35 Burst results for "Javier"

Biden administration to crack down on child labor

AP News Radio

00:52 sec | 3 weeks ago

Biden administration to crack down on child labor

"The Biden administration's promising a new task force after revelations that migrant children are being illegally exploited for labor in the U.S.. There are new figures that some 4000 children were put to work by hundreds of companies that violated child labor laws last year. The Department of Health and Human Services is being scrutinized for possibly releasing migrant children too soon from shelters, pushing them into vulnerable situations. The New York Times reported on a video of HHS secretary Javier becerra, referencing an automaker and saying, this is not the way you do an assembly line, referring to children. The times investigation identified more than 100 migrant kids. Some as young as 12 years old, who said they were working overnights and dangerous jobs for companies throughout

Biden Administration HHS Javier Becerra U.S. The New York Times The Times
Lisbon, Portugal to Host Leading Blockchain Conference in July

CryptoCurrencyWire

00:41 sec | Last month

Lisbon, Portugal to Host Leading Blockchain Conference in July

"For p.m. Wednesday, February 8th, 2023. Lisbon, Portugal, to host leading blockchain conference in July. An upcoming blockchain conference is billed to be one of Europe's grandest crypto events ever with sweet execs from the finest FinTech companies as well as prominent media personalities and blockchain founders attending. Some of the speakers include Javier Garcia, binance leader in Spain and Portugal Zoe, had developer at BNB chain more on perello, continue reading Lisbon, Portugal to host leading blockchain conference in July. The post Lisbon, Portugal to host leading blockchain conference in July appeared first on cryptocurrency wire.

Portugal Lisbon Javier Garcia Bnb Chain Europe Spain
"javier" Discussed on The Café Bitcoin Podcast

The Café Bitcoin Podcast

06:16 min | Last month

"javier" Discussed on The Café Bitcoin Podcast

"The book is also available on the movie's website. So we already answered your tweet there. If you go to sly roundabout way dot com, you can download it either in Spanish or English. And yeah, we just made it available on the film, because we figured, you know, people watch the movie, they get inspired. They know what all this is about. How life-changing can it be? So, you know, put it available there and we need to wrap in about two minutes. So Sharon, you have 60 seconds, please be brief. Yeah, first of all, I just want to say thank you to everyone that is putting out the slide around about way. Javier, gloriana, raul have done an amazing job. And the impact to answer Jane is there's over 50 kids that have pivoted and want to learn how to code in Bitcoin as a result of being exposed to this curriculum. That was one small group. What carlina and Javier and raul and goyan are doing is going to need other people to come in and help. We need a lot more bitcoiners coming in and helping here. And then helping across the world. So I challenge everyone to that. And this is going to be a great film. Awesome. Thanks for sharing. Okay, Carlos, any Javier, any closing comments before we wrap. I want to thank you guys for being here. This has been really great. Really appreciate what you guys are doing. Well, just help us spread the word about the documentary. Given what the conversation was before on the cafe Bitcoin. Now I love me some good controversy is as much as any Bitcoin or but we spend a lot more time fighting than we do just kind of paying a lot of attention to the opportunities to build and to grow the community. And we think this is a story that needs to get out there more. Particularly the efforts done in this high school that are the first place where kids are 16 years old and they're opening, running Bitcoin core nodes before even opening a bank account. That should be pretty powerful. Amazing. It's mind-blowing. And so, you know, the content is there, take it, it's already in Spanish and in English, run with it. And then finally, please visit to teach BTC's Twitter profile. They have tally coins set up. We have an ambitious goal to raise about $10,000 in the coming weeks so that the classes can continue this year. The academic year in El Salvador starts basically right now. And so we want to be able to bring to continue this year to teach more kids. And so please, if you can help us raise some funds for that, our goal is primarily to reach more kids over 300 this year. So it's doubling the size, but then also taking the content that's currently available for 1617 18 year olds. And adapting it for an even younger audience. So by the end of this year, if we're able to publish this to middle schoolers and eventually elementary school, that's the kind of work that former students like Jonathan are going to be able to help us with. So it's graduating more kids and getting them to start teaching their younger generation and building the content and open-sourcing it from there. And that's it, right? So watch the documentary and help us raise some funds. Thanks for your time. Thank you for being here. Sorry, go ahead. I'm sorry, but we got to rap, man. Where we are pretty much we're done. All right, if you can be really fast, like, go ahead. Yeah, I just wanted to mention, again, thank you for the space guys and for giving us this space suit to talk about this. Just wanted to briefly mention, if you want to help, you can sponsor directly just one student with a 120 bucks. And 20 bucks are left for the student that they get to just to stack. So just another mention that. Thank you again, guys. You bet. All right. I really wish, I mean, we should have started rapping earlier because then we could have covered a couple more things, but we got to finish up here. So I just want to thank you guys again for being here really great thing you guys are doing, it's amazing. You know, this is the future of what's going to, in my opinion, it's going to help the whole world. Ten years from now, the kids that are graduating from this are going to be like 20 years old. Or in that range. And they are the future. If they grow up native to this ecosystem, man, that's what changes the world. It's amazing. This film is debuting right now here in actually right now. You can go to the swan YouTube channel and see it. Also, tomorrow, swan signal with Sam Callahan is going to be airing with Greg foss and Lawrence lepar, don't miss that one. And that's pretty much a wrap. I want to say one more thing before we close out here is that thoughts and prayers out to the people in turkey. These earthquakes apparently are pretty brutal. They're estimating the death toll to rise as high as 40,000. So direct and positive energy that way also help there if you can. You have been listening to cafe Bitcoin. The place for your morning news preferred to hang out for some of the smartest minds in the industry. Would you talk about Bitcoin every single day? We start at 7 a.m. Pacific time a.m. eastern role for two hours live on Twitter spaces if you can't catch the live show. It is also a podcast on fountain Spotify and Apple. You can throw myself or swan a follow to be notified of when those drop. Thanks to swine Bitcoin, the sponsor of this show, my crew aunt Peter says for life producer Jacob could not do this without you. I am your host, I'll stand here and I work for swan if you want to know more, shoot me a DM, happy to help you. Thanks again. Carlos Javier, Jonathan. Everybody who came out to help today, to teach, appreciate you guys. Appreciate what you guys are doing. Also, all the speakers that come on this show on the regular. That's been their personal time to teach people about Bitcoin. And what we call this bright orange future. This is also what we call getting on the mission. If you don't know what that means, hang on. You'll figure it out. Love all you guys everybody have a great day. Well, I can crush it.

Javier raul carlina goyan Sharon BTC Carlos Jane El Salvador Sam Callahan Greg foss Lawrence lepar Twitter Jonathan YouTube turkey Carlos Javier Spotify Jacob
Suspect in custody in connection with shootings targeting New Mexico Democrats' homes, offices

AP News Radio

00:37 sec | 2 months ago

Suspect in custody in connection with shootings targeting New Mexico Democrats' homes, offices

"Authorities have arrested a suspect in the shooting at a New Mexico officials home on Norman hall. Police in Albuquerque, New Mexico, say one suspect is in custody in a firearm has been seized in connection with at least one of the recent shootings at or near the homes or offices of several elected officials. The shootings have been happening since early December, no one has been injured. One home targeted is that of Albuquerque Democrat Javier Martinez, the incoming speaker of the state House, the attacks come amid a rise in threats to members of Congress, school board members, election officials, and other government workers around the nation. I Norman hall

Norman Hall New Mexico Albuquerque Javier Martinez State House Congress
Panel Recap Challenges of Organizing Web3Related Events

BitPinas

00:25 sec | 3 months ago

Panel Recap Challenges of Organizing Web3Related Events

"2 a.m. Saturday, December 24th, 2022. Panel recap challenges of organizing web three related events. Featuring PH web three fest buenaventura and, web three PH summits star by call blockchain conferences Javier and global blockchain summits dolphin. The post panel recap challenges of organizing web three related events appeared first on bit penis.

Javier
BUX Expands in Spain with Acquisition of Local Neobroker Ninety Nine

Finance Magnates

03:25 min | 3 months ago

BUX Expands in Spain with Acquisition of Local Neobroker Ninety Nine

"5 a.m. Monday, December 5th, 2022. Expands in Spain with acquisition of local neo broker 99. LTP GTB UX, a Netherlands headquartered financial services firm, has expanded its European footprint with the latest acquisition of the retail brokerage arm of Spanish neo broker, 99. LTP GT LTP GT officially announced on Monday, the acquisition will strengthen the presence of Uttar refs dot finance magnates dot com tag books with target quad blank wide real quad follow quad be usele tagged in the Spanish retail brokerage category. Its aim for the deal is to gain an existing client base as it will migrate 99 retail user base to its platform dot LTP GT LTP GTE are proud and delighted to help a new group of Spanish clients create a stable investment base and build a better financial future, said BU X's CEO, Uruguay. Thanks to this acquisition 99 users will have access to a wide range of services provided by bu X, such as investing in Spanish, European, and U.S. stocks, ETFs, cryptocurrencies, fractional investing, and to be you X savings plan dot LTP GT LTP GT further, following the acquisition. The 99 brand will no longer offer be two C brokerage services it will only focus its resources on providing V two B amp B two B two C services to banks, FinTech, and media groups dot LTP GT LTP GTE have been working for over a year. And a half on RB two B strategy, and while it was a difficult decision, we have decided to focus all our efforts on it, the founder and CEO of 99, Javier sons, various, said dot LTP GT LTP GT, however, our clients are still very important to us, so we have been working with BU X to provide them with a great alternative to continue investing, including two free shares as a welcome gift, free migration to the BU ex platform, and fees almost 50 lower than current ones dot LTP GT LTP GT European. Expansion look VU X offerings in Europe include a range of services like commission free stock trading, fractional shares, and even trading services with lotta ref cops with that finance magnates dot com for ex broker's bucks rebrands trading platform to strict target quad Blanco will quote follow cocktail interacts for different tagged and cryptocurrencies. It now has more than a million customers dot LTP GT LTP GT the platform is aggressively expanding its footprint in the continent. It is now operational in the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Austria, and Ireland. In addition, it has a UK subsidiary which migrated a significant portion of its client base to an EU based sister company following Brexit. The revenue of the UK company, that finance magnates dot com for ex broker's books 2021 revenue helvetic 91 losses deep in quad target quad blank white will quote follow couples to 9.1 million in 2021 with a yearend loss of over 4.2 million. This article was written by arnab as home at WWW dot finance magnates dot com.

