38 Burst results for "Jackie X"

Let's Talk About It
A highlight from Episode 67: Maternity Housing, the good, the bad, and the beautiful An Interview with Faith Cintron
"Hey welcome back to Let's Talk About It with Jackie and Megan. We like to talk about things that are messy, awkward, hard, or controversial and create a space for healing. Well hey everyone welcome back to Let's Talk About It. Today we are joined by Faith. We are so excited to have her on. She was one of our favorite co -workers back at our job where Jackie and I actually met. It's been a long time coming. But we are going to talk to Faith today about running a maternity home, sort of the good, the bad, and the beautiful. So before we start, Faith could you just tell our audience a little bit about who you are, what you do, fun fact about you. Yeah yeah and and I asked for apologies ahead of time. I'm working tonight and I just had a mommy baby pop in for a second so there might be crying babies. There might be some interruptions. So I am Faith Centron. I've been doing maternity housing ministry for 12 years now. Seven of those have been with the organization I'm currently with. I don't know if we're name dropping or not. And yeah I love it. Fun fact. I don't have any fun facts. Yeah yeah I kind of exist on a plane of insanity so like every day of my life is just hilariously funny. I mean you just taught someone how to make meatloaf. That's like pretty fun. I just taught. We have two residents from Colombia and they have only been in the country for a very short time and so when we were menu planning this week I said let's try American food and I taught her how to make meatloaf and they actually liked it. I think because ketchup. I have learned that Colombian ketchup on everything and that was what won them over. Nice. Can't blame them. A fun fact is that Faith and I both went to the same university. We did. Before I did. Yeah before you did. I don't know how much sooner before I did. I don't know how much older you are. I think a lot, Jackie. I think a lot. Fairly at all. Like a year. Yeah we just missed each other. We totally should have besties on campus. Totally. Well awesome. Wow. 12 years in maternity home work. That is pretty incredible. Did you do anything to celebrate like 12 years or 10 years or anything? I didn't and it like and the anniversary like just passed. No I didn't do anything. So it's still time to celebrate. Right well you know I am where I'm actually taking a week -long vacation starting next week. So I guess that will be my celebration. Yes well deserved. So you've been doing this line of work for a long time and what motivated you to become involved in maternity housing and did you ever think that this would be your career for 12 years? Yeah I you know it kind of happened by accident as all good things do. You know I grew up in a in a very large, very Catholic, very pro -life family and I was actually thinking about this the other evening. You know my my grandparents probably sometime like the early 90s they met this homeless pregnant woman outside of their church and they brought her home and they and she lived with them until their baby until her baby was probably a year old and it was just like I think my grandparents did it wasn't a big deal but like it came to mind I was unloading the dishwasher and I was like huh they kind of set this groundwork and they were very very active in their you know in their in their pro the pro -life organization at their church.

The Dan Bongino Show
Fresh update on "jackie x" discussed on The Dan Bongino Show
"Take a little Spanish not very my wife's a native Spanish speaker not me you ever heard Jackie Wilson if you haven't you were doing yourself a huge disservice we play it every Friday it's one of the few songs we ever let the lyrics play which is kind of like a no -no in the radio business you have liners and stuff like that but we don't care we don't care because we're winning and when you're winning you could do stuff like that and we love Jackie Wilson on Fridays because that was real when music was music I just got to throw it out to the king too by the way there's nothing good Elvis man I've seen around last night Paula and I didn't want to watch the news anymore so I had a kind of a rough week and I turned on that Elvis biopic at the end and man let me tell you Elvis could bark him out too even the older like you know big guy Elvis if you know what I mean had a couple extra breakfast tacos Elvis that dude could still bark it out Elvis could sing and let me tell you something you know married and all Paula that was good -looking dude man Elvis in the day you were like dude that was the guy Elvis was the man loved the king we got to get a little more of the king let's in here get it after the break let's bring some king in here huh I promise I got news to cover but it's Friday so you know you give got to me a little leeway we don't you know Friday can't drive you crazy at the weekend coming up I can show you Democrat demon rat stuff all day but I'm going to show you the lowlights of yesterday's impeachment inquiry essay where the Democrats just completely own themselves it's

The Bitboy Crypto Podcast
A highlight from Coinbase Buying FTX? (Crypto News Update)
"Good morning, everybody. It's time to discover crypto. It's 11 .33am Eastern Standard Time, 8 .33am Pacific Standard Time, because we always, you know, we take a few minutes just to let you percolate, get inside here. We have a new guest on the twos today. We still got Drew on the ones, but on the twos, we got Jackie holding it down. What's up, guys? All right, Jackie, I just want to give about 10 -30 seconds to describe where they might know you from. You might find me on X. I do a little show called The Useless Crypto News, and it's kind of like if SNL's weekend update talked about crypto. Okay. All right. All right. Let's see the page. Okay, here we go. Let's just get right into the crypto markets, guys. We're going to talk about Bitcoin. We're going to talk about, did the NSA have a hand in Bitcoin? Maybe we're also going to talk about Coinbase potentially buying FTX, but there's a catch to FTX Europe, and it looks like it might not actually happen. Also, we have some CBDC stuff and Google Cloud. What are your thoughts on Google Cloud, Drew? I don't think it's going anywhere. It's going to keep growing. We'll see if they can compete heavily with AWS, but it's going to matter a lot who gets good deals in crypto with them. I think they're going to make some big moves. Last but not least, we got some XRP news and Chainlink news. What are your views on Chainlink? It's kind of a boomer coin. Okay, Drew, you might need to just take over at this point. My 4 .2 Chainlink in my wallet is just, you know, it might not ever recover from that. I was going to try to make it 4 .7 today. I might sell 0 .5 and reduce my exposure down to 3 .7, but let's just get into the crypto market, see what things are heading. It looks like we're slightly ticking upward here. We are up 0 .5 % on the market cap here, almost at 1 .1 trillion, 24 -hour volume, looking fairly healthy right now, $42 billion, and Bitcoin dominance coming in at 47 .4%, ETH dominance 17 .5%. And gas is the cheapest I've seen it in pushing almost a year at this point, definitely the cheapest I've seen it in over 6 months. We are close to single -digit GWEI there, 11 GWEI, meaning you can get in and out of your altcoins on Uniswap, very, very cheap. You want to mint that NFT, that's free. It might actually be close to free. It won't be a $20 gas fee. It might be closer to, depending on the NFT, you're looking at like a maybe $2 mint, so really, really cheap right now. And you can probably send Tether for less than a dollar, ETH certainly less than a dollar. All right, let's look at Bitcoin price right now and some of these other coins. Bitcoin is up 0 .4%, everybody, looking fairly healthy. We have Ethereum up 1 .0%. We have XRP, the XRP community, feeling good, feeling powerful. Looks like you're Lidostake, Ether down. Cardano, me, I'm licking my wounds. The XRP community, they are the champions today. The Cardano community, we're the losers today. Let's just call it like it is. My bag's down, yeah. Okay, so Cardano's down 1 .2%. Solana up a little bit. And TonCoin, still shaving some gains here. Did you get into TonCoin or the Telegram coin there? Unfortunately, I did not because I think Telegram's kind of an atrocious app to use. I prefer Discord, but if Discord made a coin, I'd be all over that. Yeah, and they rejected the rumblings and the musings of a coin over a year ago. You know, the idea was floated and the gamer community flatly rejected free money.

Stephanie Miller
Fresh update on "jackie x" discussed on Stephanie Miller
"Joe Biden all they can do is return to the thoroughly demolished lie that Giuliani Rudy and Donald Trump launched five years ago the Burisma conspiracy theory of fairy tales so preposterous one of the main authors led Parnas has now disowned and repudiated it who said that Cosmo Spacely oh that was Jamie Graskin star of stage screen of course sexy liberal DC okay which oh by the way do we mention you should for my birthday you should buy a pay -per -view ticket to LA sexy liberal coming up October 21st with all the alpha liberals pearls Ron Perlman Rob Reiner and Glenn Kirschner right I mean oh my god what kind of that's a lot of political sexy I feel like it's the alpha liberal to her right like Jasmine Crockett just elf that's an alpha liberal that's what I'm talking about right that's how we gotta fight back and here's the thing you've got to get that ticket because let me tell you we have been on the chain for too long when all of that power gets unleashed you Wanna be they want to be there exactly it is crossing the streams and you do want to do that you want to cross the sexy liberal streams you know speaking of that I don't remember if there's different people here then someone named Travis is calling that name says hi Travis hello are you there Stephanie? Can you hear us? This voice sounds eerily familiar. Hello? Hello? Hello? Hello? Hello? I'm walking into work right now with the sausage McGriddle so I can go don't if you need me here but thank you and blow it out your ass with your new wake -up time and fancy your breakfast. Everything is great we were in Atlanta I last week saw that with Jackie I saw that I saw you gallivanting and now is there anything else that you want to say before you can go off all the way up to shut the up mountain? Well now obviously we will remember your birthday is the day that Diane Feinstein passed so your birthday will be written by a bigger name. I'm kidding Travis we love you and miss you we're so proud of you. Love you too thank you so much happy birthday. I love you. Well he was saying he couldn't get through earlier he tweeted about it but that's because mommy's so popular he made fun of you our phone too. Because I'm wildly popular. Even with our old phone system you. he wouldn't Thank you despite the fact that I dress so weird and I'm attractive of adjacent. You're getting there. Right? Yeah you have potential. Yeah. Okay do I have a thing? No you don't have I told you All right because I have to we have one last magical segment with Frangela 47 minutes after the hour back with the the remaining moments of the Black Power Hour on the Stephanie Miller show. Who do you think you're talking to? 🎵Music🎵 Well

