17 Burst results for "Ian Rogers"

The Business of Fashion Podcast
"ian rogers" Discussed on The Business of Fashion Podcast
"About the purpose side, the meaning side? To me, they're the same because you're coming at your customers with what they're asking you for. So I think that because we're kind of moving from mass to niche, if you're in a niche culture, you need to feel close to that brand. So whatever is going to make you feel close to that brand is what that brand needs to do. So I don't think it's, I don't think purpose is the same for everyone, right? Because for some people irreverence is what draws the brand to them, where for some people changing the world is what draws them to that brand. So I think it's really got to be on brand for the brand. But I do think it's about building communities and building culture. You know what we always said it beats is we don't do advertising. We create culture. And I think that that's really what brands need to do. So if it's a culture of purpose, well, that's what's right for the brand. If it's a cultural irreverence, that could be right for the brand as well. And I think that mostly what they need is any Deborah real connection to their audience. Thank you, Ian. Thanks for having me. What we wear says a lot about who we are. Yet fashion is also a $2.5 trillion global industry that touches everyone on earth. I'm Imran amed. I first started trying to make sense of the business of fashion 15 years ago, as it was being transformed by technology, globalization, and shifting consumer values. Now I'm on a journey to see how fashion is recalibrating after the pandemic to balance profit with purpose. This is the business of fashion show. Join me to discover how fashion shapes business, culture, and identity, and to meet the people forging fashion's future.

The Business of Fashion Podcast
"ian rogers" Discussed on The Business of Fashion Podcast
"Did that architecture of a URL and a website and the way I've tried to understand it is there's blockchain technology. And on top of that, there's crypto technology. And on top of that, there's NFTs, and on top of that, there's this opportunity around virtual fashion goods. Can you just as concisely as possible, explain how those things work? Sure. What we have that's new, again, is this notion where we can have digital scarcity. That's the main thing. The main way to think about it is that that's like the real invention. We also have digital scarcity without needing a trusted source in the middle. So you could have this and it could be kind of protected and provable, even if that company goes out of business. And for those of us who had our photos that flicker, once upon a time, I still do actually have a lot of photos there. That kind of thing scares us. You know, I do this with this company today, but what happens 15 years from now? 20 years from now, will that company be here? Will that company be owned by somebody who is unfriendly to me? I don't know. What might happen? So what we have with this ability, you're effectively have programs which can never be turned off is really the way to think about it. They aren't owned by anyone, and they can't be turned off because that's what's happening is these programs are running in this big consensus network. It sounds science fiction. If it sounds science fiction, then you're getting it. Because it really is and it is a very big deal that this is a new invention. And what we really have then is kind of applications on top of that. And so some of the applications that people are making, some of them are games where instead of having this thing that you own lives only inside of one game, well, it could be portable from game to game. And then we also then have the notion that I sell you this object and now you can prove that you are the owner of that object. And you can actually sell it to someone else if you would like. Or a digital object or both. Both. And really, so what you could have is you could have proof of attendance, right? So I went to this art show and now everyone who went to that art show 5 years ago is welcome to this thing. So you could have kind of proof of attendance, or you could have proof of purchase. I buy a pair of Doc martens shoes, and now I have a Doc martens skin in Fortnite. That kind of transition is really, I think, where we are with these things. So I think the best way to think about it is you have scarce digital goods and you can do whatever you'd like to with those. You could say that's a piece of art. That's proof of attendance. That's proof of purchase. That's a scarce digital good. That's a one of ten. That's a one of 1000. That's a one of one. You can kind of do it however. However, you would like. And it is similar. I think we have photos on the wall here. That one is a one of ten. That one is number two of ten, and Russell Simmons from Def Jam has number one of ten. And those are meaningful within that. I also don't have any guarantee that my friend Glenn, who's the photographer, didn't print 50 of them, but with the blockchain you actually can have that guarantee. You can say, oh, I have looked at the blockchain. I've looked at the contract, and there are indeed only ten of these. And they belong to these ten different wallets, or wait a minute, these two belong to the same wallet or whatever it is. It's all out there to kind of be seen and be discovered and be validated. And then over time, as those objects physical or as those objects exchange, that's also tracked by the blockchain. So I sold my one of ten to you and your name would be reflected in the record. Or the wallet address. It might not be my name. The interesting thing about this is that it is both public and anonymous, right? So what you see are you can see addresses, but those addresses aren't necessarily correlated to an individual. So a lot of what I find really exciting about how all of this technology is applied in the fashion space. It goes back to what you were seeing earlier. Fashion plays such a big role in helping people express their identity. And if lots of people are starting to spend a lot of time in virtual spaces, it seems natural then that they could use fashion as a vehicle for expressing their identity in those spaces. Does that make sense to you? I think a 100%, I think it's inevitable. I think that this is a generational shift and I look at my 14 year old and she has spent the last year and a half living in a metaverse. She doesn't even know that word, right? But her school is on Zoom. She hangs out with her friends online in one form or another actually in a whole bunch of different forms, right? In Instagram in TikTok in iMessage in Fortnite in animal crossing, all of these different metaverses, right? And so for them, having a digital collection, it's completely natural, right? Some of them will have utility because they'll change the way that they play the game or that. Some will just be like the reason that we collect photos and everything else. It's like proof of existence. Look what happened to us even with photographs. We used to take photographs and have them developed and hang them up in our homes and there were many companies that thought, oh, this digital camera thing, like who wants that, right? And what we've ended up with, of course, is most kids don't even have physical photos, right? They only have collections. Of digital photos. And so I think that you could expect the same thing with many physical things. Why would I want a collection of stuff that no one can see when I can have a collection of digital stuff that everyone can see. I think for a younger generation, this is just going to become kind of natural and obvious. In this space, virtual fashion is exciting. Who are the kind of innovators that we should know about? And why is what they're doing interesting? It's really hard to say because it's so early. And I think that there are a lot of projects artifact who I've spent a lot of time with. We're investors in. They're creating they're really applying this to streetwear, working with some of the coolest people in the space, and they're really close to ground level. To me, like when they're working with someone like ferocious, like it's like, you know, they're right there where finger on the polls. But there are a lot of people doing interesting things. And some of them, I'm really excited actually about the things which are maybe less sexy, more scalable. I think that next year, when you buy a physical good, you are going to get a digital good. From any company that is progressive. Next year. I've never in my life seen what the incumbents want from a business perspective. So well aligned with what the new technology offers. Because if you look every single company wants to drive more direct to consumer. So let's just take a brand that I have nothing to do with Nike. Obviously, they are cutting retailers and driving direct to consumer. Adidas says the same thing in their quarterly report. So why wouldn't it be the case that when you buy from Nike dot com, you get a digital collectible. And when you buy from one of the other retailers, you don't. My guess is if they could drive one percentage point more in direct to consumer business, they'd do it, right? And so I think it's really inevitable that next year when you buy a physical good, you will also get a digital good from progressive retailers. And I think for a whole generation, the perceived value of a physical piece plus a digital piece is higher than