Spanish Neo Broker GTE Fintech Uttar Netherlands Spain BU Uruguay U.S. Brexit Europe Belgium UK Austria Italy France Germany Ireland EU
Javier, Astros pitch 2nd no-hitter in World Series history

AP News Radio

00:41 sec | 5 months ago

Javier, Astros pitch 2nd no-hitter in World Series history

"The Astros made baseball history as four pitchers combined for just a second no hitter in World Series history in a 5 nothing game four win over the Phillies Christian Javier allows us two walks while striking out 9 through the first 6 innings Brian Abreu struck it all three battles he faced in the 7th Rafael Montero which are at all the battles he faced in the 8th and Ryan Presley recorded the final three outs in the bottom of the 9th I'm not really thinking about the no hitter or anything like that I just want to put a zero up and close the door and go on to the next day Alex Bregman hit a two run double for the Astros who even this best of 7 series at two games apiece Michael Luang go Philadelphia

Brian Abreu Astros Rafael Montero Ryan Presley Javier Phillies Baseball Alex Bregman Michael Luang Philadelphia
The latest in sports

AP News Radio

00:59 min | 5 months ago

The latest in sports

"AP sports I'm Josh rowntree no hit history in the World Series Houston starter Christian Javier combined with three relievers to throw just the second World Series no no As Houston top Philadelphia 5 nothing to even the series at two games apiece Javier struck out 9 over his 6 innings Alex Bregman drove in a pair of runs with a double in the 5th In the NBA a thriller in Cleveland as the Cavaliers top Boston one 14 one 13 and overtime Darius Garland dropped in 29 points with 12 assists in the win In the NHL the Maple Leafs took down the flyers 5 to two in Buffalo the Sabres stormed back from two goals down to beat Pittsburgh 6 three Alex tuck scored his 7th the game winner And in the NFL Washington co owners Dan and Tanya Snyder announced that they have hired Bank of America's securities to explore potential transactions involving the team though a statement from the team did not specify what those transactions might be whether it was a sale of the team or if they were pursuing minority investors I'm Josh rowntree AP sports

Josh Rowntree Christian Javier Alex Bregman Houston Darius Garland AP Alex Tuck Javier Cavaliers Philadelphia Tanya Snyder Maple Leafs NBA Cleveland Sabres NHL Flyers Boston Buffalo Pittsburgh
Javier, Astros romp 5-0 over Yanks, Cole, take 3-0 ALCS lead

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | 5 months ago

Javier, Astros romp 5-0 over Yanks, Cole, take 3-0 ALCS lead

"The Houston Astros are one went away from advancing to your second straight and 5th overall World Series defeating the New York Yankee Saturday in game three of the American League championship series 5 to nothing Chaz McCormick second two run Homer gave the Astros a lead that the Yankees never threatened managing only one hit over the first 8 innings McCormick says it's no time for letting up now Obviously it feels good but we're not satisfied You know we've got to win one more so As soon as we can do this it'd be great Christian Javier picked up the win at 6 Houston pitchers kept the yanks off the board Matt mankiewicz New York

Houston Astros Chaz Mccormick New York Yankee American League Homer Mccormick Christian Javier Houston Pitchers Yanks Matt Mankiewicz New York
 Biden administration seeks to expand 24/7 mental health care

AP News Radio

00:39 sec | 5 months ago

Biden administration seeks to expand 24/7 mental health care

"The Biden administration has denouncing plans to expand 24/7 mental healthcare Health and Human Services secretary Javier becerra says this is something that's only been available to some in some places We are connecting the dots To make sure we give everyone whole healthcare millions of dollars in grants will be awarded to expand all hours mental health and substance abuse care This effort began with a bill in 2014 We are finally going to treat healthcare above the neck the same as healthcare below the neck The bill was sponsored by Michigan Democrat Debbie stabenow in the Senate as well as Missouri Republican Roy blunt There is a dramatic decline in

Biden Administration Javier Becerra Health And Human Services Debbie Stabenow Michigan Senate Roy Blunt Missouri
Phillies lose 5th straight, Cubs sweep season series 6-0

AP News Radio

00:29 sec | 6 months ago

Phillies lose 5th straight, Cubs sweep season series 6-0

"The Phillies playoff chances continue to teeter following their 5th consecutive loss two zero against the cubs Patrick wisdom doubled twice and drove in a run Say a Suzuki was two for three as the cubs completed a three game sweep in which they limited the fills to three runs Winning pitcher Javier Assad allowed 5 hits and 5 scoreless innings Keegan Thompson tossed one hit ball over three innings for his first save of the year Ranger Suarez lost for the first time since June 29th allowing two runs in 7 hits over 6 frames I'm Dave ferry

Patrick Wisdom Cubs Teeter Phillies Javier Assad Keegan Thompson Suzuki Ranger Suarez Dave Ferry
Tucker Carlson: Javier Salazar Is Using Biden's Talking Points

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:31 min | 6 months ago

Tucker Carlson: Javier Salazar Is Using Biden's Talking Points

"And his Tucker pointed pointed out, it's hard not to continue to be amazed by this story. Check out Tucker's monologue last night when he talked about bear county sheriff, Javier, Salazar. As we understand it, 48 migrants were lured, and I will use the word lured under false pretenses into staying at a hotel for a couple of days. They were taken by airplane at a certain point. They were shuttled to an airplane. Where they were flown to Florida, and then eventually flown to Martha's Vineyard. Again, under false pretenses, as the information that we have, that they were promised work, they were promised the solution to several other problems, we do have the names of some suspects involved that we believe our persons of interest in this case at this point, but I won't be parting with those names. I think to be fair, I think everybody on this call knows who those names are already, so I won't be naming any of them. That's appalling and shocking. For any law enforcement official, a guy who carries a gun and has a right to shoot you, to be parroting Biden administration political talking points in front of a camera. That man should be ashamed. That is completely over the top that he would say something like this. This is all crazy. We're being invaded and now they're talking about prosecuting Ron DeSantis because he sent 50 people to Martha's Vineyard to immediately deport us and they wouldn't get in the way of the food and wine festival. True craziness.

Bear County Tucker Salazar Javier Vineyard Martha Biden Administration Florida Ron Desantis
Sheriff Javier Salazar: The Facts of the Case so Far

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:53 min | 6 months ago

Sheriff Javier Salazar: The Facts of the Case so Far

"This is this Texas sheriff. Javier Salazar, he is known as a sort of a progressive activist sheriff, law enforcement all over the country despises this guy. I don't know why. I don't really get into that. I've gotten a lot of email and text messages from police officers and sheriff's deputies who can't stand this guy because of his activism. And sure enough, true to form, now apparently he wants to criminally investigate the Florida governor Ron DeSantis. We are opening up a case with an investigation with regard to the suspected activities involving the 48 migrants from Venezuela that as we understand it at this point. The facts of the case at this point are that on Wednesday, September 14th here in bear county and the city of San Antonio, our understanding is that a Venezuelan migrant was paid what we would call a bird dog fee to recruit approximately 50 migrants from the area around a migrant resource center on San Pedro here in San Antonio. As we understand it, 48 migrants were lured, and I will use the word lord. Under false pretenses into staying at a hotel for a couple of days, they were taken by airplane at a certain point. They were shuttled to an airplane. Where they were flown to Florida, and then eventually flown to Martha's Vineyard. Again, under false pretenses, as the information that we have, that they were promised work, they were promised the solution to several other problems, they were taken to Martha's Vineyard from what we can gather for nothing for a little more than a photo op video op. And then they were unceremoniously stranded in Martha's Vineyard.

Javier Salazar Ron Desantis Bear County San Antonio Texas Florida Venezuela San Pedro Martha Vineyard
Texas Sheriff Probes Migrant Flights to Martha's Vineyard

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:21 min | 6 months ago

Texas Sheriff Probes Migrant Flights to Martha's Vineyard

"Now a Texas sheriff wants to criminally investigate the governor of Florida for sending illegals to Martha's Vineyard. The freak out over 50 illegals sent by plane to Massachusetts continues, and I can not be happier. I can't believe it. Do they think this makes them look good? I mean, I didn't see this coming. Ron DeSantis is now under criminal investigation. For sending 50 illegals to Massachusetts, the Miami Herald is reporting on this. A Texas sheriff, the same sheriff, Javier, Salazar, whose community saw 53 smuggled illegals perish in the back of a semi tractor trailer on a 103° day in bear county is now going to criminally investigate the Florida governor for sending 50 illegals on an air conditioned plane to Massachusetts?

Ron Desantis Massachusetts Miami Herald Texas Vineyard Martha Florida Bear County Salazar Javier
"javier" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

WLS-AM 890

05:33 min | 6 months ago

"javier" Discussed on WLS-AM 890

"Not dumb. They're not stupid. They know exactly what they're doing. You saw it last night. His bear county sheriff Javier Salazar. I don't know what the hell this guy was thinking. He says yesterday that they're looking at criminally investigating Ron DeSantis. Again, criminally investigating for what? I don't understand. Investigating for what? Again, felonious mopery in the umpteenth degree. Is he going to tell us what exactly he's investigating him for? You get a bunch of people in the country illegally. Many of them find their way to Florida. The governor of Florida protects the state and says, I think you should go to some of these liberal enclaves. I mean, they're sanctuary cities. They say they want people. So what's the problem? Where's the criminal charge? The answer is, of course, there is no. The left loves it. Here is a perfect example of the dystopian future the left wants would politicize law enforcement in the United States. Javier Salazar, perfect example. Take a listen to this. What infuriates me the most about this case is that here we have 48 people that are already on hard times, right? They are here legally in our country at that point. They have every right to be where they are And I believe that they were preyed upon. Somebody came from out of state, preyed upon these people, lured them with promises of a better life, which is what they were absolutely looking for. This guy is incredible. This guy is incredible. They are not in the country legally, that this guy claims to be a law enforcement officer is obscene he may be he should read the law. There is a legal way to enter the country. You do so at a port of entry. Is this complicated? Will you want to wear this? If you don't enter the country legally with the proper documentation to do so at a port of entry, you are in the country illegally. This search for a better lifeline is the most myopic silly thing I've ever heard. Folks, everybody's searching for a better life. That's a global phenomenon. Have you ever met someone you shook hands with Mike, who said, you know what? I'm really looking for a worse life. Nobody said that. So that's not kind of Chewy generous there to illegal immigrant crowd. There are people in Javier Salazar's bear county who I promise you if he'd look around or searching for a better life too and would probably get one if you would stop the flow of illegal immigrants into the communities so that they wouldn't have this problem overburdening their resources through people in the country illegally. But he's not concerned about that. He's concerned about Ron DeSantis. Now, we're on on quite a few Texas stations and some really big markets. Really big markets. I'm challenging this guy, Javier Salazar. You want to be a tough guy? You know what he did, he had a Twitter account. He had a video. He wanted to get on the nightly news, and it succeeded. Hey, we're talking about it. It's the streisand effect. Yeah, it is to a degree I don't ignore that. You're not incorrect. But our other choice is to ignore it and to allow this to continue to spread this kind of stupidity. I'm challenging this guy. Why do you call in the show? Call in the show today. Bear county, sheriff Javier Salazar. If you're such a smart ass call in the show, yo, I want you to tell us what crime you plan on charging around desantis with. Are you going to convene a local grand jury? You're going to have somebody go in there and testify to a series of facts because I was in law enforcement. Sheriff Salazar, and last time I checked, when you go up in front of a magistrate or a judge to swear out and rest warrant or a search warrant, or you go into a grand jury to seek some kind of indictment on a criminal charge, you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Is the truth on your side? Are you sure that? You have a series of probable cause facts that lead you to believe that Ron DeSantis, the governor of Florida, committed a crime. Now I have a series of facts indicating that the people you're protecting committed a crime, series of facts that people who enter the country illegally not at a port of entry committed a crime is pretty hard to pretty hard to deny that. I'm pretty sure you've got nothing. Calling the show, you're welcome. 844-484-3872. I'll give you a fair shake. Make your case. I'll let you say your piece. I'll challenge you. I'll let you say your piece. I doubt you will, but you're welcome to call in. Bear county sheriff Javier selves are your urine, as somebody's calling you right now. Don't bump pretend you're not. I love when they play tough guy. I didn't hear it. Yeah, stop the nonsense. Don't be a clown, okay? You'd be clowned yourself enough yesterday. See, I was in law enforcement. I understand how this works, all right? You're not going to tell me, you don't know, man. I'm a law enforcement guy. Yeah, you're a politician. You're a politician. That's what you are. Greatest power in government, the ability to take away someone's freedom and take away someone's life. Javier Salazar and the FBI's got that power. It speaks a lot about the character of a human being, what you do with that power when no one's looking. It says even more what you do when millions of people are looking because you put out a social media video attempting to get on TV. I got more in this than the other side of the break, including what the sheriff's not paying attention to

Javier Salazar Ron DeSantis sheriff Javier Salazar Florida Bear county Sheriff Salazar desantis United States Mike sheriff Javier Texas Twitter FBI
'Fox & Friends' Report Live As Immigrants Arrive in DC

Mike Gallagher Podcast

01:51 min | 6 months ago

'Fox & Friends' Report Live As Immigrants Arrive in DC

"This was what it was like on Fox and Friends this morning is this story unfolded where two buses of illegals were dropped outside of the naval observatory where Kamala Harris the vice president lives. Here's what it sounded like and looked like on Fox News channel's Fox and Friends this morning. From our southern border have just arrived outside vice president Kamala Harris residents at the naval observatory in Washington, D.C.. Griff Jenkins is live on the scene to tell us more. Is that Massachusetts avenue that I'm looking at right there? Yeah, good morning, Steve, ainsley and Brian. This bus just arrived moments ago. I talked to some of the folks apparently this buses come from Del Rio, Texas. That's where the German on the bus told me and these for me. They don't theirs? They're in this one. No. You know? No? That president Harris, DKK, frontera Serrano. Serrano, Roberto. Javier. So what she's saying, Steve, I asked her vice president Harris says that the border is closed. She says it's open as we see these migrants coming across now. We're not sure how many there are. We do know that, according to Texas governor Abbott's office, there have been about 7900, do you think English? Venezuela. Everybody from toro Venezuela?