Mutually CoDopendent
A highlight from Renee and Their Labels
"Hey guys, welcome to Mutually Codependent, I'm Jen. And I'm Adam. And today we have a very special guest. Welcome Renee to the show. Hello. Hello. Hello. Should we get a little button so we could have like applause? Yeah, a little soundboard. Yeah, yeah. It's lonely in my head without that stuff. It's much quieter with meds. So Renee is the store manager for our Round Rock store. They are affiliated with our store. So it's not just a random person, but that's cool. It would be weird. Store manager Round Rock, how long? It's been over a year, April. April is a year late manager being here. Oh, being manager. No, I made manager in December last year. Yeah. So when I started working from home. Yeah. It was around that time. But you've been with us a year and a half. Yeah. Yeah. It's goes by so fast these days. I really felt like the other day was just like, oh, it's Renee's one year anniversary. No, it's that's a while away now. I think you started the end of March. So there's the strain of the show so that we have the the justification for the smoking, which I already started. Hold on. Hold on. I got. Oh, that was the box of matches falling. Renee's too Renee's good for the lighters. I taste the butane. I don't know how to also describe it. I had a friend who turned me on to using matches. You wait for the little little bulb to burn. You wait till it gets to the wood and it's virtually tasteless. So I started using matches a lot more since you came over the first time. But I did think that it was funny because we had this like disco. Oh, yeah, you can taste the butane. I'm like, oh, I know what I'd like to do to avoid the taste of butane in my mouth. I'd like to make sure there's at least four or five seconds of very sharp sulfur in my nose before. Because because that's better. I mean, what is these days? What is what is? I just always I make the mistake of lighting the match when it's right under my nose. So if I were to just fix that, it's it's the sort of you try. You strike it away from yourself. I had to learn the hard way to where I was just like, whoo. Shit. Well, we aren't supposed to like the smell of matches lighting. Well, not right under your nose and not as a replacement for the subtle taste of butane. I mean, but I think it's like cilantro. If you taste it, you taste it. If you don't, you don't. So I'm not judging. I'm just being a shit. I mean, when you're not. So what we're what we're smoking straight to the show, the strain of the show today is jelly rancher. Um, jelly rancher. This is brought to you by actually, I think this is hemp living. Hemp living. There we go. It's one of the brands that we sell in the store and it is available online, I believe, as well. Jelly rancher is known as a sativa. That is 26 percent THC, a considered a sativa dominant hybrid. It's been described as happy, giggly, focused feeling with notes of berries and citrus. Beta -cariophalina is the main terpene, which is the same terpene that's in black pepper and cinnamon. It's it's a little peppery. Did you just fucking? I just dropped my cherry on the. You just dumped your cherry into the ashtray. I didn't mean to. Incense, incense. So scoop it up. Scoop it up. I don't know if that's possible. So don't don't use your finger. We have tools. We're humans. We have a lot of lead. If you know that one dies, you can just like your pre -roll. We'll probably do that. Stoners. Hey, one problem at a time. Yeah, if anything, we're we're true engineers. True engineers. Well, you said did I show you the pictures of those like super old like methods of smoking? No, that I found when I was doing the research for the Bastrop thing. No, it's pretty fucking cool. Yeah, it's basically they they carved out a hole in a. Like a like a log, I guess. And they would heat up rocks and put the rocks on the cannabis, so they'd stuff the hole full of cannabis. Like imagine it was like, I don't know, a couple inches in diameter. Like golf ball would fit in it. Right. And it was like a segment of a branch with the golf ball size hole pulled out of it. Shove a bunch of weed in there and then take stones that were heated from the fire and drop them on top. Yeah. So they were literally vaping it. Yeah. It was like old old school vaping technique. Does remind me of the time when I was actually first introduced to weed. It was at a party. And they smoked through an apple. I've done that. Yeah, they cut a hole top and bottom, put some foil on it and and went to town. I mean, I didn't smoke because I was a goody two shoes back then. But, you know, we change. We evolve. Yeah. You know, the thing about people is we can change our beliefs based on our experiences. Yeah. Truly pattern seeking if we choose to. I saw a guy in TikTok the other day smoke weed out of a headrest from a car and a car like still. Yes. And so, yeah, like he took it off. He opened he put he put his weed like down the hole of the metal on one side. Like it was his joint. So he put his joint down one side, like down. And then he just I don't something how he like breathed in through the other side and he was able to smoke. How carcinogens many do you think it was so stupid? So the headrest, oh, the head rest of your car, pulling off the headdress the two holes are and using the actual chair itself, because that sounds like a great idea to be a car made in the 70s full of asbestos. His friend was like, if you were a loved one who suffers from mesothelioma, I miss my popcorn ceilings, OK? Oh, we have popcorn ceiling looked up, actually. So we have modern popcorn ceiling. So it's not as best as terrible. I just think it's fine. I just see you look up as soon as I say that. Oh, somebody was talking about it before and she was like, was it Jackie telling us to get rid of it? I don't know. You got to get rid of your popcorn. I was like, no, then it echoes. And they're like, yeah, but it's OK. No, it's not. No, we're good. We don't own this house. So we put together a list of things to talk about. Yeah, I guess we could read it. Well, we could just kind of go through it. Yeah, we could keep the audience on edge. Keep them on edge. Hey, are you on edge? Stormy. Stormy. Lily Reagan.

Bloomberg Daybreak Europe
Fresh update on "jackie x" discussed on Bloomberg Daybreak Europe
"Neil Armstrong waited six hours and 39 minutes to step onto the surface of the moon Jackie Robinson waited 20 months to play his first game with the broken Dodgers and even DiCaprio had to wait 22 years to win an Oscar you can wait until your destination don't text and drive visit stop text stop wrecks .org a message brought to you by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Project Yellow Light and the Ad Council get the news you need to start your day in just 15 minutes potential US government shutdown looming. We're also following the auto workers strike in Detroit. Wake up with Bloomberg Daybreak US edition tensions between the u .s. And China remain in focus Upset knowledge football available now on podcast your feed each weekday morning at 6 a .m. Eastern another big IPO hits the market subscribe to Bloomberg Daybreak US edition today

Let's Talk About It
A highlight from Episode 66: A Catholic and Protestant Discuss Our Lady of the Miraculous MedalIncorruptible Bodies?!
"Hey, welcome back to Let's Talk About It with Jackie and Megan. Or we like to talk about things that are messy, awkward, hard, or controversial, and create a space for healing. Hey guys, welcome back to Let's Talk About It. Today we're going to talk about dead bodies. Really exciting. Also, Megan and I are in our big earring era, I guess, this episode. She was wearing big earrings, so I had to put on big earrings, obviously. So, copycat. Yeah, I am a copycat. I'm going to grab my coffee. It's down here. Yeah, well today we're going to talk about dead bodies, incorruptible saints. Very specific dead bodies. I will not lie to all of you. This is not some in -depth research. I did do some research, but mostly we're talking about this because I saw a body that's incorruptible. In Paris, when I went to Paris. So, I could tell a little bit about that story. Megan, just what's your initial thoughts on when you hear me say there's incorruptible saints? I just want to know because I know my initial thoughts, even as a Catholic. So, I think I've always been uncomfortable, but I don't because I was like talking to John last night about it as I was just thinking about it, the topic. I was like, I don't know why. I think it's more of just a visceral like, oh, it's a dead body. Because even relics that are body parts give me kind of the same heebie -jee feeling. Oh, we have this foot or we have this bone is always kind of felt weird to me. Less so than icons or relics that are objects or items. So, I think, yeah, just like very like knee -jerk. I'm like, oh, yeah. I mean, that's fair. I don't really have, I mean, I think that relics are weird for sure, but I've never had a knee -jerk reaction to them because I always think it's cool because it's usually saints that I, especially the really old saints. Recently, there's a tour going around of a bone from Saint Jude who was from like the time of Jesus, which it's like, okay, that's really cool that there's a bone from someone that was around the time of Jesus there. And I just always think that's super cool, even though it's super weird. And we're not talking about relics in this episode. So maybe next time when we talk about relics, I'll talk more about this story. I'll say this too. I'll say this too. It is not, this isn't me being like, ew, Catholics. When I have that reaction, like I have that reaction in museums. Like this is a very personal Meghan thing. Like when I see mummies, I'm like, oh my gosh. I know a lot of people don't feel that way. So that's not a statement. Like, ew, Catholics, this is gross. I mean, it's weird. Just being like totally straight up honest. That's how I have a reaction towards any, even like, I feel like it's circulating now those images of like people who were like mummify. I don't even know the right word from like Pompeii. I've been seeing that go around TikTok and like people are like, oh my gosh, this is so cool. And I'm like, ew, I don't want to see it. So that's just me. I know I sent me, I could tell Meghan, cause I sent you the picture of Saint Jude's bone. You immediately were just like, ew. And usually Meghan's not that way about Catholic stuff or doesn't react that way. So I just thought that was really funny. Yeah. It's really not a dig on you. It's my own weird heebie -jeebies. Yeah. I'm just not a spooky girl. I know. Well, Halloween's coming up, Meghan. So better get ready for it. Which is funny because, was it two years ago that we went to St. John Cancus during All Saints Eve? Mm -hmm. And they had a whole bunch of relics. And that was my first time. Well, I guess I saw relics in Greece when I was there, but that was like a lot. It was a lot. They had a lot on display. So I was like, what? There's like a hand or something. It was like, why is this? What is happening? Yeah, there's definitely some spooky ones.

Let's Talk About It
A highlight from Episode 65: Pro-Life Advocacy An Interview with Sami Parker
"Hey, welcome back to Let's Talk About It with Jackie and Megan. We like to talk about things that are messy, awkward, hard, or controversial, and create a space for healing. Hey everyone, welcome back to Let's Talk About It. Today Jackie and I are joined with Sami and we are really excited to talk to her about pro -life advocacy and online advocacy. So Sami, thank you so much for joining us and do you mind just telling our audience a little bit about who you are, what you do? I don't know, fun to act about you. Yeah, sure. Thanks for having me on. It's really, really fun to be able to join you guys. Yeah, I'm a daughter of the king. I'm a wife as of two years ago now. I'm also a boy mom to a little eight month old boy. His name is Owen. He was born December 30th. So it's new and it's really exciting and it's just like the biggest aspect of my life now. So it's like all I talk about, but I also work with live action where we seek to end abortion and make America the most welcoming place in the world to raise a family. And so my contribution to that, I guess I do a lot of things with them, but my main contribution is just making video content, content dedicated to exposing abortion and the industry that's behind it, as well as apologetics videos, just to kind of break down common pro -abortion arguments to help equip other pro -lifers to know how to answer the myriad of pro -abortion arguments that just never seem to stop. And then I've recently honestly been loving making content that just really highlights the beauty of children and motherhood and marriage and all of those things, because it's just, I mean, it's obviously more fun to talk about more joyful and we'll really can't deny how beautiful that is. So yeah, I live in Oregon. I don't know what fun fact, gosh, I'm a twin. That's like always the fun fact. I use really. Yeah. Yeah. She lives in Colorado. So we don't, we obviously don't like post on social media together or anything, but that's my fun fact. Very nice. Well, thank you for what you do. I feel like that's very brave, especially in our world today. Megan and I, we met actually working in pro -life work at a pregnancy care center. So that's how we met. And I don't, I don't think I ever expected to work in pro -life work. Did you, did you, is this something that you thought would be your career, especially in the way that you're doing it on social media? No, no, not at all. I honestly like had no idea what I was going to do with my life, which I feel like is kind of a lot of our answers, at least in college. Like I just won't go to college because like, that's just what people did. I went to GCU and in Phoenix and got my degree in business management and kind of figured I would just get a management job and like, that would be fine. And I'd make money and I'd eventually have a family and that kind of thing. And I wasn't even super pro -life. I wasn't solidly pro -life in college anyways for the first few years at least. And so I definitely didn't think that this would be the line of work that I would end up going to, but the Lord brought me to it and changed my heart on it. And now I honestly couldn't see myself doing anything else. It's just definitely the biggest passion of mine. And it's a huge blessing that this is what I get to do all day. Obviously, wish I didn't have to. I wish abortion was already unthinkable, but yeah, never thought I was going to do it.

The Dan Bongino Show
Hinds County Supervisor David Archie Blames Fraud for Election Loss
"This is a perfect example cue up for me cut tension I thought challenging an election questioning towns questioning machines signatures I thought I'd I thought that was a prison sentence I thought that was an insurrection where we would be not told that you're not allowed to question elections it's tyranny it's the 14th amendment you're fostering a rebellion against the United States hang up by the I thought we were told that yet this story seemingly flew under the radar gave me need this tomorrow on the podcast do I forgot I can't believe I didn't get to this. Here's Hines County, county Mississippi, supervisor David Archie Democrat claiming on the local news channel claiming they were the victims of election frauds. I'm just is this guy in the he's he's not Mike Mike Mike have you heard anything any updates from you no prison no no no prison time can you Jim can you do me a favor can you reach to out the FBI today for an on -the -record comment if there's going to be a wanted poster see because this guy's a Democrat alleging during a primary that another Democrat may have tinkered with the election but notice notice there's no FBI raids or anything like that why because he was a shocker this guy's exercise exercising his constitutional right to free speech reason allowed to challenge an election all he wants but Donald Trump it finds his people that indicted in Georgia for the so weird the exact exact same thing so straight Joseph yes justice here here listen to yourself check this out Hines County Democratic Party person by the name of Jackie Hanks we both we believe and we have evidence that Jackie Amos