The Business of Fashion Podcast
"ian rogers" Discussed on The Business of Fashion Podcast
"Goes far beyond kind of what we think about as the world of fashion. Mid pandemic, November 2020, you made this big move to this company I had never heard of before. So can you tell us what ledger is? And what was it about that opportunity that drew you away from LVMH and the world of luxury fashion into this space that's now really exploding and everyone's talking about it, but very few people actually understand. So I got lucky because it's a personal story. I had been following along for a while just because I'm a geek. But also when I moved here, I made friends with a guy named Pascal gautier who ended up becoming the CEO of ledger. So I kind of had 5 years to ask him all of the questions that are normal. What is this? Why do we need this? And so it was a long osmosis for me, but it's also one of those things where it really is a rabbit hole. And I'm yet to meet an intelligent person who ventures into this rabbit hole and comes out unchanged. So for me, I have thankfully had a long time to go down it. But what ledger does in particular, and the reason that I thought ledger was a unique opportunity in this overall crypto space is, ledger is secure storage for cryptocurrency and digital assets that then provides a secure gateway into the world of cryptocurrency. So you can whether you're buying cryptocurrency or trading cryptocurrency or exchanging NFTs or all of these things you want to do with your crypto, it is the most secure place to do it. So what I realized after a long relationship with Pascal was that to kind of buy ledger as an opportunity, I didn't have to buy the Bitcoin story or the Ethereum story or the fill in the blank. It was actually you just had to believe that cryptocurrencies would be real or the digital assets would be real and that security would be a big problem in this space. And I think both of those things are, there are no brainers, even if you think that the currencies are going to be a digital Euro or a digital dollar or an EU on we are definitely going to have digital forms of money. I love it when naval ravan says, of course, the Internet is going to have its own money, thinking otherwise is like thinking that la poste or the U.S. Postal Service is going to deliver your email, right? Money is technology and technology innovates. So to me, ledger is this great opportunity where that is kind of a low beta on the entire world of cryptocurrency and security and privacy, all of which I think will have more importance in the future than they do today. Okay, so say I didn't understand anything of what you just said because I don't know any of those words. Imagine maybe you had to do this. Explain what a chief experience officer at ledger is to your mom. Okay. Let's start by saying, by the way, yes, I've done this. And does she get it? Well, did she understand my job at LVMH? I don't know. You should ask her. Well, I would say, okay, mom, first of all, you just have to believe that there will be digital assets. We have this new thing, critical digital assets. So now, for the first time, you have something digital that you could lose. It's kind of the opposite of what we experienced in the first 15 or so years of the Internet. Or the Internet was about unlimited distribution, right? The great thing about the Internet was if I'm making a magazine, I don't have to print 50,000 copies, I can have a URL, and anyone can come. Well, digital assets are sort of the inverse of that, where you can actually have a scarce digital good. But what that means, then, is you can lose it. And it's not like, if I lose my MP3 file, you just send me another one because it was just a copy of a copy anyway. It's a unique digital piece and if you lose it, it's gone. So the question is, how do you protect that? And that's what ledger does is it protects that value, long story short. What a chief experience officer is is any time there's new technology, the experience is not great. There's a road to build. I mean, if we go back to the Internet in 1996, 1997, I didn't say come to my website. I had to start with, there's this thing called the Internet, and the way you get on is you buy a modem, and then you get an ISP, and then you get this thing called a web browser, and then you really had to start at the beginning, and that experience really needed to be improved. And that's why something like America online did incredibly well in the early days of the web, which is the same reason that something like coinbase will do incredibly well in the early days of cryptocurrency. When you can give people a very simple on ramp, then you can just simplify that experience. But over time, you have access to the entire world of cryptocurrency. America online was not access to the entire Internet and coinbase is not access to the entire world of cryptocurrency. So we have to improve the experience on the way there. So with ledger, we sell a piece of hardware, which is a companion to your mobile phone. So it's a physical thing. Yes. You know, the bottom line is our phones are great and they do all kinds of amazing things, but they're fundamentally web two devices that are meant to email apps, the web, et cetera. And they're really bad at protecting value. The same thing that makes them great is what makes them dangerous for protecting a lot of value. So what you have here is a device with a secure chip, secure memory, secure screen, and you use it to protect your digital asset value. If you lose this, you have a backup recovery phrase, and you can recreate it. The backup recovery phrase is actually the thing that you have to kind of protect the most rigorously because if somebody gets their hands on it, they can get their hands on your value. But as long as you have that in a safe place, you can walk around with this very safely. I heard a podcast in London about someone who lost their code or something and it was in a landfill somewhere and they were trying to convince the local government to let them dig up the landfill because let your helps to protect against the situations like that. I mean, look, in ledger's been around for 7 years, so that person could have used the ledger probably back then. But I think that people, you know, once upon a time, people thought, this is just fun. I'm just playing around. They didn't imagine that someday those ten bitcoins they had would be worth what they're worth today. But this is also part of it. And you asked me what it means to be a chief experience officer. When you buy an iPhone, you're not buying a piece of hardware. You're buying the apple experience. And the idea is that when you buy a ledger, you're not just buying this little piece of hardware, you're buying this entire experience. The experience that not only keeps you secure, but also, hey, I want to do something today. I want to bid on, I just saw this NFT, I want it. I just got a digital asset from my favorite brand. Where do I store it? Because again, I think about, I would love to have an NFT of that concert T-shirt that I had in 1992, you know? At the time, I probably would have thought like, who cares? It's just a concert T-shirt. When I look back on it now, it has significance to me. And it probably has value. I mean, I'm sure on eBay, it has value. And so now we know that this is what happens over time. And I think that we will have digital objects. I did a conversation with two tattoo artists a couple of weeks ago. Scott Campbell, who I think you know, and mister cartoon, who is one of the most followed tattoo artists in the world. He's not the most quote unquote digital person in the world, but he said it really succinctly. He's like, look, I did the tattoo on 50 cents back, which is on the cover of get rich and die trying. Imagine if at the same time we had mint in an NFT of that. What might that be worth today? Of course. You have these moments moments that have meaning. And they will have even more meaning in the future. I think it's just, again, we talked about with fashion, we have this desire to express ourselves. But people have a desire to collect 40% of people collect something. I collect vinyl, some people collect precious moments figurines. We collect as human beings. So there's sort of like the value side of it, I think, and then the collecting side as well. You know how you

The Business of Fashion Podcast
"ian rogers" Discussed on The Business of Fashion Podcast
"The outside, what do you see as a kind of the role or influence or meaning or purpose of fashion in our culture in our business in our society with your lens of some having come in from the outside? What do you think is the role of fashion in our culture today? Well, I think it's also interesting to think about how that role has changed in the era of the Internet, right? But I think that look like music, fashion is primal. We have this some