Kamala Harris Naval Observatory Washington, D.C. Griff Jenkins Fox News Channel FOX President Harris Ainsley Frontera Serrano Steve Del Rio Massachusetts Brian Texas Serrano Javier Roberto Harris Abbott Venezuela
Cubs hound Bassitt, beat NL East-leading Mets 5-2

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | 6 months ago

Cubs hound Bassitt, beat NL East-leading Mets 5-2

"The cubs scored runs in the second third and fourth innings on their way to a 5 to win over the mets It was Rafael Ortega's solo shot that started off the onslaught for Chicago in the second with Javier Assad throwing 6 innings of one run ball and picking up his first major league win Manager David Ross viewed it as a complete team victory Really good offensive performance there good approach I'll facet there early on gives enough and then javi blocked it in really nice job him They left a lot of guys on base New York stranded Ted runners on bass and Chris Bassett went just four endings in his start for the mets Christian Arnold New York

Rafael Ortega Javier Assad Manager David Ross Cubs Mets Javi Chicago Chris Bassett TED New York
Javier goes 6 strong, Bregman homers as Astros down A's 6-3

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | 7 months ago

Javier goes 6 strong, Bregman homers as Astros down A's 6-3

"Alex Bregman finished two for four with a home run and three RBI as the Houston Astros beat the Oakland athletics 6 to three I think the guys that are really good job of her pairing and getting ready to go this series and competed every single pitch and we have to do that for you and expect to win And I think we did a really good job of locking in and focusing and playing hard The wind is the ASTRO's fourth in a row and it completes a weekend sweep of the last place a's Christian Javier earned his 7th win by holding Oakland to one hit over 6 shutout innings Christian Vasquez finished with three hits for the Astros Adam spole in Houston

Alex Bregman Houston Astros Oakland Athletics Javier Christian Vasquez Adam Spole Houston
McKenzie's 8 Ks, Maile's HR puts Guardians over Astros 1-0

AP News Radio

00:32 sec | 8 months ago

McKenzie's 8 Ks, Maile's HR puts Guardians over Astros 1-0

"Tristan McKenzie and the guardians beat the Astros one zero to earn a split of their four game series Mackenzie held Houston at two hits while striking out 8 over 8 innings He retired 15 straight before pinch hitter Kyle Tucker walked with one out in the 8th Mackenzie ended that inning and his start by getting Jose Altuve to ground into a double play Luke melee homered for the first time in three years putting Cleveland ahead in the 5th inning It came off Christian Javier who allowed 5 other hits in 6 innings A manual class a work the 9th for his 24th save I'm Dave ferry

Tristan Mckenzie Mackenzie Kyle Tucker Astros Jose Altuve Houston Christian Javier Luke Cleveland Dave Ferry
Ohtani wins 6th straight start, triples in Angels' 7-1 win

AP News Radio

00:34 sec | 9 months ago

Ohtani wins 6th straight start, triples in Angels' 7-1 win

"Shohei Ohtani had a big night both on the mound and at the plate in the angels 7 to one win over the Astros Otani threw 6 innings of one run baseball with a dozen strikeouts and he batted in two runs with a triple his catcher is max Stassi This is not normal Like there's Major League Baseball Players have been around for a long long time that are in awe of what he's doing And you know I am too Oh tani is now 9 in four as the angels snap a 5 game skid ASTRO starter Christian Javier drops to 6 and 5 Mark Myers Anaheim

Shohei Ohtani Max Stassi Otani Baseball Astros Angels Oh Tani Christian Javier Mark Myers Anaheim
"javier" Discussed on The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

08:35 min | 11 months ago

"javier" Discussed on The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

"The number to call to talk to Javier castellano, Tom is doing that. He's in St. Louis, Tom go ahead. You're on with Javier. Javier, good talking to you. But a fan for a long time. Two questions. First one, you excel as a turf writer. How do you prepare differently for your races on the turf than your races on the dart? Is there a difference? Is there a reason that, hey, when it comes to dirt riders, you're one of the best when it comes to riding on the grass, you are the best. Is that something that's just a trait you're born with? Is that something you learned a jockey school? Is it something you learned along the way as a mentor? And my second question is, you know, just like trainers and jockeys. Most of them start out at smaller race tracks. When did you have that moment that you knew you were one of the best? Was it early in your career when you were dominating at a small local track? Was it when you came to the bigger track for the first time in your first couple of races where you say, hey, these guys put their pants on one leg at a time or was it when you won your first stakes race or were win? Mike, Mike, thank you for the opportunity to let us speak to these great people every week and I'll hang up and take the call off the air. Thank you, Tom. Thank you, Tom. Go back to the first question. How you are about when you need to ride and be turf in the dirt is about horses. You have to completely you challenge yourself and you had to start it really well and write two different ways. You can write the same way you can write you can't wait to write the same turf. And you need to have a little horses that you can just mean the turf. And you had to write a turf with a lot of patience and save all the ground the best it came. And the dirt you still you can have it take advantage a little bit, put it outside horses and let it roll and make it be moved and you can do that from the turf, you have to be very careful the way you ride and the way you approach to go to the turf. You had a very, very sensible and ride a horse with a little more patient and let them finish a horse in this stretch. The second question I just came from Venezuela are on Venezuela and most of my talk to United States in 1997 at rowing college. I wrote it three years of a lot of horses and we had a lot of racing. I went racing and extending. I was really dark in colder Richard in 1997 through all the way 2001. I decided to go to New York the biggest stage to be the major layer. It took me a little moment to go forward, stop below. I think one of the cases it went in 2004 when I win the greatest car classic week of it does come in open the door in the recognizing who have your customer and then in the beginning it was just a regular ride. We didn't raise it. And we stayed leading job, but to step up with another label that people didn't know who are your customers. It was very key to several British called class in 2004 goes up. Javier castellano has set many records over the years in his Hall of Fame writing career and he's very close to setting a record here on UB the host as we turn our attention to question number 7 just a couple of questions away for Javier to set the record during this segment here this morning. You can call in 888-966-4776 to talk to Javier castellano. Transfiguration has a question on social media and wants to know what big race did Javier win that he thought he had little or no chance to win. Well, you know, when you go over there, you always have a high expectation to win the races. But sometimes you have to challenge it, Google horses. I think one of the biggest impacts in the American power and the traveling 2017 I've rolled the whole king ice, we all challenged to the best courses and the country by far. It was the first Triple Crown for long long time. It was soon defeated and while the bad horse in the ground that year, you had to challenge your heat in the summertime and the trout. I think it was the big impact to a very emotional society to be one of the best horses from the moment. And I think it is why you mean I'm not a very excited to be the best horse in the country. Here's another one that comes from Twitter Javier Colin wants to know if you remember winning 5 in a row at Saratoga. The last winter was a horse named Stan proud that this person is Colin crushed just because you were riding the horse, he high fived you walking back to the winter circle and he wants to know if you've ever had a day that good. Absolutely everything you win one race at a target is truly happy. Amazing because the new Charlie and you hook up with the best darkest in the country and to William 5 races and that they are unbelievable. I remember of course the horse is staying proud because it seemed to me like it was like, oh my God, it was a main to be. We fired racing and the next time I feel like very proud of myself to win 5 races. I have a question for you is your dog attacking you right now Javier? No, he's not sorry about that. Hall of Fame jockey Javier castellano, he has just, I'm gonna ask this next question. This will tie the record that has been equaled a few times on this segment. We have time for one more phone call to break the record or one more email that's 888-966-4776. Terry in Louisville wants to know Javier, what you think of the new hesa whip rules and is it fair that owners will lose their purse if a jockey goes over the limit. That's right. Tangy change a lot. Now we have some rule. We have to adjust every single jogging. We can't let the way all the do. I think I can agree a little bit. And disagree about the general to give it to you because sometimes if you the whole, he tried to win the race, he could pass the limit for one just to why. And there had to penalize the jockey. They had to take it away the purse and they had to be suspended for 30 days. I think I completely disagree. One, over, it's not going to make it different. I think it's going to be difficult to win the horse, but it's not going to hurt. Trust me, they whip it with use that we're not going with. You know, we call and those the stimulate the horses, they encourage the horse and we've been very modified to stick and they hold the horse that they don't hurt. I hit it myself with my hand, it doesn't hurt. And I think we have to be understanding and knowledge a lot of people about the rule, the situation I think is an infer one part, the other side is very big because it loads a contender while you are hit the horse basically. If you try to win the race, hit a one more time to take a, you know, the best benefit for the race. Why not? All right. Javier castellano with us here for just a couple more minutes. You be the host. Tom is in Saratoga in this officially makes Javier the most popular guest we have ever had on this segment, another record for Javier. Tom and Saratoga, you're hosting the show. Go right ahead, you're on with Javier. Well, being it is man award day at Belmont..

Javier castellano Javier Tom rowing college Venezuela Mike Javier Colin St. Louis Richard Saratoga United States New York Stan Colin Google Charlie Twitter Hall of Fame William Louisville
"javier" Discussed on The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