Let's Talk About It
A highlight from Episode 63: Megans Birth Story
"Hey, welcome back to Let's Talk About It with Jackie and Megan. We like to talk about things that are messy, awkward, hard, or controversial, and create a space for healing. Hey guys, welcome back to Let's Talk About It with Jackie and Megan. I feel like we haven't done an official intro in a long time. We've just kind of started talking. We just jumped right in. Yeah, well, last episode, I talked and talked and talked, and as I was editing it, I realized Megan said about three words. So this next episode, I told Megan that she needs to be the one to talk the most. So you get a break from my voice. So today, Megan's going to talk about her experience in birth and her reflections one year later, because I can't believe that CC is going to be a year. I know, I don't think I've prepared myself yet. I think I'm still in denial that it's been a year. I was thinking last night, I was like, wow, she's been out of me longer than she was in me, which is weirdly sad to me, even though that's all I wanted when I was pregnant, was for her to get out. And it's obviously ideal that she would be, because she's going to live a long, beautiful life. But it's just funny how a year later, everything is clouded. It was actually really beautiful, and I loved it, which is not the case. But I'm like, I guess I should do it again, which I suppose that's why we keep having babies, right? Yeah, when I was in college, one of my professors was saying that there is some kind of phenomena. And I think it's, yeah, like the hormone, there's some kind of hormone shift. I think it's really just bonding with your baby that your brain just completely forgets, like the way it processes information, it forgets completely how bad it was. The hormones of bonding with your baby take over, and you're like, that was amazing. And I'm almost like, I think God set it up that way so that people would keep having babies, because if not, they were probably, women would probably just stop having babies. Yeah, I also think that's something that they should prepare women more for, is there is such a rush of adrenaline and hormones, happy, not to mention if you're on any sort of drugs in the hospital, that first, I want to say two after, days were just bliss. I was like, and then you get home, and you crash, and you have a hormonal dip. And I was reading somewhere online, and so I don't know if this is accurate, because whatever, it's the internet. But someone was saying it's the equivalent of if for nine months you were taking 100 birth control pills a day, and then you just suddenly stopped, that's the hormonal shift that you have. And I was like, that makes so much sense, because the emotional sudden crash was so unexpected from the first few days where you're like, I feel wonderful, I can totally do this postpartum thing. Yeah, I definitely, postpartum depression is a real thing, and some women experience it to the extreme, but it's something that I never really thought about. And I was thinking, wow, it's because those hormone shifts are so strong from when you're having the baby, you're getting all of these hormones that are helping to grow your baby, and then suddenly, very suddenly, the baby is just out of your body, and your hormones completely shift, and they're changing, and trying to regulate, and you're breastfeeding. And not sleeping. Right, that's a real thing that I don't think people think about. And I didn't realize that two days after, there was total bliss, or I've never had a baby. Oh, and that was my experience. So, I don't know, it could be totally different for other people, but I just know in the hospital, I was like, I feel great, I feel amazing, yeah, I'm in a ton of pain, and this is the worst physically I've ever been, but emotionally, I feel wonderful. And then I got home, and it was like, I can't stop crying, I can't stop shaking from anxiety, that kind of thing, and I was like, what happened? Yeah, and I think that's actually very common. Women don't talk about how hard it can be after emotionally, because motherhood is a beautiful thing, but especially in Christian circles, they're like, this is the best time of your life, you just had a baby, especially when it's your first baby, because you don't really know what to expect, but it is a blessing, and you are grateful, you know, that you've had a baby, and your baby is healthy, and so on, but people don't talk about, yeah, how difficult that is, and it's not even something you have complete control over. It's literally, your hormones are changing and shifting. Yeah, and it just can be very confusing, and then especially for someone like me, who like had a birth experience that was like very much like unexpected, sort of like the opposite of what I was wanting, I was also dealing with like processing that experience, along with all these hormonal shifts, all of these like emotions, all of the sleeplessness, all of the stress of a new baby, so it was a lot. It's something like back, I'm like, wow, I was like kind of really struggling, and obviously like I got through it, and I had like really awesome people to support me. I mean, you came over like several times, and that was like super helpful, but it was like, I don't even think I realized in the moment how much I was feeling.

Let's Talk About It
A highlight from Episode 62: I went to Lourdes! // Marian Apparitions & Miraculous Healings
"Hey, welcome back to Let's Talk About It with Jackie and Megan. We like to talk about things that are messy, awkward, hard, or controversial, and create a space for healing. Well, welcome to... is this season five? Yeah, I don't actually, I don't know. I think it is, yeah. We only loosely keep track. Yeah, we loosely keep track at this point, but I feel like a lot of big podcasters, they don't even do seasons anymore, they just like record whenever they can. Today we're talking about that I went to Lourdes, which we hinted at last episode. Yeah, how was it there? It was great. I think before we share this episode, well, maybe along with sharing it, I'll share some of my pictures on our podcast Instagram, so you should go over there if you don't follow us, but it was kind of everything I expected and not what I expected. I don't know how to explain it. I had not seen any pictures of it besides the actual grotto where Mary appeared to Bernadette, so I knew what that looked like because you see pictures of that everywhere, but I had not really looked at pictures of Lourdes because I just wanted to not have expectations. I think I said before, I just want to go into this without expectations, and I kind of want to let God just do whatever he's going to do while I'm there because I don't want to be disappointed or, I don't know, I don't want to have a lot of expectations. I didn't even look at any pictures of Lourdes, but Lourdes was so much more beautiful than I even expected. It's up in the Pyrenees Mountains, so it's surrounded by mountains, which are just absolutely gorgeous. Meghan, you've been to Greece and you've been to mountains, and I just feel like there's just no way to describe. And then just the way that European cities look is just so beautiful, and I just think Europe is so much more beautiful than the United States. It just is. We have beautiful places with mountains and such, but just the town and everything around it and the culture, I don't know. Maybe it's just because I'm also not familiar with it, but it's just so great to me. But yeah, it was beautiful. And the church there is ridiculous. The cathedral at Lourdes, which yeah, we'll share a lot of pictures, but in the cathedral, which basically looks like if you walk into Disneyland, it kind of looks like the castle at Disneyland. And so there's the joke that Lourdes is like Catholic Disneyland because it's just so gorgeous and it kind of looks like a palace, the church there. And that was one of my favorite moments when I walked into Lourdes the first time. We got to the hotel first the night before, and then we walked down to the actual shrine, and just walking down and seeing it for the first time, I walked in with my friend and I was literally just hitting him on the arm because I was so excited and it was so beautiful. Yeah, there's like five churches in this one church. There's like, on the lower level, you can walk up and there's stairs and you can walk in, and there's this beautiful cathedral. I think it's the biggest of all the cathedrals. And then on either side, there's like, from either the bottom, you can go up this set of stairs to go toward like the top, or on the side, there's like two giant ramps that you like can go up, and you can get to the top, and there's a bottom door you can go in that's one cathedral, and there's a set of two little stairs above that door where you could go in and then go in, and there's a different church. And at the very top one, there's two side chapels off to the side before you would walk into the main church. So there's like five churches in this one giant church, and I don't know the history exactly of like how long it took, because I'm assuming it took a long time, to like build an add -on and all of that. I don't know exactly how long all of that took, but yeah, that was super cool. And we went with a Catholic priest, he's the one that led the pilgrimage, and he's one of, there's like a thousand priests that are like official priests of the shrine in Lourdes, and he's one of them because he's been going there for so long, so he got that status. So we were able to say to have Mass said in different parts of the cathedral, so yeah, I don't know. It's like, it's really hard to explain unless you've been there, but it's yeah, it's definitely very beautiful and stunning, and I had a great time, which I guess I'll talk all about in this episode, so stay tuned. So for someone like me who did not grow up with many Catholics, I'm not super familiar with a lot of the like Marian apparitions or anything, like really until I think I was friends with you, I didn't even know it was a thing. So for someone listening who's maybe in a similar position, what is the significance and the history of Lourdes? Okay, so I guess I can start with that. So I'm gonna go to my notes here because I don't want to mess it up. This region of France, which where Lourdes is, was a strategic stronghold during medieval times, and it's like situated at the foot of the Pyrenees, which I talked about, and the medieval castle of Lourdes provided protection against foreign forces. So this was like a very significant part of France. During the Hundred Years War, the French captured this region from the English in 1406 after an 18 -month siege. The medieval castle was used as a state prison from the reign of Louis the 14th, so that's something interesting. So in 1858, basically when we believe that Mary appeared to Bernadette, it was still known as a military and state stronghold. So like this place that now has been turned into like this very religious town before was a military and like state stronghold. So we believe it was in 1858, so I don't know how many years ago that was at this point, a long time, between February 11th and July 16th the Virgin Mary appeared to this young peasant girl named Bernadette. I don't know how to say her last name, it starts with an S, but we'll put it in the show notes. She was a 14 -year -old girl, and we believe that she appeared to her 18 different times. And I won't get into the details of each of those apparitions, but I'll leave a link if you want to like read the story of some of the more significant apparitions.

The Dan Bongino Show
Joe Biden Plays Down the Term 'Bidenomics' After Backlash
"We've got to play some Jackie Wilson and I've got a favorite song I'd like to share with you. And also right now we're going to talk about how our economy is, as you well know, in the crapper. It is not doing well at all. It is limping along to the extent that it's moving anywhere. And the White House has been trying to claim that this utter weakness in the Biden presidency is in fact of great strength, obviously. And they've been calling it Bidenomics, which is hilarious. And Joe Biden gave a big a big speech yesterday emphasizing that your bank account doesn't tell the story of great how this economy is doing. Listen to Joe Biden talking about how he came to office looking to do what his partner to do, which is fundamentally transform America. I came to office determined to the point of some my own team thought I was too determined to change the economic direction of this country to move trickle down economics and get rid of it. Where everyone from the Wall Street Journal Financial Times called the program Bidenomics. I'm not sure they meant it as a compliment at the time. Our plan is working. Yeah, that's right. Somebody else gave me the cool nickname. It wasn't me who just gave that nickname to myself. more For more on

AP News Radio
Body-cam footage shows indicted ex-police officers laughing at man who died in their custody
"Authorities in Jackson, Mississippi have released body cam footage that shows several police officers joking. After they repeatedly used a taser on a black man who died in their custody. It begins as a trespassing call at a Jackson Mississippi hotel on New Year's Eve. Can you understand me? Don't put your hand back here. It ends with the death of key muriel. Officers are seen struggling to get both of his hands in handcuffs. And he's zapped repeatedly with a taser. And deprived of medical attention for about an hour. The three officers are charged in his death, but that night they joke about the incident. Strong as an ox. One officer describes this struggle as funny at first, and then says it got annoying. But it was funny, and Mississippi grand juries indicted two of the former police officers on murder counts and another on a manslaughter charge. I'm Jackie Quinn

AP News Radio
Biden releases new strategy to tackle rise in antisemitism, says 'hate will not prevail'
"The White House has unveiled a new 100 step government blueprint for fighting violence and discrimination directed at Jewish people in America. Noting an alarming rise in the country. Vanished semitic incidents are at a record high. President Biden is outlined more than 100 steps, government, business, and community leaders can embrace to counter bias and hate. Their centered around increasing awareness of anti semitism, improving security for Jewish communities, reversing the normalization of anti semitism, and building solidarity across communities. At last week's reception, marking Jewish American heritage month. The president said there's an increase in physical violence and intimidation. Anti semitic flyers and driveways and banners on bridges. Anti semitic conspiracy theories rampant online. It's unconscionable. It's almost unbelievable. It's despicable. He says the recommendations send a message, hate, will not prevail in America. I'm Jackie Quinn.

AP News Radio
US study finds 1 in 10 get long COVID after omicron, starts identifying key symptoms
"A new study finds about 10% of people who had the omicron variant of COVID-19 have symptoms of long COVID, but it's a smaller number than originally thought. New research published in the journal of the American medical association studied nearly 9000 adults who had COVID-19 and compared them with those who hadn't been infected. At first, it looked like one in three were getting long COVID. But once more patients were added and the symptoms could be tracked in real time, it looks more like one in ten still had symptoms after 6 months. The national Institutes of health is working to better understand why some people develop long-term debilitating health issues. And others make full recoveries. About a dozen symptoms are found in long COVID, including fatigue, brain fog, stomach, or heart issues, loss of smell or taste, sexual problems, and chronic cough. I'm Jackie Quinn.