The Business of Fashion Podcast
"ian rogers" Discussed on The Business of Fashion Podcast
"Podcast. It's Friday, July 8th. On this week's episode, we're going back into the archive to revisit one of my favorite conversations with Ian Rogers, the former chief digital officer at LVMH, and now chief experience officer at ledger. Last summer we spoke in a conversation about the future of the metaverse, and what it means for fashion, so much has changed since then. There have been so many more developments in the fashion industry around virtual fashion. NFTs and cryptocurrency. But this conversation provides a fundamental basic understanding of how this new frontier might develop. Here's Ian Rogers on the BOF podcast. Ian, how are you? I'm good, thank you. It's been a crazy, difficult challenging 16, 17 months. How is this period been for you personally and professionally? You made some big changes. Yeah. But just a reflection on the last 16 months. We started last year really ambitious at LVMH. I mean, we had said with Ben I don't know that we wanted to make a huge commitment to artificial intelligence and data as a company. We'd set aside a big budget for that and then February March, things really started to change. And we stopped a ton of things that we were doing just because the future was so uncertain. At the same time for us on the digital team, it was really exciting because we went from 8% of the business to a 100% of the business, you know, virtually overnight. And we had these pieces of the business like we had an ecommerce committee that met every 6 weeks and we went from every 6 weeks to twice a week. And it was great because a lot of the things that we'd put in place over the previous 5 years were really useful. We built some of the scaffolding. We had good ecommerce businesses that became great ecommerce businesses. When I looked around the table at the ecommerce committee, almost nobody who was kind of in that zoom room had been in the company 5 years previous. So there were really big changes and they were really visible at the company. So that was great. And also for me personally, it was the end of 5 years. And I'd always said three to 5 years was what I had planned at LVMH. To me, this narrative around cryptocurrency had gotten stronger and stronger. And the pandemic to me accelerated that as well. Not only were we all living in metaverses, but you've got lots of stimulus coming from the U.S. government, European government. And I think that that impacts the way that we think about digital currency and then China used the opportunity to move really forcefully into their Central Bank digital currency, the EU on. So to me, that just said, okay, the game theories on this cryptocurrency thing really starts now. Before we get into the cryptocurrency, I want to talk a little bit about what you managed to accomplish at the image. I remember our first meeting, I think it was 2015 shortly after you joined. And you arrived at LVMH, and it was really different place from the way you left it just in terms of kind of embracing technology. And with your background and the music industry, you helped oversee the digitization of music. You're a part of that movement. What are your reflections now on the digitization of fashion? Well, I think it's super interesting, you know, because music went from being 0% digital. It was all compact discs, which, by the way, are digital, but from a distribution perspective, 0%, to a 100% effectively. You have a vinyl market, et cetera, but really the distribution of music is all streaming. I mean, there were so many lessons in that. One of them being that the industry was incredibly resistant to it until it was a really necessary for them to be. To embrace it. But I think it's actually quite different in fashion because the retail experience is so much of the act of buying fashion. Everything from discovery to shopping. Oh, that's a big part of kind of the experience of fashion. I actually think that the luxury industry was smart to not commoditize the experience. I think if in the previous 15 years, they had kind of gone down the Amazon path and just kind of made it about like, oh, a bunch of products in a grid and then check out and so I think to really try to preserve that customer experience was really smart. And I actually think that the pandemic was super helpful to kind of get people across the trans something because a lot of the things that were precious for no reason, right? They just got exploded. They said, well, wait, how do we offer a lecture experience at a distance? Because the fact is it is luxury to have a conversation with your sales associate over WhatsApp. And to feel like it's really personal. And then the product shows up at your door. That actually feels great. There's nothing sort of cheap feeling about that. So I think that on the fashion side, the challenge has just been how do you approximate a luxury customer experience online. And I don't think that's trivial because brands are doing really well online. They're selling well online, but the NPS scores online are not the same as the NPS score of walking into a Louis Vuitton store or a Dior store because I mean, there's no one kind of greeting you and your web browser and saying, hello, would you like a glass of champagne? You know, it's just not quite the same. But I think that the industry has come a long way. I think the main things that we accomplish at LVMH would be around just rationalizing how do you sell. What is the difference between selling direct to consumer, selling on net deportes, selling on far fetch, having an affiliate such as list dot com drive the sale. I think 5 years ago, there wasn't a lot of understanding around that even the differences between those pathways. And I think that we rationalize those into something that really makes sense. The other is around data and artificial intelligence. How can we use data to serve the customer? That was really the big question I think that commitment that we had hoped to make in 2020 on data, LVMH has made this year. They've announced a partnership with Google. They're really, I think, using data in a very smart way at LVMH now. And then I think the third thing is that customer experience thing. How do you do client telling at a distance? What is the software that's in the hand of the sales associate? So they know the customer, they know the inventory, and no matter where that product is in the network, oh, I'm sorry, it's not in the store. We're standing in right now. But we do have one in Rome. Can I have it to you tomorrow? That has come a long way in the last 5 years as well. There are still some brands, maybe not LVMH brands, but Chanel is one that is said, no ecommerce. What do you make of that? In this time when there was a time over the last 16 months when no one could shop in a store. Look, we need to recognize that we're dealing in a inventory constrained environment. So if Kanye said, the only way you can get my new shoe drop is you have to drive to a warehouse in New Jersey. He would still sell all of them, right? So I think when you're in that environment, you can choose how you want to reach the customer. From my perspective, that's not how I would approach it. I would really approach it by looking at the customer journey. You know, what I learned in music is you ignore what it is your customers want at your own peril. We knew that people wanted to listen to digital music in 1998 and the record labels were in denial on that fact until 2005. And that cost them 50% of the market cap of recorded music. So from my perspective, you ask your customers, what do you want? And then you find the way that's on brand to give it to them. And I think that you definitely can. I mean, if you look at what Louis Vuitton is doing, Dior, fendi, they're not sacrificing any of what their brand means to the customers. I would say it's the opposite. I think, you know, again, if you've got a sales associate who can FaceTime with a customer, is that ecommerce, I would say yes, someone else might say no, because when they think ecommerce, they just think like add to cart, check out PayPal, and that's ecommerce, but you should be reaching your customers wherever they are and however they would like to be reached. So before we move on to crypto, because I'm really interested in that. You came from one major cultural industry, music. And you moved into another major cultural industry, fashion. I'm curious as someone who came from