07:18 min | 11 months ago

"javier" Discussed on The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

"And now we come to the point where we welcome in Hall of Fame jockey, Javier castellano. When you heard that little highlight clip there, some of his biggest wins, it's hard to narrow it down to just four race calls. When you talk about Javier castellano, he has won 5497 career races. He is a four time eclipse award winner and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2017. And now you, HR and nation, have the chance to call in and talk with Javier directly here on the equine forum. Javier, good morning. How are you? I am very excited to have you with us and it's great to hear your voice and I know our listeners are excited. I've already received a few email questions, which I'll ask of you. But Bobby isn't bayside. He's on the line right now. And he is excited to talk to Javier castellano. Bobby, go right ahead, my friend. Thank you. Thank you. Javier, you one of my favorite jockeys. And I think one of the traits that you bring to the table is if you're not going to win, you always write hard to try and be second or third, you know, and I think that persevering serves you well to serve your fans while an early you mentioned two venues. Arlington park and Hollywood park that are no longer with us. Heartbreaking, but what's your favorite racetrack to write out? What do you feel most at home? Thank you all, listen. Thanks, Bobby. Thank you, Bobby. Thank you. I appreciate for the economy and really appreciate everything I write of performance and try to do my best and try to bring it everything hard for the table and try to give you my 100% every single horses. You questions about who are my favorite? I believe it's Saratoga. Set up today one of the biggest racetrack in the country, so I say it's very unique. It won my favorite race restaurant because it's only short time, 6 week, it depends on the best, the best in the summertime, the best chart in the best trying and the horses and the best find the country. I think they all who cut together and does it very unique track. Yeah, I appreciate the phone call Bobby. You can call in for about the next 15 minutes and talk with Hall of Fame jockey, Javier castellano, the phone number 888-966-4776. That is 8 8 8 9 6 6 HR N you can also email your questions to me might get horse racing radio dot net or post them on our social media pages and I will ask them for you. Javier here is an email question from a listener LT and Louisville wants to know he says, well, Jerry Bailey is notorious for handicapping races and making a strategy how much does Javier look at form and does he just ride or does he just ride when the gates open? Well, basically we owe every single race there right there races. Every single track, every single jockey. I believe they all look at the same paper. You look everywhere everybody look at the same thing. We all handicapped with the race. The key is how you handicap the race and plot the best thing how you adjust yourself every single track every single horse and the perceived and the race. Because you can study how long as you can, the racing form of when the open, the game is something you have to make it your decision. You will always have a plan to go to the race, but in the same time you had to make a year on decision, you see your best adjustment in the race. I think it does the key to be successful. All right, Patricia is in Highlands Ranch Colorado and wants to know what factors go into you deciding to challenge front running speed and when in the race do you decide to challenge the FrontRunner? I think the key is to relax. If we now fight it with the horses and the horse that you want to go to the league and you try to slow down, I think it has a big mistake. He can make and you have to go with the floor if the horse heats, et cetera. Don't fight it too much. Just go with the flow and the kids behave if you have good hand to relax the horses and go into the lead and keep going faster but you're feeling good in the nice way and you could ride it. That's going to be carried all the way to the wire. All right, Jackie Javier castellano was here to take your phone calls for about the next 12 minutes or so 888-966-4776, the number to call in and ask a question of Javier. You know, so many unbelievable horses have been written by Xavier over the years. If you want to look back on one of those top moments with him, now is your chance to do it. 888-966-4776. Javier, here's another email question. Eric wants to know about the relationship that you had with Todd pletcher and Chad Brown for so many years. And the fact that you used to ride first call for both of them, we don't see that much anymore. How come? Well, you know, it's the new generation is coming out and you grew up in New York in new colony and they all talented, right? It's a big John talented writer. They do a good performance. And for some reason, you know, and unfortunately the last two years have a had to go through a little bit to a little bump in the rope and I think it was the moment. It's about one thing about, again, you can lose time. No matter how good you are, how good you can in this port, but you miss a little time. Everybody's gonna rate plastic, you just pop. And then it's hard to get it back. One of the biggest challenges I do right now and try to get my business back. Nothing to any right is we are very fortunate to compete with the best top colony and the country for many years. And you can see the population, the darkness is about 20 30 and of course you have to be 100% to go there and do it the best thing that the result put away behind because I want some feel like 100%. I think I need to just adjust my body and fix in and keep continue to fight it. I feel great right now, a few 100%, I'd like to give my best and back and the only way you can do is to work hard and try to win race and try to convince the people a real castellana is still here. Yeah, that's also, I think you just answered our next question that we had via email, which came from hud and how to hope that answered it for you. He wanted you to explain the process that you had to go through to regain that top level form that you seem to be back in right now. And it's been a long road because of circumstances that were kind of out of your control. And I think that answered hud's question too. So we appreciate that hud. 888-966-4776,.

Javier castellano Javier Bobby Hall of Fame Jerry Bailey Arlington park Hollywood park Jackie Javier castellano Saratoga Highlands Ranch Louisville Patricia Chad Brown Todd pletcher Colorado Xavier Eric New York John
"javier" Discussed on Awards Chatter

Awards Chatter

02:18 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on Awards Chatter

"The world. So we shouldn't be scared about international. What it's called international. Go ahead. To repeat, what advice would you give your children the children of Javier Bardem and Penélope Cruz? If they said they wanted to go into the film business. I don't know. I mean, I can tell you that they are not doctors, for sure. All right, okay. Oh, I can see that. I can see that. It's a tough one. It's a tough one because I say so before I, we are a very strange example of success that doesn't have to do anything with the work we do. We both are from Spain. We have built a huge, beautiful, amazing career doing what we love, both in Spain, and out of Spain, we still keep on earning artillery doing what we love, we are appreciated by you guys, we thank you for and that's not useful. So when anybody says I want to be an actor, I go, I feel the same thing that I felt when I was young and my mom was doing theater and she was unemployed and I go, okay, if you really modest to you, if it really really, opens up a channel of passion and communication and you feel that you don't know to do anything else. But at go for it. But if otherwise, but also in the same place, what jobs out there are safe as we call it. I don't know. So you have a passion, go for it. I'm pray. Yes. Javier Bardem, thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you. Thanks very much for tuning into awards chatter. We really appreciate you taking the time to do that. And would really appreciate you taking a minute more to subscribe to our podcast on iTunes or your podcasts app, and to leave us a rating as well. If you have any questions, comments or concerns, you can reach me via Twitter at Twitter dot com slash Scott feinberg. Until next time, thanks for joining us..

Penélope Cruz Javier Bardem Spain Twitter Scott feinberg
"javier" Discussed on Awards Chatter

Awards Chatter

07:24 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on Awards Chatter

"Not having bumps along the way with the spell? I think that's a challenge. I also bucking that, I mean, today the world is a different world than it was in the 50s, of course. The whole social media and the instance of the instant moment of everything being recorded and put it out there immediately on the echo of that. It's a different life world that it was in the 50s. But again, to be able to maintain that combination of private and public, it must be very hard. And I think that was one of the reasons why the marriage, I'm saying the main reason, but one of the reasons that the marriage had some problems, because it's human. It's a lot. It's a lot. For so many years, with the public eye on top of them. I mean, it may not be for sure. So the movie comes out and drops on Amazon where you can watch it if you choose. But extremely well received for the entire group of it's really the central four Quartet of unicole J. K. Simmons and Nina arianda. And then Oscar nominations morning, you've been through this. But let's talk about the difference this time. You are nominated for best actor in the same year that your wife is nominated for best actress. Spectacular. I said, darling, we're going to watch the nominations live now. She never watched life. The opposite of me, I watched my life. No, because we know and we knew that it was going to be very, very, very difficult. They will happen. But if happens, I want to see it. Yeah. So he took me a while to convince her. We finally did. We put a TV on. It was a small sulfur. We get together. And the first name is mining. Yes. The first was most international feature for the good boss. Didn't happen. That was a down. Then it was Javier Bardem, the first name which I knew he was going to be the first one because of the B yes. I heard I was like, wow, okay. And she was like jumping. I said, no, no, no, no, no, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. Wait. This doesn't make any sense if you're not in. And then it hurts come is Justin Coleman, and she says, too many seats. And she said that. Penélope Cruz. And that was a moment. Where I jumped. On hunter. I don't know how to translate that, but it's like, no, yes, now yes. Now, yes, we celebrate now and make now it's something to sort of read. And she was absolutely taken by and we both were taken by it. And it's a miracle. It's such a great thing. It's a gift. I don't know how to say that. It's everything. It's everything in the sense that mostly I'm so happy I'm humbly dude for being there. But in her case, it's a rug Spanish. And that's a big thing. It's her second time in Spanish. It's a big thing. And it will be very happy if she wins. I know I have a hard divided, of course, as you can imagine. But she's my wife. That's right. I adore her. And I think because that alone because of the Spanish thing, it's very important. And she's amazing in the movie. As Nicole and Jesse can, Olivia and Kristen. But it made me very happy to really, it makes us very happy to share this. It's very special. So thank God I convinced her to see it. I recorded it. I have a video. You have it here. That's so cool. Well, very well deserved. It so exciting. We wish you guys the best of luck on March 27th and thank you again for coming to Boulder to do this. Thank you so much. Thank you. Can I say, can I say something? Because the podcast, you can finish the podcast here, no? There is a lot of people here that you were doing a line, I was capable of asking you to make some questions. Oh yeah, yeah. I mean, are you okay with that? Okay. Good. So if you raise your head, this is so nice. Let's start right here. I'm going to just repeat the question so that everybody can hear it. Her son is a director. A student and a student to become a director. And she likes the way that you have spoken about the role of directors in your life. What would you say the most important advice for an aspiring director is? I had the chance to work with amazing directors. I'm there all good people. I mean, it's about the humanity. It's about the good person behind the role that we play on a set. The energy of a director is the energy that rules the set. So the technical stuff he will get there is about being aware that his relationship with the crew is going to really create the atmosphere that's going to rule the shoot. And that is way more than important at the framing, I think. Because it's from there, where the love, the passion, and the trust for the actors are born are born from being from feeling safe and protected. Because we are very vulnerable. I mean, it's not that we are special what the fuck we are. But when you are playing certain scenes or something wrong, like when I was doing the ages of Lulu with the net thing, you are in a vulnerable place. And things too big as Luna, he made me feel, don't worry. He made me feel like he was doing it just for him. There was a camera rolling, but he made me feel like, don't worry. I'm here for you. That's the most important thing I would say to him. Let's go to our next question. The question would be, you know, kind of what you think the future of Spanish language films are in the U.S.. I will just add a quick note to that that we are in a moment where the most watched show ever on Netflix is now the Korean language Squid Game. So it does seem and we're coming off two years ago, parasite, a Korean language film, one of the best picture Oscar, seems like subtitles are less scary for people than they used to be. Yeah, it's true. I don't know. I don't know how to answer that. I wish it would be more. But I think that it's, as you said, Scott, the audience is less scared to read subtitles. And I think we should thank the platforms for that. Because they are more willing to see international feature with the committee with the commodity of their houses and pull the subtitles and without the anxious with the anxiety of being on a screen and fearing out if they're going to lose anything. I think the Oscar branch is more international and is welcoming more the international work. And let's not forget Hollywood itself is very international. I mean, you got to do and there is people from everywhere. I don't know how many Americans they were. But that's the greatest thing about Hollywood. You really brings a lot of time from all around.

unicole J. K. Simmons Nina arianda Justin Coleman Penélope Cruz Javier Bardem Oscar darling Amazon hunter Olivia Kristen Jesse Nicole Boulder Lulu Luna Netflix Oscar branch U.S. Scott
"javier" Discussed on Awards Chatter