AP News Radio
Taking a daily multivitamin appears to boost brains of adults over 60, but more study is needed
"A new study shows taking a daily multivitamin, may boost memory function in some people. But the research is not comprehensive enough to warrant a broad recommendation. Researchers at Columbia University and Brigham and women's hospital tracked more than 3500 people over the age of 60 for several years, some got a multivitamin. Others got a dummy pill, and they were tested online for memory function. Given a list of 20 words, after a year, participants who took the daily vitamins had better memory function, recalling 7.81 words, while those with the placebo improved to 7.65 words. The study leader says multivitamins may work by providing micronutrients that can enhance function of the hippocampus, an area in the brain that controls learning and memory. U.S. dietary guidelines lean against vitamin supplements, recommending nutrients be obtained through food. Researchers say more memories study is needed. I'm Jackie Quinn

AP News Radio
DeSantis launches GOP presidential campaign in Twitter announcement plagued by glitches
"Florida's Republican governors announced that he's officially a candidate for president, but the announcement didn't go exactly as planned. Republican governor Ron DeSantis launched his campaign in a special Twitter space's feed. Criticizing President Biden. He lacks vigor, flounders in the face of our nation's challenges, and he takes his cues from the woke mob. But there were technical problems that led to start and stops, audio glitches, and a delay of nearly half an hour. Desantis was asked why he chose Twitter instead of traditional media. He compared it to his COVID lockdown opposition, lamenting a lack of free expression. You had to put your money where your mouth is. Even that was marred by an audio glitch. This is rivals were rough. Donald Trump tweeted the desantis Twitter launch is a disaster. His whole campaign will be a disaster. And Nikki Haley's campaign also called it a failure. But still, desantis says they raised a $1 million in the first hour after the announcement. I'm Jackie Quinn

AP News Radio
Amanda Gorman's poem for Biden's inauguration banned by Florida school
"A complaint from a parent is landed a poem written for President Biden's inauguration on a restricted list at a Florida elementary school. It's not clear what in the poem the hill we climb by Amanda Gorman is objectionable to a Miami Lake's parent, but daily Salinas says she doesn't favor eliminating or censoring any books, but she does want materials to be appropriate for students. Florida's governor Ron DeSantis has made headlines with his policies that promote books censorship. The nation's first national youth poet laureate then 17 year old Amanda Gorman, said her poem, which was read January 20th, 2021, was intended to be a message of hope, without ignoring the evidence of Discord and division in the country. In response to the restrictions at the school. She says she's gutted and concerned that authorities are robbing children of the chance to find their voices in literature. I'm Jackie Quinn

AP News Radio
Civil rights groups warn tourists about Florida in wake of 'hostile' laws
"The NAACP's issued a travel advisory against the state of Florida because of the state's conservative politics. The NAACP statement says laws championed by governor Ron DeSantis and lawmakers are openly hostile toward African Americans, people of color and LGBTQ individuals. The civil rights group joins two other organizations in discouraging travel to the state. The Republican governor showed no sign of backing down when he was inaugurated for another term in January. We will never surrender to the woke mob, Florida is where woke goes to die. Florida is one of the most popular tourist states in the U.S., and its economy depends on visitors. Several big city mayors were quick to respond, saying they welcome diversity and inclusion. I'm Jackie Quinn

AP News Radio
Biden, McCarthy to meet Monday for debt ceiling talks as default deadline looms
"President Biden and House speaker Kevin McCarthy are due to speak face to face. After a telephone conversation on how to reach an agreement on averting a U.S. default. House speaker Kevin McCarthy says he did have a productive call with President Biden. They spoke as the president was returning from the G 7 summit in Japan, where he had to reassure world leaders. Default is not an option. Biden says, despite GOP complaints, he has compromised and introduced ideas to raise revenue. Much of what they've already proposed is simply quite frankly unacceptable. But conservative Republicans, like congressman Jody arrington, who spoke on ABC's this week with George Stephanopoulos, says the government spending patterns need to change. We have to get back to pre COVID pre inflationary spending. We've got to rightsize and rein in this bureaucratic bloat. Treasury secretary Janet Yellen says it looks like the debt limit will be reached somewhere around June 1st, where the U.S. won't have the funds to meet its obligations. Seniors who count on social security are military that expects pay. She spoke on NBC's meet the press. I'm Jackie Quinn

AP News Radio
Biden: GOP must move off 'extreme' positions, no debt limit deal solely on its 'partisan terms'
"The president of the United States and the Speaker of the House are expected to speak directly about ways to avert a looming government default. President Biden before leaving the G 7 gathering in Japan focused comments on the debt ceiling showdown, saying Republicans are wrong when they claim that he's not willing to negotiate spending cuts. You put forward a proposal that cuts spending by more than a $1 trillion. And the president proposed instead of cutting Medicaid, reduced corporate tax breaks. I'm not going to agree to a deal that protects, for example, $30 billion tax break for the oil industry. On ABC's this week with George Stephanopoulos, House budget committee chair, Jody arrington, says this is about cutting spending going forward. We have to get back to pre COVID pre inflationary spending. We've got to rightsize and rein in this bureaucratic bloat. It's estimated the U.S. could exceed its borrowing limit by June 1st. Triggering global concerns which the president tried to ease during the G 7 summit. Default is not an option. I'm Jackie Quinn.

The Paul Finebaum Show
"jackie x" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"What impact do you think it will have on the aggies who really showed the way for Texas and did quite well as a result across the board? Well, I may be a different opinion, but I think he had a little help. Because it's going to generate, you know, take away the auburn Alabama game. What if you took that game away from the state of Alabama? So what's happening by Texas going to the SEC, that game is going to come back. So the interest in the state is going to get bigger. The interest in the state is going to also filter all the way down to the high schools, so the high school recruits are going to be growing up, thinking about more so about Texas, Texas, a and M rival. And it will come back to be very similar to that Alabama auburn or Mississippi state Mississippi. So in my opinion, I may be different from everybody else. But I think it's great for high school football. I think in the state of Texas, I think it's great for the state of Texas. And I think it will help Texas a and M. I know it damn sure will help Texas. Jackie sherrill, I can talk to you forever. Coach, come back soon. We always enjoy it and I hope to see you very soon as well. Paul, for you, I'll do anything. What applies the legendary Jackie Sheryl joining us. What a career and what a legacy he has left at a number of places. We'll take a short break here. More of your phone calls right after this.

The Paul Finebaum Show
"jackie x" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"Contract who's worth was put by knowledgeable sources at $1.7 million. You know, they're paying offense and defensive coordinators today. That much. Well, I think Kevin Steele shattered that easily going back to Alabama a couple of weeks ago. Which brings me to the bigger question. And I've been talking to you about this for almost 40 years and you have been telegraphing where we are, you mentioned in the 80s about expansion in the SEC and where and the super conferences and you've been so where are we right now? I know that's a broad question, but a lot of people like us who've been around a while don't like what they're seeing. Well, where we're headed because the NCAA I'll go three or four things, but the NCAA had a chance to head off to NIL in my opinion. They refused that. And then the vote came down 9 zero in the Supreme Court. So where we are now, there's no guardrails on the NIL. There's no guardrails basically on transfer. You can say what you want to. There's got to be contact. And there is contact in transfer. But then I feel where we're going because a television, we're going to NFL model. Which means that we'll have each west and we'll have divisions in those east west and we'll end up we have a 12 game playoff. So we'll end up with a 12 game playoff for the national championship, but college football will separate from the NCAA and we'll have a commissioner just like the NFL and it'll be teams that will make a commitment to better themselves in college football. That means the stadium that means the support. So right now you have UCLA and USC going to travel all the way across the country to Finn state and play are somewhere else and what will happen if we when we go to the east west, then they will be playing people in the west side of the country that will afford our can afford our will make a commitment. Now we'll teams will universities like rice, our universities like Vanderbilt are even Stanford, make the commitment or to be in that circle. So I'll take will end up, you know, with 48 to 60 teams that will be in the NFL bottle. Coach talking to coach Jackie Sheryl coach COVID changed a little bit because it brought the anticipation and the excitement back. But as you know, attendance has been a big concern of athletic directors. And I think it still is when you consider everything that goes into having to go to a game and the travel and the time, how concerned are you that the prices of tickets and what it costs to get tickets and all the money donors have to give to everything connected to NIL are eventually going to turn people off. I mean, they're turning some people off, but where is this going? Well, I don't know if the term Polish turn off. I think it will that you just can't continue to give. Is that matter how much money you have? A point and I have two or three former players that give upwards in the ten to $20 million to a university. Well, you can't give continue to give that amount. So where do you go? The generations that we have meaning the younger, those are the ones that the athletic directors in the university's go to try to continue to support for the university. And. Very correct. And when you say that you get tired of it, you're not and I have some of my former players in some of the Friends that have said, okay, I've given to the NIL. I'm not giving you any more. So the university to keep the NIL moving have got to go to different people to in more people and spread it out. There is a great disadvantage in college football right now because of the NIL. I'll take Texas and Texas a and M because of the all money. They have a lot more money for the NIL than a Mississippi state would have already been a Mississippi. And on that subject because you know what it's like dealing with longhorns and you dealt with them quite well. During your tenure, you even beat them at Mississippi. What do you think that is going to mean to the SEC next year? We see Oklahoma show up and here come here come here comes the gang from Austin. Well, it means more to ESPN. You know, the whole thing, Paul, and this is my opinion now with Texas and Oklahoma coming in. Texas signed the Texas LongHorn network. And they signed a ten year contract 15 million a year, which is great. But the LongHorn network is kind of like the PAC 12 network. It didn't go. It didn't sell. And so here's ESPN. Which last year was the 5th year, so they still owe Texas 75 million date and the SEC approached Texas to join and I would say in my opinion that Texas said I'm not coming alone and that's how Oklahoma's got into the mix and so Oklahoma and Texas are going to the SEC, but you got to understand it's going to save if however the contract comes out. It's going to save ESPN 50 million because Texas will now longer have the Texas network. Yeah, the LongHorn network next year will be folded into everything else. You understand that culture and from this standpoint and I've seen you often at a and M games, it seems like Texas a and M has really fit in well to the SEC culture. What do you think or how do you think Texas will fit in? It's going to be a shock for Texas. Because they will no longer be the big dog on the street. They will have to understand very quickly that when they line up every Saturday, Saturday against Alabama or LSU or Florida or you don't know it's like planned Oklahoma. So it's not going to be easy to dominate the SEC. Like they dominated the big 12 per year. And what impact do you think it will have on the aggies who really showed the way for Texas and did quite well as a result across the

The Paul Finebaum Show
"jackie x" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"Welcome back. Great to have all of you with us here on Thursday afternoon. Let's get back to our calls. We had a busy show already. We had we talked about Florida. We talked about Alabama situation. Jackie Sheryl joins us. At the bottom of this hour, always fun to check in with the legendary coach. Let's get back to the calls. And John is up next in Georgia. Hello, John. Hey, what's up, Paul? How are you doing? We are well. Thank you. So I just want to say first off. What's all this hard behind broad show? You asked me, he's the worst quarterback to play the game. That's invented is the goal. I got news for you. Yeah. No one agrees with you. Nobody myth is up next in Kentucky. Hello, meth. Hey, Paul. Thanks for taking my call. Thank you. Who would be the greatest actor that's a coach or a player? Well, I'm going to go ahead and say, and I'm going to throw it out there. The one and only LeBron James. Really? Yeah. I've seen so much. I mean, I'm going to throw this. It's going to be a very arguable, I guess, confrontation. I don't know if you're a big fan or not, but the thing about it is, is LeBron, he swaps so much that he would be one of the best actors I've ever seen in my entire life. Well, you know, listen, I'm no actor, but I don't see it. I mean, I think frankly, I think Shaquille would be a good actor. I think Barkley would be a good actor. I don't think LeBron does not quite have to be an actor. You have to get really, he's got one, he's got one look, and I don't think he could he has much movement other than that. But that's just my opinion. Anybody else? Let me ask you one question, Paul. Okay. Let me ask you one question. LeBron, Kobe, or Michael. That is not even a legitimate question. Well, so LeBron had to bounce around to get what he wanted. Let's look at some of the things we're not going to. It's an age old debate. It doesn't need to be debated. Michael Jordan is the greatest player. Great. Kobe is quite unique, but I'm not arguing against LeBron James's prowess, but he Michael Jordan stands on top of that. That tree. Nobody on that mountain but on that on that plateau, it doesn't matter. He's the best. Sloan is up next in Tennessee. Hello Sloan. How you doing? We are doing great. Thank you for asking. Yes. I was just wanting to say something Michael Jordan is definitely the best. And by the way, I didn't realize it was a big debate in the country today, but anyway, we're happy to talk about it. But I was talking about, you know, Nick Saban, he's got a record of 274 wins and 67 losses. At his career at Alabama, what do you think about that? Well, I've already thought about it. And Nick Saban is the greatest coach of all time. That is not being debated, nor is it in dispute. The real question isn't what he's done. It's what he's going to do now. And that's why the conversation that we had earlier with Griffith the other day who said he thinks Kirby smart is the best coach today. Everyone knows Kirby smarts one in four against Nick Saban. Things that we debate about when everyone already knows are inane and worthless debates. So the question is about now. It's about the present and the future, not about the past. Speaking of the past, look who's back. Jeff in Columbus, Ohio. Wow. What's going on, Paul? Jeff. I mean, I think that's an debate to say, who's the most hated guy in 5 mom history? He tried to say it to me Paul, but you know that's not true. Come on, Paul. I don't know. I'd have to really dig down, but you're in the conversation, Jeff. That's all right. I don't mind it, Paul. I could take it. Hey Paul, I don't mean to come off like John and Louisville. But I have to admit on Monday when I didn't hear your voice at the opening, it's just not the same when you're not in the booth, my man. I don't care who you get to set up. The Paul fine bomb show knees pie Paul fine bomb on the microphone and I like I said, I don't want to sound like John and lily. Speaking of which, you know what might be the call of the year already? Is what Mitch just not this one? John. Hey, when John took down John, the opening day of the brackets. You remember that call? Oh yeah, I do. That was a classic. I got to give Mitch credit. Hey, Paul, I mean, we're really in spring ball right now. But your boy Griff came in like it was conference play. He came in with his a game earlier in the year, didn't he? Boy, I thought Griff, I mean, we have a lot of good guests, but Griff just blew everyone else away with his appearance two days ago. Oh, I know it. And you know what makes it a good guess when Griff is on Paul. He's one of the few, if not the only guests in analysts, that you come back and challenge. I've been telling you this, why don't you challenge all your guests and analysts like you challenge grip. That's what makes it, that's what makes it radio gold. I mean, what do you think? Well, that's all we had the first guest today. I challenged him. You did. I feel like I do that occasionally, but I appreciate the tip. Do you have any. When you get guys like pat 40 on and those guys, I don't know why you don't challenge them. Speaking of which, how about the paralegal coming in last night with a great idea about the brackets for the analysts and gas? Okay. He came in and said, we had to call our bracket. Now we ought to have who are the worst Talking Heads on the show. Right. And I'm thinking, we'll just have to make the paralegal the tournament chairperson. So you know me and always talking about the talking head. So if you had to. Well, that's what I'm saying. If you had to see the top four worst Talking Heads on the show, who would they be? All right, I'll go 40. I'll go Barrett's Lee, I'll go up. I gotta think of his name. But he's with the pay site. What's that pay site that's out there now? Yeah, where's the guy from the athletic? Well, we talked to Andy Staples, he's all right. Bruce Feldman, he's decent. David oven, I'm trying to think. He's the guy on the West Coast. Thank you so much. Stewart mandel. Stewart. You can't put him in a number one scene.