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ian rogers" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"In global news headlights and votes Hannah George good morning Good morning Caroline and thank you Olaf Schultz will be sworn in as German Chancellor today bringing Angela Merkel's 16 year term at the helm of Europe's biggest economy to an end Bloomberg's in Rogers tells us what to expect Schulz will head a three way ruling coalition of his center left social Democrats the greens and the pro business free Democrats Three way alliance has an ambitious agenda that includes billions of Euros of spending on climate protection and upgrading digital infrastructure The immediate priority for the government will be getting a fourth wave of coronavirus infections under control Hundreds of people are dying every day and intensive care units and some hotspots are coming under increasing pressure in Berlin I'm Ian Rogers Bloomberg daybreak Europe In the U.S. the House passed a bill that will open the way to quickly raise the debt ceiling Democrats would receive one time fast track authority to hike the limit for a simple majority vote averting the threat of Republicans blocking the move That means the vote should provide enough money to cover borrowing through 2022 and it lessens the risk of a payment default this month Here pressure is mounting on prime minister Boris Johnson after a video emerged showing key aids joking about a party in Downing Street last Christmas at a time when they were banned Johnson's then press secretary Allegra Stratton can be heard laughing when asked about an alleged party during a rehearsal for a TV media briefing This is recorded This fictional party was a business meet And it was not socially just Downing Street says there was no Christmas party and COVID rules had been followed at all times labor leader Keir Starmer has called on Johnson to apologize And Tokyo plans to introduce same sex partnerships next year a significant milestone for the Japanese capital the proposal were recognized same sex relationships without giving them full legal status Opinion surveys show the public is largely in favor of equal marriage rights Japan is the only G 7 country not to recognize the partnerships Global news 24 hours a day on air and Don Bloomberg quick take powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than a 120 countries I'm Hannah George This is Bloomberg Caroline Thank you so much Hannah with the world news Let's get the morning sports news.

The Business of Fashion Podcast
"ian rogers" Discussed on The Business of Fashion Podcast
"Goods will make sense. I think that's where this goes. So fidgety is in a way the gateway to purely virtual down the road because consumers and everyone out there needs to kind of go on that journey of placing more value in these things like being able to display those things in virtual spaces. Yeah, I need to have it's almost like we Instagram gave digital photos so much more value. So we need those kind of Instagram like experiences for our digital goods, but that also means that we need collections. I wish that I had a digital version of my vinyl collection. I would love that. You know, and by the way, my Spotify and Apple music collections are not the same because I have an invested the same as I have into my vinyl collection, right? But if I had that digital representation of that collection and a place to show it off, now I could see buying the digital vinyl and putting that in my collection and showing that off. But I think that's the way it has to go. It has to start with digital, then there will be another side of that marketplace and then people will want those virtual goods because they'll have they'll have value and they'll have meaning in an ecosystem. So let's say 5 years from now, so it's not too far out into the future. If next year, you think people are going to be doing the fidget opportunity the digital and physical object? 5 years from now in the fashion space, what does this technology mean for big fashion companies and for fashion customers? I feel like we always need to be a little careful because my experience has told me we think this stuff is coming sooner than it is. So and I think in this kind of cryptocurrency world, if we look at user adoption, we're in kind of 1997. So that means that the iPod comes in 2002 and the iPhone comes in 2008. So we probably do. We probably do have a little longer than we think. But again, we had a music subscription service called rhapsody in 2001, 2002 as well. So the early signs of these future ecosystems do show up pretty early. I think that because of that alignment with direct to consumer, this will happen more quickly than most things. It wasn't the case that major record labels had a big incentive. It wasn't the case that LVMH had a big incentive to go early into ecommerce. I actually think that a company like Nike does have a big incentive to be first when it comes to digital collectibles. So I think that will make it move a little faster. So what are the biggest misconceptions about this technology? Because everybody's talking about it. What do you think are the things that people don't really understand? I think it's just the case that which always happens where the storytelling gets ahead of the reality. This is exactly what caused the dotcom bubble in the late 90s. And the excitement was real and it was deserved. You know, the Internet has changed humanity. The storytelling, I think got a little bit ahead of the reality. There was more work to do before all these things were built up. And I think it's the same here. You know, people want to kind of fast forward to the end. But a you can't see the end, be this technology is still really nascent. The way that we do something like NFTs, it's not very mature. There are lots of problems with the existing ecosystem, which, you know, if you follow the news, you can kind of see them all over the place. That's not because it's bad. It's just because it's early. I think that the biggest misconception that people have, though, is that there's kind of like a digital and a physical. But we have one consciousness, right? I mean, I can read Twitter and get pissed off. I don't get digital pissed off, right? I get pissed off in the same place in consciousness that I get upset if somebody pulls in front of me in traffic. So I think that we kind of need to let go of this notion of that's digital. This is physical. And I hope that 2020 has shown everyone, I can talk to my mom on FaceTime and I'm still talking to my mom. It's not digital talking to my mom. And so I think that that's the other big misconception is that we like to make these big buckets of, oh, that's digital. Oh, that's physical. But the reality is, again, we have these kind of core instincts to connect with people to share to be individuals. And we're going to do those in both the physical and the digital space. And in fact, they might relate to one another. I do also think and we're already seeing it that the more time we spend looking at our phones, the more premium in person experiences become. They become more valuable. So I think that we just as a species, we're just going to learn how to deal with this. You know, what is it we value? And what can we accomplish in each of these realms? But I think that we need to think of it as a continuum in a spectrum and not this hard line between digital and physical. Just now you were mentioning all of the speculation and the bubble that built around the Internet and the dot com bubble. Are we in a bubble now when it comes to cryptocurrencies in Bitcoin? Because there's been so much volatility in that space. And how does that volatility impact some of these opportunities that you've been discussing? In many ways, the volatility is what makes people pay attention to it. And then the more people pay attention to it, the more people get kind of like roped into the narratives and then it becomes more real as a result. So I think in many ways, the volatility kind of propels it forward. Because these stories are real. Like I said before I'm yet to meet an intelligent person who kind of like pokes their head in here and finds nothing. So I think that really just kind of bringing more people along for the ride means it will continue to increase over time. Also because it's kind of controlled by the masses and not controlled by the few. I think it will both be volatile, but also kind of gather strength over time. Because it doesn't need just a few investment banks to believe in it. It really has this kind of underlying story. At the same time, I think it's really natural that you're going to have these ebbs and flows exactly because of that. Because something is really exciting and everyone has fomo and they don't want to miss out and they run in and then the bubble pops for some reason and it falls back down. But what has happened over the years of cryptocurrency is that happens, the bubble pops, it finds a new level that's higher than the previous level. Same thing happens. It runs up. It finds a new level that's higher than the previous level. So, you know, I think we can bet that that will keep going. There will be changes, I'm sure, though. These are technologies. So there will be innovations. There will be paradigm shifts. There will be new narratives that take over the old ones. So I think it will be quite dynamic. And I don't think it will be zero sum or winner take all. And I hope that's one thing that's different from what the Internet has done. The Internet has made it, look at what Shopify has done this year. They have made it so that it's free for the first million every year. Okay, that's a great value proposition for the customer, but that to me is just Internet companies doing what Internet companies do, which is get enough scale to starve anyone who doesn't have the same scale. So my hope is is that there will be a broader spectrum and more decentralization in this future than we had in the Internet. How does augmented reality intersect with this space? Augmented reality, and I would say artificial intelligence are as big if not bigger than everything that we've talked about. I mean, we all use augmented reality in some way every day. We just don't call it that. I came home from the airport using ways, which is like a cartoon version of the city, right? I think that we're sort of still lacking that iPhone of augmented reality, but the notion that I'm going to get more information about my surroundings, I mean, I already do with my phone in many ways, but that will just improve and improve and improve. And I think that when you start to play that into digital fashion and digital art, there will be this really blurry line between what we see in the physical world and what we see in the digital world. It might be more information. It might be more imagery. It might be, you know, I just think that that's inevitable. And I think at this point in our lives, if I told you, live today without interacting with any artificial intelligence, I think you would have a very hard time making it through the day. You would basically have to put your phone in a drawer and not use anyone else's phone to do it. Before. Yeah, and you know, because every time you use Google or use Instagram, or use Google Maps, or you use ways or there's artificial intelligence behind that. So I think we're all already living in kind of a surprising future. I'd like to understand the psychology of the kinds of people that collect. I was watching the video that Christie's put up of people watching the price tick up and up on that digital artwork. And that he's sold, I think for $69.3 million..