Awards Chatter

07:44 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on Awards Chatter

"Was did you grow up with I love Lucy in Spain? Not really. I love Lucy wasn't as popular as his as he was here. But once I heard about that project, I knew who Lucille Ball was kind of, I want to dig in. I want to investigate and I saw him. I saw both of them. I started to see the episodes, and I was mildly loved with them. I'm like, wow, what a couple. What they meant, what they create. I mean, the revolutionary revolutionary they were in many aspects. So it was kind of obsessed. And I kind of felt, oh no, linked to his energy. I could relate to that energy. And I wanted to play that energy because it's something I haven't played very often, even only if I've ever played. So I chased it. And it took a good four or 5 years. Wow. Now, once Sorkin became involved as the writer and the director, he's always said he likes to work. He says he's like a dog. They actually like being kind of, they're comforted by confinement sometimes in a crate or whatever. And for him, that means with Steve Jobs, it's going to be three the structure is three presentations of Apple products or in this case, it's going to be the making over the course of a week of one specific episode of I love Lucy while all these other things are going on in their lives. So this was based on a real episode called Fred and Ethel fight. And I guess was that sort of the north star for you and Nicole Kidman who plays Lucy and everybody in terms of how do you how do you prep to play this guy? I guess specifically focused on that episode. Yes, absolutely. And that was the episode that will trigger our approach to, in this case, we can Ricardo. But our told us from the first moment ago, I don't want any impersonation. I won real people because of this story that I am more interested in telling. But of course, we are actors. And I know JK and everybody was trying to approach those characters as much as we could. Without losing the line, the guideline that the script has and we thought getting into a kind of a mimic imitation because that won't make any favor to anyone. So it was challenging in the sense that it took me to me a lot of work to get there. And at the same time, the good thing is that in a funny way, I wasn't aware of how much of an icon he was until I finished the movie. That is good. Otherwise, I would have said no. Panicking. And in addition to being an actor and a executive because desilu productions, of course, was the thing. He was also, of course, a singer and a band leader, which meant Javier Bardem, who I believe is not a singer or a band leader, had some work to do. Yeah, and you should see their face of the person who was teaching me. Singing. Her name is Fiona MacDonald. She's great. She's from Scotland, by lives in London. And it was everything was through Zoom. So let's start from the beginning. She was so cool. Yeah. We have some work to do. You're bad. And we did. We spent hours and hours and hours. And then there's a moment where the voice comes out. And you go like, wow. Yeah. And it felt so good. And it's a muscle. It's a muscle. If you, everybody can really sing. You have to train. You have to train. Look at McDonald's. No. No, no, no, no, you don't want that. Now, setting aside all of that, just from the acting standpoint, is there anything harder than playing someone who's playing someone? It was fun to play the in the case of desi, he was kind of similar. It was more different with Lucille Ball and Lucy Ricardo. The voice beats and everything that she called, that's so beautifully. This is what's kind of the same person, a little bit more high on the high pitch when he was in front of people because it's normal is what you do when there's a theater full of people. But he was not energy. And that's where I like. He won't change. He was done man and he was going with that energy all over the place, meaning he won, give up in front of anybody, not even Morris. Yes. Like in the movie, we see. Fuck with the killing. It's a great line. And working with Alan stark and I have to say it's a dream come true for any actor. To have those words to have those scenes to have those characters, the first time I read the script, I have to stand up and shake the body because I was so nervous I was so much wanting to say those lines and I had my first zoom. He was not convinced that I would do the role. There were looking for all the actors. And I always say, listen, I don't know if it's gonna happen or not, but thank you for allowing me to read your script because that alone is an amazing experience for an actor. Now I absolutely everyone recognizes he is one of the greatest writers ever. But he also, it's not easy to act in one of his movies because he likes to shoot fast, and he wants you to stick to his dialog. There's no improvising at all. And they're very verbose characters, not in a bad way, but there's a lot of material. You guys had 38 days to do this during the pandemic. What's it like having to learn and deliver Aaron Sorkin dialog? Well, you have to for sure to learn those lines and you should, because there are so there's a lot of work behind those lines. There's a lot of intelligence and sense of drama. I mean, he knows what he does. And of course, you have to stick to those words. Again, I'm the foreigner. Playing it for her. So I have that bullet also. And he was super respectful and nice and I was very into it. Yeah, yeah. But the rest of the cast because I was the one who was like, can I have another one? Yes. And I will change one work here when we're there because I said, I don't think my country would say that word because I don't think he was so good in English. So it was the man who changed our story. They don't need any change. They are beautiful. They are perfect. And it's true. He likes to shoot fast. He doesn't want to take to take the most. And basically what he does is the whole scene. So he's very much like theater. But it's great to have that as well because it makes you build it makes you be alert. It may just be a worry. It makes you be really playing with the other one. So we've talked about the fact that going back 30 years, you have worked numerous times with Penelope before and before and since she's been your wife. Here is a character who every day for years is going to work with his wife and they have very high highs, very low lows. Take me into that aspect as you're approaching these characters, is that something you could even fathom doing with your and.

Lucy Lucille Ball desilu Fiona MacDonald Sorkin Lucy Ricardo Nicole Kidman Ethel Steve Jobs Alan stark Javier Bardem Ricardo Spain Fred Apple desi McDonald Scotland London Morris
"javier" Discussed on Awards Chatter

Awards Chatter

07:18 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on Awards Chatter

"In a foreign language. Cut to nominated for an Oscar. That's it. That was not to say something about me. It would be more about Julian, but what I mean is you never know that you never know what's going to happen. Well, and let's also say, you didn't just have to learn English. You lost how many pounds? I wish I could do that today. Oh no, in number, but it was a lot. I heard and you don't know. I only ate something. 38 pounds I heard. And then when you could speak Spanish in this film, it had to be with a Cuban accent, which was not something that. But anyway, and I know studied in Cuba and all that. So let's just say, en route to the Oscar winning you won the Venice Film Festival's best actor prize, and then yes, nominated for the Oscar. The first ever Spanish acting nominee male or female, any of the four acting categories at the Oscars. What did that mean to you to Spain and to the kind of opportunities that then came in? Well, it meant for me it's something absolutely surreal. Oscars are those things that you watch a 3 o'clock in the morning at home. And you are never going to get there. It's true that by that time Fernando toba won already for Belle epoque and controversy for beginning to begin. So we kind of knew that it was kind of possible. But for an actor, so what in many is that I did a party in my home. It was a terrorist. It was a 7th floor. And I was to make an interview from the phone and in the meantime, back in the day where the phones it was a hard line. There were no cell phones. Hey, Javier, okay, join me to the house, because I have to do interviews. Okay, then two hours later, I step up in the living room and they were like 200 people. But I invited it. So the elevator broke, it was a great party. We called the fireman. And we ran out of ice and we as the firemen to bring ice. So they were bringing boxes of beers and ice in the latter to a terrorist. That's what how big it meant. Because they kind of knew what we're celebrating, right? Now, another thing that happens with an Oscar nomination is that a lot of people who you would not think might ever know who you are or see your work suddenly do. And I will quote something that you had said earlier in your career, I think before the Oscar nomination, when you did not know this person, you said, I don't believe in God, I believe in Al Pacino. And suddenly, Al Pacino is calling you. Yeah, it was 2 o'clock in the morning. Again, hard lines tape machines recording tape machines. You remember those things? And they called you, I woke up like summer is dead. Something's wrong. And then I hear Al Pacino's voice. Saying, I saw the movie with Julian and I love your performance. And I went there. I give to play a gift to play anything I stayed there for two hours. I keep that tape with me. Yes. And that's the thing that you want even if I knew that back in the day when I went to the harbor. Yes, yes. To see if I was doing that movie, I would have said no. If I knew that Al Pacino was gonna watch it. Now, at that point, even having done before night falls, you're still, I know we're not super confident in your English, but I think you realize you better get more confident in your English because now there are a lot of opportunities. Some of which correct me if I'm wrong, but I mean, you, you were not going to take the gamble and do a bad job. So right after before night falls, I think you got a call from Steven Spielberg. Yeah. To do minority report, the part that Colin Farrell ultimately played, and I'm sure you would have very much liked to work with Steven Spielberg. But what happened? What happened is that he called me and I was like shaking. I want to meet him at his office and I just have to share with you that I saw ET 24 times on screen. ET is my movie. Yeah. And I saw ET right there. Yes. And then I was more nervous that I can express with words. He offered me my military report, and I felt I wish I could do it, but I don't have I don't have the comfortableness of playing a role so active, so dynamic in a language that I don't control, and also I don't think I am the right guy to play this role. And I shared that with him and he was super sweet, super generous and careful and he absolutely understood how supported me with that. And since then, we had a relationship like we talked here and there. And of course, it's one of those things. The same with Al Pacino, when you have such a big admiration for people. And then you meet the people, and you understand how great human beings they are, how careful, nice, sweet, talented generous fun, of course their work goes like even higher. Yeah. And hopefully, the day will come with today when you're realizing how big of an asshole I am. But what can I say? And I'm sure it's lost in translation. This is great. So continuing to work in Spain for the next few years, primarily, there were a couple of other movies that we have to talk about. And I hope that if you haven't seen these movies, you're writing down the titles because these are as great if not greater than the stuff that you've done in the U.S. and so let's start with the dock worker in Fernando Leone is Mondays in the sun. Another movie which was Spain's submission for the best foreign language film Oscar. This is a you've said at that time, it's probably the movie I am most proud of and I know it had to do with the subject matter. So can you talk about that? Yeah, it was a movie also because I went to the Oscars. I brought I brought my mom. I brought the noise. The echo the sound around it is so huge for the first timer. So I went back home like shaking like wow, I've been there and I survived. I also was super excited to have a happy been able to be part of it. But when this movie came to me, it was a movie in my own language. In my own land, about social situations that matter. So it was a great anchor for me to go back to what I loved the most, which is performed. After months of speaking about myself, which is something that I kind of like. I'm an actor. Well, so that movie dealt with chronic unemployment, which in Spain, men dealing with that there. But then the next one, I have to say, and you've done so many great performances, but I don't know if it's possible to be better.

Oscar Al Pacino Venice Film Festival's best ac Oscars Fernando toba Julian Steven Spielberg Spain Javier Cuba Colin Farrell Fernando Leone U.S.
"javier" Discussed on Awards Chatter

Awards Chatter

07:03 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on Awards Chatter

"And society, whatever. I mean, those psychiatric names that are now thrown to kids so easily, by the way, in my humble opinion. I was just nervous guy with a lust to say, let's just spread. And I couldn't be sitting down for 8 hours straight on a class. That's what happened. So I have a way to express myself through my body through my voice through my presence and since that was kind of forbidden, I started to paint it. And I loved it. I tried to go in that direction, especially because I saw my mom going through a very hard time of unemployment. I mean, we all know that the people that we see walking the carpet, including myself today, it's the very little peak of the iceberg that covers a good 95, 90 5% of unemployment in actors. And I've seen that. I've suffered that. I went through the cold. I went through the younger. I went through many things that my mom had to go through with his kids. Her kids, because the phone wasn't ringing. I didn't want that. But then the DNA takes place. And I start to be the guy in the classroom that makes the funny things. And wants to have the leading voice and I can really portray every teacher and I can mimic everybody in the class. So it's like shit. I got it. I got it. To me, what can I do? And it's not easy to necessarily make much money in painting, so it's not that I chose something to survive and it would be very established. Yes. It was the opposite of that. So in order to keep on painting and supporting my studies for painting, I started to work as an extra. In movies, and I work as an extra for three years and believe me, every time I do a movie and I see extras, I feel so much for them because I know how hard the job is and how not taking care of they are. And every time I can, I usually try to put focus on them and make their production be able to take as good care as they deserve. Because it's a hard job and then one day give me one line two days to give me two lines and it's like, okay, okay, what's all of this? And they offer me these movie called the ages of Lulu. Yes. Which was my first feature. And we are definitely going to talk about that. But I think people should know that right from the outside of your career, you were also very active on the stage and distinguished on the stage. Was the ultimate goal always to be in movies, though, or would you have been just as happy to be a theater actor? Well, the funny thing is my mother was especially a very active theater actress. She's a legend in Spain now. She's a lady. I mean, everybody speaks off la bar them like a kind of a goddess as she was. And I've seen everything on stage happening. I remember one day, I don't know, I think it was 7 or 8, that in a premiere night. I was in the green room, you would call where she was getting ready. And as a game, I locked her in. And according opens, she was, she wasn't there. On my mom was screaming up and up and then finding somebody kicked the door and opened the door. And my face is like, I was like there, how do you call it? Like backstage. I could see the screen. I could hear the screaming, and I could see that the state, and I can enjoy the moment, because wow. So she's screaming because she has to be here. And there's people waiting, wow. I was fascinated by the fact that she was in that public world unless you would have to jump in and be the Queen Elizabeth. So I guess that kind of put me put some kind of memory in me that says, don't do theater. Well, so the reason that film kind of emerged as your as your primary path was because of a person who I know was very important in your life and in your wife Penelope's named big ass Loma. Can you talk about who he was and why he was such an important figure in your life? Yeah, speaking of accidents, my sister went to do a custom audition for that movie. She asked me to a company here. I said, okay, I'll go. I was sitting down. She did the audition and the casting director comes out. Would you mind to come in? No, me and I don't want to. I'm an extra. I don't do movies. Come come here. So take off your shirt, really? Listen, I was 18. I was ready to take a shirt off. Okay, I do that every Friday for free. So, and then they called me because Luna called me. And he did another video tape. And he was like, is he serious? Are you? I mean, what's going on here? And then they gave me this role. Male prostitutes. Malpractice. Please. Absolutely. So that's 1990, and now it's a supporting role, but you made a big impression. And numerous ways on people. And then a year later. Can I say something? I play this male prostitute with Carter. And who does everything? Women animals, whatever. Just bring it on. And my mom was playing the owner of the brothel. That it's like that is like a first day of shooting for me. And I was killing a character like choking her. And I was talking to her for real, because it was so nervous. She had to say, stop Jimmy. Para Jimmy do you want to kill her? Instead of Jimmy that was my name says, stop Javier stop Javier. But and she couldn't say, gee, my name is my name, because she was so scared. So from that, great beginning. A year later, and biggest Luna, we should say, I mean, the two probably correct me if I'm wrong, but probably the two preeminent Spanish filmmakers of your generation were biggest Luna, and then Pedro almodovar, who was your next collaborator in high heels, a movie that came out the next year, 91, which was Spain's Oscar submission. And again, it's kind of cementing you as somebody to watch in Spain. And all of this leads back to biggest Luna a year later with a movie called jamon jamon. And in.

