speech_Male> organoids <Speech_Male> to study the early <Speech_Male> development of real <Speech_Male> brains <Speech_Male> including the brains <Speech_Male> of our cousins <Speech_Male> than the andhra tolls <Speech_Male> next <Speech_Male> time on <Speech_Music_Male> science clear <Speech_Music_Male> vivid <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> for more details <Speech_Male> about clear and vivid. <Speech_Male> Sign up for <Speech_Male> my newsletter. <Speech_Music_Male> Please visit alan. <Speech_Music_Male> Alda dot com <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> and you can also find <Speech_Male> us on facebook and <Speech_Music_Male> instagram at clear <Speech_Male> and vivid <Speech_Male> and i'm on twitter <Speech_Music_Male> at alan <Speech_Music_Male> alda.