The Business of Fashion Podcast
"ian rogers" Discussed on The Business of Fashion Podcast
"Who came from the outside, what do you see as a kind of the role or influence or meaning or purpose of fashion in our culture in our business in our society? With your lens of having come in from the outside, what do you think is the role of fashion in our culture today? Well, I think it's also interesting to think about how that role has changed in the era of the Internet, right? But I think that look like music, fashion is primal..

No Agenda
"ian rogers" Discussed on No Agenda
"To a healthcare and wellness company. Where half of its sales will come from nonsmoking products. When he says smoking products demeans means combustible. And right here it says. The company currently generates a quarter of its revenue from alternatives. Such as it's soon to be released in the us it's already being released electronic device that heats tobacco instead of burning it. Yes for from the people who bring you the healthcare and wellness. It's the i cross device that heats tobacco. They finally make in their move. They got all at. You said it from that report. It said they were making twenty five percent of their income from i cross already alternatives. Such as such as i think. What's the other alternative gum. I think our nicorette gum nicorette. They got they got other things I cost just launching. It's been launched around the world that hasn't really launched in the us yet as looks idiotic. But this is what they're pushing. That's why the menthol cigarettes got banned. That's why vape vaping had to come under a ban. Trump almost signed that deal and he saw that it was a scam when he figured it out. This is all about bringing the new i. Quashed device to you. Yeah we've been talking about this for five years. That's that's why. I'm bringing it up now there. I think it's the oa personally. I can't see anyone. Can you hold on one of these like some sort of an idiot. Will people hold vapes all the time. It's but vapes producers huge cloud these these things produce a cloud and i don't see that many people with vapes is to me at least around here. I don't think i've seen but two or three right. I i get out a little more. The vaping almost daily daily. I go out. I see nobody with vapes. I don't see anyone with cigarettes either. California's pretty rigid about these things. That's true the Special operations command of the us military. I don't know why this is in defense. Blog expects to move into clinical trials next year of a pill that may inhibit or reduce some of the degenerative effects of aging and injury part of a broader pentagon push for improved human performance. This has got to be the adrenal chrome. What else could it be. Yeah well it could be. Fm nil to it says it's based on what is called a quote human performance small molecule like to find out more about this. Okay a couple of clips. do we play this clip. That just been sitting around in a clip list is a six week cycle clip about these these two yard. Who's at the fbi busted which these the guy which yahoos were these. What were they doing will. They're all yahoo. So i don't old play. Tell me if we've discussed. Two men have been arrested in california and charged with planning to bomb the democratic headquarters inside memento prosecutors described. The alleged plot is domestic terrorism. Npr justice correspondent ryan lucas reports as federal. Prosecutors tell it. Ian rogers and jared copeland were not happy about donald trump's election loss to joe biden and so in late november of last year. Prosecutors say the two men began plotting to attack democratic targets in california text messages. Cited in the indictment provide details of. I think we did. We did yahoos was. Let's go get an all k- all do it. Two guys in their in their lounge chairs low iq with low iq's going back and forth and the fbi got involved in downgraded this where they grew says at goose. This stores are getting a little tedious. Yeah well luckily people are catching on. They haven't you know. It's i don't know if you can speak of the six week cycle anymore. That's we identified almost two years ago. So i think you can call it de bridget used to rigid. Yeah yeah it was. It really was six weeks. Usually like on the day could wait for this true. Have have this. Which i'm personally. I like the west coast because of this particular clip in new york city. If you live on the west coast then you probably experienced the impact of wildfires in one way or another while this week. Those thousands of miles away on the east coast can see the smoke as well. Ntd's area pass. Dr has that story. New york city looks red. It today right. You would think that's just clouds and maybe a thunderstorm. It's usually now get this. A lot of this stuff is actually smoked traveled for over two thousand five hundred miles from the west coast fires on the way to new york city. You can definitely see it. It's all around us but you can't really feel or taste it in any other way. But according to where stations it does actually affect the air quality here in new york city. Isn't the only place along the east coast impacted by the smoke. If you take a look at this map you can see that. The big apple is among the worst hit but there are layers of smoke from maine all the way down to south carolina. What looks like a cloudy day in washington. Dc is actually smoked too. According today to the washington monument is harder to see an enormous and the city has an air quality index value of one hundred ten which is considered unhealthy for sensitive groups right now over eighty large wildfires burning throughout the nation and more in canada. This is expected to be cleared up later this week. How did german guy get that gig on. That's have no idea what this guy's exchange program or something. I have one from the crypto cougar. Formerly known as the money. Honey about Well listen what's taking place in china and how the. Us is reacting big story in terms of the crackdown. Coming from the cdc pig. I defined. I think on your show a few months ago. I think to describe the biden foreign policy. And i described it as speak really really loud but carry a twig so remember earlier in this week but we had an example where the united states with our allies went out and said very loudly that the chinese communist party was engaged in cyber intrusions and cyber attacks and they said oh bad guys well meanwhile then a few days later out of nowhere these chinese. Somehow that we're supposed to be prosecuted are released and they dropped the charges. So how is that working as great all about is another story with another incident with no real understanding. Because nobody's reporting well no because we all have to remind you that republicans are killing everyone. That's all that the television brings me. That's all yeah well. They're worried sick about the midterms and so they're doing everything they can to demonize anything. Anyone who's a republican. Oh man. I am kicking myself. So hard disk term that is popping up. it's because of mark zuckerberg and face bag. And i had this domain name. Thirty years ago became property of my own company and then when when it went public it was property of the company and so i don't even know who owns it anymore but i had metaverse dot com and i had permission from neil stevenson. Who wrote the snow crash..