Lulu Spain Queen Elizabeth Luna Penelope la Para Jimmy Javier Jimmy Carter Pedro almodovar Oscar jamon jamon
"javier" Discussed on Fresh Air

Fresh Air

04:01 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on Fresh Air

"The <Speech_Male> story unfolds over <Speech_Male> several weeks, <Speech_Male> but we never <Speech_Male> leave the school grounds, <Speech_Male> or see <Speech_Male> anything of Nora's <Speech_Male> home life. <Speech_Male> We're completely <Speech_Male> immersed in her <Speech_Male> day to today school <Speech_Male> experience. <Speech_Male> And we see and <Speech_Male> hear only <Silence> what she sees in <Speech_Male> here. <Speech_Male> The camera <Speech_Male> remains at Nora's eye <Speech_Male> level throughout, <Speech_Male> as if to <Speech_Male> approximate a child's <Speech_Male> perspective. <Speech_Male> The adults <Speech_Male> loom over her. <Speech_Male> Their heads cut <Speech_Male> off by the top of the <Speech_Male> frame. As <Speech_Male> if to suggest <Speech_Male> how oblivious they <Silence> are to what's going <Speech_Male> on. <Speech_Male> A bell <Speech_Male> becomes a laughing stock. <Speech_Male> Humiliated <Speech_Male> by his tormentors, <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> soon teased by <Speech_Male> everyone else. <Speech_Male> And before <Speech_Male> long, he <Speech_Male> learns the terrible <Speech_Male> lesson that <Speech_Male> one way to stop being <Speech_Male> bullied is <Speech_Male> to become a bully <Speech_Male> yourself. <Speech_Male> All <Speech_Male> of this puts tremendous <Speech_Male> strain on Nora, <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> vanderbeck captures <Speech_Male> her inner struggle <Speech_Male> to heartbreaking <Speech_Male> effect. <Speech_Male> Will she distance herself <Speech_Male> from her brother <Speech_Male> to save face? <Speech_Male> Or will she <Silence> figure out a way to help <Speech_Male> him? <Speech_Male> The movie resolves <Speech_Male> this tension <Speech_Male> in a way that feels <Speech_Male> both hopeful <Silence> and despairing. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> It also left me thinking <Speech_Male> intently about my <Speech_Male> own 5 year old, <Speech_Male> and the everyday <Speech_Male> cruelties that <Speech_Male> kids inflict on each <Speech_Male> other on <Speech_Male> school playgrounds, the <Silence> world over. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> The beautifully shot, <Speech_Male> the sacred <Speech_Male> bonds, <Speech_Male> also centers <Speech_Male> on a secret that <Speech_Male> a child is reluctant <Speech_Male> to share with her <Speech_Male> parent. <Speech_Male> But this time, <Speech_Male> the story is told <Speech_Male> from the parents <Speech_Male> perspective. <Speech_Male> Amina, <Speech_Male> played by Aisha <Speech_Male> abakar <Speech_Male> Suleiman, <Speech_Male> is an observant Muslim <Speech_Male> woman who <Speech_Male> lives with her 15 <Speech_Male> year old daughter, Maria, <Speech_Male> in <Speech_Male> N'Djamena, <Silence> the capital of Chad. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Maria, it turns <Speech_Male> out is pregnant, <Speech_Male> and has <Silence> been expelled from her <Speech_Male> school. <Speech_Male> A meter herself <Speech_Male> was just a <Speech_Male> teenager when she gave <Speech_Male> birth to Maria. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> And being <Speech_Male> the young single mom <Speech_Male> has cost her <Speech_Male> dearly. <Speech_Male> Even now, <Speech_Male> people look down on <Speech_Male> her, and she's been <Silence> cut off from the rest of her <Speech_Male> family. <Speech_Male> Hoping to <Speech_Male> avoid a similar <Speech_Male> fate. Maria <Speech_Male> wants to have an abortion, <Speech_Male> <Silence> and Amina agrees <Speech_Male> to help her. <Speech_Male> At times <Speech_Male> the sacred <Speech_Male> bonds might <Speech_Male> remind you of dramas <Speech_Male> like four <Speech_Male> months three weeks and <Speech_Male> two days, <Speech_Male> or never rarely <Speech_Male> sometimes always. <Speech_Male> Both of which <Speech_Male> are also about <Speech_Male> a young woman's struggles <Silence> to end a pregnancy. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> But it's not as bleak <Speech_Male> or clinical as <Speech_Male> those films. <Speech_Male> Partly because the <Speech_Male> director, Mohamed <Speech_Male> Salah harun, <Speech_Male> has such a <Speech_Male> vibrant eye for <Speech_Male> color and texture. <Speech_Male> As we can <Speech_Male> see from the gorgeous <Speech_Male> robes that amino <Speech_Male> wares. <Speech_Male> Harun may <Speech_Male> be illuminating a <Speech_Male> real world issue. <Speech_Male> But he's <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> also made a <Speech_Male> visually lush melodrama <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> about how women survive <Speech_Male> in a strictly <Speech_Male> religious community, <Silence> dominated <Speech_Male> by men. <Speech_Male> We meet some of <Speech_Male> those men, <Speech_Male> like the local imam, <Speech_Male> who scolds <Speech_Male> Amina for skipping prayer <Speech_Male> meetings. <Speech_Male> Where the older merchant, <Speech_Male> who repeatedly <Speech_Male> asks Amina <Speech_Male> to marry him. <Speech_Male> But as <Speech_Male> the movie progresses, <Speech_Male> Amina <Speech_Male> finds strength and solidarity <Speech_Male> in unexpected <Speech_Male> places. <Speech_Male> And it's thrilling <Speech_Male> to watch as <Speech_Male> she renews <Speech_Male> the sacred bonds <Speech_Male> that connect her <Speech_Male> to the other women <Silence> in her community. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> No less than playground, <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> linky is a story <Silence> about fighting back. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> And a moving reminder <Speech_Male> that we're never as <Speech_Male> alone <SpeakerChange> as <Speech_Male> we may think we are. <Speech_Male> Justin <Speech_Male> Chang is film critic <Speech_Male> for the LA times. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> He reviewed <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> playground <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> and the sacred <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> bonds. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> On Monday's <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement>

Nora Maria Amina Salah harun Chad LA times
"javier" Discussed on Fresh Air

Fresh Air

04:24 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on Fresh Air

"To be a welder who's played by Josh Brolin comes upon a satchel full of drug money. And is running. And your character Anton chigurh is trying to track him down. And what we're going to listen to is a phone call between you and this guy who has the money. And one of the things that is referred to in the call is that you know where his wife lives and is headed to odesa Texas and the clear intimation is that you will kill his wife if he doesn't bring you the money. So let's just listen to this conversation. This is our guest Javier Bardem and Josh Brolin in No Country for Old Men. You need to come and see me. Who is it? You know who it is? You need to talk to me. I don't need to talk to you. I think you do. Do you know what I'm going? Why would I care where you're going? I know what you are. Yeah, where am I? You're in the hospital across the river, but that's not what I'm going. Do you know what I'm going? Yeah, I know where you're going. All right. You know she won't be there. It doesn't make any difference worse chase. So where are you going up there for? You know how this is gonna turn out, don't you? Nope. I think you did. So this is where I offer. You bring me the money and I let her go. All the while she's accountable. The same as you. That's the best deal you're gonna get. I won't tell you to save yourself. Because you can't. And that's one of the ten scariest guys I've ever seen in a movie. It's our guest Javier Bardem from the film, the Coen brothers, No Country for Old Men. You know, your character Anton sugar, we don't really know anything about him in the film. And I gather in the novel, the cormac McCarthy novel. He's also not so clearly defined. Did you have a backstory in your head that told you how he became what he was? That's a very funny and very interesting question. No, I didn't. And actually that's one of the things I love to do the most to create a story backstory in my head that will help me to understand what I'm doing. But in this case, I've prepared a role with my acting teacher Juan Carlos Correa, which is being my acting teacher since 22 years ago. And of course, once I go there with Juan Carlos with my acting teacher, I go based on the ideas that the coins want me to do..

Josh Brolin Anton chigurh odesa Javier Bardem Anton sugar Texas cormac McCarthy Juan Carlos Correa Juan Carlos
"javier" Discussed on Fresh Air

Fresh Air

05:58 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on Fresh Air

"And apocalypse is now and great performances done in English. Along with some of the great performance also in Italy, France, and of course Spain, which I have the chance to work with some of them. But no, I never thought about going out of Spain and working in a foreign language ever because that was truly out of my radar. That's not going to happen. But it happened. That's a weird thing. And if you ask me, why I can tell you, there's this lovely man called Julian snobel which I love and I endorse who had the guts to say, I want you to do before night falls. And everybody around us like, why? Who's that guy? Why? Why him? And he said, well, because I like him, because he saw someone some of my movies in Spain. At that time, I didn't speak any English. And he said, we're going to make this together. Don't worry. It's going to be fine. And I have one of the best experiences of my life. During that movie, I will never forget it. And we work hard and we made it. And I guess that brought some attention. You really didn't speak English before getting into that movie. No, I mean, just hello and give me a glass of water. That's all. I'm always saying that I know how to curse very well because I'm learning English listening AC/DC. So I'm a huge fan of AC/DC and so I was translating the lyrics the lyrics. So I know how to curse. You have to start somewhere, right? What we should just pause a minute on this film because it was a real important one for you. Before night falls directed by Julian schnabel, it's you play the poet and novelist right now, the arena who was a gay man, persecuted in Cuba during the revolution, it kind of takes us through the 60s through the Mariel boatlift when you his character ends up in New York and gets aids. I mean, it's really dramatic role. And one of the things that's fascinating to me about it is that it takes place in Cuba but much of the dialog is in English. How is acting English different from acting in Spanish for you? It's a different situation and it's like here, I'm trying to express myself. I'm sure some opinions and be relaxed and giving you what I think, giving you some thoughts about what I feel or what I think. And there is this office in my brain. Full of people working at the same time that I'm talking to you, trying to not. Be wrong with the intonation with the words so it's very exhausting. The office is translated. Okay. If I speak Spanish, that office is closed. There is nobody in the office. I mean, I'm fine by my own. Funny enough, funny enough, and that's something that I discovered during the falls. It gives me also a different kind of freedom because I don't know how to say it. It's not about not having respect to the words. Of course, I have respect to the words. But since some of the words doesn't have an emotional resonance on me, I can play with them more freely. When in New York speaking in your mother tongue, you may be more cautious of using some words or using some intonations. In English, I feel more free also to try and experiment things and experiment tones and the way of speaking and so one thing gives you the other. Javier Bardem, speaking with Dave Davies in 2011..