Rocketship.fm
"jackie x" Discussed on Rocketship.fm
"Other people would reflect back plus what they heard. So they say you know for me. This is where. I learned that. I like to try something hard. And then teach it to somebody else. And that was one of the patterns. I saw So that that was a a nice way for me to really introspective bath and figure out what is it. I wanted to have my life once. He can do anything. Great feedback on where to go when you're at that second stage but after that stage if you decide to pursue a career path after that stage you're moving into product leadership now you're becoming a people manager and that's a whole new ballgame. The first thing to know is that to become a product leader. You need to. I be a good product manager and the seems maybe some people. This is incredibly obvious. But i've definitely met people who said i don't want to get better at execution because i just want to become a manager and the people might team will do the execution and that is not at all how it works first of all because you won't get hired into those roles or promoted into those roles if you're not already showing excellence but second of all because You won't be trusted to to coach the people on your team. If you don't already know how to do it. So i i. Things is like focus on being great at your job and i would even encourage people to To not act like their current. Kim role is some like inconvenience stop on the path people management because that will start the fray. Your relationship with your manager and your relationship with your manager is incredibly important. So the next thing i would say is to focus on starting to pick up some product leadership activities and the the two that i think are really big here. One is mentoring people So this might be unofficial mentoring and might be official mentoring having an intern having a coaching. Apm but really starting to show interest in helping other people develop because that's a huge part of product leadership and building up this track record of people that you've helped who then can write you a nice mix peer review and talk about how helpful you work because that will start to show your skills there. Another one for private leadership is starting to work on processes. And if i process you should work on process. And you're like no. I can't process which is a lot of fiennes for you. Might wanna rethink how much you want to become the people manager because processes a huge part of what people managers are responsible for so even before you become a manager you can work on processes by a developing templates for your teams to us and share them around. You might decide to take over one of the team meetings in lead bad and help organize it for people Volunteer for various types of processing organization all responsibilities. And by doing that you You get to show your skill at those And you get to start to earn the respect of the other. Pm's on your team so that if you do become a manager they'll be like oh that makes a lot of sense. I can see why why she should have become a manager and not like why did she get that rolling not me so this process is really important and then the third thing i'd say is to talk to your manager about it and you don't want to say like i want to be a manager right now because that might free that relationships again but instead he might say I'm really interested in becoming a people manager some day Can we talk about what skills i should focus on and what i should be developing so i'll be ready when the opportunity arises and by putting that out in a future looking lay. Now your manager is free to go right down all the reasons why they're not gonna promote you right now but now you have this nice list of what you should be working on. That can help but the idea managers have in case they hadn't thought of it and give you give you really important feedback on on where he needs work okay. We've gone through a lot here. It's probably a good time to take one final break to hear from our sponsors. Well then come back to cover. Some common mistakes made along with some final thoughts. This episode is brought to you by issue whether you work for yourself or you're part of a team. It's time to get creative. Make your online presence and your business stand out from the rest with issue. First impressions are everything. If you're looking to make an impact with your online content you need issue. The easiest way to make your creative ideas come to life and share everywhere you want to be seen. Issue is the all in one platform to create and distribute beautiful digital content from marketing materials. To magazines to flip books to brochures and a lot more there's no need for endless scrolling through pdf's issue features your creative in an easy to view way on every single device get started with issue today four free or if you sign up for premium account. You'll actually get fifty percent off when you go to issue dot com slash podcast and use the promo code rocket chat. That's i s. s due dot com slash podcast and use promo code rocketship at checkout for your free account or fifty percent off your premium account in twenty twenty one. A truly diversified portfolio needs more than the traditional mix of stocks bonds and mutual funds needs private real estate studies have shown that portfolios with an allocation of private real estate generally delivered a better risk adjusted return with more annual income and lower volatility over the past two decades. Thanks to its track. Record of consistent performance through multiple market cycles with fund rise this level of powerful diversification is now available to you. Budweiser rise provides access to diversified portfolios of private real estate to all investors with their industry leading easy to use platform. Whether you're looking to add stable cash flow via dividends or for long term growth appreciation fundraise makes investing in private. Real estate is easy as investing in stocks bonds or mutual funds. See for yourself. How one hundred fifty thousand. Investors have built a better portfolio with private real estate. It takes just a few minutes to get started would have fun rise dot com slash rocketship. Today that's f. u. n. d. r. i s. e. dot com slash rocketship fundraise dot com slash rocketship. Welcome back we're in the homestretch of today's episode one where we're learning how to navigate or product careers. Jackie bavaro author of cracking the. Pm career talked about three stages that one goes through. Basically product managers senior product manager and product leader and she offers great advice route advice. That's a result of a great career in product that she's had herself she seen what's worked and well what exactly hasn't worked in fact. Jackie talks about some mistakes that she's seen made along the way things that can hopefully be avoided. One of the common mistakes i see is under investing in your relationship with your manager. I think sometimes people have a tendency to either get competitive with her manager or to to sort of vent and let it all out to their manager complained to their manager But in most companies your managers. Either the person who decides to promote you or at least somebody who needs to advocate for you to promotion committee and so your manager they need to want to promote you and they need to believe that you are going to make their lives easier. They want to know that. Like okay. great. If i make you a manager you're gonna handle all those people for me and not that you're gonna come and complain to me and make my life topper now. Be another person who i have to. I have to deal with investing in that relationship. Really get to know your manager Understand what their goals are. What keeps them awake at night because the way that you grow in your career for most of these levels is you start to delegate some of your current responsibilities and that frees up your time so now you can take on Bigger and better responsibilities. And that's true for you but it's also true for your manager so if you can connect with your manager they might give you some really high level important stretch opportunities that you love because it's a chance to show these strategic skills and get exposure at a higher level in the company and they love because.

Storytelling with Puck
"jackie x" Discussed on Storytelling with Puck
"Careers officer but he. Yeah i think we go through school especially once you get into secondary school and it's all about the exams. It's about what you learn what you can take out into the outside world. What career you'd you'll you're going to be doing is that we're told what time to arrive. What time to have lunch when to go on a break sit down. Listen you kind of restrained completely bound up completely with all of these these rules that we have to adhere to said that by the time you get out into the world kim wilde if you actually even end up doing anything that you really want today because we kind of heavily. His expectations put opponents. You just sometimes get to the point where you think. I'm not allowed to do that. I'm not allowed to speak up. I'm not allowed to show people who i am. And what. I believe because people are so frightened of being judged all being told off actually just to be in a room with someone. That says a give you permission to do that you you of course you can do that. I have one lady who was a former teacher. Come to me. She'd retired so she'd done a whole lot. Thirty forty years of her career and she came to one of my finding your voice workshops where of obsequious with people on giving them that power and a lot of it is around. Play a lot of what i do comes from my acting background. My acting training so it is around a just giving people the opportunity to create an express themselves with that voice. And i have a rehearsal piecyk if people to the practice pace and it's kinda about using the different levels of your voice little deep authority voice. So this like benny voice which is very passionate token from the heart or took him from the head which is very inspirational. When in a storytelling voice that we use and i said to this this woman had given the practice patient she started reading in. You know there's elements that we use the different elements of your body can use that really deep authoritative voice. And she said no. Just give it a go. Just you know deep down. We're talking about this neanderthal man kind of authority and she said no. I can't do that. what why why. Can't you do that. And she said well. When i was a child any time i used as a deep voice like that. My mom told me to stop because it was. I was using my peggy mount voice. Now hewlett let your thought to remember who picked him out was vaguely. Remember her for a an actress in the forties and the fifties and she had this really deep eastern voice and obviously her mom had kind of associated or or made. This poor woman thinks that anytime. She used a authoritative voice berryman. She was a teacher that she was somehow a horrible battleaxe of a woman so she never used it and i. It's not kind of thing that we have so many constraints as children growing up that we take with us into adulthood and we just. We don't need them anymore. We don't need that baggage anymore. So so yes. I think it's it's about giving people that permission as well and in giving them the permission their confidence naturally grows because they suddenly go know i am valid. What i have to say is valid. Who i am is valid. The ideas and the messages i want to share is valid. So i think commission is a is a big thing. That's wonderful. i think it seems as well to lead on to them than being able to give permission to themselves significant permission at one moment which then allows them to build up the confidence as you explained to them be able to give them permission themselves permission when they are then in front of a classroom again always. They are speaking public in a public arena. All in business or whatever it is. they're doing. Actually that train of fort leads me quite nicely onto another question. I wanted to ask you about so. You've explained what you're doing for people and allowing them to to speak and giving them the power to speak. But i know you work with quite a variance of people so currently fumbled but she work with actors. You work with business people you what with teams and then is it also with professional speakers or have i missed. So how does it vary when you're working with these people in terms of how you approach the situation and how you approach help all does it. Vary i i. I don't think it varies a great deal. Because as i said earlier is the acting training at any actor and go you go to. I think the chinese is basically decide but it it something i feel and i've certainly found since working with adults and I've had a real chance in in the last few months to think about it is the acting. Training is something that is of benefit to everybody so in that training you you play. So they're all those games that will so think ooh Actually stuff actually like. I've just explained this. There's a law imply as some research went on to say that it's very important products to continue playing into adulthood. There's older techniques around voice. How you use your pitch. You'll tone how you use pauses and obviously alongside that comes breath so breathing exercises. Obviously when we breathe normally sweet we use vegetative breath. We only use the top fat lungs at. But when you're when you're breathing for performance you have to learn how to use your diaphragm which is a whole other set of Of of breathing and then onto improvisisation is. I mean it's been proven. Improvisation is just lights up the brain in in all sorts of ways and we improvise everyday people. You you say to somebody. We're going to improvisation they will go code. But actually it's every time we open my mouth. I'm improvising right. Now you're improvising in your answers to me. So i think everything along those lines weather. I'm working with Geena speaks or any kind of speeches if they've gotta talk that they're doing a presentation to make again. My job is to get them to performance. And so i will touch on all of those things from playing to improvise ation to voice to breath to actually honing what it is their message that they have to say and it goes back again to what the actor said to me in that dressing room. That if you don't believe what you're saying your audience went believe that either. So that's that's why sometimes people in the business world. They saw two d. presentations but they don't know what it is. They're talking about really there. They somebody else's asked them. It's not their talk. It's not it's not personal to them. It's what they do is job and said that's when excuse me those kind of presentations can get quite dull. Because people don't they don't understand what they're saying themselves so the audience don't understand what they're saying they're not leaping back to stories and how you relate any kind of presentation back to your own story and then three doing that. You engage more. You make it more personal more interesting for yourself. Therefore you make it more personal more interesting for the audience and that goes right the way through so even with with actors actors or obviously more specific they have script to learn or they have a piece that they need to perform at than it is a bit again. It's all the same basics of seekers back to actor's training obviously but they still need to be given permission in lots of ways to just let go because a lot of the actors trading which again works across teams works across leaders. it works across.