NPR News Now
"ian rogers" Discussed on NPR News Now
"Live from npr news. I'm lakshmi saying to california. Men are charged with allegedly plotting to firebomb the democratic headquarters in sacramento as npr's ryan lucas reports. Both men are in custody. Ian rogers and jared copeland are facing several federal charges including one count of conspiracy to destroy a building by fire or explosives. According to the indictment the men prompted by the outcome of the twenty twenty presidential election began in november to plan an attack against the democratic headquarters in sacramento in one text. Message cited in the indictment rogers wrote to copeland quote. I want to blow up a democrat building bad. The indictment says officers seized more than forty guns from rogers. Home and business as well as five. Pipebombs rogers was arrested in january. Copeland was taken into custody this week. Ryan lucas. Npr news washington the interim prime minister of haiti's facing growing challenges to his authority more than a week. After presidential vinyl moe's was assassinated presidential and legislative elections are currently scheduled for september twenty sixth but reuters reports haitian senator patrice won't and outspoken critic of maurice's rule believes fair elections won't be possible for at least a year meanwhile the hunt continues for several fugitives in connection with maurice's death. Npr's jason bobi and says investigators are also trying to determine how the suspects were able to enter the slain presidents heavily guarded home so easily. Investigators are basically trying to go with the bigger picture here in this investigation. They're expanding beyond these two dozen or so colombian mercenaries who were at the scene of the night president. Louise was killed and they're looking at. Who hired them. Who let them into the presidential palace. If indeed it was the colombians who were the first ones there some of them have claimed that the president was already dead when they stormed the private residence. Npr's jason bobi reporting from port-au-prince officials. Say the former chief of the president's security detail has been placed in isolated detention and will be questioned further about his actions the night of the assassination the federal aviation administration is ordering airlines to inspect thousands of boeing seven. Thirty sevens because of a potential problem with a cabin pressure warning system. Npr's david schaper says the order effects. More than nine thousand jets. The faa directive orders more frequent inspections of cabin pressure. Alerts which is on boeing. Seven thirty sevens. Those switches are designed to help ensure that there is enough oxygen to breathe is. The planes climbed higher altitudes. The faa says the failure rate of the switches is much higher than initially estimated and poses a safety risk as pilots could become incapacitated if the switches failed to alert them to oxygen levels falling dangerously low the directive orders repeated testing of the switches and replacing them if necessary. The order applies to all versions of boeing seven. Thirty sevens including the max but the issue is not related to problems at caused to max and grounded the planes for nearly two years david schaper. Npr news this is npr. One of the companies affected by the us's regulator faa's a decision to ground seven. Thirty sevens is roads aviation base in honolulu that company being barred from flying or doing maintenance inspections until it meets faa regulations the agency did not disclose details of what prompted it to ground the carrier. The faa says. Its decision is separate from its investigation into july second crash. In which the company's boeing seven thirty-seven trans air plane went down in the waters off. Hawaii the coastguard rescued the two pilots. The news agency reuters says one of its award. Winning photojournalist has been killed shot while covering the conflict between the taliban and the military in afghanistan. npr's hadeed has more ready to send that photo journalists dodge. the dickey was killed in a taliban crossfire. That was according to an afghan commander who spoke to the news organization. So did he had been embedded with afghan special forces for they had been fighting to retake a market in the southern area spin boldak the taliban had recently overrun the area. Whether there's a border crossing with pakistan siddiqi was part of a reuters team that won a pulitzer prize in two thousand eighteen for documenting the raking go refugee crisis. The royd is president and its editor in chief said in a statement that sadiki wasn't outstanding photographer and a devoted husband and father de hadeed. Npr news the dow jones industrial average has fallen ninety four points since the open it stands a thirty four thousand eight hundred ninety two. I'm lakshmi singh npr news..

Newsradio 600 KOGO
"ian rogers" Discussed on Newsradio 600 KOGO
"I'm clip Albert. In the company's center in for Jack Cronin this evening. A Northern California business owner arrested earlier this month, is accused of now planning a domestic terrorist attack against California lawmakers. Investigators with the FBI says Ian Rogers plan to target a number of Democrats, including Governor Gavin Newsom, five pop. I'm the pipe bombs. Bomb making materials in nearly 50 guns were confiscated from Roger's home business. Investigators tell us. Rogers also wanted to attack Twitter and Facebook for silencing former president Trump on Social Media. Rogers is being held tonight at the Napa County Jail on a $5 million bond. Coronado Man, Jeffrey Smith was in federal court here in San Diego today to face charges in connection with the capital riot on January 6th Jennifer Castor with the reporting butter 10 News has details. The FBI reports that someone who grew up with Smith in Coronado also came forward, saying they texted with him through Instagram after the riots. That witness reportedly shared screenshots of his texts where he wrote, I'm a Patriot. I stormed the capital and that his purpose was to send a message that Americans aren't going to take a fraudulent election. He also reportedly wrote that he wasn't going to drive 38 hours from San Diego to not walk right through the front of the Capitol building. Charging documents show that when the agent contacted Smith, he apparently told the agent he was in D. C for President Trump's speech. But told his girlfriend to stay in the hotel because of the chaos of the capital, Theo FBI states that he admitted that he saw the chaos and Smith admitted he walked into the capital on January. 6 2021 remained in the capital for about 30 minutes. There is nothing in the criminal complaint stating that Smith directly participated in any of the violence every Smith it was arrested yesterday by the FBI is officially charged with the violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds that entering a restricted building. And he's being held on $25,000 bond. Meantime, the chief of the U. S Capitol police today calling for permanent fencing around the Capitol building in the aftermath of the riot. The acting chief of U. S. Capitol. Police. Yoga Nonda. Pittman says vast improvements are needed to physical security, including permanent fencing and available ready backup forces. In close proximity to the Capitol. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is appointed retired general Russel Honore to review security infrastructure, including command and control following the January 6th breach. Previous law enforcement and security officials have also recommended in hand security, but Congress has rejected permanent fencing. Temporary fencing has been up around the capital since before the inauguration. This Jared Helpers reporting from the U. S Capital here in San Diego, the county now adding six Mork coronavirus testing pods. The plans announced today for next month, and they're working on fixing the sign up system. The new testing sites will be under the sign up website My turn dot CIA dot gov We are in the pilot project with the state of California. This is the my turn system, and it is presently being used for all seven of our community pods. We've added a regional map in search function that will make it easier for individuals to find a vaccination site near them, and we've been working to clean up some of the functionality of my turn to make it easier with the 1st and 2nd appointment. Another vaccine superstation opens in the North County Sunday at Cal State San Marcos and one is expected to open next week. In the East County, but the date and location haven't been named. Eventually everyone will sign up, but that my turn website But for the time being the superstation appointments are being made at vaccination. Superstation SD dot com Marilyn Haider KOGO News, the number of new coronavirus cases and set Eagle County continues a downward trend. The county reporting 1489 new cases, The daily case number has been below 2000 now. For six of the last seven days with the county also reported today 69 new deaths from a covert 19. That brings the total now of deaths in the county since the pandemic began to 2534. And word from the White House today that undocumented immigrants will get the vaccine. White House press secretary Jen Psaki, explaining today why the Biden administration wants immigrants in the country illegally to be able to get the vaccine. We do feel as an administration that ensuring that all people on the United States undocumented immigrants as well, of course, should receive access to a vaccine because that One is morally right, but also insures that people in the country are also safe. White House press secretary also saying the administration is working to get more of the vaccines distributed more quickly and getting more people to administrative vaccines as well. And a military homecoming today in Santiago, the amphibious dock landing ship USS Comstock returning from deployment the naval base San Diego In the western Pacific and eastern Indian oceans. The ship is part of the making island Amphibious Ready group and arriving today. Welcome home to the crew. The 2021 Farmers Insurance Open. Got it away out of Torrey Pines today. Without fans. Tournament. CEO Marty Gorsuch knows how important the event is to the region. Even without the six figure attendance Torrey Pines usually draws. We're very fortunate to have this event have the PG Tor gray San Diego with one of their tournaments to have a place like Torrey Pines, where we could host it. That's the reason why the USDA in the U. S Open chose to use this course as well. It's a great showcase of our city and to have this chance again on national international TV to show off San Diego and let the world see how great it is and have the weather will have on the weekend. This week's event is less than five months ahead of the return of the U. S. Open to San Diego and Torrey Pines. 13 years after nearly 300,000 people showed up the week of the playoff victory for Tiger Woods, Jack Cronin cuckoo News on the leader board tied for the lead after the first round. Patrick Reid and Alex Noren, who's on the leader board for a possible recall election of Governor Newsome. That's next with Lou Penrose. Koga News time. 6 35. Let's check Coco's real time traffic Now when there's my can cut from help us any Eagle 100 dealers Traffic center. Looking.