Spain Julian snobel Cuba Julian schnabel Italy France aids New York Javier Bardem Dave Davies
"javier" Discussed on The Podcast On Podcasting

The Podcast On Podcasting

04:40 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on The Podcast On Podcasting

"New Zoom account specific just to grow your show. And that happened for the first time after we thought we had paid for it. And it was like about to shut down. And I was in the middle of a call with a client. And I'm like, Teresa, please buy this right now. It still got shut down. And it took like a week to get it back on. I was so embarrassed. I'm glad that you had your team got it a lot faster. I had a lot of them on the call. So I have a monologue just in case I have any issues or something like that happens in help me out right away. But I guess that's your question. How do I keep it short? I just have a couple of questions I want to ask. And I think just naturally, I have ADD. I can't sit for a long time, especially if I'm asking the questions. If I'm being asked the questions I can project for a long time. But as me coming up with more questions, I'll just have two or three. They're not even do the roulette. I have my choice for I asked three random questions. I can not do it with real estate. And we finished probably most of the 30 minutes, 35 minutes. That's awesome. I like him like that. It's good for me. There's something I've got like 45 minutes, so. Cool. Awesome, Javier. If you're listening, the naked truth is this podcast. It is just seriously crushing it. It is ranked so high and tons of listeners, tons of people following it. It's already one of the top real estate podcasts. Please check it out. If you're interested in real estate, he's got a great show. And I love that it is no BS. It is straight into the point. Some other real estate shows, by the way, they're more about let's pretend nothing ever goes wrong because if people think something goes wrong, they're not going to pay for my coaching program. And we need to make money. So we need to make it sound as easy as possible. Javier does it a little bit differently. His niche is to let you know that it's not a perfect world. Things happen. And you've got to be just prepared for those things that can happen. So listening to a show is a good way to do that. Regardless if you want to operate the deals or if you want to be passively invested in the deals, it's really good to check out Javier's podcast. As you mentioned, he raised $2 million just a week ago. To some of you that's unfathomable. If you want to be part of his deals, go and find him, go and find his podcast, the links to his company and his show are already in the show notes. His bios also in the show notes. Go ahead and scroll down. Check him out, really just think the world of this guy. He's impressed me at every step of the game. And I love that he always comes with the realist attitude, like he's coming from his heart, genuine. And he's just approachable. So check him out. All of that stuff's there. Javier, thank you for spending all the time with us to share your insights about growing a podcast and your successes. If you're listening, not only do I want you to go check his show out. But also, I want to remind you that every other podcast episode is a little bit shorter and just me pouring into your business. That's what's going to happen on the very next episode. So stick around and I'll see you there. Bye for now. Two quick things before you go. Number one, if you are looking to upgrade your podcast equipment or just get your very first affordable microphone, then go to grow your show dot com slash PDF. That links in the show notes, go ahead and scroll down. On that PDF is 100% equipment for your podcasting studio that I've personally vetted. My team has vetted this. We know that it works. We know that it's affordable and we don't want you paying more for your podcasting equipment. So again, if you're looking to upgrade, your equipment or get your very first inexpensive microphone that works great. That's where you go. And then number two is got a free course, a to Z on everything you need to know about podcasting and you don't have to go anywhere, but the podcast in order to access it. You don't have to even give me an email address to access it. It is just the very first 6 episodes of this podcast. So what you'll do is you'll scroll down a bit, you'll click on the all episodes and scroll down because we're hundreds of episodes in. And you'll see the episode one, two, three, four, 5, and 6 is a free course from a to Z on launching a top podcast. Take advantage of those two things. I'll see you on the next episode..

Javier Teresa
"javier" Discussed on The Podcast On Podcasting

The Podcast On Podcasting

08:01 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on The Podcast On Podcasting

"The easy button. That was key for me. Yeah, sure. What else would you pour into? Let's just pretend like because it's actually true. Somebody listening is a brand new podcaster or about to start a podcast. And we talked a lot of really cool things like helpful, tangible pieces of advice that you've shared with us, getting over impostor syndrome, being yourself, you don't have to be like them. Overcoming time objections overcoming guests and content. And using the easy button or working with a team to offload some of that stuff so you can focus what else do you think that a new podcaster needs to know in order to be successful having a show? Honestly, it's not as expensive as you think it is. I would say like as far as running a podcast, having somebody run it for you, pens, right? There's different levels that you can get some stuff done. But it's not going to break you. And a lot of people want to do stuff on their own, but you start not because they feel like you said they're going to save money or they're just going to make it better. But a 5 never takes an engine in a car, I'm going to learn on YouTube about how to fix an engine. I'm not going to fix it better than the mechanic that's been done for 20 years. I'm not. So it's probably one of the biggest things that as a new person starting a new business or a new venture, sometimes you go down a rabbit hole of a million things you want to go you can't even focus anymore. Just make it as easy as possible and focus on what's actually going to get you can say make you money, right? Or whatever is going to be your if it's going to be interviewing and having a podcast is focused on that. Don't forget about everything else, all the details, it might not be as fun anymore. Yeah, so don't be afraid. Don't feel like you have to learn everything, basically. Don't be afraid to ask for help. It's in a Jeep groups that I joined. There are a lot of people like on the CJ group with CJ's the oldest civilian jeeps. There's people that log on and they're like, guess what? I did this one thing, all by myself. Somebody said it was going to cost 600 bucks. So I thought, no, I'm going to do it myself. And so I spent the whole weekend trying to learn this and practice this. I went and bought this thing and granted it took me a month instead of a weekend, but I was able to get it done and it only cost me 250 bucks. And when I see stuff like that, I'm like, what are you kidding me? You would rather spend a whole month and $250 than just a quick 800 bucks and have it done in a weekend, like actual and know that it's safe. If it's your breaks or whatever. To me, I resonate with you. I'm like, I want to hire a professional. I want it to be done right. And the difference between some of these people are like, it's a 150 to hire somebody or 75 to do it myself. I'm like, why would you ever do it yourself? You're only saving 75 bucks and it's taking you hours away from your family or away from your hobby or away from your business where you're making hopefully more than 75 bucks. Anyway, this is not a tangent. I agree. And it was me too. It's like the toilet paper. Sorry. I know. So somebody said the other day, money's like a time machine. I'm like, what do you mean, like a time machine? Yeah, you can use money to buy time. I'm like, oh shoot, I didn't think about that. So if you take a month, it fix something. Unless you totally love that. Unless you love to go in there and get your hands dirty and fix the Jeep and that's different because you love it. Half of them do, and I don't fault them. The people that are stressed out and they're saving a couple dollars just to spend the money because the time and energy is going to take you, that money buys you time. It's like a time machine. It kind of takes you back in time. Now, you paid a money now. You could get those ten hours back. You would spend trying to do all your editing, figure out what platform to put it on and asking all the emails and all that stuff. So yeah, for me, I love easy buttons, a 100%. Let's play part of your podcast. All right, I've had this pulled up ever since recently soon after. So I'm playing episode 91. They're not usually good deals because usually they're online. They're not the best. You can hear the reason why you can get lucky and find a good project or if you can find one that's been for sale for a while, try to come in and negotiate the price, get some kind of order finance. Wait, hold up. I have it on 1.5 speed. I either listen at 1.5 or two, because I'm 80 D and it's actually easier. So I just realized the listener probably doesn't want to hear that. Especially if they've already got it on two X speed. That's really freaking fast. Okay, so that was the teaser of the episode. It lasts about 14 seconds. Our goal is 17 seconds or less, and it kind of gets you pulled into the podcast and here comes the music. Make the deal work. That is possible. This is the naked truth about real estate investing. Your host Javier is already been through all the brain damage of this business, so you don't have to go through it. That way, you're not exposed to all of the risk of losing your shirt or getting caught with your pants down. I like how we use expose caught with your pants down or losing your shirt. And it's called the naked truth. Let's dive into another no BS episode right now. 6 ways to get free leads on commercial properties, apartment buildings or whatever you're trying to buy. I'm going to talk about 6 ways free ways to do it right now. Okay. Number one, goal on Google. Love it. Love it. And it's just a short episode where he's pouring into the listener. The 6 ways helps people get attracted and be like, I can take notes of that. So awesome stuff. And I like that you're doing every other episode. We do that too. Like I do a shorter 5, ten minutes, 20 minutes max. And then I do my interviews with other people that usually last 30 to 60 minutes. How long are your interviews? I'll say 25 to 35 minutes. How do you keep them like it's just this interview right now? We've been on the call together for like about 55 zero minutes. And I'm sure that after the intro and outro, even cutting this couple of things, it's still going to be 50 minutes long. Just out of curiosity, what do you do to help keep it short? Because I personally think that I could learn from you Javier, if you just share how do you keep them 30 minutes, 25 minutes. That's too hard for me. No, I just have a phrase Zoom account, so trust me off in 30 minutes. Not just kidding. Make it easy for you. You're like, oh my gosh, I gotta hurt you up. Sometimes I have a couple of employees that use a free account. And when they'll schedule it on their account, and it kicks us off. I'm like, why don't you use my account? Look, funny story before I continue with that. I was raising money for a project like a week ago, right? I was raising a couple million bucks. And it was the first time we used a zoom to webinar. Before I would just send a zoom link to my investors. This time we had the register by a ticket or free ticket, and it's a webinar. I never done it before. While a 30 minute sentence said, boom, everybody stop. You're a dangle and in 5 minutes, like the countdown like, oh shit, it's gonna end. I'm not even I'm like 60% of the process. And that was fun. Not funny, but I'm texting my assistant. Buy whatever you gotta buy, they're not in the next 5 minutes, but I'm gonna be very unhappy. And sure enough she paid for the license and they continued, right? But anyways, there was no lapse. Yeah, I need your team. That happened to me as well. And I was like, please buy this right now. It still kicked us off. We got a new account. I had an account with I have a real estate business, and then I've got this company. And so I started.

CJ group CJ YouTube Javier Google
"javier" Discussed on The Podcast On Podcasting

The Podcast On Podcasting

08:04 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on The Podcast On Podcasting