One Life Radio Podcast
"jackie x" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"We have to start acting. Why will the fda approved pfizer's vaccine today and we talked about it with mary. Holland scott gottlieb. Who who was a former fda commissioner also see nbc contributor and is a member of the boards of pfizer. I mean come on genetic testing startup. Tempus healthcare tech company inc and biotech company alumnia. He also serves as co chair of norwegian cruise. Lines holdings and royal caribbeans. Healthy sale panel. And you know it's like that's probably why the cruise lines are requiring vaccines. And now he's also on the board for pfizer. Like what the you know. What like what is going on here. Well and i think we know what is going on mandate the mandate. They are hoping that by making this move and we can have lots of debates as far as the timing of it if it's appropriate not appropriate. The long term safety say they are hoping that this entices another part of the population to abandon what we have helped to Incompliance that is what they are hoping. You know i've been kind surprise even in my circle In those very very close to me. Of course i think feel strongly about this but i've been surprised by how much the fear has gotten to some and they have gone. Gotten a dose of gently had a significant reaction. Did this I wrestle. With the decision i went and got the first. Does i had a terrible reaction. I will not be going back. You know another one. But they're hoping they're hoping that the theory team gets to us and that this little bit of what they believe is going to be. Reassurance will write to comply but bernadette wing a good thing of us. Do not because i can tell you me right now raising my hand i will not comply. I won't either going to lead to further mandates but it so we need to look at that through that light. yeah and until there's the the The pharmaceutical companies are liable for their actions. We should all question whether or not in my opinion how we move forward. It just doesn't seem right. You know and there was a there was a gentleman. I i apologize. I believe jimmy was his name. He's the father of a child spoke at the beginning of the rally that lost his son to a to a vaccine to the covert nineteen vaccine. Correct just just a. I mean got heart wrenching Single parents who had gotten up there. Talk about how you know. Even as a baby he cared for his son a raise ten enduring kobe. You know he really thought the vaccine has to be better than the shutdown better than the isolation and so he gave it a few weeks but then he took his time in and gave him the vaccine and within a few days the the teenage boys sixteen. We should hit home for me. Having a teenage myself Have passed away. This was entire. Life is entire world in the guilt that this man lives with and he just. He wasn't informed. He didn't know that his halfway from large he just had no idea analyst. Yeah with a heartbreaking story. yeah it was. We've got one minute til the music starts. Jackie what is our call to action. all right. the call to action is of course. If you're not a member for vaccine tilles wanna keep up with our legislative action blurts. what's happening. You gotta go to our website. We also have an app. Download the app. You can catch me on the high buyer. You can catch me on one radio. You've missed my you know episodes. That's a great way to connect with us Lastly stop complying right. There's only so much advocacy we can do. At the end of the day. Each of us have to stand up in our own communities our own churches our own school. And say i will not comply with not lady. You would not intimidate me. I'm going to and bass over new to do. Absolutely i. And i believe that we're standing up against corruption. Unprecedented corruption here in america Jackie thank you so much always a pleasure everyone. I hope you enjoyed the show. You know what you're welcome. You'll get one body you'll get one mind and you get one life protected..

One Life Radio Podcast
"jackie x" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"Truth of who. We are A you know again. That's why we're so thankful for people like you. You talk about this on the stage that are willing to show the truth behind this movie because with out you it would be an even greater uphill battle than it is right now and i shared with the audience and i'm sharing. I'll share it with the audience now. A lot of people don't know you know how things work behind the scenes. I pay to play. This show would never be on the air. If i wasn't paying for it you know and there's very little time available monday through friday friday in in mainstream radio there just is i pay to play you know. People looked at the crowd. I'm like do you know what that means. And they looked at me like no they'd most of them did not know what that means. That means that that that. If i fall short i've got to put in my own money if i don't have enough sponsors or enough people that support the show. You know it comes out of my own pocket but i believe in what i do so much that i you know i i. I'm not gonna. I'm not going to quit easily. You know i'm just not so. Did you think that the crowd was surprised. When i said that. Did anybody talk about it afterwards. Yeah i think you know. A lot of these things were discussing. It's like your shocked but not surprised like you know there's just as like you know happening but when you actually hear anything you start putting the pieces together. I think almost every person who i spoke with afterwards they were just so inspired to do something i really was expecting. We're gonna at least have a few naysayers. Who said oh yeah like. I didn't like that. I was blown away every single person. I talked to came away. I am willing to stand with you. We are not going away and we are going to fight alongside of you need a choice. Everyone in this country needs a choice to have control over their over their body and what they do with it you know. I'm looking at the clock. We're going to go for a quick break. We'll be right back. You're listening to jackie schlegel on one life. Radio one advertise on one life. Radio send us an email info at one life. Radio dot com. It's back to school time. And that means that you need to boost your immune defences with organic by the immune support bundle is a double pack of protection for your heart working immune system. It's a holistic approach to wellness combining daily support with extra defenses when you need them most all organic vitamin cs zinc and adapted genyk superfoods. Give your a nate immunity a helping hand for a limited time your immune support bundle will include an extra box of immunity a forty dollar value at no charge. That way you and your family can feel safer get yours by going. To organic by dot com. That's organic fi dot com decade of educating and learning. You're listening to one live radio. Are you ready. Welcome back to one life. Radio this is bernadette with junior in the mix and jackie schlegel. We are broadcasting live from dallas texas on iheart media as well as ame in southern california on. Abc news talk Jackie schlegel is the executive director for texans for vaccine choice. We're doing a recap of the freedom rally that we attended this weekend. Okay so what. Are you most proud of jackie. Well we touched on this just a little bit But the unity the compassion. The friendliness of everyone oftentimes again. I think they just want to get the worst side of us capturing bill they want to show divisiveness they want to show. You know an anti vaccine bob and they just went to get that We had zero security issues. Zero counter protests. Were just really really proud of all of the members who showed up represented As the calm reasonable voice of vaccine choice it was great. It really was just to just to just to be a part of of our country. You know our government our state all these things that matter we all should have an equal opinion to be at least heard right. That's what the first amendment is. All about our freedom of speech you know at the freedom fight that was a lot of talk of the failures on both republicans and democrats on this issue. But i hear that. They are back in the capital working in a special session today. What can we expect. you know. i think while we were very well behaved bernadette. I'm not sure our elected officials are going to take our lead. Think we're gonna have a lot more political sties. I do think gonna have a lot more finger pointing as i talked abou- from the capital. You know the the democrats had fled the The state in an effort to block another bill and there was a lot of blame game going on you know because they did. Stop this special session for moving forward. But as i pointed out the truth is is if they wanted. If republicans wanted a ban on employee mandates they could've done during the regular section. We'd like to finger-pointing we'd like to say well. They are stopping this but the truth is our elected officials across. The aisle could've gotten his done had they wanted to and they did. It will be interesting to see what the reception now is. If you can't get the governor to put this issue of employer mandates on this special session agenda and did a bill to his desk then lemme tell you. There's enough blame to go around for all of them. The time is now. The people are united on this issue. If they can't make it happen then.

One Life Radio Podcast
"jackie x" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"Welcome back to one life. Radio this is bernadette junior in the mix we are broadcasting live from dallas texas on iheart media as well as km eta southern california on abc. News talk before. I get to jackie schlegel. I wanna give a shout out for environmental. they are one of our sponsors. I take their probiotic there. deep immune tariff flora broad spectrum symbiotic every single day to protect my immune system. I believe in it wholeheartedly. It's gotten an se award. And i encourage everyone out there. Listening to take care of their gut microbiome. It's one of the most important things that you can do. Go to environmental dot com. Check out their deep immune system. It's the one. I mean a probiotic. It's in the little it's blue it's got like a little blue blue my ad Accent on the box. Tariff laura deep immune. Okay let me get. Jackie schlegel everyone. Jackie is the executive director for texans for vaccine choice and just six short years. She took a group of passionate moms and turned it into the epitome of grass roots activism setting an unprecedented standard for the nation and even drawing worldwide attention that flooding group of twenty is now a political action committee and educational foundation with over seventy five thousand official members who proudly align themselves with texans for vaccine choice and thanks to jackie's endless energy and passion. This group is organized with local branches. Core members and team leaders impacting their schools their communities and their legislators their website is texans for vaccine choice dot com. Welcome sister jackie energy. I don't know burn today. Is we had a big get. How's your energy. Do i gotta say. I got my butt kicked a little three hours sleep. I took a nap yesterday in the middle of the day. I never to that. And i still slept like a rock last night But but i'm glad i showed up. I'm glad i went. And i'm glad i was part of of This this this this freedom rally that you had texans for vaccine choice. I think it's so important that we have a choice. It's not that i'm anti medical. I am pro-choice. No matter what it is no one should get the right to tell another person what to do with their body period. That's my stand. I absolutely agree. In what a great event it was we were so thankful you were able to come in to share into connect. You had a message that needs to be heard on saturday. And i know that it's so different from what you normally do. All righty. yeah but you did it. You did it gravely emboli and i'm just so proud of you. Thank you for being there. Well i i appreciate the opportunity to speak. It's only my second time really actually that i've spoken in front of an audience like that. But you know what you have to be brave. We all have to be brave. We all have to be smart. And i love the work that you're doing because this conversation needs to happen it needs to happen in order for us. To thrive our democracy to thrive as a country. I believe that with all my heart. So why did you do this. Freedom fight jackie well simply put. We do three things. I texted perplexing choice. We educate we advocate in. We build community. I think we did. Those three things on saturday had an incredible stellar lineup. Eileen o. for one. I was just so taken aback by the doctors who spoke. Oh yeah i learned so much from them so it was educational was We did advocacy. We talk to families about getting involved in showing up. i mean clearly. Our elected officials knew we were there. They knew we were outside. And we were advocating for our rights. And then i think the third and final component of building community. This can be a lonely journey right. I mean sometimes you feel like you are against the work and we have so many new individuals join us in joining our movement. That really my goal of this event was for everybody to have something to come together on. You have a rope. We knew we were going to have individuals who were fascinated with this. Kobe vaccine who joined us for whatever reason and we even tried to reach out to the lesson. No they are welcome at texas for vaccine choice And so those. Are you know the reasons that we came together in clearly on the advocacy Just to extend the reach to those who are fighting back against these medical mandates We reached a lot of people in saturday. And i'm really glad we did the event. Yeah i am too and you know. I had a purpose bringing my mask with me and showing it to the crowd because i was trying to really convey that there are a lot of people out there that are scared like my seventeen year old daughter. I brought her up in the speech. Because you know and it's funny and mother's day she got me the ring that said mama bear. I talked about that and the speeches well but it's important that we understand that. In order for us to move forward is a democracy we have to. We have to respect one another's opinions about how we feel about what we do with our body right. They have just as much right to choose to get a vaccine as we do to not choose to get a vaccine and i think you know i. Hopefully i accomplished that. Hopefully i did. I'm so glad you clarified on that mission. In what you were relating. I think that compassion is a beautiful message and we might not agree on everything. But we all came together in compassion. Could you imagine how powerful me would be if we did just that. Yeah we have to embrace each other's differences you know Most of the crowd believed in organized religion. I'm a buddhist you know. They're trying to create peace and and you know understanding for how they were feeling in all those mothers and fathers in the crowd. Like you. Jackie that have vaccine injured children. We need to listen to you. We need to make changes in government to protect all children. I'm very passionate about it as you know just like you. But let's talk about the media. Shutout has any mainstream news or media covered the event. I haven't really seen any media coverage i was able to. We went out to dinner after the event or saturday night. And i was thrilled when i looked up on the television and i saw a sure. You know little segment on it. I was hoping i was going to see more. I went home and searches search. I finally found the in. I kinda had to laugh. Because the only coverage i cook fine was maybe a twenty two second clip about freedom. Rally never mentioned our name stated were hundreds. Well there were fifth. He hundred people at least by our admits that showed up to this rally. There's well over a thousand people there. Maybe two thousand and our name is texans vaccine choice. The fact that we've had come right media shout. Let me tell you what they want to show. Is that divisive community. What they want to show is angry protesters. They knew they weren't gonna get that when they showed up. And that's not the message. They were getting. They decided they weren't going to show the.