KOMO
"ian rogers" Discussed on KOMO
"Among the headlines of the following today. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo's administration is being accused of under reporting coronavirus deaths in nursing homes. The Eiji for New York State, said that the state has had more than 8500 nursing home deaths but claims that the current administration there has under reported by as much as 50%. Claiming that the state only counted deaths in homes and not residents who were transferred and then died at the hospital. The stock market surge in today's investor investors are closely watching the short selling battle on Wall Street involving retail stocks that Rebecca Jarvis just spoke about a moment ago. Nation's top health experts say 90,000 more Americans may die from covert 19 over the next month, ABC Cecilia Vega reports from the new head of the CDC to chief medical advisor Dr Anthony Fauci. The first briefing socially distanced on zoom, and it comes as January marks the deadliest month on record for this pandemic. With the government still struggling to get vaccines to the people who need them. Most sources tell ABC News discussions are now underway to call on as many as 10,000 service members to help administer shots at 100 sites around the country. But even with the White House plan to purchase 200 million more doses, the grim reality the stockpile remains low. Any stockpile that may have existed previously no longer exists So far more than 20 million people have received their first dose. For most Americans, another reality check. It will be months before everyone who wants a vaccine will be able to get one and the Biden administration now hoping to expand access by changing the rules on who could administer vaccines, calling on recently retired doctors and nurses and allowing people licensed in one state to cross state lines and pitch in ABC, Cecilia Vega. There's a new study released today. That might explain why so many people lose the sense of taste and smell when they're infected with covert. 19 study reports that peak virus levels are about 1000 times higher in the brain than they are in the lungs, suggesting that covered 19 may replicate faster in our brain matter. More research is being done on what long term effects The virus leaves. But some side effects already being reported, including sleep issues, difficulty concentrating memory problems and, of course, taste and smell. The study published in the National Library of Medicine. Department of Homeland Security Warning Americans about a nationwide threat of terrorism. The acting Secretary David Penkovsky, is issuing a bulletin saying that there's currently a heightened threat across the country, which will persist in the coming weeks. NBC's chief justice correspondent Pierre Thomas, reports. According to the new bulletin, right wing militants and Lone Wolves may target elected officials and government facilities and maybe emboldened by the January 6 breach of the U. S Capitol. They're out there. They're angry. They're disenfranchised. They're upset that President Trump lost and assigned. This threat is real. The FBI now announcing charges against Ian Rogers after authorities say they discovered an arsenal of 49 firearms and five fully functional pipe bombs after searching his home and business. The FBI claims Rogers was angry because President Trump lost and was preparing for an attack allegedly texting. I want to blow up a Democrat building bad. I hope 45 President Trump goes to war. If he doesn't I will Attorney for Roger says nothing indicates that he was actually planning an attack. But according to an FBI affidavit, authorities fear the Rogers of Napa may have had his sights on the California governor's office after recovering threatening text messages on his phone law enforcement on edge across the country. If the FBI.

KOMO
"ian rogers" Discussed on KOMO
"Enforcement on edge across the country. Fpr races to arrest all those who stays the insurrection on Capitol Hill. The massive scale of the probe becoming clear. 400 suspects identified hundreds more under investigation. And in a startling conspiracy indictment released last night, Justice Department prosecutors claim that some militia members were planning a response to Trump's losses earliest November and suggested a team is large is 40 members coordinated during the attack on the capital? We have been told sedition charges could becoming its ABC News chief Justice correspondent Pierre Thomas, Northern California business owner arrested earlier this month, is accused of planning the domestic terrorist attack on California lawmakers. Investigators with the FBI say Ian Rogers planned it to target a number of Democrats, including Governor Gavin Newsom. Five pipe bombs, bomb making materials and nearly 50 guns were confiscated from his home and business. Investigators say Rogers also wanted to attack Twitter and Facebook for silencing former President Donald Trump on Social Media. Rogers is being held at the Napa County Jail on $5 Million Bonds. A group of stranded drivers in Oregon are vaccinated against the coronavirus now, after being in the right place at the right time, the Josephine County Health Department says several health care workers were on their way back from a mass vaccination clinic. When they got stranded in a snowstorm. They have six doses of the vaccine that we're going to expire, so they went car to car along the highway, offering the shots to other people Come on news time. 7 20 good for business. Now it's powered by Washington Federal Bank and here's what Fed banks Brad Good Hotel industry report shows that 56% of People plan to travel for leisure this year. What business travel is not expected to return until 2024 hospitality industry is down nearly four million jobs compared to the same time in 2019. Some 200,000 jobs are expected to be filled this year. Overall, the accommodations sector faces a nearly 19% unemployment rate. Half of US hotel rooms are projected to remain empty this year. So how did we do last year Gross domestic product, or GDP. The sum of all goods and services produced drooped by 3.5% in 2020. That's the worst since World War two, according to the Commerce Department. The economy we know now fell into recession in February as the pandemic erupted, But the signs of recovery are parent. Fourth quarter GDP rose 4%. So it appears the contraction is behind US. Personal spending, private investment and exports all surged at the end of 2020 as well. Head of the Federal Reserve says the most important for the economy now is simply getting vaccinated. Be good to yourselves. That's good for business. Uncommon news Wall Street The Dow is higher up 497 points right now, a 7 30,094 S and P 500 of 58. The NASDAQ is up about 148 coming up next the question in this morning's trivia contest.