"It, right? I mean, just being transparent. Javier, how would you feel if I played your intro? All right, cool. I'll be pulling up here in a sec. I would like to understand just the challenges that you needed to overcome to start your podcast. With that said, the first question is, from the time that either you thought you might want to have a podcast or the time that somebody, the first person said, you've got to have a podcast. Whether it was from someone else or from you and fast forward all the way to the time that you hired us to work with you to launch your podcast. How many days weeks, months or years went by from the time you were like, somehow considering it to when you actually launched? That is an awesome question. Adam. So a lot of times sometimes you have a self limited belief, like self limited beliefs, right? Who the hell wants to hear you speak? Who wants to hear me speak? Who wants to do what kind of advice can I give? Doesn't matter where you're coming from. Listen, you will connect with somebody, right? So I think that was probably the biggest thing for me. Who's gonna listen to me? Like, what do I gotta say? I felt like I didn't have anything to share. It was really weird because you don't think that way. But maybe because it was a podcast and everybody that I've seen podcasting matter great speaker that could present there are just amazing presenters and they have big businesses, right? So I have to be like them to be able to do a podcast. And that's bull crap. You don't have to be like that. You got to be like yourself. So that was number one. As soon as I got that switch turned like a year ago, I said, you know what? I'm going to do a podcast. But I was buying a whole bunch of real estate. I was growing my business. I was putting systems and processes, and then when you told me, you got to have 1 million in one episode ready before you launched. My holy crap. A million episodes before I launched. So I said, oh my gosh. What did I really say? There's no way I said a million. I think you said like 56 or something like that. I forgot what it was. And I was so busy and I was working like 60, 70 hours a week and I was throwing in a couple of episodes a day to have him on the vault, right? Back in the library, just having easy to come in out. That's what you do, right? And you tell me, hey, you want to like, here's different levels? How do you want to hit? I'm like, hey man, let's hit it. Let's go balls to the wall. Let's go as hard as we can. Because that's just the way I did it. For me, it was really making that commitment, right? I didn't want to have a step in one foot in one foot out. That's probably why it took me the longest. Just making sure I found the time. And I was able to commit and try to get to your KPIs you gave me, right? I didn't want to fall short. So that's probably why I didn't do it earlier, because I didn't have time. So it took a little over a year. Part of it was that you didn't feel like you had time. And part of the reason that you didn't feel like you had time is because I told you have a million episodes ready to go before you could ever launch. Hopefully the listener knows I did not say a million. So with your podcast, one of the things that I appreciate with your personality, one of the things and I think I'm going to share two as long as I can remember in both, you don't have to be like them, you can just be yourself. That is something that's really important. It doesn't matter what genre we're starting our podcast in. There are other people in that same genre almost a 100% of the time. And for example, real estate is one of the top three most busy type of podcasts. There's like comedy podcasts. There's real estate podcasts. And nobody even knows the third one because it's so small. For the most common types of podcasts. So starting a show in real estate, I think it can be intimidating. Regardless of the industry, but it can be intimidating, especially when we know that there's a lot of other people in that industry. And we would think because of impostor syndrome, we would be thinking like, man, I'm not that person. And I can't do what she does. And their podcast, they have co hosts. I don't want an effing co host. I don't want that. That sounds horrible. I'm already married. I already got to figure out how to deal with putting the dishes out and leaving the toilet seat up. And whatever else, squeezing the toothpaste wrong. Or hanging the toilet paper opposite, which that is a big pet peeve for me. I don't even know it's supposed to go. Roll down a roll up. I guess down. The easy way is the way that it comes from the top Javier. We're already in a fight and we're not even married yet. So that's me just like trying to decide, should I have a show host that I got to kind of wait and see where they're taking their questions. When I kind of have a direction that I want to go, it can be tough. You don't want to have to be like them. You can just be yourself. Another thing that I literally appreciate, I think it's funny, because with you, when you started your show, I think I was pushing you toward our middle package. I'm pretty sure I was pushing you through the middle package. And you're like, well, what's this other one? That's a lot more. Expensive. It was the most expensive package. I'm like, well, I can tell you about that. I'm just going to do that one. Why do it if I'm not going to go all in? And that's one thing that I appreciate you with you is you do go all in and on top of that, it's not a ready fire aim. It sounds like a ready fire aim because you're jumping two feet forward, but I truly believe that every time you've done something, you found stops and ways like for example, working with a company that's going to take care of a lot of that stuff or partnering with other people with you owning over $50 million of real estate before you ever did your podcast. It's like, how do you get to 50 million? It's a combination of making sure you're taking action, but also protecting yourself and your investors. While buying those properties and I love that about your natural personality. I think that it's one of the reasons why you've gotten so far. Thank you so much. And to hit that point, one thing that I forget to mention was the fact that I didn't really know anybody out in the podcast world that would give me an easy button. So I'm all about an easy button. I don't have any tattoos in my body. But if I got a tattoo at big old easy not my chest like, bam. Easy button. I mean, that's what you guys provided for me. You're like, Javier? All you gotta do is open up the zoom link and we'll do the rest. I like awesome. You know, you know, like, that was it. Okay, good. Adam, can you find somebody to argue with my wife for me? Please, and it'll be the best. If it's about how the toilet paper roll goes, I'll do it for free. Awesome. There's no question. I will help facilitate that the toilet paper roll needs to go from the top. Not from the back. That makes sense. Any other argument, Yao, I'll try to find someone. So try to find someone. That was one of the reasons why I had waited such a long time because I was waiting for the right person to help me with the process. And you know what? I asked one time and if Facebook group and I must have got like 20 answers and your name came up 19 out of 20. So, all right, cool. I remember that. That's actually on our website now. Really? Because there was only two times in that group that people were like, how do I start a podcast or how do I grow my podcast? And you're one of them and yeah, like lots of people responded and we were overwhelmingly like the most and so I'm like, I reached out to my ad guy and I go, you've got to while we still can screenshot this stuff because this is unheard of. I was so like, wow, I didn't realize people even knew what it was that we did, but it's funny. I got that. And then I messaged you right away. You missed any writer back and we said we talked. And then when you send me the payment link, I paid within like 30 seconds probably. You did. I was like, what the fuck? The guy already paid. Yeah. I should have raised my prices. Yeah, I think that was good. I want to talk a little bit about this. So yes, you are using the easy button. However, there's still got to be some challenges that.

Javier sec Adam Yao Facebook
"javier" Discussed on The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

02:57 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

"There's no doubt about it. Let's segue into talking about a horse in a race that you're going to compete in on Saturday afternoon here. Simplification, you're going to ride for Antonio Sano in the mucho macho man. And I wanted to focus on that horse because he is a three year old and you know you're in the process of now hoping to pick up a Derby mount whether he's the one or not, who knows. But he certainly a very talented horse. You've never ridden that horse before Javier. So when you're getting ready to hop aboard a horse for the first time, what are some of the things you do to get ready to ride that horse to the best of your ability? Well, I'm very lucky fortune to be able to work the horse last week and I get on the horse in the morning. I lost the way he did it. He was really good by a California and even in so many potential he had the ability to do that in first by watching the boys, it was like 600 and three. He did it when he broke his face and now we step up the class a little bit. We all look it for and he's been working hard and he's been working really good. I think a lot of hope that we have also hoping is in the voice. You know, it's interesting when you look at all your accomplishments. And I know you're busy, so I'll let you go, but one more question here. When you look at everything you've accomplished. And it's been a remarkable career. The one thing that is kind of lacking from the resume that every jockey wants to have is that when in The Kentucky Derby, how important is it to get that one to kind of cap off everything you've accomplished? This is the goal we all joking we want to reach up when you sign a year for your life. At first, policy and you got real decent rate you went away. And I have to win the race at all. The closer I've been there and my career. And this should be the lead if we talk about challenges and you talk about this before and looking forward and I think hopefully soon we can not have all that reach up to my goal and work the hard thing I can get there one day. Well, Javier, there's a movie coming out in theaters called jockey and maybe one day when you complete this comeback story, you get back to the top you win The Kentucky Derby. Maybe there's a Javier castellano movie in the making someday up the road. Looking forward. All right buddy, listen, say hello to the family for me. Thank you for taking some time. And all the best, stay safe every time you get a leg up and let's go get it done. Happy new year. Thank you. That's why. Thank you..

Antonio Sano Derby mount Javier Kentucky Derby California Javier castellano
"javier" Discussed on The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

09:11 min | 1 year ago

"javier" Discussed on The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast

"Maybe we'll have to send Javier a case of jellyfish water because he's looking for inspiration now and he is as determined as ever to get back to the top of the standings. And I steal that word from the headline of the story that Gulfstream sent out this past week about Javier. Javier was with me now here on the horse racing radio network. Good morning, Hall of Famer. Good morning, Mike. Looking forward to the conversation here. Happy new year Javier. Thank you. Happy new year. You know, I was going to dive into some of your statistics here because you look at what you've accomplished in your career, your 25th all time in number of wins among jockeys. You have 5432 career victories. And from 2013 to 2016, you earned four consecutive eclipse awards as the nation's leading rider. But the past couple of years have not been filled with that same level of success that you have come to expect from yourself. So the word determined was used in the headline of the Gulf Stream story that they sent out this past week. What is your mindset Javier coming into this season? Why are you determined as they said in the press release? Very competitive. Every day, something different, you know. The new generation is coming and I think you have to be fine to be in the top of you know, and maintain it for any reason, I don't know, you sometimes out of your hand being hopping a roller coaster game and especially for the giant is one day in the tub or when the battle. And you depended for the training for the honest too, you know, if you don't have it be support to join it to be on it, you not going to be successful in this business. And basically, you know, I think I'm looking forward and looking forward to being top again. And I've been working hard. They cut the issues in the past last year. I did to give my body a leading mania surgery in my hips. And I didn't really care to be able in my hips and basically the world to get the momentum taken. This game is about thinking people the questions, how will it be when you come back? It takes a little while to be convinced of the people and the same level I used to be, you know, as you're hungry, I think a lot of these games like to do. I'd like to win. I'd like to win the competitive. And that's the reason why another opportunity myself and feel young and competitive with all the top young and by this means it feeds everything up just to 44. I like just sending my career hopefully by 7 years ahead. It's got to be everything going the right way. And I always take care of my body. I was working hard and to be dedication. And to be in and compete with the new generation is coming. You know, as you were talking about your hip and the injuries that you've had and the things you've had to overcome the past couple of years and I was thinking Javier about other great athletes in other sports that have gone through similar things and gotten back to the very top of their game. People like Tiger Woods, who comes back and eventually wins the masters. Peyton Manning, who goes through his neck surgeries and comes back and eventually wins the Super Bowl. Do you look at yourself in that light? Is that kind of how you're approaching this season that, hey, all of that's behind me, let's get back to the top. Actually, absolutely, Mike. I'm very positive guy. I would like to be looking for the future. I've been working hard for that. I know it's not easy. But not just impossible. And I think people are when you work hard, you are maybe spot. Basically, like, you say, online, a lot of best athletes in the world can be like Tiger Woods, you know, many from your fell in the tennis when you know your shoulder and your air ball and baseball players they come back and they do everything. I know how to win races. I want more of their 5000 winners and I know how I know how you get to doing it to doing a service. And I think you have to do yourself, but it's not that's what I am right now. I'm thinking I'm looking forward to the future. I just need a little way of trying to get there. Yeah, you're still proving yourself, which is amazing to me because as you said, more than 5000 wins, you're in the Hall of Fame. You didn't just forget how to ride a horse all of a sudden. But now you have to go back and almost like you're an apprentice jockey again. You have to prove yourself that you can still compete at this high level. And earlier you talked about building up trust with trainers and with owners. How do you go about doing that now Javier? Work hard. You know, the only way you can do that, work hard. Show you can you can do it, you know? Get on horses in the morning, try to win race in. The more you win race and the more opportunities yourself. And I think that's what I'm looking for, you know? I think it worked hard. The dedication that you always been consistent and when the opportunity comes out, I'm going to be right there. You know, you are so used to being among the leaders in the standings every year. And as I mentioned in the past few years that wasn't the case, how challenging have these past few years been for you professionally and personally. Every day is how I realized I think to be prepared for everything, you know, working in school and anything and that's what I am very strong mind. I love this for, of course, every day is a challenge. I like to do it myself because that seems to keep people motivated to reach out to people. And that's the beauty to get to the top. When you reach out to those challenges yourself and you get there, it's not getting better how you feel. Okay, I did it. And that's what I look for. And that's why I'm being dedicated myself and trying to clear yourself and belong to the game. I'm picturing like rocky Balboa. You're out there training all the time training harder than ever. You're more focused than ever. You're drowning out the noise. Is that the, is that kind of your approach as you get ready to launch into 2022? Working harder than ever? Yeah, actually, 20 21 is it was kind of weird year for everybody and you would be Colby and everybody and go to and I think it's we put it behind. Now I think Bill 100%, but this area is putting behind. Now 2022 and we can be time hungry. I'm looking dude. I look forward and I want to win racing. I want to be back to the top. That's my goal. Talking with Hall of Fame jockey, Javier castellano, as determined as ever to get back to the top of the standings, not just at Gulfstream park where he is now, but certainly nationally as well, where he feels like he belongs. Javier, did you ever lose confidence in yourself when things weren't going the way you wanted them to go the past couple of years? Not at all, not at all. You never know that calm today. And you go through a little frustration and bigger you spent the more and when I was never disappointed and I never lose my content in myself because I've been writing for more than 25 years. I know how hard it is and I know how to win races. I'm very grateful thank God, give me a potential to be here and raise it and be wearing until I care. I'm going to be charging a lot is for a lot of races and that's I mean, I'm very thankful because to be able to do what I love to do and I think I'm always right, I appreciate the always be grateful for that. They're born to be a jockey..

Javier Gulfstream Gulf Stream Mike Peyton Manning Tiger Woods Hall of Fame Super Bowl tennis baseball rocky Balboa Javier castellano Colby Gulfstream park Bill