One Life Radio Podcast
"jackie x" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"Report. When it comes out and to add their own research so. I think it will be a topic of debate very very soon I think there's a lot that we don't know about what the true origin of this is. But from my perspective certainly the leading hypothesis is that there was some kind of a breakout from this wuhan laboratory where they were doing that corona virus research and they work. It was clearly gain of function research. I mean that's clear. In other words. It was bio weapons research. I believe that mandates are morally and spiritually wrong. I agree with with Robert kennedy jr. any also is quoted as saying that human rights guaranteed by the us constitution and bill of rights are being decimated. Do you agree with that. I do i i you know. Human dignity is sort of not explicitly in the constitution. But that's what it's all about bernadette its dignity for free exercise of religion for free speech for freedom of assembly to petition the government the integrity of your body the integrity of your spirit. That's what america represents to the world and these new policies around cove. It closed down churches. That closed down demonstrations that are censoring people. Through social media. Enter telling people they have to inject toxic substances in their bodies. These are decimating our conversation and we should all be deeply concerned And you know you you touched on this a few minutes ago but and this is written by lynne. Mctaggart and brian hubbard. They are the editors of what the doctors don't tell you they go on to say that. Then there's the small matter of unintentional apartheid if seen hesitancy is greatest among the black and asian communities will any government dare to restrict their movements in favor of white people. What do you say to that. Well i seventy. Five percent of african americans had noted the vaccine so far so this is not only going to be an apartheid against black people. This is going to be an apartheid against unvaccinated people. And we're putting up. Jim crow to point right now and i think it's horrifying. We know where that goes. It's good we shouldn't be on board with this. But i'm gonna have to run but always great to talk to you all right. Yeah we've gone a little over a thank you so much. Mary holland. I encourage everyone to. You're welcome and i encourage everyone to go to children's health defense dot org stay tuned. We've got jackie schlegel coming up. You're listening to one life. Radio advertise one life radio. Send us an email info at one life. Radio dot com. Hey everyone. I've got some furby lewis. News her in politics a brand that i've used for years has joined us as our official pet sponsor of one life radio casteran. Politics is the maker of america's number one organic pet food. There are gannex. Line of recipes is the only complete line of usda organically certified pet food and their pristine recipes are made with responsibly. Sourced ingredients such as wild caught. Salmon and grass-fed beef caster in politics is the most comprehensive portfolio of purposeful pet food setting the new standard and pet nutrition shop in order online at castor politics. Pet dot com. That's caster pollock's pat dot com.

One Life Radio Podcast
"jackie x" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"Welcome back everyone. You're listening to one life. Radio this is bernadette with junior in the mix and mary holland we are broadcasting live from dallas texas on iheart media as well as cami. Et and southern california on abc news. Talk mary holland is she. Serves as president and general counsel of children's health defense. She left the faculty of new york university school of law where she surfers seventeen years most recently directing. Its graduate lawyering program. Mary received her master of arts and juris doctorate degrees from columbia university and our undergraduate degree from harvard. She has worked in international public and private law and she is the co author of the books vaccine epidemic and the hp. The vaccine on trial seeking justice for our generation betrayed her website or their website is children's health defense dot org. We are getting an update from the children's health defense so mary. What can you tell us about robert. F kennedy's new book. The real anthony fao cheesy so very exciting Bernadette the book will be published in november Bobby has been working on this for over a year and It's taken longer than we might have liked. But i think it is going to be a blockbuster book pre-order it now on amazon So you'll get sent to you right the day that it's finally published but it's really a look not only at tony faculty who's a crucial figure in the cova situation. But he's been leading really the national institutes of health particularly an infectious diseases for forty years. And so he's been extremely influential in this period of time when we've gone from the aids crisis in the nineteen eighties to really this Focus on vaccines against infectious diseases. Whether it's Ebola or whether it's h one n one or now it's cove it. Tony saudi has been at the lead in this. And i think we have to understand who he is and what. His role has been and the subtitle of the book. Is you know how it relates to democracy and human rights. these are moments right now bernadette and it's really important that people understand that we are moving very rapidly with today's decision by the fda for biosecurity state where we will really be discriminating among people based on their vaccination status. And they're wearing masks and they're taking tests and we really have to think long and hard. If this is the world we wanna live in. The likelihood is those things won't be an isolation they will be actually paired with a lot of other records about you that will be available electronically your property records your health records your criminal record your employment record and so we really have to look at. Is this the world we want to move into. I know i for one really jones. No i don't at all. I'd like to know what their records are. I'd like to know if some of these guys like scott gottlieb who is a former. Fda says he was born. June eleven nine. yes yes. He was a commissioner and he's a physician and someone sent it to me during the break. It says american physician investor who service at twenty three hundred twenty third commissioner of the food and drug administration from 2017 until april twenty. One thousand nine. He is presently a resident fellow at the conservative. Think tank in the american enterprise institute partner at the venture capital firm of new enterprise associates. How does that happen. it's the revolving door. And actually i just read over the weekend. Bernadette the phrase the one way you're right so the powers that be want to have twenty four seven comprehensive surveillance about us as citizens. Needless to say they don't want that kind of transparency about the decision making process. I mean it's fda decision this is out a public meeting probably the most consequential food and drug administration decision. Ever in history as it is now going to be mandated pervasively in the united states and around the world and there was no meeting bernadette no meeting and have any that looks vaccine and biologics. It's called ver- back. They did not convene it to make this decision. That tells you something. They don't want transparency. They don't want accurate information. They want to move ahead. There is a policy agenda here that i think is we have to better understand. I cannot wait for the book. The real anthony thousandby by robert f. kennedy coming out in the fall okay. So the debate is heating up over the cove. Nineteen booster shots as well. What's the latest news and booster shots in the united states. And the latest news is that the centers for disease control and the fda have both given a green light to boosters. And they're saying that they recommend them that the current vaccine's out there may not be affect against the delta varian and they're recommending that particularly people who are vulnerable. Get a third shot earned debt. If the first two didn't work is the third one right right. Let's real here. And of course people who are most vulnerable are the ones who are most susceptible to events. So i hope that people if you know. I hope that people use their commonsense here. Yeah well you said earlier in the broadcast it's only forty two percent effective anyway. The the pfizer. One current senate effective. Yeah forty two percent effective. They say that's they are number against delta circulation. Why would you take something that is less than fifty percent likely to help you see. I don't know. Yeah i'll i'll stick with my regular exercise trying to eat as much organic food. Yeah my vitamin deem vitamins. Yes yes yes healthy life right boost your immune system absolutely and keeping your mind clear. Keep your television off. That fear can get that. Fear can do all kinds of crazy stuff to your body absolutely okay. So the epa recently banned the use of Chlorof- fire five firoz. Is that this one. I put your phone ok pronounced okay. It's it's exciting. So the the the environmental protection agency just finally after sixty five years bernadette banned the use of chlor purify which is an extremely toxic. Pesticide that is particularly harmful to children. And they only did this. After a decision in may by the ninth circuit court of appeals that basically said the epa has been acting in an egregious manner. And that they don't have science to back up during you know. Finally it's been banned which is great news but it does tell us yet. We have to do better. These laws are not protective of enough of of of citizens of children in particular. They're just not. This was on the market for sixty five years. Sixty five years. How does that happen here. How does that happen. The way it happens is the real truth is the way it happens. Is these agencies. Get captured bernadette. They get captured by the industries they regulate and so the golf. The golf industry the agribusiness industry. They basically have their people in these agencies and they make sure that any decision they make is blunted stunted so that it really doesn't impede their use can make more money if you have pesticides you can make more money can make help people in the process. That's the point. He'll those costs are internalized. You know we're gonna keep having problems like this. Congress really needs to act. And that's what this article that we published in the defender from beyond pesticides is where the author comes from Until we really have congress act on this. we're in trouble. we have you know. Children's health is about toxic exposures and these pesticides can be very toxic. I mean they're intending to kill insect. So of course they can have side effects. Yeah no absolutely and so There are international. Search is going on right now to find the origins of sars covy to what they found so far. Well there's clearly a really interesting Half bernadette that needs to be explored more realistically and further about the wuhan lab about collaboration between us scientists in about funding through the national institutes of health to do this corona virus gain of function research right dual use research both as a weapon and also as a vaccine to prevent this bioweapon. We know that the president's Report which was do ninety days after he announced it. We know that that report is going to coming out soon. We know that there are some fantastic organizations out. There like organic consumers association. That are ready to scrutinize that.

News 96.5 WDBO
"jackie x" Discussed on News 96.5 WDBO
"Jackie over looking for a quick food break that won't break the bank. Well, hey, guess what, You found it. You see it sheets you can get to delicious snack wraps for just five bucks. No kidding. To mouthwatering wraps packed full of flavorful ingredients for only $5 Choose from faves like our bacon wrapped burger rapport, grilled chicken wrap, then customize it by choosing the cheese sauce and veggies you crave. So hey, enjoy the eats and the value order on the app and pick up curbside at select locations, sheets run and done. Nothing ignites your senses like the European Adventures and world class thrills of Busch Gardens, Williamsburg here, the gravity defying drops and speed of our record breaking coasters. See the world's most beautiful theme park as you stroll to are elegantly theme villages and treat all your senses to the live concepts nightly fireworks in coasters in the dark. Summer nights. June 25th to July 29th Save up to 40% on Ticket Some fun cards. Hurry offering soon restrictions apply. You may see a star money. Bonus days are here. So shop summer styles now and earn rewards faster through July 5th. It's a special time when saw reports, members earn bonus points and get to their next reward. Faster. Get $10 in star money for every $50 spent with a Macy's card or for every $100 spent with a bronze membership. Visit. Macys dot com slash star money for exclusions and details. Offer may vary in select stores. Join our mailing list. Sign up to receive the three big things you need to know. Just tap the three big things. Newsletter Button Wdbo. After receive emails you look forward to What is a pirate's favorite firework? And maybe happy Fourth of July. Alright, we got jokes. Keep them coming. 6 25 on Orlando's Evening news. Good evening. I'm Kevin Refused Lego land Florida's close to celebrating its 10th anniversary and visitors can help them build a huge birthday cake beginning on Monday. If you go, the resident master model builders at Legoland.

Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"jackie x" Discussed on Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"That's <Speech_Male> the most important <Speech_Female> thing is <Speech_Female> that you know. <Speech_Female> Even if <Speech_Female> this is a <Speech_Male> period <Speech_Male> in life <Speech_Male> that is finite <Speech_Female> <Speech_Male> it will have been a <Speech_Male> fantastic experience. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Male> I can witter <Speech_Male> on live. <Speech_Female> Benign <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> even if no one's listening <Speech_Male> while <Speech_Male> i'm sure they will continue <Speech_Male> listening and i think the podcast <Speech_Male> is. <Speech_Male> There's a lot of interview. <Speech_Male> Podcasts out there but i <Speech_Male> think it's <Speech_Male> it's a good one and <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> i'm not gonna <Speech_Male> recommend it because then people won't <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> wash my what not <Speech_Male> would do is absolutely <Speech_Male> and i'm sure that could <Speech_Male> be bringing as well. It's been <Speech_Male> really love to meet <Speech_Male> you an <Speech_Male> hour and <Speech_Male> a half two hours <Speech_Male> half my goodness <Speech_Male> talking about longtime <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> we'll see again. <Speech_Telephony_Male> We'll <Speech_Male> be back next <Speech_Male> week <Speech_Male> with the podcast with nigel <Speech_Male> player. <Speech_Male> And then all the ones <Speech_Male> from clapham coming up <Speech_Male> do come and <SpeakerChange> see us in clapham <Speech_Male> if you get <Speech_Male> the chance thanks very <Speech_Male> much thank you jackie. <Speech_Male> Weaver goodbye <Speech_Male> i'm not gonna say <Speech_Male> the puck. I'm not gonna say the catchphrase. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> Thank <SpeakerChange> you <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> thank you jackie weaver. <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Speech_Music_Male> <Music> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> You <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> have been listening <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> to <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> me. Rich <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> dining my guest <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> jackie weaver. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Thank you very much <Speech_Music_Male> to scam. For god's <Speech_Music_Male> providing <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> banging <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> new theme tune. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> I hope you're enjoying <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> it <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Thanks <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> to pass as well play <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> for so long. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> We've got have rights issue <Speech_Music_Male> with <SpeakerChange> youtube. That's <Speech_Music_Male> why we got new <Speech_Male> weightless <Speech_Male> can you june. <Speech_Male> I say <SpeakerChange> it's good <Speech_Male> anyway. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> To my friend <Speech_Music_Male> director <Speech_Male> chris evans don. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> I'm indebted to ben <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> walker <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> producer <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and everybody <Speech_Music_Male> at a cast. The british <Speech_Music_Male> comedy guide on <Speech_Music_Male> at all everyone <Speech_Music_Male> who <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> thank you very much <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> for listening. This <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> is a skype <SpeakerChange> potato <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and go faster. Stripe <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> don't come <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> production. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> You know you can get a budget <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> go. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> His go <Speech_Music_Male> foster stripe dot com. <Speech_Music_Male> Pulsa has <Speech_Music_Male> loads of downloads <Speech_Music_Male> in books. Fantastic <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> things a <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> club. Version of its own <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> As wealthy <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and get that shows <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> delivered <Speech_Music_Male> every month <Speech_Music_Male> it's <Speech_Music_Male> fantastic and fries <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> rates but percentage <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> vote. Might one <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> on you. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Ship support them in <Speech_Music_Male> whatever way <Speech_Music_Male> field.

Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"jackie x" Discussed on Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"I wouldn't like to be in the rover by no no. I wouldn't tie. Now you have a faberge egg vote if you'd were the appropriate but the choice. I mean you choose the lifestyle. William could walk away every never going there. It's sort of i feel. Have you watched the crown. Do you watch that man. I feel i feel that. You know i don't i just feel sorry for them. All of them really. I don't think. I don't think. I don't think it's the thing i'd wanna swap life for to be in that situation regardless of all the money and everything just seems a certainly in recent years a lot of misery for the for the members of the royal family falling in love with the wrong people and being made to do the right thing supposedly in that. That's very much like the chocolate. My family my mom not gonna move our chocolate camilla. Parker bowles is sort of like a really big chocolate. That prince charles wasn't allowed to have ended up having early whitney chocolate Good well look with. I think we're nearly done look i. It's been really. We've you and i taught for a long time. It feels if we thought about fifty five minutes here feels incredible. I is there anything else coming up. Say you want to the podcast. Which is called jackie. We that has the authority that the correct name. It is which you can get wherever you get your podcast. That will hopefully be ongoing forever. There's an episode of me coming up. Is there anything else. Exciting in the pipeline. Bits which account tell you about. Then yeah book. Let's bring in but it's just the editing stage at the moment so that was quite interesting book about was the book about. I think as a book of common sense okay. That sounds good very good christmas gift. House the gesture association of local councils and then coming up that we need to know about from the rest of the. Are you still able to do your your work. Your chief off. Yeah busy dude. I mean i mean. I work weekends and even needs a social whatever actually actually after being big of a social life anyway. I kind of the day job is very interactive with people. And it's kind of to be unpeopled into time. I make sense. It does make sense. You their home of you coming in looking after the dog. I think he's missing you. I think just wanted to spend time with you. Work into well. He's been brilliant. I mean clearly to do all the stuff. I've been doing and continue to do job as well means something has had to go and that's just largely been anything to do with the allegation people often say. Oh what's it like when you walk down the street and you recognize walk down the street and goes and does all the shopping. While i was i was just about ask you whether the no every time anyone you interview anyone the get will the catch phrases thrown back ers wondering if that happened if you did go out. But it's got to the stage where it's still fun or is it. Is it getting to put. we thinking. This is gonna be annoying if this is every compensation have it. It's it's not allowed to be annoying if biscuits as well not allowed to be annoying because that would really be biting the hand that feeds you. And i definitely got the impression. I didn't pop out to the supermarket. I had that sense of people looking at me. Questioning is it isn't it but i think the funniest one was when i went for my job..

Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"jackie x" Discussed on Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"The other is just too gross to will be lovely. Could just imagine very nice. You could put on it to keep it has up okay fair enough jacki weaver. Have you ever seen a ghost. Oh yes right. Tell me all about the ghost you saw. That's not much of a story. I mean. I i guess shortly after my ground died so talking about what age i'm about fourteen fifteen and giving back one night just as you put the light out. I am sure i saw her. What was she doing that creepy. It was why she coming in that time. So is bedtime. That's the problem that's when you sleep. That's a pair. I saw a ghost of my son. When i woke up. And he's not even dead and a disappointed. Even damn i saw when i saw it i thought he must have died in the other talking. About in your focus. He came in he stood by the bed and then he went and stood in the corner. Look to the corner. And i went and he was going on and i reached out and he was completely solid. I reached out and he just was evaporated but he was like a complete. I was asleep. Jackie was asleep. Mine does play chicks sir. Okay oh well that's nice. What did you think she was saying by coming back to say. It's all right. How things that don't understand. Why frightened of ghosts cave. Would light cam freddy krueger. You get but you know if you see someone from from your life going to try to hurt you lure solid form. An ugly do ghost. I don't know. I think i'd come if i'm nothing less she merging but it'd be fun to come back to dick around with people if you don't go slow if and i think i just think someone told me. I think we estimated this before wrongly. I think some fourteen billion people have died..

Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"jackie x" Discussed on Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"Enough me laugh to your time and So how would you describe the podcast and who the other guests who got coming up. Oh gosh lots of them Jay rayner tom allen. I'm tom d back. He's a nice boy. You like anton debate. I do very much. Jeremy vine yogurt sal. Yep reverend kate bodily i she was she was hysterical and say lots of lots more people that are kind of coming along time time. Ganz what sort of questions ask. Because i can. I'll can well. I cannot be held responsible for the questions. The questions largely submitted by people on twitter. Who we know that somebody coming up there invited to to offer questions in my life. I kind of scheme know that people would want to know the answer to the really big questions in life you know what lifelock after corona virus calico on hostile hospital. Can i go on holiday to ten arief. no it's you know. Can you put butter on sandwiches wrong. What goes on skins or other scones. Firdous jamal cream. They apparently unfortu- favorite cheese. She comes up a lot. Dairy conduct the country s with dairy products. What is your favorite cheese jacki. Weaver have to to be honest. I like smoked cheddar. Okay good particularly on pizza. Controversial and audibly chains. Okay i mean that's the blue cheese is a big area say blue cheese a slight thing my favorite cheese cheese well in which case to be an danish bloop. Okay yeah let's not sakina on the still still cheese. I like blue cheese. And i don't like stolen very much. Yeah i'm glad that just comes along with christmas at christmas but i don't like it. I like the french ones really with the blue cheese fig. I say it's already interesting. I was asked about tyrod cope with this. I was to meet aliens and alien invasions and things like that. So there's there's it's quite a broad reach. And how is this gonna do this every single week. Is this going to go on for project per time or is this going to be. I think i will have to give up roundabout seventy nine twenty seventy-nine well you know you could. I as i demonstrate that this is oh hello see husband in the background. Hello this is not quite as good as a child. Coming in and dancing nevarez quite exciting. See your husband he dances. It'd be fun. I'm down get a viral moment with you. That would be actually perfect price. Both i've got about five hundred of these jackie's while i'm saying interational or another so you you can. You can keep going forever. you can have people back. You can have new people all the time. So it's you know it's an it's an endless aso's it's too early. They've literally as we're recording. This the first ones have gone up today. So it's too early to to you to know whether it's whether it's getting big numbers or not whether it's drawer again. Huge amounts of money. But i guess there's two different things there although the be slight overlap one is. There's absolutely no point doing something that nobody's enjoying. You gotta get something out of actually bundy it quite interesting one because somebody sets the other day that not quite so blunt as you must be rolling in it but actually more than ninety five percent of what i do. I don't get paid for through. How much because. I'm too simple to ask but at the same time i kind of think. That's not really the key..

Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"jackie x" Discussed on Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"It's it's we all get it because it's the it's the wonderful ejection of these furious or for men in the face of a reasonable clever woman. That's the is that just makes it. I guess one of the things that kind kinda resonates with me. It is the so often we see things that are wrong. You know. I mean that we come across people who are just wrong in instant so many different ways. Most of the time in the day jobs we have you have to just navigate round. It's you know. Do the best you can with an and in that one moment it was like summary. Justice was dispensed this. Yes i get that. I think it's not something that people can really buy into. Because i think you know let people ask me about high. I get involved in local democracy. Why people get involved in politics a sector. And i thought it was kind of unique to me as often we do but actually a lot of people get involved for exactly the same reason. It's a sense of injustice. Something's wrong and we want to put it right. And i think that's kind of often the glue that binds us. So i think that's what people can of resonated with on some level and it was being reasonable. One and i think we're just so used to seeing the unreasonable and other people the media's the media's intended recently seems to be the other all those guys would be pam in that stuff now because all of that so horrible and rude..

Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"jackie x" Discussed on Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"A good idea. I've been trying to write this week. I love every part of the writing process except doing. That's the only part. I don't like so haven't got much done but i've got i've got some stuff to. I'm with not much about this week. But i i was. I took my Daughter my daughter to the supermarket this week and we've got to the trolley and she's quite a big six year old and she said she wanted to sit in the little seat in the trolleys had to lift her up and i got her in there but it was quite odd. And there's a point where you're just too big to go in the seat in the supermarket. Trolley am i. Remember that myself and i told her i remember the when i sat was when my mom said i couldn't go in the supermarket. Trotted anymore is in western superman and said the the just too big now and i remember being broken and my daughter said. How old were you when that happened. I said i was twenty eight years old. And because he's never too young to hear first twenty eight year old joke she said no. You weren't eight which is still quite close to to happen. But there's something quite poignant about that about those moments in childhood where you realize you have to leave something behind him. My doors getting close to that age re supermarket trolleys at least made me sad anyway. The livestream helicopters are not exactly coming to and the regular ones. Are we still do some of them. But this is the almost the last official one. We're going to be doing before. Heading over to the clapham grand to start doing live shows. We are doing one more. That will be out next week. But we're recording on the second of june. Which is the day this will go out with nigel. Planer from the young ones and nicholas craig and lots and lots of other stuff. I'm very excited about that. Huge fan of his. So you will be at watch that one on twitch when it comes out at eight pm on the second of june. I forgot that. I was going to be in my parents week. Half term so i over recording my end from cheddar. So there's every in somerset so there's every chance you won't get to see but i'm not sure what the internet like in china they do think is the magic of the whole. Which so you never. But you can't come to see those. Gigs at the clapham. Grand the still some to come go chain dot com slash gigs tastic guests on the way. Let's crack on my guest. This week is probably best known for being the chief officer of the cheshire association of local councils. That's why we're all here. Haven't had many council people on the show by just go. it's time to. i'm not gonna have any rubbish. That got to be at least chief officer. Is jackie weaver. Laser german here. She is hello jacki. Weaver richard to see you. We have just been talking for an hour on your podcasts..