Newsradio 600 KOGO
"ian rogers" Discussed on Newsradio 600 KOGO
"From Fox News and Amazon. Alexa. There's more fall out for those accused of riding at the capital more than 100 have been arrested in the FBI keeps investigating others. Federal prosecutors have charged Thomas Caldwell, Donovan Crowl and Jessica Watkins, all members of the far right militia known as the Oath Keepers. With conspiring to obstruct Congress. The FBI says messages from the three while at the Capitol are part of the evidence against them. The obstruction charges come in addition to a judge determining the three were dangers to the community. They were ordered held without bond. No, please from the accused have been entered. If found guilty. The conspiracy charge could carry a minimum of 20 years in prison. Colonel Scott Fox News. Another man's in trouble Out West. Federal prosecutors have charged the Napa County, California man after investigators say they found five functional pipe bombs, nearly 50 firearms and thousands of rounds of ammo at his home and business. Your documents say 44 year old Ian Rogers had texted his intentions of attacking Democrats to ensure former President Trump stayed in office. Court filings indicate. Rogers was also a member of a pro gun, anti government group. He's jailed on $5 million bond and faces up to 10 years in a federal prison if convicted. Rich Dennison Fox News on Wall Street stock futures are mixed His markets fall oversees the day after a big sell off. The Dow plunged more than 600 points, its largest drop since October. Gamestop, not one of those falling stocks. It surged 200% in one day. It's now $347 a share last year one point it was only about two bucks. So what's going on the popular Reddit page? It's called Wall Street bets. It has grown to three million members, and what they're doing is they're encouraging each other by stocks that have been shorted by the big guy hedge funds that causes the hedge funds to scramble to cover their short positions. It pushes up the value and the price.

KNST AM 790
"ian rogers" Discussed on KNST AM 790
"All the drama. More fall out for those accused of riding at the capital more than 100 have been arrested in the FBI keeps investigating others. Federal prosecutors have charged Thomas Caldwell, Donovan Crowl and Jessica Watkins, all members of the far right militia, known as the oath keepers with conspiring to obstruct Congress. The FBI says messages from the three while at the Capitol are part of the evidence against them. The obstruction charges come in addition to a judge, determining the three were dangers to the community. They were ordered held without bond. No, please from the accused have been entered. If found guilty. The conspiracy charge could carry a minimum of 20 years in prison. In all. Scott Fox News. Another man's in trouble Out West. Federal prosecutors have charged the Napa County, California man after investigators say they found five functional pipe bombs, nearly 50 firearms and thousands of rounds of ammo at his home and business. Your documents, say 44 year old Ian Rogers and texted his intentions of attacking Democrats to ensure former President Trump stayed in office. Court filings indicate. Rogers was also a member of a pro gun, anti government group. Was jailed on $5 million bond and faces up to 10 years in a federal prison if convicted. Rich Dennison Fox News on Wall Street stock futures are mixed His markets fall oversees the day after a big sell off. The Dow plunged more than 600 points is largest drop since October. Gamestop not one of those falling stocks, it surged 200% in one day. It's now $347 a share last year, one point Was only about two bucks. So what's going on the popular Reddit page? It's called Wall Street bets. It has grown to three million members, and what they're doing is they're encouraging each other by stocks that have been shorted by the big guy hedge funds that causes the hedge funds to scramble to cover their short positions. It pushes up the value.

KSFO-AM
"ian rogers" Discussed on KSFO-AM
"News Network bus set up couldn't be easier because everything's ready to go in the APP. Just say Alexa. Plane news from Fox in Fox News. It's the latest when you need it on demand from Fox News and Amazon, Alexa. There's more fall out for those accused of riding at the capital more than 100 have been arrested in the FBI keeps investigating others. Federal prosecutors have charged Thomas Caldwell, Donovan Crowl and Jessica Watkins, all members of the far right militia known as the Oath Keepers. With conspiring to obstruct Congress. The FBI says messages from the three while at the Capitol are part of the evidence against them. The obstruction charges come in addition to a judge determining the three were dangers to the community. They were ordered held without bond. No, please from the accused have been entered. If found guilty. The conspiracy charge could carry a minimum of 20 years in prison. Colonel Scott Fox News. Another man's in trouble Out West. Federal prosecutors have charged the Napa County, California man after investigators say they found five functional pipe bombs, nearly 50 firearms and thousands of rounds of ammo at his home and business. Your documents say 44 year old Ian Rogers had texted his intentions of attacking Democrats to ensure former President Trump stayed in office. Court filings indicate. Rogers was also a member of a pro gun, anti government group. He's jailed on $5 million bond and faces up to 10 years in a federal prison if convicted. Rich Dennison Fox News on Wall Street stock futures are mixed His markets fall oversees the day after a big sell off. The Dow plunged more than 600 points is largest drop since October came stop, not one of those falling stocks. It surged 200% in one day. It's now $347 a share last year, one point Was only about two bucks. So what's going on the popular Reddit page? It's called Wall Street bets. It has grown to three million members, and what they're doing is they're encouraging each other by stocks that have been shorted by the big guy hedge funds that causes the hedge funds to scramble.

KOMO
"ian rogers" Discussed on KOMO
"KOMO Seattle KOMO at them. Oakville 20 minutes of nonstop news starts now coming up on camo have a relative somewhere else that needs the vaccine. I'm Brian Calvert, and there's no residency requirement for any Washington vaccine site. I'm Frank Lindsay. Some people in Oregon got an unexpected dose of the covert 19 vaccine. Thanks to a snowstorm, plus traffic and weather every 10 minutes on the force. Live now to ABC News. Couple news time 12 o'clock. From ABC News. I'm Michelle Franzen, the White House Cove in 19 Response team, holding its first briefing today, laying out a federal plan to distribute and ramp up vaccinations nationwide Task Force says it's confident it can turn the US around from its current path of high transmission and high death tolls. One way they say they plan to do that is to up daily vaccinations. CDC director Dr Rochelle Walensky. The vaccine doses of minister continued to rise to more than 1.6 million doses per day over the past week, but members of the task force to say that they expected to be months before everyone who wants a shot can get one. They also say it's essential for Congress to pass funding to complete Biden's plan. Marco Malard, ABC News President Biden signing executive orders today aimed at the health of the environment and economy, campaigned on the promise he'd end government climate change denial, and we see it with our own eyes. We feel it We know it in our bones. President Biden signing orders mandating the government purchased more electric vehicles invest in non polluting green energy. He created a White House climate policy office and promised oil, gas and coal workers of the government will help retrain them for better paying clean energy work. Andy Field, ABC NEWS Washington A Northern California man is accused of plotting attacks and anger over President Trump leaving office. Four year old Ian Rogers owns an auto repair shop in Napa County. And it just unsealed Crimen. Complaint. Rogers has accused of possessing a large cache of weapons, operational bombs, bomb making materials and bomb making books, and FBI agents claim he sent threatening text messages about blowing up Democrats attacking Twitter headquarters and war. Former president Trump left office after he was arrested on January 15th, his mom saying using him. It's an example. Now. Rogers is facing federal charges for the explosives. Alex Stone, ABC News TODAY, Homeland Security issued an alert of domestic Terror threats it coming in the coming weeks. You're listening to ABC News. Stay connected. Stay informed. Co Moh Midday. Good afternoon. It's 12 02 on Taylor Vance Ice Now our top stories from the camo 24 7 news Center after hearing.